I don't know about you, but I always feel in some sort of quandry when reading someone else's diaries. I mean published ones, of course - I would never commit such a violation as to read a friend's diary or journal... but why do we make the distinction here? Because the author is dead? Because they are a stranger? Because they are famous? Hmm... You see, the difficult thing is, I love reading diaries of people - and letters, especially if a book has the correspondence between both, er, correspondents. For some in this ilk, look out for the letters of Joyce Grenfell and Virginia Graham; or Nancy Mitford and Heywood Hill. You see, there I go already, recommending things I'm not *quite* sure I feel comfortable reading.
I've kept a journal since 2001 - they are all spread out in that picture up there. Now, I would hate, hate, hate for anyone to read them -
and I imagine anyone else would hate, hate, hate to be put through the experience. I was 15 when I started writing them, remember. I love this quotation from Richmal Crompton's novel 'The Gypsy's Baby', she even got the name right: "Simon was at the age when he imagined that everyone around him took an intense and generally malevolent interest in his doings." Well, that was me, I daresay.So why am I content to read the diaries of, say, Virginia Woolf? Partly because they're brilliant pieces of writing, but what IS it that makes the diaires of lesser beings so interesting? Just curiosity? A couple of years ago an Oxfam worker discovered the diary of Ilene Powell, from 1925, and published it (see pic). It was incredibly mundane, with tiny scraps of entries - about two days' output for a regular, angsty teenager. So why was it so interesting?
I suppose blogging is the new diary-writing - though they should retain their very different approaches. Unless you fancy a list of famous people I have met...
Oh yes... any recommendations?
Hypocrite, me!?
So often it is the very mundanity that is engaging, particularly where we 'know' the diarist otherwise, or where we are interested in the period detail of their lives.
ReplyDeleteLetters and diaries so often juxtapose the 'big' and the 'small', i.e. the major, turning-point events, and the insignificant, everyday ones. E.g. Winston Churchill writing to Clemmie at the very end of the war and describing events of extraordinary importance, then going on to say "One big goldfish was retrieved from the bottom of the pool at Chartwell. All the rest have been stolen or else eaten by an otter. I have put Scotland yard on the work of finding the thief...."
Diaries are, for me, things which tell you what you should have been doing if only you had found your diary in time to do it!
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