I went along to this session
keen to hear Kate Grenville, who changed my view of Australian history with her
book The secret river, but Kim Scott and Selina Hastings turned out to
be equally entertaining.
Paula Morris introduced the
panel as three writers who all delve into the past and hook into the lives of
real people, and the session focussed on how and why they do that. Kate
Grenville and Kim Scott both looked back on family history as an initial
impetus. Kate now “blessed her mother” for telling her family stories of their
convict ancestors enough times for them to sink in, despite her own “glazed
indifference” as a child. The stories made her think there was “deeply
unfinished business here”, although it wasn’t for many years that she realised
what it was. For Kim (author of That Deadman Dance), what he
inherited was not so much stories as a sense of pride in Aboriginal identity,
without the words available to articulate that pride – a challenge for any
writer.
Also discussed were the
relationship between biography and both fiction and non-fiction, the
responsibility a writer has to real people when using their stories, how far
“real” characters turn into “invented” characters, and how literary biographers
will fare in an age of electronic communications. Selina pointed out that
people tend to be more indiscreet in emails, but this is balanced out by the
difficulty of sorting and cataloguing emails. Some universities are buying
writers’ hard drives, but there is a huge amount of work involved in weeding out
the spam from what is useful and valuable . The British Library has asked some
well-known writers to print out and keep their emails, but this can easily lead
to self censorship. “I love paper myself,” she said wistfully.
One of the delights of Writers
and Readers Week lies in the scraps of unexpected information you pick up along
the way, such as Selina Hastings’ stories of the 16 years she spent “dozing” on
the staff of the DailyTelegraph (“one of the reasons Fleet Street
collapsed”), how Somerset Maugham’s will barring access to his correspondence
was rescinded and the reason Rosamond Lehmann chose her as a biographer – and
possible regretted her choice, and Kim Scott’s insights into interactions
between the Aboriginal Noongar people and early European explorers, and his
evocative description of the south coast of Western Australia.
Beautifully turned phrases are
another bonus. “Silences are a novelist’s best friend,” said Kate Grenville.
And Kate again, talking about geography: “place holds stories and holds the
truth below the level of analysis.”
I didn’t mean to buy anything
but came away with a signed copy of Kate Grenville’s Searching for the
secret river (the story behind the story). Couldn’t help it. Total fan.
Two of the writers appear again
tomorrow: Kim Scott with Juan Gabriel Vasquez at 2pm, and Kate Grenville with
Alan Hollinghurst at 5pm.
Check out Philippa Werry's new blog.
Author photos below, top to bottom - Kate Grenville, Selina Hastings and Kim Scott
1 comment:
It was great, wasn't it - and everyone had a fair go and say and the themes seemed to resonate and be reciprocal among the three writers although they come from quite different perspectives in their writing.
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