TDR
Interview: Laura Hird
by Zsolt Alapi
In
the Paris of the early 1920s there was Sylvia Beach, owner of Shakespeare
and Co. and tireless promoter of some of the greatest literary talents of
the time, most notably James Joyce. In our current cyberage of on-line
publishing, there is Scottish writer Laura Hird, whose websites (www.laurahird.com)
is one of the most eclectic compilations of on-line fiction, prose,
interviews, reviews, and cultural varia by some of the most interesting
international writers active today. Hird’s site is a wealth of
inspiration for aspiring writers, those who are established, and for those
who love the unusual and writing that pushes the envelope. Four issues
appear per year, and her "Showcase" features well-known voices
like Ali Smith (recent nominee for the Booker Prize), major underground
figures like Dan Fante and Mark SaFranko, and the best of the new voices
like Tony O’Neill, Heidi Smith, Canadian Matthew
Firth, and many others.
Hird is a tireless promoter of fine talent, and her keen eye for original
and quality writing makes her site a must read for anyone who wants to
keep abreast of literature that is edgy, ballsy, unconventional, and,
above all, real. The voices in Hird’s "Showcase" are all
original, contemporary, and passionate: a testament to her own editorial
vision
Hird’s site is a slick
production. Biographies of each author are featured with links to their
other works, their influences, anecdotes, advice, music, reviews,
interviews, and even recipes. Her "Lit. Mag Central" is a
compilation of some of the top on-line ‘zines as well as print journals,
complete with links, submission guidelines, editorial policies, a great
service for any writer aspiring or established. There is even a
"Forum" where readers can post their responses for the authors
to read and a list of the latest literary contests and news on the latest
publications. Finally, there is her "About Me," a fascinating
look at Hird’s own life as a writer and editor.
Laura Hird lives and
writes in Edinburgh, Scotland. Her work has appeared widely throughout the
UK and the continent, but has yet to be discovered in Canada, an omission
her publishers will hopefully rectify. Her novel, Born Free,
a gritty urban tale of a family’s struggles, published in 1999, was
short listed for both the Orange Prize for Fiction and for the prestigious
Whitbread First Novel Award. Nail and Other Stories was short
listed for the Saltire Society Scottish First Book of the Year Award, and
forthcoming in August, 2006 is another collection of stories, Hope and
Other Urban Tales from Canongate Books.
Hird’s collection Nail
and Other Stories is a virtuoso performance, a stunning collection
that offers slices of Scottish gritty realism, alternately disturbing,
humorous, and surreal, but always provocative. By her own admission, Hird
writes to describe a world "in all its ugly beauty, minus the
boundaries of taboo or political correctness." Indeed, Nail…
features
a vast array of characters from the woman of the title story whose
obsession is typified by a growth that symbolizes her own inner collapse,
vindictive men and women, the ghost of a lesbian lover, young children who
try to desperately hold onto their innocence in a violent and morally
vacuous world, and a soldier who has been driven insane by the horrors of
war. The stories in Nail… transcend gender stereotypes, as Hird
is equally skilled at portraying vivid male and female characters. Two
personal favorites in this standout collections are "Imaginary
Friends" and "Routes". "Imaginary Friends" is the
story of a young girl whose best friend is her piano teacher who just
happens to be a pervert and potential child molester. Hird skillfully
presents the horror of the events through the child’s innocent
perspective. The ending is wonderfully done, alternately gentle, creepy,
ironic, yet almost wistfully poignant. In "Routs", Hird
demonstrates a mastery of dialect and presents the point of view of a
child who is jaded by his world and living circumstances. It is a blend of
emotions from anger, disappointment, and failed expectations, yet ends
with the redemptive hope of love and romance, completely true to the
pre-adolescent sensibility.
As an editor and tireless
promoter of the new and the best in writing, Hird can be summed up in a
testament offered to Sylvia Beach about her own work: "she was one
courageous woman." For Canadian readers, Laura Hird’s talent as a
writer will be a revelation.
What follows is an
interview with Laura Hird about her role as both editor and writer. (March
2006)
ZA: How did you come
up with the idea for your website?
