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Q &
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1. At first, The Art of Falling was self-published. Why
did you decide to do this, and what tips would you offer to someone
thinking of doing the same?
I couldn't find a publisher. For nearly three years I edited and
rewrote and sent it to different literary agents and, occasionally,
direct to publishers. Some loved it, but still nothing happened.
No-one actually said it couldn't be published because it was a bad
book. It was so frustrating because I had been published before
and knew that this was far better than the others.
My best advice to anyone considering doing the same is to engage
a professional editor and proof-reader, to invest in the best quality
production and cover you can afford, and - probably most important
- to steel yourself to be fearless about getting your book into
shops and getting media coverage for it. You also need to be absolutely
certain that the company you choose to print your books also has
the capacity to distribute them into shops and fulfil orders efficiently
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Jess Arnold, Birmingham
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2. The Art of Falling contains
many detailed descriptions of Italy. Why did you choose Italy as
the setting of your novel?
The idea for the novel came to me when I read a single paragraph
in a newspaper about the project to stabilize the Leaning Tower
of Pisa. With that as my starting point, it was inevitable that
Italy would be the setting! The more I mulled over the idea, I realized
I had spent a great deal of time in Italy over the years, both in
summer and winter; that it was somewhere I had always been drawn
to, almost without realizing it - and that was the germ of Tom Wainwright's
repressed yearning for his lost Italian life.
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Toby Wilmott, Cornwall
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3. Your novel is set in a small Italian village during the war,
how much research did you do for the book and how difficult was
it to find the information that you needed?
Research for the novel - mainly from old out-of-print books from
a second-hand shop - took about six months before I started writing,
and then continued right through two years of writing (my daughter
was very young at the time, and I was only able to work two days
a week). I loved the research. A strange kind of synchronicity seemed
to occur whenever I needed inspiration, or the answer to a question:
there would be another article in a newspaper about Pisa, or one
about wartime atrocities in the region (at the time the Italian
authorities, just as in the book, were opening long dormant files).
Then I was also lucky enough to have an introduction to a veteran
who had fought with the 8th Army in Italy, who generously provided
much detail and background information. I took my notebooks on family
holidays to Tuscany and Umbria, where we moved around to stay in
different places (the central farmhouse Le Macchie is a composite
of these) and spent time in Pisa and Volterra. That part of the
research was pure pleasure!
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Diana Rivers, Cambridge
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4. The Art of Falling contains many references to astronomy.
Is this a particular passion of yours and why do you focus on it
so much in your novel?
Not really a particular passion, more a normal curiosity about the
stars and the universe. In the novel, it is linked to the Leaning
Tower, because the astronomer and scientist Galileo was famously
supposed to have conducted an experiment there to discover whether
a lighter or heavier object would fall to the ground faster. There
is much debate over whether he actually did drop these objects from
the tower, or whether he simply did a Thought Experiment - where
logic dictates that two apparent facts cannot both be true at the
same time. This is the pattern of reasoning that Isabel tries to
grapple with when she is feeling that she will never find out what
happened to her father. She comes to the conclusion that at least
one fact she has always accepted must be untrue, for Tom cannot
be both alive and dead.
Elsewhere in the book, the stars become a symbol of displacing true
emotion rather than the usual romantic metaphor, such as when Giuliana's
father gets out his vast old science book to keep the conversation
going while he is making sure Tom is not alone with his daughter,
or Isabel watches the meteor shower while worriedly watching out
for Tom the night he never returns home.
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Sophie Johnson, Dumfries
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5. The Tower of Pisa
is quite a prevalent motif in the novel, why is this?
I've probably given quite a lot of that answer already, to previous
questions. I can only add that the tower represents the uncertainty,
and the inevitability of difficulty, when anything is built on shifting
ground or to a flawed blueprint. Metaphorically, that extends to families
and relationships. Also how there can be a kind of security in imperfection
in that it gains its own stability - better the devil you know, in
other words. |
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Mollie Turnbull, Isle
of Wight |
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6. The style and content of The Art of Falling is rather
different from your other novels Hot Gossip, Idol Chatter
and The Moonbathers. Why did you decide to take your writing
in such a different direction?
