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On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, author John Connolly shares the inspiration behind his new book, The Land Of Lost Things.
I interviewed John Connolly about his life and career, what inspired him to start writing, and the creative process that went into his new release, The Land Of Lost Things.
I’m 55, born in Dublin, and was a journalist before I became a full-time novelist with the publication of my first book, Every Dead Thing, in 1999. For the past 13 years, I’ve also hosted a radio show, ABC to XTC, for RTE here in Ireland.
Like a lot of people who write for a living, I began writing when I was very young – not long after I learned to read, really. The logical step from reading and enjoying stories was trying to write one of my own. Every Dead Thing was the first novel that I sat down to write, though, at least in part out of frustration with journalism. I went into journalism because it was a way to be paid to write, but there were far better journalists at the Irish Times, and I didn’t enjoy newspaper work quite as much as I thought I would.
Like I said, I’d always written, but I stopped writing fiction after I left school, with the exception of one dreadful short story in college. Instead I worked for local newspapers and then college newspapers, and finally became a full-time freelance with the Irish Times, where I stayed for five years.
Probably about four years, with the last two involving serious focus, and a research trip to the US.
I’m probably on a two-year cycle now, but it’s hard to quantify the period during which an idea gestates. I had vague ideas floating around in my head long before I started to put them down on the screen. I always have vague ideas percolating…
It picks up from The Book of Lost Things, which I published 17 years ago, and was very much a novel about remembered childhood pain. I didn’t want to write that novel again, and since then my sons have grown up and left home, and my mother has entered her nineties, so I think I wanted to explore that middle period, when many of us seem to be worrying about our kids and our parents. The next stage is people worrying about us.
The same as with every book: not wanting to throw it away somewhere between 20-40,000 words, which is when doubt usually begins to set in.
An accident that leaves Phoebe, the daughter of Ceres, a young single mother, unresponsive. It looks at that moment when, as a parent, you just find yourself breaking, or think you’re no longer able to cope. I suspect every parent has been through it, in some shape or form.
Whether to go back to the possibility of pain, or accept a form of escape from it, even at a cost to those you love.
Entirely the second. I don’t think I’d be interested in writing a book that I’d planned. It just wouldn’t happen anyway. I can’t work that way. All good fiction is about character, and characters have to be discovered through the process of writing, at least for me.
I don’t work that way with my editors, or not after 36 books – and I’ve had the same editor in the UK since my first, and the same in the US since my second. By now, I think I have a good sense of when, or where, there might be problems with a book. That’s also a function of my background in journalism, where it was important to deliver clean copy, on deadline, that didn’t really have to be edited. If it came back to you, you’d done something wrong. Editing, for me, tends to be quite light touch. Having said that, I tend to take on board 90 per cent of my editors’ suggestions, argue about another five per cent before accepting them, and reject the last five per cent, only to realise later that I probably should have gone along with them as well.
When you write the first line, you have to commit psychologically to writing the last as well. As someone once said, professionals are amateurs who finish things, and abandoning books and stories just damages our creative confidence.
I’ve delivered next year’s Parker book, have another one at draft stage, and have a collection of supernatural fiction and non-fiction pretty much done. After that, I have an idea for a book set at the time of the Watergate hearings, and that may be the next novel.
Creatively, yes, and I’m fortunate to be able to write full-time and support myself that way. But proud? No, I don’t think that’s how my mind works. I fret too much for pride.
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