LH: Initially,
it was to create a place where I could publish work by some of my favorite
new writers, and also to publicize literary magazines and literary
websites (the life blood of new writing and increasingly one of the few
places where innovation is still allowed) in the hope that some sort of
cross fertilization would occur and that other editors might start
noticing some of the writers I was featuring and maybe ask them for
stories to publish. I’m glad to report that this is now happening on a
regular basis. I decided to set up the Showcase section of the site,
initially, so other people could read the works of these writers, and
eventually started getting submissions from all over the place. I also
started contacting writers whose work I enjoyed in literary magazines and
other sites, asking if they would like to contribute. Then, I started
reviewing the odd book or film on the site, and subsequently started
getting e.mails from people who wanted to review, which has led to the
loyal band of reviewers and the growing New Review section the site has
today.
ZA: How do you feel
about the website now? Is it what you had hoped for?
LH:
It’s much more than I had hoped for. I was particularly delighted last
October when I reached 1 million hits. As well, many of the writers first
featured on Showcase have gone on to have books published and their
stories and poems featured in a wide variety of magazines. I’ve
published writing from all over the world including the U.S., Canada,
South Africa, Pakistan, India, China, Denmark, Mexico, Finland, and even
Malta. It has been particularly gratifying since I have formed many
friendships with other writers through the site.
ZA: Seeing that there
is such a wide variety of stories and poems on your website, what are your
criteria for accepting works to feature?
LH:
I just look for work that is well-written, has that certain spark, and
that I personally enjoy. I don’t like to appear too prescriptive about
the fiction/poetry/reviews I accept as I like to encourage a variety of
genres and styles. I like writing that drags me in, involves me, moves me,
expresses some simple truth, and ideally makes me either laugh or cry or
both.
ZA: How did you get
well-known writers such as Dan Fante, Mark SaFranko, and Ali Smith to
submit their work to your site?
LH:
Dan I’ve known for a few years since we did some readings together when
he was over in Scotland promoting his novels Mooch and Chump
Change which Canongate, my publisher, put out. We kept in touch
and I asked if he’d be interested in submitting a story and was
delighted when he agreed to let me feature "Princess," which
ended up in his latest collection, Corksucker. Mark I was in
touch with about getting a review of his latest novel, Hating Olivia,
on the site and chanced my arm and asked if he would submit a story,
which he most generously did. I published a story by Ali Smith when I was
guest editing the Pulp.net website and again took a chance and asked if
she’d be willing to let me feature one of her stories on my own site.
She very kindly agreed to let me include her wonderful story, "The
Child". I love all the writing on Showcase, regardless of where a
writer is in his or her career, but it’s a great boost to some of the
newer writers to be published alongside their award-winning, established
counterparts.
ZA: Do you have any
advice for aspiring young writers who wish to be posted on your website?
LH: Please
send your work along. I’ll be waiting.
ZA: Laura, let’s
talk about your own writing. Who are your major influences?
L.H. I
was first introduced in secondary school to the works of Raymond Carver,
who is probably still my favorite writer today. Reading his fiction, I
developed an insatiable appetite for short stories. Amongst my favorite
short fiction writers, I’d include Richard Ford, Flannery O’Conner,
William Trevor, Scottish writers Duncan McLean, AL Kennedy, Ali Smith, and
also James M. Cain’s novellas. I’m also an enormous fan of Patricia
Highsmith for her wonderfully intense, psychological style of writing and
deceptively profound, unsettling and deadly short stories. She also wrote
a wonderful reference book called ‘Plotting and Writing Suspense
Fiction’ which I found invaluable when I first started writing and still
re-read passages from when the writers block kicks in. I’ve always
enjoyed the earthy, working class tales of Zola, Thomas Hardy, and DH
Lawrence, and the plays of Tennessee Williams, Genet, Pinter, Singe, Orton,
David Hare, Peter Shaffer etc. My favorite novel of all-time is Alasdair
Gray’s 1982 Janine which was really the book that opened my eyes
to contemporary Scottish fiction. I remember reading it more than a dozen
times on the trot when I first discovered it as I was convinced I would
never read anything as perfect again. It’s still hard to beat. Other
novelists I enjoy include Nabokov, early Ian Banks, Charles Bukowski, Dan
Fante, Hanif Kureishi, John Fowles, Ian McEwan, David Lodge, A.M. Homes,
early Irvine Welsh… Plus, the hundreds of not-yet-established writers
that fill modern anthologies, literary magazines and websites (many of
whom I’ve been lucky enough to feature on my own site). I find
unpublished writing particularly fresh and inspiring.
