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Welcome to The Interview Online Blog


Interview with Emma Donoghue

22 November 2010 by Nicky

Really pleased to announce our next interview on The Interview Online

This Tuesday we shall be talking to Emma Donoghue who was shortlisted for this year's Man Booker Prize with Room.

 

The novel is an extraordinary story of a young mother, kidnapped for seven years and kept in a shed. What makes the story all the more remarkable is that it's told from the perspective of her five year old son Jack, to whom she gave birth while locked up. Jack has no experience of the world except what he's learnt from the TV and what is in Room. Which to him is real?

Audrey Niffenegger is quoted on the cover "Room is a book to read in one sitting". We didn't quite manage it but wish we could have stopped the world until we had. I'm really looking forward to interviewing the author. She's in Canada so it will have to be "down the line" as we say in the business.

If you've read the book, please do suggest a question or two.

 

Our thanks to our friends at  www.WriterPictures.com for the image

Hilary Mantel at Rose Theatre in Kingston

09 March 2010 by Nicky

Hilary Mantel CBE has described her 2009 Man Booker Prize winning novel Wolf Hall as the "The book I was born to write". And joining the audience at the  Rose Theatre in Kingston recently, there was definitely a feeling that this is her moment. Ms. Mantel enjoyed the court in Kingston and the court was happy to lap up every word. We had asked for an interview for this site but sadly had been turned down by the publishers. Opening the book I had just bought before going into the auditorium, I was enthralled within seconds  and just wish I could cancel the next few days to enjoy the writing.

The Kingston event was billed as "in conversation with Richard Cohen" (visiting professor of Creative Writing and Publishing Studies at Kingston University and editor).  However more than once I wished during the 90 minutes that it had indeed been a conversation. A question was asked and then Ms. Mantel was abandoned to the audience until she came to a full stop. Cue next unrelated question. Yes she of course fascinating however there were moment when I would have like the interviewer to press her for more details.

Nonetheless some elements were gripping. We heard (as many may already know) that Ms. Mantel is a cradle Catholic, that she doesn't consider herself  a historian (academics will no doubt collectively sleep more soundly now), that she wanted to recreate the poisonous atmosphere at the court of King Henry VIII, that the role of the historical fiction writer was to fill in the gaps which, like intricate lace making, paint the entire picture ("The gaps where the facts run out" she claimed,)  that in suffering from migraines all her life she often felt the presence of "an other being alongside", that Ivy Compton-Burnett inspired her.  When an audience member asked her whether she had a tragic view of humanity, after a pause she replied "no, a satirical view". These were indeed enlightening moments. However we could have done with a few more.

The "author meets their audience event" has been established for some time now and the numerous literary festivals highlight  the fact that writers need to be performers as well as artists.  Perhaps this also applies to their interviewers.


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