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Q &
A |
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1. Where did you get the idea for These Foolish Things?
I got the idea in Berwick Street Market in Soho. I love street
markets, the way they seethe with life. And I thought, when I get
old I don't want to be shut away in some retirement home miles away
from any human activity, I'd like to stay in the thick of things;
I'd like to retire to a flat above a street market. Then I thought
wouldn't India be even better? It's warm, it's cheap and there's
a lot of respect for old people. They're treated much better than
they are here. English is commonly spoken. People travel all over
the world nowadays without a thought, seventy is the new fifty,
we're already going to India for new hips
it would sure beat
Worthing on a wet Thursday afternoon. The more I though about it,
the better the idea seemed
so then I started to make up my
characters
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2. Are there any plans to adapt this novel for TV?
Yes- I've just finished the first draft of the film script. Working
Title have optioned it. I think it could be an absolutely wonderful
film, with a cast of our finest actors and actresses. There are
very few films about getting old which are funny, and that realize
there's no such thing as old people- there's just us, with a few
more wrinkles.
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3. What research did you have to do? Have you ever been to Bangalore?
I didn't do much research, to tell the truth. I lived for two years
in Pakistan in the seventies, and have written novels and TV scripts
out there, so I'm quite familiar with the subcontinent. But I've
only been to India a few times, and just on holiday. And I've only
spent one day in Bangalore. As I say in the book: "those who
know Bangalore may find the place somewhat shifted around, but then
memory plays tricks on us all". Besides, Bangalore is in a
state of flux and reinvention- it's Silicon City.
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4. All the characters in the book are very colourful and realistic.
Were the characters based on anyone you know?
No. The characters just came out of my head.
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5. I've read some
fantastic reviews for These Foolish Things, but what in your
opinion, is the best thing that has ever been written/said about this
or any of your other books?
Gosh. I think I liked "moving, sincere, funny, terrifying
".
And there was a very perspicacious review in the TLS which said "underneath
the ironies, These Foolish Things is a book about remembering- too
late, or not too late- how to be alive". Reviews sometimes tell
me things I didn't realize when I was writing a book.
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6. What are you working on at the moment?
Trying to think of a new novel. No ideas yet; but then they ambush
you when you least expect them
I've also written the screenplay
for a film of "Pride and Prejudice" which has been shot,
with Keira Knightley, Brenda Blethyn and Donald Sutherland. It's
being released later this year.
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7. Do you think the Indian retirement home could ever be a real
solution to our aging population?
Yes! I think it makes huge sense- we're outsourcing everything
else, why not outsource the elderly? Setting up retirement homes
in the developing world is a logical idea
its time is coming,
I'm sure of it. Sometimes novelists see things before anyone else
does.
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8. Ageing, death, family relationships and cultural understanding
are just some of the issues raised in the novel - what is the main
theme you would like readers to take away from this?
I think that's enough, isn't it? And I'd like them to have some
laughs along the way. As Lily Tomlin said: "We're all in it
together. Alone."
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CLICK
HERE for an extract from the book.
Read more from Deborah Moggach on her website: www.deborahmoggach.com
Don't forget to enter our competition to win 6 copies of These
Foolish Things for your reading group
CLICK HERE
for the These
Foolish Thing Reading Guide
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