
Mike Mason's fantasy novels, The Blue Umbrella and The Violet Flash, appeal to all ages. Enjoy this insight into Ches from The Violet Flash.
Over to you, Mike:~
Brief Physical Description
 
This is a very interesting  question because my main character, Ches Cholmondeley (pronounced Chum-ly),  goes through a dramatic physical change over the co
urse of two books.  In the first book, The Blue Umbrella, Ches is not yet the protagonist  but a strong supporting character. When we first meet him he is described  as “a boy who looked a little like Frankenstein: big, stocky, square-headed,  square-shouldered, everything square down to the rims of his tortoiseshell  glasses.” When he walks he is “flat-footed, thumping along with  his arms straight at his sides, palms facing back, his whole body stiff  as if to keep any part of it from touching any other part.” What we  don’t know about Ches is that he is in the power of an evil magician.  By book two, The Violet Flash, when Ches takes over as the protagonist,  the evil spell over him has been broken. Now on page one he is described  as “a lithe, darkly handsome boy of twelve”—yet still shadowed  by a hint of double identity.
Actor Who Resembles Ches
 
Though I never thought of this  as I wrote my books, I think Daniel Radcliffe, especially in hi
s role  as Harry Potter, resembles Ches. Think of my description: “a lithe,  darkly handsome boy.” And those horn-rimmed glasses. And that look  of intensity and preoccupation. And the suggestion (though his own heart  is good) of a deep acquaintance with darkness and evil that has left  him scarred. Like Daniel/Harry, my Ches is called on to fight against  a wickedness that has touched his very body and soul, and this struggle  has a definite impact on his looks, bearing, behavior.
Strengths and Weaknesses
 
Ches is a very strong person,  but in all the wrong ways: he is confident to the point of insecurity;  resolute to the point of stubbornness; independent to the point of alienation;  introspective to the point of selfishness; intelligent to the point  of ignorance of all that is most important in life. In short, his very  strengths, because misdirected, make him fundamentally weak. This is  what drew me to him as a character who needed to be explored, who needed  to go on a long journey of self-discovery. Only as Ches learns to trust  other people, and ultimately to love, are his weaknesses transformed  into strengths. This is the power of healthy, loving relationship.
Quirk
 
The very first sentence of  The Violet Flash describes a quirk that goes to the r
oot of Ches’s  character: “He poked the bridge of his tortoiseshell glasses with  one finger, a gesture he performed a few hundred times a day.” Throughout  the book we see him performing this gesture with various degrees of  force, depending upon how troubled he is, how hard he is thinking, how  hard he is trying to “see” through those thick glasses of his. The  glasses are a symbol of his quest for true vision, true knowledge, and  they also suggest that he moves slowly (like a tortoise) and needs to  come out of his “shell.” Another quirk is that he never laughs;  he just tonelessly says “Ha, ha.” But by the end of the book he  is laughing!
My Inspiration for Ches
 
Mainly, myself. While Ches  is not me, I do identify with him strongly: his self-centeredness, introspection,  abstraction, pride—all those things that can keep a person locked  in a lonely fortress rather than joining the human race. Like Ches,  I’ve come a long way, but I don’t think you ever really get over  your weaknesses. It’s a lifelong struggle to emerge fully into the  light. By writing about a character who has a lot of personal work to  do, I’ve made progress myself. And come to think of it, I did have  a childhood friend who was a lot like Ches: a big, lumbering, brilliant  disaster of a kid. Probably I chose him as a friend for the way he mirrored  my own inner flaws.
Background to the Story
 
a little boy, I  lived at the top of a hill, and at the bottom of the hill was a very  special store. As a man nearing 50, one night I woke up and realized  that once again, though many years had passed and I was many miles away,  I lived at the top of a hill, and at the bottom was a special old general  store with a lot of character. With this insight, the whole geography  for series of children’s fantasy novels came into focus. So my story  is very much inspired by the landscapes, both inner and outer, of my  own childhood.  Many thanks, Mike, for this detailed look at Ches :)
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1 comments:
I didn't know there was a sequel to the Blue Umbrella!! I'll have to look for this!
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