![]() | |||
|
Smoking With Brian Howell Immensely. For as long as I can remember I have been fascinated by the artistic process. I tend to write about how artists create their work, perhaps because I can't do that myself. I can't explain why that is what attracts me, rather than writing about everyday characters and how they get through the world. That doesn't generally excite me, unless creativity is somehow at the heart of the story. But it's no less valid. Having traveled and lived in so many different places, do you find that setting plays an important role in your work? Again, tremendously. Even if you have only visited a place for a short period, the impressions stay with you and permeate your thinking and the way you see a place when you write. I wouldn't want to write about a place I haven't visited - unless there is a good reason in the story for that to be the case or it is a conflation of places or simply a totally imaginary place, of course. Tell us more about your experience as a published novelist. Are there any changes you would like to see in book industry? The publisher of my novel, Toby Press, exceeded my expectations in that originally they intended only to sell through their website. There was no intention beyond that in the foreseeable future, so you can imagine that my horizons were very narrow from the start. But they expanded to make their books much more widely available, through bookshops and online etc. And they produce lovely, beautifully bound books. But they are not as well known as mainstream or other literary publishers, so every extra bit of exposure I get is a huge step forward. What did you do before writing took over your life? I was a cinema manger, which is not as glamorous as it sound to some. I was trying to make my way into the film business in Britain, made a couple of rock promos for fun, plus a short film, and wrote a few feature-length screenplays on spec. But I got nowhere. I did odd jobs until I starting teaching English to foreigners, which was almost the same time as I started writing prose and living abroad. Who or what have you read recently that left you shaking your head? Only in a positive way: Joseph McElroy's amazing novel, Lookout Cartridge, and Tanizaki's short novel, The Secret History of the Lord of Musashi. They couldn't be more different from each other, but you are equally absorbed in their strange worlds. I wouldn't like to summarise the McElroy. The Tanizaki is about one of the oddest obsessions I've ever read about. Read Indulgence. |
|||
| Issue Four (June 15, 2004): Bones by Vanessa Gebbie «» Possessed by Louise Jackson «» Clouds, the Gills of Fish by Myfanwy Collins «» Her Face in the Light by Sue Bond «» Left Standing by Susan Henderson «» Moonlighting by Jen Wright «» The Evening of the Dock by Steve Almond «» Microsecond by Stacy Taylor «» All the Good People by Kathy Fish «» The Problem with Logic by Theresa Boyar «» Layover by H. A. Fleming «» The Girl and the Snake by TJ Rivard «» Indulgence by Brian Howell «» Other Times at Sunrise by Melanie Ann Campbell «» The Beauty Of Estelle by Darby Larson «» Carnivale by Pia Z. Ehrhardt «» Remembering Elizabeth by Bob Arter «» Tiny Bombers by Jeff Landon «» Green Socks, White Lies by Liesl Jobson «» Certitude by Rusty Barnes «» Interviews: Vanessa Gebbie «» Myfanwy Collins «» Sue Bond «» Susan Henderson «» Jen Wright «» Steve Almond «» Stacy Taylor «» Kathy Fish «» Theresa Boyar «» H. A. Fleming «» TJ Rivard «» Brian Howell «» Melanie Ann Campbell «» Darby Larson «» Pia Z. Ehrhardt «» Bob Arter «» Jeff Landon «» Liesl Jobson «» Rusty Barnes «» Cover Art "Jealousy" by Marty D. Ison «» Letter From the Editor | |||