Neil Campbell drops by today for an interview in anticipation of the publication of his second short fiction collection Pictures from Hopper by Salt. The book will be launched in Northumbria, at Gallery North, tomorrow night at 6pm.
Neil’s
début collection of stories, Broken Doll, was published by Salt in 2007.
Two chapbooks of poetry, Birds, (2009) and Bugsworth Diary, (2011) have been published by Knives, Forks and
Spoons. Born in Manchester, he now lives in Northumberland.
Hi Neil and welcome to Women Rule Writer.
Huge congrats on the publication of Pictures from Hopper, your second
short fiction collection, by Salt.
Sum up Pictures from Hopper
in five words.
Stories influenced by Hopper paintings.
Talk about your love for the artist Hopper. How did you 'discover' him? What
draws you to his work? How did you first hit on the idea of writing stories
inspired by his work?
Many years ago I went to New York, and wandered into the Hopper Room at
the Whitney Museum. I also saw a documentary on TV at some point. But the truth
is, I'm no expert at all, and that helped me in writing the stories. I've never
read what Hopper or anyone else has said about any of the paintings, so I had
no preconceptions at all.
I write instinctively and didn't even know the word ekphrasis until a
few weeks ago (though I had read and admired Pictures from Brueghel). I started
with Gas, and was pleased with the results, and so I took it from there. I was
house sitting for Nicholas Royle, and inbetween drinking all the beer that Nick
had tried to hide, I used a Hopper book from his shelf to find paintings I
thought I could get a story out of. So I owe a thanks to Nick for that, and
much else, really.
There were also correlations with Hopper and the writers I was reading
at the time, like John Cheever and Elizabeth Bishop. Compare Hopper's Gas and
Bishop's poem In the Filling Station, and you get the idea.
Tell us more
about this new short story collection – does it differ from Broken Doll in terms of themes or
subject matter? Do you feel any changes in your writing from your own POV?
This book is different from Broken Doll in that there are many more
narrative voices and types of short fiction, and it is much less obviously
autobiographical. There are some unreliable narrators too. But it is a pity
more people didn’t read Broken Doll.
The cover for Pictures from
Hopper is haunting – a big building with lots of windows like dead eyes.
Can you tell us how the use of that image came about and what relevance does it
have to the book?
Chris Hamilton Emery (publisher at Salt) came up with that and I
immediately thought it perfect. It is like a Manchester version of Hopper’s ‘Sunday
Morning’. And though I like your simile I don’t think the eyes are dead.
What is your favourite thing about
the short story form?
Brevity.
You wrote a thesis on Raymond Carver
and you are a fan of Richard Yates. Would you say they have influenced you? If
so, how?
I used to drink with this guy in Middlesbrough. For some
inexplicable reason he gave me a copy of Cathedral. It was an American edition
with a picture on the front of man drinking beer at a table. And there was a
hardhat on the table and a TV on in the background. Carver was the first writer
I thought I’d be able to have a beer with. I understood the people in his
stories.
Yates was an influence on Broken
Doll. But once I read John Cheever I realized why Yates never got a story in
the New Yorker. Cheever is a genius of the short story, perhaps the best of all.
Goodbye My Brother, The Swimmer, The Sorrows of Gin etc etc. And Richard Ford
probably knows more about the short story than anyone alive. I wish someone
would publish his non-fiction.
Who are your favourite short fiction
writers and why?
John Cheever writes sentences of
utter beauty, and he’s got that little something extra that you can’t put your
finger on. And he’s funny too. Richard Ford for his absence of bullshit. Andre
Dubus because he writes about the heart. Elizabeth Bishop for her
concentration. Sam Shepard for his voices and humour, Flannery O’Connor for her
peacocks. The Nick Adams stories by Ernest Hemingway. Hemingway was an absolute
master, and not ‘macho’ in the stories at all. Etgar Keret for his optimism and
humour. I’m reading Day out of Days by Sam Shepard at the moment. And Coast of
Chicago by Stuart Dybek, and they are both great books.
I have that Dybek book – it is
masterful.
You are a poet as well as a short
fiction writer. Do you find a crossover of themes between the two, or does each
stand alone for you?
I write poems sometimes, entirely on
instinct. Landscape is playing an increasing role in both. In fact, all my
poems are nature poems really. I love Norman MacCaig’s Assynt poems. I get an
idea either for a story or a poem, that’s it.
What is your writing process – morning or night; longhand or laptop?
I’ve just started to write longhand in the evenings. I’ve had enough of
screens.
What one piece of advice would you offer beginning writers?
Don’t piss into the wind.
What are you working on now? Any plans to write a novel?
No, none at all. I’m quite happy to read them occasionally, especially if
they are by Cormac McCarthy. But I’ve got too many stories to work on. I’m just
writing one short story after another, and I absolutely love it.
Thanks a million for stopping by,
Neil. I look forward to reading Pictures from Hopper very soon and I
hope it does the business for you.
Well, me too, and I must read Nude.
7 comments:
Thanks for the introduction to Neil's work, Nuala and to Neil for the interiew! That's another book for my book list! I loved the cover and like the honest approach Neil has to the craft of writing (and reading)that comes through in the interview. Shauna.
Excellent interview. Very interesting subject for a book, and good questions. Good luck with the book.
Thanks Shauna - he's an excellent writer; I think you'd enjoy his stuff. For a taster google his name + horizon review. N x
Thanks Insinbad, it's a great premise for a book and that linked theme makes people (readers) comfortable somehow, I think.
I love Hopper so I'm up for Neil's book - and I'm intrigued by Broken Doll, too. I like your tase in fiction, Neil - it speaks volumes and bodes well for your own work. Off to read some of you.
Thanks for the interview, really insightful and catchy.
Thanks for reading, Rachel. Hope you enjo Neil's work online. N x
Wonderful interview. Neil Campbell sounds like an amazing writer cant wait to read his short stories/ prosiac works. There are many books I am intent on reading now, to get into the sombre hombre mood. Somewhere around here there is some graft for draft, at least the first one.
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