ZA: Is there a
community of writers in Scotland with whom you can share your work?
L.H. It’s
always good to meet up with fellow Scottish writers at workshops and
readings, but really this is true of other writers throughout the UK and
abroad. I’m still friendly with a couple of writers from the Children
of Albion Rovers anthology and have gotten to know some of the younger
Scottish writers through featuring their work on the website. I think
Glasgow has a stronger sense of kinship between writers due to the
Creative Writing course run by the university there. I’ve developed a
particularly good relationship with writers from US and Canada over the
years as they seem to truly appreciate and celebrate short stories in a
way that is sadly lacking in the UK.
ZA: You have said that
your most enjoyable creations are "real monsters". As well, you
mention Patricia Highsmith’s Ripley as one of your favorite literary
creations. Clearly, Ripley is an amoral figure who lies, cheats, and
kills, even assuming another’s identity. Why this fascination with the
darker side of the human experience?
L.H. The
character of Ripley I love because Highsmith really pulls you into his way
of thinking to the point you are almost culpable in his behavior. I hate
the tendency in society (most often manipulated by the media) to think of
things in black and white. Instead of trying to understand why people
commit immoral acts, we are encouraged to judge them and see them as
‘evil.’ I can’t see how society can ever develop and improve if we
continue to pigeon-hole people like this. We are all subject to
temptation, think ill of other people, have our own prejudices, hurt the
feelings of others either consciously or unconsciously or much worse at
some point in our lives. Nobody knows what is round the corner, how it
might make us feel, how we may potentially respond to it. By its own
unpredictability and uncertainty, we are never certain where life will
lead us, good or bad, till that life is over. Even the strongest of
characters have a point at which, for any number or a culmination of
reasons, they can be broken. Writing gives me an opportunity to put myself
into the heads of all manner of characters to try and imagine points in
their particular journeys. The more complex or difficult the route, the
more challenging and fascinating the journey for me as a writer.
ZA: In your story
"There was a Soldier" (in _Nail…_), the main character is a
soldier who murders women, has sex with them, and then defiles their
corpses. Clearly, the character is mad, yet you offer only a hint of the
reason for his obsessive and perverse action. How do you think you are
able to maintain that fine line between graphic violence and social
commentary?
L.H. Part
of the impetus behind that story was my feeling about the desensitizing
effect watching modern warfare on television seems to have on the general
populace. During the time I was writing the story, the tragic conflict in
the former Yugoslavia was unfolding. Each day on the news, we were offered
increasingly horrific images. It was as if the concept of people
massacring their own friends and neighbors wasn’t hellish enough. Like
we needed to be shown the charred bodies of entire families wiped out due
to ethnic cleansing for it to really sink in and, even then, our lack of
compassion and compulsion to keep our heads buried in the sand stopped us
having an emotional response? When ‘There Was a Soldier’ was first
published, I found it ironic that people were so concerned about the
explicit violence in what was simply a piece of fiction when they seemed
indifferent to the real extremes of violence that are taking place
throughout the world at any given time.
ZA: Two
of your finest creations in Nail… are the 12 year old boy in
"Routes" and the young girl in "Imaginary Friends".
These stories both hinge upon the innocence of the characters and their
attempt to deal with a cruel, vile world that seeks to claim their
innocence. Their initiation into the dark reality of this world reminds me
of the protagonist’s epiphany at the end of Joyce’s "Araby"
where he sees himself as a "creature". Do you share Joyce’s
view that reality can only be understood once we have awakened to the
darkness in the human heart?
