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1. How would you summarize your new book in one sentence?
Honest Dutch clerk in a walled island of thieves meets a Japanese midwife at the end of the eighteenth century, and dominoes go toppling.
2. How long did it take you to write this book?
Four years.
3. Where is your favourite place to write?
My hut in my back garden.
4. How do you choose your characters' names?
By stumbling across them, storing them on a special page in my notebook, and retrieving them when the right vacancy arises.
5. How many drafts do you go through?
'Going through' drafts in the sense of polishing is indistinguishable from 'writing'. Countless, then.
6. If there was one book you wish you had written what would it be?
I couldn't have written Chekhov's 'The Duel' or Conrad's 'Youth' or Marilynne Robinson's 'Gilead' because I'm not those people, I haven't lived their lifetimes and I don't have their talent, but that's okay, because most writers don't.
7. If your book were to become a movie, who would you like to see star in it?
James McAvoy as Jacob de Zoet if he happened to be free and liked the idea, and I'd go down on bended knee to beg Tom Wilkinson to be Marinus. Did you see him in 'John Adams'?
8. What's your favourite city in the world?
Portland if I'm feeling bookish, Amsterdam if I'm feeling escapist, Cork if I'm feeling homesick.
9. If you could talk to any writer living or dead who would it be, and what would you ask?
Chekhov 'Mind if we just hang out and not discuss writing?'
10. When do you write best, morning or night?
Both, if you like my work: neither, if you don't.
11. Who is the first person who gets to you read your manuscript?
My wife.
12. Do you have a guilty pleasure read?
Leave guilt outside the library.
13. What's on your nightstand right now?
'The Vintner's Luck' by Elizabeth Knox.
14. What is the first book you remember reading?
'Mr Tickle' by Roger Hargreaves.
15. Did you always want to be a writer?
Yes-ish.
16. What do you drink or eat while you write?
Good quality loose tea; hazlenuts and almonds, dried fruit, sesame sticks, and once a day a small quantity of bitter dark chocolate, but I have to watch it because I'm knocking on the doors of middle-age and my navel is becoming a more dramatic geographical feature as the years go by.
17. Typewriter, laptop, or pen & paper?
Pen & paper first, then laptop. Did anyone else answer 'typewriter'? Where can you buy ribbons these days?
18. What do you wear when you write?
Lots during an Irish winter, just my pyjama bottoms if it's a Japanese summer.
19. How do you decide which narrative point of view to write from?
By thinking about it.
20. What is the best gift someone could give a writer?
A bowl of noodles with a half-poached egg, and a glass of kiwi and lime smoothie.
:} Elorithryn
Also like his sense o'humour. And that Mr Mitchell likes his tea, darrrk chocolate, his backyard hut. Who says No man is a backyard hut...sorry, bad joke.
Read a review on CBC. I have Mr Mitchell's book on my Wanna Get To List for this year.
Seriously, Elo: I know your love for history. Google Dejima, the real world island in the story. Fascinating setting.
Now I'm off to google, and what I see it sounds like Cape Cod (peninsula turned to island by canal) DOn't ever get anyone from Cape Cod into and argument about where Cape Cod really begins and ends. My hubby and I have a mutual teasing understanding... otherwise it can get ugly. *grin*
:} Elorithryn (also likes her darrrk chocolate)