Posts Tagged ‘interview’

The Bookseller of Kabul – The Legal Saga – What Does it Mean?

Category: Books, Writing | Author: | Date: August 2nd, 2010

The biggest appeal of The Bookseller of Kabul for me was that it gave a portrayal of a family living in Kabul and it was a world not too many people (outside that world) know about.

But what is it? Is it non-fiction or fiction?

I have the book The Bookseller of Kabul. I have read it. But I must admit, I have not read all of it. I only managed to get half way.

I really struggled through it. It felt like reading a very very long magazine article. I don’t know why but I had the impression, before reading it, that it was a novel. Perhaps I was meant to guess from the fact that all the characters were real people. My fault. But you can experience something and still fictionalize it. It gives your fictionalization a stronger backbone. Anyway I digress. The Guardian called it non-fiction but the author tried to write it like a novel. It seems the author was also confused.

Having lived with the family for so long and questioned them so closely, she says she felt justified writing from inside the head of each character, attributing thoughts and feelings to them without the filter of her own voice – as if she were writing a novel.

I think that’s why I found it confusing – and gave up.

Even though the author said she was ‘writing from the inside the head of each character’, I just couldn’t get into the book nor did I get into any of the characters. When I felt I might be getting close to one of the characters, she would jump to another character. To really enjoy a book, I need to be emotionally hooked and unfortunately I wasn’t.

I think that’s why I found it frustrating.

Going inside a character’s head is normally something done in the realm of fiction. Isn’t it? If you’re talking from a journalistic point of view, you could only really describe what’s in your head (the journalist) and what you see and hear from those you interact with. As a journalist, you can only imply and assume what’s going on inside someone else’s head.

Am I wrong?

As you know Asne Seierstad has been in the news recently being sued by the main character Shah Muhammad Rais for her portrayal of his family – and she has subsequently lost her first legal battle against him.

Asne Seierstad’s case makes you wonder if she did exploit them. The Guardian points this out:

But was it right to accept Rais’s hospitality for almost half a year and then tear him apart in public? She may have been invited into the family home by Rais, but did the women in the house – one of whom was 16 and had barely left the backyard of her father’s home before marrying the aging Rais – truly understand what would happen to their secrets after they were scribbled down in a writer’s notepad?

The author seems to think that ‘there’s nothing unkind’ in showing the world how Afghanistan and the family unit work. I’m not for censorship. I agree people should know the truth.

It’s important for us to know Afghanistan. It is a country where we waged a war and to understand people you have to dig deeper and there’s nothing unkind in that.

What is surprising is, by digging deep to understand the society she wrote about – to provide the truth, she seems genuinely shocked that she’s being sued and accused of ‘treachery’ by the family that invited her into their house, offered her access to their inner most thoughts and took care of her while she stayed with them.

I’m not condoning the society and its culture but to the bookseller it is how it is. And they probably didn’t realize that their way of life would shock the rest of the world and they’d be condemned for it. They themselves. Not the society and culture that is controlling them. This is how they see it. Of course they’re taking it personal. Who wouldn’t? Wouldn’t you?

They say now that they didn’t say certain things or that they are humiliated by having them written about, but who is really saying that?” Seierstad says. “It is Rais who is leading this campaign against me for reasons of money or of honour, I have no idea, but because these women are dependent on him, they have no choice but to say what he says.

The bookseller is himself a victim of the society that he lives in. And even if they do not like their situation, to not condemn the book is to show that they disrespect their own culture. The family has to live in that culture and deal with the consequences of seeming to be disrespectful.

And it’s understandable that the bookseller feels betrayed. She was invited as a guest. And even though she ‘absented herself’ from the book, what she focused on and how she wrote it implies her opinions, be it hers or the world’s.

Seierstad absented herself from its pages: in the book, the omnipotent storyteller is never present.

As a journalist, I’m surprised she didn’t make sure she had the family’s written consent to publish what they said.

“If I write a book in future, I may decide to take the precaution of going back to every person I interview, reading their quotes back to them and asking them to sign a letter, saying it is accurate,” she says. “Journalism is moving into a different world where we are held to almost impossible standards. In everything I write, ever again, I need to make sure I am 100% accurate. A journalist can get away with this sort of controversy once, but I can’t survive it again.”

