Ali Shaw is the author of the new novel The Trees. He also has written the novels The Girl with Glass Feet and The Man Who Rained. He lives in Oxford, England.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for The
Trees, and for the world you describe in the novel?
A: The idea struck in an unguarded instant, much
like the trees do in the story. I can’t quite remember what I was doing at the
time – walking to the corner shop, probably, or walking back – but I can
remember that the idea arrived with a feeling of upward force.
At that stage it was just an image: a forest
thundering up from the ground fully formed.
From there I had to sit down and imagine what sort of forest it would
be, and what sort of people I wanted to follow through it.
Q: How would you describe your main character,
Adrien, and his view of the world, both before and after the trees take over?
A: He’s a struggler. He struggles with
everything. He doesn’t like modernity or urban life but he doesn’t much like
nature either. His anxieties have twisted him up into someone who’s become
quite unbearable, although I hope he’s funny at times too.
After the forest arrives he’s even more lost
than he was beforehand. It takes faith in him from others – other people and
other things – to make him change.
Q: The book cover pictures a fox. What
role do you see the fox playing in the novel?
A: Foxes are limbo animals, and people have
always had such wonderfully complicated relationships with them. On the one
hand they’re pests, on the other they’re incredibly beautiful.
If you see a fox crossing a city street at night
you’re reminded of the natural world beyond the reach of your concrete. If you
wake up in the morning and find it’s torn your bins open for the umpteenth
time, you feel less romantic.
In Britain foxes are a socially divisive animal
because of the bloodsport of foxhunting (which is a dozen or more people on
horseback chasing one fox through the woods with a pack of braying dogs), but
the red fox has made its home all over the world and exists in so many
countries that it’s become almost a universal element of human culture.
In The Trees, I thought of foxes as a kind of
intermediary between people and nature. The fox on the cover is made out of
leaves, which I think represents that perfectly.
Q: Which authors do you feel have influenced
your own work?
A: Fairy stories have had a massive influence on
me, be they the spooky forest stories of the Brothers Grimm or the wonderfully
melancholy tales of Hans Christian Andersen. That’s surely why the forest in
The Trees ended up being more like something from a fairy story than, say, a
national park.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m writing an adventure story. It’s a bit
too early to go into the details, but I’m trying to push my imagination as far
as it will travel and see what it invents along the way.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: This is about foxes again. But first you need
to know that halfway through writing the novel, my wife and I had a little
girl, who I became the main carer for when my wife went back to work.
That meant that a lot of my writing got done
very late at night when my daughter was asleep, at which hour I would often
hearing a vixen shrieking outside.
We live in a flat overlooking a stream, and sometimes
the vixen would come and catch ducks around midnight (provoking a good deal
more shrieking). If she wasn’t doing that she was barking every twenty seconds
for an hour or so, and thus became the soundtrack to much of my work on the
novel.
Maybe that best explains why there’s a fox in
this story...
On the night before the book was published here
in the UK, I went out for a drink with a friend. Coming back from the pub around midnight, I
saw the vixen standing in the road outside my front door.
I wish I could say she was staring at me
enigmatically, but I think her attention was firmly on the ducks. Nevertheless,
it was the first and only time I’ve ever actually seen her – and I was very
glad to do so.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
No comments:
Post a Comment