Showing posts with label Niamh Boyce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Niamh Boyce. Show all posts
Thursday, 3 September 2015
VIRTUAL TOUR - MISS EMILY - #3
My virtual tour takes me to Kildare today and the blog home of Niamh Boyce where we talk bravery and recreating worlds. Here.
Thursday, 18 July 2013
NIAMH BOYCE INTERVIEW
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Niamh Boyce |
I am delighted today to welcome Irish writer and blogger Niamh Boyce to WWR for a chat about The Herbalist, her début novel. A Hennessy XO New Irish Writer of the Year winner, originally from Athy, Co. Kildare, Niamh now lives in Ballylinan, Co. Laois, where she's writing her next novel.
The Irish Times said recently of the book: 'Boyce’s subject matter may be dark, and she treats it with the seriousness it deserves, but she writes with a lightness of touch not often seen in the genre; this is the most entertaining yet substantial historical novel I’ve read since Joseph O’Connor’s Star of the Sea.'
Hi, Niamh, and welcome to WWR.
Your novel The Herbalist is out now in trade paperback and the cover is really gorgeous. As you are also a visual artist, I imagine the cover looking 100% right is very important to you. Talk to me about the cover and how you felt when you first saw it/feel about it now. And are there different covers planned for the paperback and the UK editions?
Delighted to be here, Nuala! And I’m glad you like the cover. I’ll be honest - I’m delighted with the cover now but I wasn’t too fond of it at first. I saw it then on a screen, without detail, and the girls dress was black, not red. Because I paint and love art, I had visualised many possible cover images and had certain expectations regarding ‘the look’ of the book. The publishers asked that I bear with them, and explained how it would appear in the final version, which, as you can see, is beautiful with a matt texture, embossed gold lettering and wonderful attention to detail on both the outside and inside covers. I realise now that the image, as well as fitting well with the story, has a much wider appeal than anything I might have chosen. I’m partial to a slightly gothic aesthetic which might have misled readers as to what genre it was! (And it will be the same cover for the paperback and UK editions.)
The Herbalist is set in rural-ish 1930s Ireland. The men in the novel are somewhat shadowy – apart from the herbalist himself, though he is mysterious. Was it important to you to have women as the main agents of this story?
With regard to women being the main agents of this story – no, it wasn’t a conscious decision made from the outset. Actually in the earliest drafts, Dan was a main character. So the men in the novel are secondary characters in the same way that some of the women like Birdie Chase and Mrs B are secondary characters. Voice was important and I followed the voices instinctively and decided who got main parts on the basis of how many words they gave me (I made a graph!) rather than gender. But gender, voice and silence are of course very much linked. So as my pen crossed the page, I felt as if I was scratching away at silence, that the voices I heard were confiding, telling secrets, crossing over. For example, there was a palpable silence around the tiny newspaper article [that inspired the book], a few sentences really, that eventually led me to write the novel. It told me nothing. And it was a nothing I was ready to dive into. As Rose says in the book – You wouldn't know it but it's my story. You won't find me in the column inches. You won't find me in the newsprint. You'll find me in the gaps, the commas, the full stops - the small dark spaces where one thing led to another. So I was aware, that on the level of voice, I was working against a silence. In reality, the tale of that summer, the summer of The Herbalist, would never have been passed on. So I was conscious of that. And that in turn is connected to shame and to the wider dynamics of power – of class, religion and gender. But for me to consider those issues as I wrote the book, to make a conscious effort to weave them into the narrative would have been death to the fiction, so I didn’t. But it all comes out in the wash as they say…
You write both short and long fiction, as well as poetry. Can we expect a short fiction collection from you anytime soon? A poetry book?
My short story collection is finished. I might play around with the order of the stories but I just need to find the time. I’ve no definite plans for publishing them at the moment. I also have the guts of a poetry collection, but not the whole shebang yet!
How does the long haul of the novel compare to writing short? What are the positive aspects of novel writing for you?
Short fiction is very satisfying to write but with novels, you get to enter a whole world, a world of your own creation and you get to build it at a slower pace, step by step. You get to explore further and in a more winding way. You get to spend ages looking up strange and wonderful things and call it research! You get to change your mind, rewrite, have characters walk in and announce themselves, or walk of in a hissy fit; there’s so much room for the unexpected. It’s exciting.
Oh, I know, I love research.
The voice of Emily sings from the book – she is sassy and funny. How easy does humour come to you as you write?
It comes naturally or not at all, it depends on the character. I’ve never tried to be funny but I think the absolute bald truth of any situation can be hilarious. So if you have an honest character or a young character who speaks as they see, I think that humour is almost unavoidable then. The truth of how we are as people is funny in and of itself.
Who are the women writers who make you think ‘Yes!’ and for what reasons?
As a young woman in the 1990s a trio of poets made me aware that my life, my ordinary, everyday life might be worth writing about, might even be rich with a myth and magic of its own. They were Paula Meehan, Mary Dorcey and Rita Ann Higgins. The title alone of Higgins poetry collection Goddess On The Mervue Bus made me think ‘yes!’ Especially as I rode the Mervue Bus in and out of Galway City with my baby girl on my lap. And she put a community welfare officer in a poem, and she told the truth about power. And Dorcey wrote about mothers and daughters, real women, not some Róisín Dubh or Mother Ireland, or dying swan, or gormless muse. That was new then, or new to me at least!