In film-making, even extras who appear just for a second have to sign consent forms. Why shouldn’t the main character of your book? I’m surprised she didn’t record them speaking and asked them for permission to include it in the book there and then. Images of journalists saying ‘this is on record’ and flicking on their tape recorders come to mind. Have I watched too many films? Don’t journalists do that in the real world?

But what does all this mean?

It provides a good lesson when writing anything to get your facts verified and before publishing, to get written consent.

The Bookseller of Kabul – I will finish it some day.

Have you read the book? What do you think of all this?

(Quotes taken from Guardian.co.uk)

“Life has, indeed, many ills, but the mind that views every object in its most cheering aspect, and every doubtful dispensation as replete with latent good, bears within itself a powerful and perpetual antidote.”

Lydia H. Sigourney – Poet

CURRENT STATUS: Reminder, Motivator and Review Meeting (Read on if you want to join me in my Corporation of One meeting)

What l have learnt:

  • Jack Higgins aka Harry Patterson earned £4million in a year and was still rejected. Read A Life in Writing: Jack Higgins (via Guardian.co.uk). Inspiring.
  • Seth Godin tells us that the way we are online is how we publicize ourselves. If you have a presence online, you are promoting yourself even if you don’t know it or care for it, you’re still doing it.
  • Chris Brogan’s post We Won’t Come is thought-provoking. Make it easy for people. But if you don’t, you’ll get those who are really interested. Something like that. He explains it better.
  • Top 10 Must Have WordPress Plugins by Kimberly Castleberry. Check it out and see if you’re missing some.

What I have done:

  • Downloaded some WordPress plugins recommended by Kimberly Castleberry.

WORD COUNT: Night Walker 137,000 words in total. Friday 30 July wrote 1,000 words.

Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About Numb the Character

Category: Books, People who Inspire, Writing | Author: | Date: July 28th, 2010

It’s great to have you back after the first part of the interview with novelist Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About Writing.

Today, we continue with Sean talking about Numb the main character of his book (the book is also called Numb). I had 3 questions for Sean about his main character and I must admit, and he can verify, that these questions popped into my head while writing my email to Sean. It’s cool that Sean doesn’t mind me being silly. Well, read on and you’ll understand what I mean:

1) If your character could take 3 items on a desert island, what would he take?

I don’t think he would want to take anything. Numb is a pretty unattached guy: at one point he becomes very aware of the uselessness of the materialistic items around him. So, the metaphysical answer to the question would be: nothing.

However, that’s not a fun answer, so: he would take a hammer, his suit, and a ceramic mask.

2) Is the character based on yourself or someone you know or was he conjured up totally from your imagination?

Yes.

I’m not trying to be difficult, but I think that he is all three, an amalgam of me and others and imagination, and I think that if I tried too hard to break him apart and “know” where he came from I wouldn’t have been able to write the novel. Sometimes its just best to listen to our characters instead of picking them apart.

3) If your main character could be an animal, what would he want to be and why?

A monkey, for two reasons. First: monkey is an awesome word and can’t be said enough. Try. Monkey monkey monkey. By the third monkey it’s like heaven.

Second, when I think of a monkey I think of an animal that seems observant and soulful. Numb is both, or at least he is to me.

Somebody ask Sean what he means by saying his character would bring a suit and a ceramic mask. Is it for fun? See, the hammer I understand. I’m dying to ask and should have asked but did not ask. So I’m asking now. Why the suit and ceramic mask? You may think I’m taking this questioning and answering a bit too seriously. You’re probably right. I’m just curious. Sean? Why? You’re going to say they were just random items that came to mind and now under such intense scrutiny you feel you’ve got to make up a reason?

Okay, I’ll quit provoking you.

While we wait for an answer…you could chant monkey monkey monkey to see if it’s like heaven… or you could watch this funny Numb book trailer – no, this book trailer is not the one I responded to – see previous post – this is another one (exact title and video taken from Janet Reid’s website):

Hell with 2010…the world might end Wednesday

Monkey, monkey, monkey…Monkey, monkey, monkey….Monkey, monkey, monkey…

And no, I did not make this up.

Sean, tell them I did not make up the answers.

