Works of fiction where characters have ME/CFS

Discussion in 'General ME/CFS discussion' started by Tom Kindlon, Oct 29, 2022.

  1. RoseE

    RoseE Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    346
    Trish and Peter Trewhitt like this.
  2. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    ME Association:

    Writing a children’s book featuring a protagonist who has ME Sally Doherty talks about her new book – Max and Monty: The Raven Thief – and explains why she jumped at the chance to write a book for children with a protagonist with ME, as part of the HarperCollins new disability series. The ME Association is proud to say we had some input in this book, and are credited in the inside front cover.

    https://meassociation.org.uk/2024/09/writing-a-childrens-book-featuring-a-protagonist-who-has-me/

     
  3. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    "Everybody has a story" - a talk with Stuart Murdoch
    September 20, 2024

    In a recent InterAction article, we spoke to Scottish singer-songwriter Stuart Murdoch about his journey with ME, which he shares in his new book, Nobody's Empire.


    Speed read
    Stuart Murdoch has lived with ME for over 30 years. He has manage to build a slow career in music and is the lead signer in the band Belle and Sebastian. Stuart reflects on storytelling (particularly in his new novel), his journey with ME and his sense of belonging in the ME community. He wants to make a difference and raise awareness. He shares his certainty that no life is ever wasted.

    Continues at:
    https://www.actionforme.org.uk/news/a-talk-with-stuart-murdoch/

     
    Last edited: Sep 21, 2024
    Hutan, Peter Trewhitt and Trish like this.
  4. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    [​IMG]
    Stuart Murdoch of Belle and Sebastian: ‘My wife said to me, don’t put any sex in the book.’ Photograph: Katherine Anne Rose/The Observer


    Books interview
    Fiction


    Interview
    Stuart Murdoch: ‘I feel like this book will be the Trainspotting of ME’
    Killian Fox

    The Belle and Sebastian musician on his new novel, inspired by his long struggle with chronic fatigue, choirs and his love of Victorian authors


    [​IMG]
    Sat 28 Sep 2024 19.00 CEST
    https://www.theguardian.com/books/2...ike-this-book-will-be-the-trainspotting-of-me

     
    Last edited: Sep 28, 2024
    Hutan and Peter Trewhitt like this.
  5. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    ME Association on a fictional novel
    DCI Parrish – meet the new detective with ME/CFS on the block
    October 4, 2024
    Stand aside Kojak, Columbo, Maigret, Morse, Lewis and Rebus. There’s a new detective on the block – and he’s not ashamed to flash his ME/CFS credentials.

    https://meassociation.org.uk/2024/10/dci-parrish-meet-the-new-detective-with-me-cfs-on-the-block/

     
    Peter Trewhitt, Sean and forestglip like this.
  6. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    Posted under this thread on the ME Association page 5 days ago:

    https://www.facebook.com/share/15dxc7gBJz/?mibextid=wwXIfr

    There was an appalling characterisation of an ME patient in
    "Strike" last night on TV. A man in a suit in a wheelchair, shouting and bullying in a loud voice, and scared of getting infections from his daughter. Did you see it?
     
  7. Lou B Lou

    Lou B Lou Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    751


    It's JK Rowling's novel 'The Ink Black Heart' adapted as a drama for BBCTV with the last episode on BBC1 on Christmas Eve.

    JKR's novel has a 2 characters with ME - One (Inigo) is an angry abusive bully whose friends and workmates dropped him not because That's What Happens When People Become Sick/Disabled With ME but according to JKR because he was a self aggrandizing bully.

    The 2nd character with ME (Kea) is portrayed by JKR as a lying faker, a hysteric, who runs around shouting/slamming doors while supposedly in an ME relapse.



    Christmas Eve BBC1 viewers can watch JKRs character assassination of people with the disabling disease ME (majority women).

    JK Rowling claims to be a feminist, concerned for women and kids, but clearly sick and disabled women and kids with ME are *The wrong sort of women and kids*


    JK Rowling's hero-detectives Strike and Robin put the sick people with ME in their place:
    "This is a murder enquiry!!".


    NO, it's Fiction. Real ME patients (who are mostly women) are dying from medical neglect and prejudice.


    I'm so sorry JKR has done such a cruel thing as to exploit a serious disabling disease, and character assassinate the sufferers, for literary and dramatic effect.


    https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0025ydf


    .
     
    Last edited: Dec 23, 2024
    Sean, Trish, Wyva and 2 others like this.
  8. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    6,342
    I haven't listened to this so not recommending it per se.

    https://thelonelycrowd.org/2025/04/03/read-by-the-author-take-away-by-alan-mccormick/

    Alan McCormick reads his short story ‘Take Away’ from Issue Fourteen. Find out how Alan wrote the story here.

    https://thelonelycrowd.org/2025/04/02/on-writing-take-away-alan-mccormick/
    On writing ‘Take Away’ / Alan McCormick
    Alan McCormick on the creative process behind ‘Take Away’ in Issue Fourteen.



    ‘Take Away’ is about Hannah, a fifteen-year-old struggling with ME in small town Sussex in 1990. It’s a personal story, as I was ill with ME in my mid-twenties during the same period. Hannah suffers disbelief and hostility about her illness, sometimes from classmates, but mostly from some care professionals, doctors and social workers. I was fortunate in that I suffered far less unhelpful attitudes than Hannah, though some of my friends found my diagnosis difficult to deal with and would suggest I just needed to be more positive and get on with life as there was nothing seriously physically wrong with me. Given I was mentally and physically disabled, completely exhausted, unable to read, confined to bed most of the time, often needing a wheelchair when I was outside, this rejection could be depressing and alienating, making me even question whether my pragmatic realist (rather than unquestioningly positive) approach was making things worse.

    continues at link
     
    Last edited: Apr 6, 2025
    Hutan, Peter Trewhitt and shak8 like this.
  9. jnmaciuch

    jnmaciuch Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    425
    Location:
    USA
    The podcast Friends at the Table has a side character with ME/CFS in their "Partizan" sci-fi storyline. It is a table top roleplaying game podcast. The character created robot service dogs that are able to do energy-draining tasks for them--I thought it was a fun depiction.
     

Share This Page