L.H. I
think the boy in ‘Routes’ had already built up a set of prejudices
with which to protect himself, due to neglect, being verbally abused and
through hearing certain groups of people spoken about in a negative way by
the adults in his life. However, many of his mother and her boyfriend’s
own prejudices he had subverted, ie. his desire to join a triad gang or
seek the respect of the black community. As is the case with most
children, the forbidden is almost unbearably enticing. Often children
would not even think about doing certain things if they hadn’t been told
there was something inherently bad or dangerous about them. With the
little girl in ‘Imaginary Friends’ her parents’ own awkwardness at
physical affection towards her as her body develops makes the advances and
affection of her piano teacher all the more welcome. I also meant for the
story to suggest that the real horror of the abuse for her personally will
begin when it is discovered what has been going on and she ends up feeling
almost demonized for having been involved. Finally, I tried to reflect in
this story how human beings first become instinctively fascinated with the
darkness as children. It is a fine line between letting them explore and
discover it for themselves, or serving to protect them from it, in which
case they often strive to discover it in possibly more extreme ways as
they get older.
ZA: The characters in
your stories are often morally bankrupt. Would you say that your writing
is a pessimistic reflection of a world that is both chaotic and with
little value?
L.H. I
think it reflects a world where the majority of people feel they are
decreasingly in control. The accumulation of money seems to be the main
objective these days. If something is not geared towards making a lot of
money, it is seen as worthless. Making people feel useless if they
aren’t thriving financially creates an ever more fractured society. In
this environment, it’s hard to explain any sort of moral code to
children as they grow up and subsequently our schools are also
battlegrounds where pupils are in many cases in control now. Everything
comes with mixed messages. Everyone is looking for a scapegoat. We are
left with a sense that the only thing we can rely on is ourselves, the
pressure of which leads many of us to blank that enormous sense of duty
out by one destructive means or another. In Scotland our inherent
Calvinist guilt leads us to deal with that by drinking ourselves to death
en-masse. I’m probably extremely naïve, but I’ve always wondered why
we always have to compete with each other, rather than pool our resources
and do something truly constructive.
ZA:
Your forthcoming collection is called _Hope and Other Urban Tales_. Is
this collection more character driven (like _Nail…_), or more of a
reflection on social issues and conditions?
L.H. Most
of my stories stem from the characters, and as I draw up stories for them,
their personal circumstances become apparent. I guess the thing that is
common to most of my characters is that they are in some way trying to
escape their own realities. Nobody seems to be happy with what they have
any more, however much that may be. You rarely, if ever hear someone say,
‘No thanks, I’ve got enough. Give it to someone else.’ When I was
reading back the typeset proofs of the new collection, I realized it was
probably the most pessimistic book I have written yet. It was not my
intention, and I was somewhat depressed by this realization.
ZA: Any new projects
on the horizon?
L.H. I’m
currently working on a book of my mother’s letters for my publisher,
Canongate. The book features letters my mum wrote to me during the time I
was a student in London in the late 1980’s and early 90’s. At the time
my friends and I would take turns and read them out loud to help combat
our home-sickness and invariable end up in tears or uncontrollable
laughter. After mum died in 1999, I took great comfort from the letters
and again used to read bits from them to friends. Everyone I’ve shared
them with has always said that it was a great shame mum hadn’t turned
her considerable writing talents to fiction. The book includes many of the
letters, interspersed with my own feelings about our lives at that time,
my parents’ early lives and my own childhood, my relationship with my
mother and father, regrets, memories. It’s an emotional book to work on,
but I could not resist the opportunity to finally get a book of my mum’s
writing out there. It’s due to be published in May 2007. After that,
Canongate have commissioned a sequel to my novel, Born Free, which
I look forward to working on. There’s also a couple of possible projects
regarding the website, one being a bilingual English/Italian issue of
Storie magazine which would feature stories and writers featured on the
showcase, and the other a possible anthology of the showcase writers’
work. I’m also working on the screenplay of a film a Dutch filmmaker is
making of my story ‘Of Cats and Women’ from Nail… plus
a few short story projects.
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