All the time I worked as a journalist, my ambition was to write
novels. When I finally started one, I took all the usual advice
given to novice writers: write about what you know, and think about
a good marketing angle. So setting my books on newspapers and magazines,
and making them funny, was the obvious way to go. The marketing
angle (that I had actually worked on a gossip column) worked a treat.
The problem was that while these books were fun and easy to write,
I really wanted to do something more serious. So after The Moonbathers,
I took the decision to try to write the novel I had always wanted
to produce: more literary, with proper research and serious themes.
It was starting all over again; I didn't want a publishing contract,
I just wanted to take as long as I needed to see whether I could
do it. Little did I know then how long that would be
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Faye Pengelly, Kent |
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7. Are any of the characters or events in the book based on
your own experience?
With this book I was clear in my mind that I wanted to write about
an entirely imaginary set of people, in a setting that had nothing
to do with my life. Of course, it can never be quite as cut and
dried as that. Of course, writers draw on their personal understanding
and interpretation of the world. Having said that, there is nothing
in the events of the story that are based on my own experience.
Perhaps a tiny touch of vertigo, but that's about it!
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Joseph Malone, Essex |
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8. If a film were to be made of The Art of Falling, who
would you like to cast as the main characters?
Giuliana would be played by a beautiful gamine like Natalie Portman.
I happened to see father and son actors Peter and Rupert Penry-Jones
on television, and thought they would be perfect for the younger
and older Tom, with the slightly diffident Englishness required.
Matteo would be the hardest for me to cast. Perhaps he would be
most effectively played by an unknown (but spellbinding) Italian
actor. I could see someone like Samantha Bond or Julianne Moore
playing Isabel, determined yet vulnerable.
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Isla Morgan, London |
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9. Who are your favourite authors and why?
Carol Shields, Sebastian Faulks and Julian Barnes all have a quality
I admire greatly: their prose flows apparently effortlessly but
glitters with wonderful observations. The words and stories carry
their insight lightly but they are all the more powerful for that.
I love Armistead Maupin, especially the Tales of the City books
for the glorious characters and wit packed into his tight sharp
sentences. Margaret Forster and Selina Hastings write brilliant
biographies that really get under the skin of their subjects. And
Sue Limb and Jilly Cooper's early romances - especially Imogen and
Octavia - are my comfort reads. Sometimes they work better than
migraine pills.
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Amanda Lee, Scarborough
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10. Can you tell us anything about what you are working on at
the moment?
A companion book - not a sequel - which still explores absence,
and the effects of a wartime experience, this time in Holland. It
has themes of film and photography, art and memory. I also have
an insistent idea for another novel, set in Greece that will have
the same rather dreamy southern European atmosphere as The Art
of Falling.
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Laura Jones, London |
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CLICK
HERE for an extract from the book.
To find out more about Deborah Lawrenson and her books, VISIT
her website.
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Other
Interviews
Chloe Hooper for A Child's
Book of True Crime
Bo Caldwell for The Distant
Land of My Father
Carol Goodman for The Lake
of Dead Languages
Mary Lawson for Crow Lake
Mark Haddon for The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Karin Slaughter for Kisscut
and Blindsighted
Sebastian Faulks for Birdsong
Elizabeth Bergs for True
to Form
Anne Tylers for The Amateur
Marriage
Rose Tremain for The Colour
Alice Hoffman for Blackbird
House
Jane Juska for A Round-Heeled
Woman
Ian McEwan for Enduring
Love
Audrey Niffenegger for The
Time Traveler's Wife
Deborah Moggach for These
Foolish Things
Lindsey Davis for Scandal
Takes a Holiday
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