People please.

Oh, don’t go yet.

Just a reminder, the third part of the interview: Sean Ferrell Talks About the Book Trailer Numb will be posted on Friday.

Yes, I am dragging it out. I’m just too long-winded and frankly I fear for your health, and Sean’s of course.

Don’t worry, I’ll remind you.

I have Twitter and Hootsuite. Oh yeah. I’ve been playing…and probably annoying. All in the name of work.

Monkey, monkey, monkey…I think I feel it’s like heaven.

Try it.

Then find Sean on Twitter @byseanferrell and let him know if you feel it’s like heaven.

Oh, and according to Janet Reid, the world is ending today. So get out there and do something.

Published by HarperPerennial, Numb is out in August 2010.

Numb ~ Review from Publisher’s Weekly
Sean Ferrell, Harper Perennial, $13.99 paper (288p) ISBN 978-0-06-194650-9
In Ferrell’s offbeat debut, an amnesiac joins a Texas circus where his inability to feel pain makes him a big-top hit and earns him the name Numb. After a haunting experience wrestling a lion, Numb and his best friend, Mal, give up the circus for life in New York, where they live in a crappy hotel and make a living as a lowrent one-man freak show. When Numb lands a talent agent and begins to move up through the layers of celebrity, he leaves Mal behind for a cast of characters including a blind artist girlfriend and bad news model Emilia. But in Numb’s world, nothing hurts much at all, so Mal comes back and predictably turns things upside down, despite the men’s bond being difficult to comprehend. There are captivating moments and passages, but details like Numb’s rise to recognized-on-the-street fame aren’t sufficiently explained and require a hefty suspension of disbelief. Though some of the storytelling nuts and bolts are missing, the book has a lot of heart. (Aug.)

(via Sean Ferrell’s website)

[All photos used belong to Sean Ferrell]


Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About Writing

Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About the Book Trailer Numb

Chuck Sambuchino – An Interview: Published Book, Writing and a Writer’s Life (Part 1)

“You cannot change anything in your life with intention alone, which can become a watered-down, occasional hope that you’ll get to tomorrow. Intention without action is useless.”

Caroline Myss – Author

CURRENT STATUS: Reminder, Motivator and Review Meeting (Read on if you want to join me in my Corporation of One meeting)

What l have learnt:

  • Ebooks. More angst. Read When Assholes Collide by Matt Stewart (via Huffington Post).
  • “Electronic rights are not e-book rights”. Read E-book Traps by Ron Knight (via UpAuthors.com). Something to think about.
  • Could ‘The Jackal’ be the Death of Publishing? (via The Independent). I don’t know.
  • There’s a 3 day novel writing contest in September. It sounds crazy to write a novel in 3 days and I’m tempted to try it.
  • Mythbusting by Rachelle Gardner. It’s good to know.

What I have done:

  • Learning about Squidoo.
  • I cleaned my room and the bathroom. Ah, the smell of fresh linen. A gleaming bathroom is a wonderful bathroom.

WORD COUNT: Night Walker 135,000 in total. Tuesday 27 July 2,000 words.

Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About Writing

Category: People who Inspire, Writing | Author: | Date: July 26th, 2010

It is with much delight that I get to introduce Sean Ferrell as my guest writer for today. I’m still in a state of shock that he said yes and that it only took a few days to get all this in motion. See what two chilled-out people can accomplish? Imagine we put some drive into it, we’d conquer the world. That’s another story for another time, me thinks.

How did we ‘meet’?

I checked out Sean’s book trailer for his book “Numb” which I found clever and funny and left a comment saying:

Funny book trailer. Is that really you, Sean Ferrell, talking? But that Kindle is ugly compared to the iPad. Sorry, I’m a lover of Apple.

Then he responded:

Yes, it really is me talking, and yes, it really is ugly. It looks like something from 1986.

And we got talking and voila, I asked him if I could interview him and the good giving man said yes – thanks Sean – I wasn’t being sarcastic, in the world of publishing everything works well when people can be both good and giving.

So, the interview is below for you to enjoy as well. Later on this week, pop by again won’t you because we have more of Sean Ferrell answering questions on his main character in Numb and how he created his book trailer. So, don’t forget to come back for that. And of course, as always, I’ll remind you.