Angela Carter’s The Bloody Chamber also really spoke to me – it said, ‘never mind all that paring it all back and good clean prose, the short story can be a lush baroque burlesque of prose!’ At the moment I’m enjoying how Tove Jansson writes about women sharing a life and making art. There is something stunning in the calmness of her delivery, the understatement, the lack of ego in her writing.
Writer Sara Crowley tagged a Smash Hits style set of questions to an interview she did with me and I thought it would be a fun way to end with you, Niamh, so here goes:
What’s your favourite biscuit? Toffee Pops rock!
Who is your favourite Sesame Street character? Has to be Oscar- the Heathcliff of Muppets.
Cheese or chocolate? Cheese.
Who is the most famous person you have ever met? I met the song writer Mick Hanly last week in Castlecomer library and he was really lovely.
Whose poster did you have on your teenaged bedroom wall? Paul Young. So unpunk. Don’t know what I was thinking…
Ha ha, me too. I was going to marry Paul Young!!
Best milkshake flavour? Strawberry.
Niamh, wishing you all the best with The Herbalist. Readers, you can buy it here and visit Niamh’s blog here for the latest on appearances, reviews etc. Signed copies of The Herbalist are available from Stone House Books in Kilkenny.
Thanks for having me over Nuala, and for the questions, they were thought provoking and good fun.
Friday, 17 May 2013
WRITERS & TIME INTERVIEW
Niamh Boyce, who will soon be world famous with her début novel, The Herbalist, interviews me today about managing time as a writer. Read it here.
Wednesday, 7 November 2012
STRADBALLY BOUND - LEAVES FEST
I'm taking part in the Leaves Literary Festival this Saturday, 10th November, in County Laois, where I'll be reading from Mother America. My event is on in Stradbally, where I read with Christine Dwyer Hickey and Niamh Boyce, chaired by Seamus Hosey, with music by harpist Claire O'Donnell. Arthouse @ the Library, Stradbally at 8.00pm.
Stradbally is near to my heart for two reasons, one of which is that a dear neighbour of mine from home was born and bred there, and always spoke of it with such fondness. She is buried there now. The other reason? Well, let's just say it's encoded in my poem 'Peabiddy', for those of you who have read The Juno Charm :)
John MacKenna is leading a workshop. It costs €40. I've done a workshop with him - he's very good. Worth doing.
Details of the rest of the festival here.
Wednesday, 17 October 2012
LEAVES LITERARY FESTIVAL
I'm taking part in the Leaves Literary Festival on Saturday 10th
November in lovely Laois. My event is on in Stradbally, where I read with
Christine Dwyer Hickey and Niamh Boyce, chaired by Seamus Hosey, with music by
harpist Claire O'Donnell. Arthouse @ the Library, Stradbally at 8.00pm
John MacKenna is leading a workshop. It costs €40. I've done a workshop with him - he's very good. Worth doing.
Details of the rest of the festival here:
OFFICIAL OPENING & LAUNCH
The festivities commence on Friday 9th
November with the official launch in Áras an Chontae at 7.30pm. The event will
also incorporate the launch of exciting new poetry collections by Ann Egan,
Kathy D’Arcy, Jamie O’Connell and Pat Boran with James Ryan chairing the
readings. Readings by all the authors will be interspersed by music from
guitarist, Conal Rae from Laois School of Music. Admission is free and books will
be on sale on the night.
CHILDREN'S EVENTS
The Festival also includes a Children’s
Programme. On Friday 9th November award-winning author and
illustrator, Niamh Sharkey, Laureate na nÓg, will visit schools in the county
to create a Monster Doodle and then on to Abbeyleix Library for a reading at
3.30pm. Children’s author Roisín Meaney will also pay a visit to some
lucky schools in Laois and give a reading in Portlaoise Library at 3.30pm.
Admission to the children’s events is free of charge.
WORKSHOPS
Adult writers workshops will also take place in the
Dunamaise Arts Centre. Hennessy award winner Niamh Boyce will hold a workshop
entitled, “Poems Beget Poems” on the 9th November running from 10am
to 4pm. This workshop would suit writers who have begun to write poetry
and would like to explore it further.
Also for adults, well-known writer John MacKenna
will hold a workshop entitled, “Seasons of the Heart”, exploring the ways in
which we can draw on nature and our own life experiences to create fiction and
memoir. This workshop runs from 10am to 4pm on the 10th November in
the Dunamaise Arts Centre.
READING
The final event on Saturday evening is an exciting
mix of readings and music featuring Christine Dwyer Hickey, Niamh Boyce and Nuala
Ní Chonchúir, chaired by Seamus Hosey,
with music by harpist Claire O Donnell. This
will take place in the Arthouse & Library, Stradbally at 8.00pm on the 10th
November.
Bookings for all events can be made at the
Dunamaise Arts Centre Tel: 057 8663355. www.dunamaise.ie
Thursday, 24 November 2011
VIRTUAL TOUR - JUNO CHARM - # 3
Today my virtual book tour for The Juno Charm takes me back across the Irish Sea, from last week's stop in England, to County Kildare and writer Niamh Boyce's blog.
Here is a sample question from Niamh:
'There are so many voices in the collection and, for me, those different voices added a thrill to the collection, I never knew who I was going to meet, Frida Kahlo, van Gogh and his model and mistress Sien. The people who draw you to write about them, are those who 'posterity does not sympathise with,' the ne'er do wells? How does that process happen, is it a matter of someone sparking your interest and the voice coming to be quite organically from that? Have you ever tried to write from the point of view of someone you didn’t like, or do you have to feel a sympathy?'
Go here to read my answer and to see what else we talked about.
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