TDR
Interview: Jim Bartley
Jim
Bartley is a playwright and First Fiction book reviewer for The Globe
and Mail. Among four produced plays, his most recent, Stephen and
Mister Wilde, has been staged across Canada and on CBC Radio. He
contributes a monthly book column to Toronto's Xtra Magazine. A longtime
Toronto resident, he has traveled extensively in Bosnia, Serbia and
Croatia. Drina Bridge (Raincoast, 2006) is his first
novel.
Interview by Nathaniel G. Moore, Winter
2007
Photo credit: Natasha Vasiljevic
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TDR: Tell us a bit about your
background, where you grew up, when you started writing, etc.
JB: I'm a kid from the western fringe
of what used to be called Metro Toronto. An uneventful suburban
childhood, decent parents, one-car garage, shag carpet, rec-room,
beer-and-pot parties when the folks went away. I played bass in a
laughable high school blues band. When I graduated from University of
Toronto I moved into a place in the Annex, started acting for dollars at
a theatre called Toronto Truck. Had a lot of fun and lived on almost
nothing. Got into the gay-lib scene and did some writing for The Body
Politic, which morphed into XTRA Magazine -- I still write for them.
Started writing plays in the 80s
and had four produced, most recently Stephen & Mister Wilde staged
in various cities and on CBC Radio.
TDR: How was your experience working
with Raincoast Books?
I'm one of the Raincoast fiction
authors who squeaked through their big downsizing of 2006. Some of their
contracted authors were cut loose, so I have this mix of survivor's
guilt and tremendous relief. I certainly can't claim they've neglected
me, despite the fact that they have now completely killed their adult
fiction list in the publishing section (they still distribute fiction
and publish the Harry Potter books in Canada.) Raincoast makes
attractive books and uses top quality and eco-friendly materials, so I
was pleased from the outset about that, and Drina Bridge has a
gorgeous design.
They
turned my work into quite a beautiful object, and found a Belgrade
artist for the cover image, and put one of my own photos on the back
cover -- a pic of the actual Bridge on the Drina in Bosnia. I feel I've
done pretty well, in a business (publishing) that's so often
disappointing for a new writer -- if not downright demeaning. I've had
no sense of that from Raincoast. It's very clear they love the book.
They answer my emails -- editors, publicists, marketing, they've been
quite attentive.
TDR: How has being a playwright
influenced you as a fiction writer?
JB: Plays are talk, so I think the
dialogue in my fiction is likely more convincing (and the conversations
are often longer) because of that. Plays have a tighter, more intimate
focus on humans interacting, whereas novels open up the setting and
action possibilities without limit. Stagecraft, as wonderful as it is
with inspired artists, is limited by what's physically producible and
within budget, whereas prose fiction is produced entirely within the
writer's and reader's imaginations. There's no practical or logistical
restriction on where you can go or what you can do in a novel. Shifting
from stage writing to book-length fiction was a revelation for me.
TDR: What went into the creation of Drina
Bridge, can you tell us how you came to put this story down on
paper?
JB: So much coalesced, very gradually,
to become the story in Drina Bridge. Elements from my life
were very important in kick-starting the story, but the things that
happen in the book haven't happened to me, except for the fact that I'm
a gay/queer guy from Toronto whose life and friends are affected by
HIV-AIDS, and the more specific fact that I did go to Yugoslavia in 1991
when the country was beginning to descend into war. The rest of the
narrative grew out of my coming to know people in Toronto who'd fled
Serbia and Bosnia and Croatia when things were falling apart, and from
research into Yugoslavia history and the wars of the 1990s.
I read a lot, and I went back twice to
former Yugoslavia and put a few thousand kilometres on rental cars
driving to the various places and landscapes that appear in the book --
Sarajevo, Belgrade, rural Bosnia and Serbia, gorgeous medieval
monasteries in Serbia, ancient mosques. I met a lot of generous and
accommodating people -- Serb, Muslim, Croat and also Yugoslavs who don't
sport an ethnic identity -- who were often a bit bewildered that this
Canadian guy was writing a novel about their history and culture. The
research was pretty much a life-altering experience. I have a special
affection for the place (ghastly as some of the reality is), which I
don't have for, say, England or Italy or other places I've been to.
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