This is novelist Sean Ferrell giving advice to aspiring writers like me and you:

1) What advice or tip would you give an aspiring novelist still to make it?

Write toward the things that scare you. That’s where the energy is. Low energy writing is hard to pump up, and it will read as inauthentic. If you write to the things that scare you–revelations about you, your past, your family, whatever–that energy that you’ve used for so long to keep that stuff hidden will infuse the writing with energy and authenticity. If you don’t share it with others, so be it, but you’ll feel better and you’ll know you can tackle anything in your writing. And I don’t mean write memoir. I mean, if there is a topic you’re worried you “shouldn’t” try to handle in your fiction, that’s exactly what you should write about.

Also, find your own process. Don’t invest too much faith in any “process that works” touted by teachers or books or famous writers. Find your own way to get the words out. Try everything, adapt, trust your gut.

2) What noticeable thing has changed since you got the book deal?

I discovered I could fly! Actually, no, I always knew I could fly. What did change was I stopped thinking that publication would cure my writer’s insecurities. I still have plenty of opportunities to question my ability, to see the fault-lines and failures.

Publication doesn’t solve anything. If anything it made me realize that I write because I have to. It’s easy to get distracted by goals: if I can only finish a novel, if I can only get an agent, if I can only sell a book THEN I’ll be happy. And that stuff happens and you still find your shoes smell like shit and the dishes are dirty and not much has changed. So nothing changes, nothing is solved, and you still sit down and start writing again. In a weird way, getting published removed the distraction of publication.

3) How do you feel about author marketing? Has it always been that way?

I think that the way marketing and publishing work now puts much more opportunity into the author’s hands than it used to. I say opportunity and not pressure because honestly who would I rather have out there representing me than me? I am by nature an incredibly shy person. I think all my Twitter followers just collectively wet themselves laughing, but it is true. So, as a shy person I find that blogging and twitter have given me a great way to meet readers and writers, and to enjoy talking about books and to sometimes be stupid. Okay, I am often stupid. I am now on the verge of doing some readings where there will be GASP people GASP in front of me and I feel much better about it than I would a few years ago because social networking has made me feel like those who want to hear me will enjoy it, those who don’t won’t, and I can’t control either response so I’ll just try and have fun.

More about Numb:

Numb, a man who feels no pain and has no memory of how he came to be this way, travels to New York City after a short stint in the circus to search for the answers to his past. But when word of his condition spreads–sparked by the attention he attracts from letting people nail his hands to bars for money–he quickly finds himself hounded on all sides by those who would use his unique ability in their own pursuits of fame and fortune. There’s the best friend who doesn’t quite know how to handle Numb’s newfound celebrity, the savvy talent agent who may or may not have Numb’s best interests in mind, the sadistic supermodel whose idea of a good time involves lion claws and can openers, and the blind girlfriend who might actually see something in Numb others don’t. As Numb navigates this strange world, and as he continues to search for clues from his past, he is forced to confront one of life’s toughest questions: Who am I?
(via Sean Ferrell’s website)

Numb, coming from HarperPerennial in August, 2010

Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About Numb the Character

Sean Ferrell – The Author Talks About the Book Trailer Numb

Chuck Sambuchino – An Interview: Published Book, Writing and a Writer’s Life (Part 1)

“It is good to have money and the things that money can buy, but it’s good too, to check up once in a while and make sure you haven’t lost the things money can’t buy.”

George Lorimer – Editor of Saturday Evening Post

CURRENT STATUS: Reminder, Motivator and Daily Review Meeting (Read on if you want to join me in my Corporation of One meeting)

What l have learnt:

What I have done:

  • My friend Oosters is to write film reviews on my blog. I have another one ‘Whatever Works’ coming to you tomorrow. Yeah!
  • Author Sean Ferrell is to answer questions that I wanted to know and hopefully will benefit you as well. Hurrah!
  • Author Chuck Sambuchino’s interview as my guest blogger has been confirmed for mid-September. Yeah!
  • Talking to a book group run by another friend to see if they would consider writing their book reviews on my blog. Yeah! You can only but ask, right?

WORD COUNT: Night Walker 133,000 in total. Friday 23 July 1,000 words