For The Lumière Reader, originally published May 2013.
An interview with English novelist and Auckland Writers & Readers Festival guest Scarlett Thomas.
“A DELIGHT, not
least for the quality of Scarlett Thomas’s writing,” Philip Pullman described
Scarlett Thomas’s Our
Tragic Universe, “Full of life and energy.” In 2011 Thomas was on
the Independent on Sunday’s list of
the UK’s 20 best young authors. At Unity Books on Tuesday, Thomas seemed to
live and breathe her books, reading from upcoming The Seed Collectors.
Kimaya McIntosh snares answers about Katherine Mansfield, Ethnobotany, and road
signs.
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*
KIMAYA MCINTOSH: Are there other Scarletts
from the creative realms you like?
SCARLETT
THOMAS: Do you mean do I like Scarlett Johansson? Yes. I think she’s hot.
KM: A
common theme that pops up alongside your name is the devotion followers of your
work show. What do you think is the secret to this following?
ST: This
is impossible to answer! I don’t know. Perhaps they think I’m Scarlett
Johansson.
KM: Tell
me about a favourite author from New Zealand?
ST: My
favourite New Zealand writer is Katherine Mansfield. Every time I re-read her
stories I find something new. I particularly like ‘Bliss’, ‘Marriage a la
Mode’, and ‘Je ne parle pas Francais’. I very much enjoyed the novel Electric by Chad Taylor a few years back. I
really like Emily Perkins and am just getting into Eleanor Catton’s work, which
is fantastic so far.
KM: What
is your creative philosophy?
ST: My
whole creative philosophy is explained in Monkeys
With Typewriters, but in a nutshell: be authentic; be beautiful; be
compassionate.
ST: Recent
influences are the great writers of free indirect style, particularly Katherine
Mansfield. Tolstoy and Chekhov are also big favourites.
KM:
Between your novels and your short stories, is there a character you’ve created
that you truly dislike?
ST: If I
had, it would mean I’d made a huge mistake, and that the work was a failure.
I’ve created some very flawed characters for my new novel, but I love each one
of them with all my heart. I always ask my students if they love their
characters—even the
minor ones. Disliking a character is a sign that you have not worked hard
enough on your characterisation. Of course I have created types and flat
characters over the years—but I’m not proud of them.
KM: When
you look at the defining features of your leading characters, they are drawn
from you and your life, but which character would you want to be and why?
ST: Maybe
Apollo Smintheus. I mean, who wouldn’t want to be a mouse god? I wouldn’t say
my characters are aspirational exactly, but I’d quite like to be Fleur from my
new novel. She’s very beautiful and a bit weird.
KM: Do you
have any words of wisdom for any budding creative writers out there?
ST:
Remember that fiction is always about suffering, but that suffering can be
funny as well as painful. Tell your truth in your own way and you won’t go
wrong.
KM: You’re
studying towards an MSc in Ethnobotany while working on your ninth novel, The Seed Collectors.
Is this more than research for the new novel? What attracts you to Ethnobotany?
ST: I did
begin an MSc in Ethnobotany as research for The
Seed Collectors. I completed all my essays, but in the end decided
not to do the dissertation—I needed the time to work on the novel. I guess in a way the
novel will be the dissertation! I learned some really cool stuff, particularly
from the botany classes. There was a lot to learn, too, considering that I
began from such an embarrassingly low level that I didn’t even know that
flowers turned to fruit. Being a student again—while at the same time being a senior member of staff in another
department—was a real
eye-opener, and I’m sure it has made me a better novelist. Basically, I got to
see myself at my worst: competitive, shy, arrogant, unfriendly, fussy. As the
teacher you are in control and that can hide a lot of flaws in your personality
(as well as exposing a lot of others, probably). Being a student put me back in
touch with the really horrible person I am inside. I was the one who didn’t
want to get mud on my shoes, or eat the weird leaf we’d just picked. I cheated
at the Fishing Game (designed to show how communities will naturally co-operate
without legal restrictions), refused to drink from a cup everyone else had used
when someone was demonstrating a ritual, and publicly berated an
environmentalist for still eating dairy products. But examining one’s ego is
what being a novelist is all about. The worst stuff makes the best (and
funniest) characters.
KM: What’s
exciting about coming to the Auckland Writers & Readers Festival, your
first trip to New Zealand?
ST: It’s
my first time in New Zealand, but I’m absolutely loving it. My partner is from
here, so I’ve heard a lot about the place over the years. Obvious attractions
are the beautiful fairytale landscape and the wonderful climate (I have not yet
strayed from the North Island). I’m also enjoying your road signs. They’re much
more philosophical than ours. Ours say things like ‘Keep Your Distance!’ Yours
say ‘Think about what’s behind you’ without telling you exactly what to think
or what to do about it.
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