MY INTERVIEW TONIGHT IS WITH BERNARD CORNWELL.
My interview tonight is with one of the
world’s bestselling authors and a personal hero of mine. His Sharpe series, based on the Napoleonic Wars,
became a tremendous success when transferred to television and his ability to
combine wonderful fictional narrative with well-researched historical events
makes each of his books a delight to read. His main characters whether Sharpe,
Uhtred, Arthur Pendragon or Starbuck are all legends, or well on the way to
becoming so, and after well over thirty books he continues to enthral his
readers.
It’s a great pleasure tonight for me to
talk to Bernard Cornwell.
Bernard, your books cover a wide range of time periods from
prehistory with Stonehenge to the Sharpe series set in the 19th century. Is there a new century you
would still like to explore?
There is, and I’m
hoping to explore it this winter – a new series set in the late 16th and early 17th Centuries.
The late Tudor and Jacobean period? I'm presuming we're talking about England. Going back to your start as an author, the story has it that you got your first novel published by
thrusting it in the hands of a publisher while watching a parade. A great way
of evading the famous Slush Pile if it’s true! Is that what happened?
That’s not quite what
happened. I was at a party watching New York’s Thanksgiving Day parade when a
laconic English voice said ‘they do this sort of thing frightfully well’. He
was a literary agent and I persuaded him (with difficulty) to read the novel
I’d just finished, and for which I was having difficulty finding a publisher.
Within a week I had a seven-book contract. He’s still my agent thirty something
years later!
The Sharpe books were your first published novels. What made you
choose the Napoleonic Wars as your debut on the writing stage?
You write what you
want to read! I was (still am) a huge fan of the Hornblower series
and it struck me as odd that so many writers were dealing with the naval side
of the Napoleonic wars and none was writing about the land campaigns. It seemed
to me to be a gap on the shelf!
I know you must have been asked a thousand times about Sharpe,
but two quick questions. Asides from the time when Sharpe is in Portugal most
of the series has been filmed for TV, but are there any plans to film Sharpe’s Devil?
I hope not, it’s not
a book I’m fond of!
Probably. I don’t
know when, but I’ve kept back one splendid battle for a novel and one day I’ll
get round to writing it!
It’s a great shame, but there can never be any further Arthurian
Warlord books, for obvious reasons. The series has a special place for me and I
find something new in its magic every time I reread it, but do you have a
favourite Cornwell book, or series?
The Arthur trilogy is
my favourite! They were fantastically exciting to write, which is why I
like them so much. But I have a lot of other favourites – I like Gallow’s Thief
and The Fort, and for some reason Sharpe’s Siege. But my favourite Sharpe
book? Trafalgar.
All of your books are historically very accurate from the point
of view of geography and main events. How much time do you spend researching
each novel, certainly at the beginning of each series?
It’s really an
impossible question to answer, sorry! Research is a lifetime activity. I became
fascinated by the Napoleonic period when I was a teenager and began to read
widely back then, similarly I became incredibly interested in the Anglo-Saxons
when I was at university, so between that period and actually writing Uhtred is
a gap of what? Thirty, forty years? And I was reading about the Saxons
all that time, and all that reading is fed into the research.
At the moment you bring out at least one book a year, you also
act of course and you travel a lot. Do you have a strict annual routine you try
to keep to?
I write between
October and April! And generally I refuse any invitation to travel in
that period. From June to August I’m caught up in the Monomoy Theatre in
Chatham on Cape Cod where, for my sins, I’m a member of the company. That
leaves May, September and October! Not a bad life!
Very few internationally successful authors are as open as you
on social networks, especially Facebook. Few also take the time to reply on
their websites to fans’ queries and comments. Is keeping in touch with your fan
base important to you?
I should imagine it’s
important to any author! You get a lot of ideas from readers!
You now live on Cape Cod, one of the most beautiful parts of the
world and I love going whale-watching in Provincetown. Did you and Judy move
there to write, or move there because you could because of your writing?
Because we could,
because it’s a beautiful part of the world, because the sailing is good here!
We actually split our time between Cape Cod (summer) and Charleston, South
Carolina (winter). We own a house in the historic district of Charleston which
is, of course, sensationally beautiful, and it’s in Charleston that I do most
of the writing.
As part Canadian, born and brought up in the UK and living in
America, do you now consider the United States as your “home” country?
I’ve lived in the US
for half my life! Yes, I consider it home, because it is, but I still
think of myself as English and, of course, retain a huge loyalty and affection
for Britain. But I married into the US, and there’s not much you can do when
you fall in love except go with the flow, and as we seem to be very happily
married and because Judy has family here, it’s just more convenient to live
here. And I like it! Who wouldn’t like living in Cape Cod and Charleston?
You’ve done more than most writers could ever aspire to, but do
you have one ambition you would still like to achieve?
To write a better
book? For a long time my ambition was to sail the Atlantic in a small
boat, but I did that with two friends a few years ago. I’d like to play
Prospero some time, and who knows? It might happen . . . .
A fascinating interview. Thanks Richard and Bernard. How nice to read of a writer who responds to social media.
ReplyDeleteHiCarol,
DeleteHow true!
Richard
Thank you both for a fantastic insight into a great writer. Cornwall's Arthurian triology (alongside Marion Zimmer Bradley's The Mists of Avalon) are amongst my favourite books on the subject. I recently handed them over to my brother and he too is now a die-hard fan - he's read The Winter King twice already! Shani xxx
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Shani.
DeleteThe Warlord trilogy is my personal favourite too.
Richard
*Faints* Richard, what a wonderful interview with such a talented author. Thank you both for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWhat romantic words ... and there’s not much you can do when you fall in love except go with the flow ... *sigh*
Agreed, Glynis. It also explains why Bernard and Judy (his wife) hav successfully collaborated on a number of books.... and still talk to each other.
DeleteFantastic interview! Wonderful to get these insights into Bernard's life (I think I might be a teeny bit envious.) Thank you very much Richard and Bernard.
ReplyDeleteHi Teresa,
DeleteMany thanks for your comment. I'm jealous too!
All the best
Richard
I love how Bernard met his agent - fate indeed! And surely to write about what fascinates you personally and what you want to read - then you are writing from the heart and that's a sure-fire recipe for success. Thank you both for a great interview!!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Sarah.
DeleteIt just goes to show you have to take every opportunity that comes up!
Richard
Fab interview, and what a thoroughly nice man Bernard is :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, and you're absolutely dead right, Tina, he's a lovely guy!
DeleteSuperb interview, fantastic author, great books. I discovered Sharpe before the TV series and raved about it for years. I've been to Cape Cod and Charleston and can agree that they're beautiful places to live! (I'm quite content here in the Costa Blanca, however!)
ReplyDeleteExcellent interview, Richard, fantastic author, Bernard, and superb books! I discovered Sharpe before the TV series and raved about them for years. Mention of Cape Cod and Charleston brings back memories of visiting those beautiful places, though I'm quite content here in Spain's Costa Blanca. Thank you, Richard!
ReplyDeleteHi Nik. Many thanks. I've been to Cape Cod several times and love the place. Next time I'll have to go over when Bernard is doing one of his amateur dramatics in the Monomoy Theatre in Chatham. I promise not to heckle!
Delete