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Q &
A |
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1. The setting of Crow Lake is very isolated.
a. Did you feel the need for this isolation whilst writing the novel?
b. Did you grow up in a similar habitat to that depicted in the
novel?
I did grow up in a little farming community, though it wasn't
as small or as isolated as Crow Lake, and I gave the novel a similar
setting partly out of nostalgia and partly because it is much easier
to write authentically about something you know well.
But as it happened, the story did require a degree of isolation.
If the Morrisons had lived in a town or city, for instance, the
social services would have stepped in to help when the parents died,
and Luke's sacrifice would probably not have been necessary. His
sacrifice is pivotal to the plot - it greatly increases the tension
between the brothers, and it's tension that keeps a reader interested.
Also, it made Matt's eventual 'failure' harder for Kate to forgive.
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Beverly Holman, Bath |
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2. The principal characters' youth
is marred by tragedy. Did any experience in your own childhood influence
your writing?
No - my own youth was very conventional and unexciting. Nothing that
takes place in Crow Lake happened to me. However, both of my parents
died shortly before I began writing the book, and although they were
in their eighties I'm sure that experience fed into the story.
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Kathleen Brown, Salisbury |
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3. Do you have any brothers and sisters and if so what is your
relationship like with them?
I have two elder brothers and a younger sister, which of course
leads people to conclude that I am writing about my own family.
In fact Matt and Luke are not based on my brothers, and I am not
Kate, but Bo is based on my sister as a baby. Normally I invent
all my characters, (you know them much better that way) but I wanted
a really horrendous baby and my sister at that age filled the bill
so perfectly that I asked if she would mind if I used her.
As children we all fought like cats and dogs, but we are close
now.
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Polly Hunter, Swansea |
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4. I was fascinated by your description
of the wildlife and the children's interest and attraction to it,
is this a hobby you share with your novel's character?
The ponds in Crow Lake are real (see Q 7), and I was fascinated by
them as a child. Also we have a pond in our garden, here in England,
which I waste an enormous amount of time peering into. Apart from
that, though, I know nothing whatsoever about biology, which posed
quite a problem for me while I was writing the book. I consulted books
on the subject and had a lot of help from two zoologists at Toronto
University, but even so I keep waiting for someone to tell me I've
got it all wrong.
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Terri Butler, Colchester |
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5. What research into rural communities
and poverty did you have to do in order to write the book?
None at all. I drew on my memories of the community I grew up in,
and on the time I spent in the north as a child. I'm very lazy about
research, which is one of the reasons I chose to set the book in an
area and a time I know well.
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Michael Cunningham, Eastbourne |
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6. All of the characters felt extremely
personal. Which do you feel the most affinity for and whose position
do you sympathise with most?
I think I feel most affinity for Kate, mostly because of writing her
in the first person. It took me 5 years to write the book, and for
all of that time I was trying to see the story from Kate's perspective
- you get to know a character very well that way. She is not entirely
likeable - she has been badly damaged by loss, and as a consequence
has become rather narrow and judgmental - but I hope that I have written
her well enough that readers understand and forgive her.
As for which character I sympathise with most - it would have to
be Matt. Such sacrifices were made for him, and he let everyone
down. It must be hard for anyone to live with that. Harder still,
for Matt, was losing the admiration and respect of the sister he
had been so close to - that would have been devastating. As Daniel
said, that was the worst tragedy for Matt.
Kate has my sympathy too, though. She has been through a lot, and
now she has to live with the knowledge that she has been the cause
of most of Matt's suffering.
I feel for her there.
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Camille Atkinson, Basingstoke |
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7. The ponds seem to be a recurring theme in the book. Would
you say they are symbolic of the relationship between Kate and Matt?
Yes, they are. The ponds are real - they were back behind the railroad
tracks when I was growing up (and are still there). They were a
source of great delight when I was a child, and initially I set
the story around them purely out of nostalgia. But as the novel
progressed, it seemed to me that the ponds became for Kate a symbol
of the 'golden' period of her childhood, before Matt let her down.
At university, Kate decides on her choice of career partly because
of a fear that ponds might not survive the effects of pollution.
She says, 'I imagined myself going back to them one day in the future,
looking into their depths and seeing . . . nothing.'.
