BookSense.com:
Before writing On
Bullfighting, what did you know about bullfighting?
A.L. Kennedy:
Beforehand,
I only knew what the average British person would -- rough order of events,
the fact that the bull dies, I think I'd read some color supplement articles
about matadors from time to time.
Are you now
a fan of bullfighting?
I couldn't say
I'm a fan, but there are parts of it I respect. Some matadors and cuadrilla
members have great courage and skill, some ganaderos truly care well
for their animals.
Did writing
a book on it change your views of other books on bullfighting?
Not really --
if a book's bad, it's fairly obvious and vice versa. It did make me wonder
that there was so little transparency and so little detail in many of them.
What do you
think bullfighting's future will be?
I think it will
keep on and keep changing, the way it has for centuries.
You touched
a little on women bullfighters and the difficulties they face. Is the (I suppose
very) macho world of bullfighting opening up at all to them?
Apparently
it's not. Rosa Sanchez, the most prominent woman, retired for lack of access
to quality fights. Sadly, male fighters are unwilling to appear on the bill
with female matadors, so they never get quite the exposure they might, and
tend to end up on all-female bills, as they have done since Victorian times.
What female matadors need is one very charismatic and very skilled woman to
really break through. Technically, being a matador doesn't require strength
beyond a reasonable capacity that a woman could have and men as small, or
smaller than women today have been very fine matadors.
Are you a
sports fan in general?
Not much. I have
a fondness for Welsh rugby, and I loved to see Agassi when he was playing
really fluid, intuitive tennis. I suppose I'm drawn to intuitive artists in
sport, highly skilled, highly integrated teams, but I'm not a fan of anything
per se. I'll watch an interesting game of almost anything, but I don't feel
obliged to waste my time with match after match of this or that.
In the book
you were suffering from an undiagnosed slipped disc. Now that it has been
fixed, has your writing changed?
I
now write lying down in an arrangement of pillows and whatnot -- it's the
only way that it doesn't hurt. And I take more breaks, if I'm not under a
deadline. I don't know if my writing has changed -- I'm not the best judge.
I haven't written a novel for years now, so I have no idea about that. The
passage of time tends to alter things, even if everything else stays much
the same.
Do you write
much nonfiction?
No, not much.
Only to pay the bills and if I'm interested. I do an occasional column for
The Guardian -- that stops me getting too annoyed about politics.
Did writing
On Bullfighting change what you wanted to write about in the future?
No.
Your novels
and short stories are often -- although certainly not always -- set in Glasgow.
Did having to write about Spain give you insights into writing about other
places or cultures?
I've
only set one novel in Glasgow and maybe a couple of short stories. I tend
to put things wherever they'll fit, although I generally only use settings
I've seen. Given that modern writers travel a lot -- myself included -- that
covers a fair amount of territory.
Are you writing
now?
Yes, although
not much.
What are you
reading?
Right
now -- the collected essays of Gore
Vidal.
Do you think
there was any actual truth behind the recent "Scottish literary renaissance"?
There
was certainly a lot of writing coming out of Scotland. I think publishers
exploited it too heavily and have burned a variety of authors out. The fact
is, there has always been a lot of writing in Scotland -- it's just become
more visible lately, although perhaps not outside the UK.
Do you feel
there any particularly Scottish aspects to your writing?
I couldn't tell.
Possibly choice of subject matter, possibly sense of humor -- but there are
other European countries where there are similar tastes and themes and jokes.
You recently
started a hyper-novel for The Scotsman
newspaper online. How did you get involved with that?
They asked me
to do it. It involved writing a few hundred words to kick things off and then
going away.
How
did it go?
I haven't the
faintest idea.
Are
you much involved with the Internet?
I have a website
and I use the Internet more and more for initial research. For deep research,
it's still not much use.
Is there anyone
you would like to try collaborating
with?
I'm not a collaborator.
Although I can work alongside people occasionally -- I just have on a Canadian
TV drama series with the Scottish poet John Burnside -- who is a fine, fine
poet and a great guy.
Do you have
any books you'd like to recommend?
No. My taste
wouldn't be everyone's. Just read often and broadly -- it's good exercise.
Search for A.L.
Kennedy's books on BookSense.com
*On
Bullfighting:
A
March/April 2001 Book Sense 76 pick
"As agile with language as any torero is with cape and sword, Kennedy
takes us from the brink of suicide (her own) to the bullfights of Spain. Ghosts
of the past, Lorca,
and Goya
flit through her ruminations even as she closely and factually describes the
art and science of the corrida de toros in this mesmerizing and artful
book."
-- Betsy Burton, The King's English Bookshop, Salt Lake City, UT
Everything
You Need:
A September/October 2001 Book Sense 76 pick
"The number
of residents in a writer's colony on an island off Wales is kept, by mutual
agreement, to seven, including a successful but suicidal author of popular
horror novels. When a new resident is accepted, the stage is set for a moving
and unforgettable novel of friendship, despair, and redemption. One of the
best books of the year." - Bob Sommer & Gayle Shanks, Changing Hands,
Tempe, AZ
Further
Reading
Charles
Pierce
Connie
Willis
A.L.
Kennedy's website - especially
the FAQ
Browse
Archived Interviews
Browse
Archived Excerpts