Home     Reading Guides     Top Tips     Host With the Most     Vintage Living Texts     Special Feature     Hot Spot     Competition     Feedback     Random House
 
 

These are Irvine Welsh's responses to your questions:
 
Back to the Main Page

  Other Interviews  
Q & A

1. Bedroom Secrets of the Masterchefs has been compared to Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray.   Did you have this or any other books in mind when you wrote it?

Yes, I’m a big fan of this book and wrote an introduction to a recent edition of it. I’m obsessed with duality, so along with this Stevenson’s Dr Jekyl and  Mr Hyde [link to reading guide] and Hogg’s Justified Sinner were the biggest influences.

 

2. Bedroom Secrets has quite a fantastical plot, though at the same time it contains a lot of realism.   How did you achieve this?

Eh…rewriting? I’ve never accepted the dichotomy between the fantastical and realist. If it happens in imaginative space it’s ‘real’ in the context of the novel.

 

3. Like Danny Skinner, you once worked for Edinburgh council.   How did you get into writing?

Basically, I was bored with doing what I was doing. I was always good at telling stories, I just started writing them down for my own amusement, and it mushroomed from there.

 

4. To what extent do you base your novels on your own experience?

Depends on the novel. Trainspotting was probably the most directly based on my experience, perhaps some elements of Marabou and Glue to an extent. The rest I’m not so directly close to. I think if you’re going to have any legs as a writer, you need to be able to get beyond your own direct experience.

 
5. You’ve written 3 books of short stories.   Which medium is your favourite – the short story or the novel?

I can’t really make the distinction. They’re all just stories to me.

 

6. Who do you think is the most influential writer at the moment?

JK Rowling. Every bright kid and dumb adult has read her books. That’s influence on at least two generations. In literary fiction you would probably have to say Ian McEwan in the UK, as his books are constantly lauded by the critical bourgeoisie for their consumerist counterparts. In the USA it would be Chuck Palahnuick, on the left-field, or perhaps somebody more mainstream like Don DeLillo, John Updike or Jonathan Franzen.

 

7. What advice would you give someone hoping to pursue a career in writing?

Finish the story. It’s amazing how many ‘writers’ never get past the first paragraph, page or chapter of a novel. They usually end up reviewing books and telling the rest of us how it should be done. You have to grit your teeth and get your head down and finish it before you become obsessed with rewriting every word.

 
 

CLICK HERE for our reading guides.

 

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

Deborah Lawrenson for The Art of Falling

A. L. Kennedy for Paradise

Arthur Golden for Memoirs of a Geisha

Margaret Forster for Is There Anything You Want?

Diana Evans for 26a

Chuck Palahniuk for Haunted

Douglas Kennedy for State of the Union

Julian Barnes for Arthur & George

Kit Whitfield for Bareback

John Burnside for A Lie About My Father

Tim Willocks for The Religion

Return to top
 
Random House Resources
  NEWS BY EMAIL  
  FIND A BOOK  
  EXTRACTS  
  AUDIO  
  AUTHOR EVENTS  
Top tips
  Help is at hand...  

If you would like to become a member of a reading group, start a reading group of your own or are looking for tips to liven up an existing group, TOP TIPS has the right advice for you.
CLICK HERE.

New Guides
  For the very latest guides on a wide selection of titles from modern fiction to classics and new writers, CLICK HERE.  
New Guides
  For even more Reading Guides, check out the sister site to Random House at BooksatTransworld.  
Competition
 

Sign up to our newsletter now and enter the chance to win free copies of our book of the month for a year. There will be five lucky reading groups!

Click Here to win a set…

When Will There Be Good News?

 
National Year of Reading