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Peter Wilcox, Cambridge |
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8. What do you think is at the root of the sibling rivalry which
develops between Luke and Matt?
I think a lot of the tension between Luke and Matt stems from the
fact that their balance of power has shifted. Until their parents
died, Luke was very much the 'lesser' brother. He was your standard
bored, sullen, resentful teenager. Matt was the one the family hopes
were pinned on - nothing much was expected of Luke. Both boys had
adjusted to their rolls over many years. They might not have liked
the status quo, but at least they were accustomed to it.
And then comes the accident. Traumatic though it is, I think the
accident is the making of Luke. By giving up his future to stay
at home with his little sisters and give Matt a chance to go on
with his education, Luke moves from being the family problem to
being the family solution, almost overnight. He becomes the head
of the family - mother and father, rolled into one.
I don't see Matt as having a jealous or resentful nature, but even
so, that would be quite a change to adjust to. He is hugely indebted
to Luke, and that debt would be a heavy burden. You expect your
parents to make sacrifices for you - that is what parents do - but
you don't expect it of your siblings.
To complicate matters, Matt genuinely doubts Luke's ability to
provide for and bring up the girls. His lack of faith would be galling
to Luke.
Add to that the anxiety, uncertainty and grief which both boys
have to deal with, and you can imagine how raw their edges would
be.
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Katie Heart, Stoke-On-Trent |
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9. Why did you choose Northern
Ontario as the background for this novel? Have you lived there yourself?
I was brought up in a small farming community in southern Ontario,
but my family had a summer home further north, which had been in the
family for generations. It is in an area called the Canadian Shield
- wild and inhospitable, but absolutely beautiful. It is still my
favourite landscape. It is largely uninhabited, and the communities
up there can be isolated in a way that you would no longer find in
southern Ontario. This suited the story very well. |
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Shirley Higgins, Milton Keynes |
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10. Crow Lake is your first novel;
do you have any plans to write a second book?
I am working on a second book now. It is not a sequel to Crow Lake,
but it is set in the north - in fact in Struan, the (ficitional) town
closest to Crow Lake. Bo may wander into the story. At the end of
Crow Lake, Kate says that Bo has a job as a cook in a restaurant in
Struan (still slinging saucepans about), so I think she'll be there,
though she won't have a very large role.
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Ashley Marnham, Harrogate |
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11. I adore the images on the cover for both the hardback and
the paperback editions of this book (had to buy them both!) How
much input did you have towards the design of the covers and do
you like the end result?
Thank you for buying two copies!!
I'm a newcomer to all this, so I don't know whether my experience
was typical. I believe that in theory, although publishers generally
consult the author over the cover, the publisher has the final say.
I was very fortunate: I wasn't keen on the paperback cover (who
are those two little boys?) and Vintage very kindly said they wouldn't
use it if I really didn't like it. In the end, I decided that they
probably knew more about selling books than I did, so I gave it
the go-ahead. (As it happens it has done very well, so they were
proved right.) The hardback cover I loved, so that was no problem.
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Sangita Patel, Sheffield |
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12. What inspired you to write this novel?
That is a difficult question. No one thing was the inspiration for
Crow Lake, but I think a number of things played a part. About ten
years ago we dug a pond in our garden. We filled it with water from
the garden hose and then left it, and within four days it had life
in it. I started watching it more closely then, and that made me
recall the ponds of my childhood (see Q 7). Quite soon after that
I wrote a short story set around those original ponds. It had only
two characters - Matt and Kate - and one theme - hero worship; specifically,
what happens when the hero fails. The story did very well, and it
was suggested that I use it as the basis for a novel. I couldn't
see how to go about it though, so I did nothing with the idea for
some years. Then when my parents were dying I spent a lot of time
with them, back in Canada, in the little community where I'd grown
up. It was a difficult time, but I did a lot of thinking about issues
of family, home and childhood, and when I got back to England, I
discovered that I finally knew what it was I wanted to say in Crow
Lake.
I realize that sounds a bit woolly, but I think the process - the
germination of an idea - actually is a bit woolly! It seems to go
on at a subconscious level, and it's very hard to understand it
yourself, and harder still to put it into words!
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John Ashton, South London |
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