Tom La Farge, photo by Wendy Walker |
Tom La Farge is the author of the new novel Humans By Lamplight, the third in his Enchantments series, which also includes The Broken House and Maznoona. He is based in Brooklyn.
Q:
How did you come up with the world you write about in your Enchantments series,
and what inspired the idea for Humans By Lamplight, the third in the series?
A:
The world of The Enchantments took shape the year I lived in it. 1997-8, to
replace old problems with newer, more interesting ones, Wendy Walker and I escaped
to Morocco.
After
we rented an apartment in the city of Essaouira, Mohammed, a spice-merchant friend,
walked through it singing, carrying a bowl of smoking incense to drive out the
Evil Eye. He also sold us the herbs and spices we’d need to protect us and gave
us a pair of young chameleons as protection against jnun.
Jnun
is the plural of djinn (“genie”). We heard a lot of stories about enchantment by
jnun. Everyone had one to tell, even the cosmopolitan and college-educated. One
acquaintance did ethnographic research in an asylum. All the doctors were
French-trained Freudian psychiatrists, but the inmates’ relatives were sure their
loved one was possessed by jnun.
We
heard of a country girl who refused to eat meat. To her parents this seemed so
perverse that they called in a man who had memorized the holy book. He used
sacred writ to expel the djinn. After some coercion and negotiation, the djinn
cleared out, and the girl returned to a “normal” diet.
So
I learned how that world was enchanted and how magic fits into ordinary life. I
have always preferred tales where magic grows from lived experience to stories that
imagine it as a superpower or a technique acquired by study.
I
learned also that humans share this world with a rival race, the jnun, less
devils than troublemakers. I change their name from jnun to znoon. They take
possession of humans and drive them into obsession, sterility, depression,
obedience. They are willful, self-absorbed, and they adore performance. They
are able to shift shape, are long-lived, but not immortal.
Q:
Did you know before you started the first book that you'd be writing a series?
A:
No, I began the first book, The Broken House, because while I was in Morocco, I
finished another book. I’d been thinking about imagination, and I wanted to
keep that train of thought going.
And
there I was, living in a place where so many realities seemed drawn from
strange imaginings. I had to mold my mind into new shapes to mimic the minds
around me.
To
answer the question, “How do I get a young chameleon to drink?” (A: hang a leaf
overhead and pour water so that it drips down. Then the chameleon flicks out
her tongue and laps at the drip), I had to watch and mimic the chameleon, since
you can’t train her to drink from a bowl.
The
history grew. Worlds built this way contain unfilled spaces for further histories,
which can then be composed without having to reinvent the world. So I came to
write Maznoona and Humans by Lamplight. Put it down to thrift, or, if you
prefer, laziness.
Q:
Do you usually know how the books will end, or do you make many changes along
the way?
A:
A chameleon stuns bugs by shooting out a long tongue with a bone in its tip.
The tip is sticky, so that she can then reel in the insect she’s just whacked.
It’s always a surprise to see.
My
books have the same way of startling me. The story opens as I write it, and
something shoots out that I hadn’t expected. Stories set in strange worlds can
open further than you’d guess they were going to.
Q:
How was the novel's title chosen, and what does it signify for you?
A:
The title Humans by Lamplight suggests how humans free themselves from znoon.
The znoon drive us to perform, to live within the image they force us to
desire. Lamplight encourages reading: a keen, empathetic attention to something
besides our own image in a mirror.
Q:
What are you working on now?
I’m
working on a version of a 10th-century Arabic classic, the Maqamat by
al-Hariri. Hariri’s book a set of stories where the same two characters meet
again and again all across the vast medieval Muslim world.
One
is a young man, an incurably restless, curious traveler, and the other is
either a saint or a scam-artist, possibly both. In my version the equivocal
saint will be a young woman, Beela, who is born at the end of Humans by
Lamplight.
Q:
Anything else we should know?
A:
You can observe more of my behavior on my website.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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