Benjamin Black is the pen name of Irish author John Banville. He is the author of seven novels in the acclaimed Quirke series. He agreed to be interviewed for Shots.
What made you decide to write the Quirke series and where did the character of Quirke come from? What made you decide to make him a pathologist?
BB: Many
years ago I was commissioned to write a television mini-series set in 1950s
Dublin. I did three one-hour episodes but, as with so many of these projects,
they never got made. Then I began to read Georges Simenon, was greatly
impressed, and had the idea of turning the screen series into a novel: the
result was Christine Falls, the first
Quirke book. Why did I make him a pathologist? I don’t really know. But I know
I didn’t want to write about a detective.
Your latest Quirke novel is Even The Dead. How did the
storyline come about?
BB: I start with a very vague notion of a plot and just begin to
write. Often I have no idea where I shall end up--with Vengeance, for instance, I was almost at the end before I decided
who the killer was. As Raymond Chandler said, it doesn't matter a damn what a
book is about, all that counts is how it is written. He also said he didn't
care who killed Professor Plumb with a lead pipe in the library, and I agree
with that, too.
There is very much an elegiac tone to Even The Dead. Loose ends are being tied up. Is this the end of
Quirke?
BB: Not at all. It's true that every time I finish a BB book I
think I won't do another one, but the characters are too interesting for me to
let them go, and always I'm drawn back to them. In Even the Dead the most significant happening is Quirke's falling in
love at last--and with a psychiatrist, at that. I hope he will be happy. We'll
see.
How much does religion specifically Catholicism play a part in
your writing?
BB: Well, I was brought up as a Catholic, which meant I was
brainwashed from an early age. When I came to realise the pernicious influence
that religion wields in human lives I became extremely angry. Some of that
anger remains, so of course I transferred it to Quirke.
How important is place, in this case Dublin in your novels?
BB: Extremely important. I think of Dublin, and specifically 1950s
Dublin, as a central character in the Quirke books.
How would you explain Dublin to someone who has never been
there?
BB: I'm not sure that one could 'explain' something so intricate
and diverse as a city. What I loved about the Dublin of my youth was its
peculiar mixture of gaiety and melancholy; it's this ambiguous aspect of the place
that I have tried to capture in the Quirke novels.
What made you decide to set the Quirke novels in the 1950s?
BB: Since I was setting out to write noir fiction, 1950s Dublin seemed the ideal milieu: all
that
repression, all that guilt, all those dark secrets deeply buried: perfect
material. The Dublin of those days reeked of alcohol and cigarette smoke and
sadness.
Raymond Chandler is my favourite crime writer and I very much
enjoyed reading Black-Eyed Blonde. How much of an influence did Raymond
Chandler have on your crime writing and are there any other crime writers that have
influenced you?
BB: I read Chandler as a teenager and was greatly impressed to
discover that crime fiction could be stylish.
Before Chandler I had read mainly Agatha Christie, whose lumpen prose made me
feel I was chewing on sawdust. Chandler by comparison was the epitome of
elegance, wit and sophistication. Much later I discovered Simenon, a true
genius. And of course the great Richard Stark, whose Parker novels are superb.
Which five noir novels would you say are your favourites and
why?
BB: The Long Goodbye,
Raymond Chandler. Not his best, perhaps, but certainly the darkest and most
compelling.
Dirty Snow, Georges
Simenon. This was the first Simenon I read, and I was utterly bowled over by
it.
The Postman Always Rings
Twice, James M. Cain. A compellingly nasty piece of work.
The Hunter, Richard
Stark. The first of the Parker novels, and still one of the best. John Boorman
made a wonderful movie from it, Point
Blank.
How's the Pain?
Pascal Garnier. Simenon's son, John Simenon, considers Garnier to be his
father's literary heir, and he's right.
You have been writing fiction now for quite sometime both as
Benjamin Black and also with your real name John Banville. How much has your writing changed and do you
have a different way of writing the Quirke series as opposed to when you are
writing as John Banville?
BB: Yes, they are two entirely different writers. Even their
working methods are radically unalike--Banville writes with a fountain pen,
Black types direct on to the screen. I always say that what you get from
Banville is the result of deep concentration, while from Black you get pure
spontaneity.
What do you think of the state of Irish crime writing at the
moment? Including yourself there are a quite a number of excellent Irish
writers that are writing really good books.
BB: I haven't read enough contemporary crime fiction to comment.
Crime fiction especially contemporary crime fiction is said to
be very good at social history. Is there anything you won’t write about?
BB: Serial killers, rapists. Crime fiction, especially on
television, exploits women dreadfully.
What one question would Benjamin Black like to ask John
Banville and vice versa?
BB: Do you like being Benjamin Black? Why? I tolerate him. He keeps me busy.
There was a BBC series made of Quirke featuring Gabriel
Byrne. Are we likely to see anymore?
BB: Well, I certainly hope so, but at present there is nothing in
production.
What are you working on at the moment
BB: A crime mystery set in Prague in the late 1500s.
Even the Dead by Benjamin Black
A
suspicious death, a pregnant woman suddenly gone missing: Quirke's latest case
leads him inexorably toward the dark machinations of an old foe.
Perhaps
Quirke has been down among the dead too long. Lately the Irish pathologist has
suffered hallucinations and blackouts, and he fears the cause is a brain tumor.
A specialist diagnoses an old head injury caused by a savage beating; all that's
needed, the doctor declares, is an extended rest. But Quirke, ever intent on
finding his place among the living, is not about to retire.
One
night during a June heat wave, a car crashes into a tree in central Dublin and
bursts into flames. The police assume the driver's death was either an accident
or a suicide, but Quirke's examination of the body leads him to believe
otherwise. Then his daughter Phoebe gets a mysterious visit from an
acquaintance: the woman, who admits to being pregnant, says she fears for her
life, though she won't say why. When the woman later disappears, Phoebe asks
her father for help, and Quirke in turn seeks the assistance of his old friend
Inspector Hackett. Before long the two men find themselves untangling a twisted
string of events that takes them deep into a shadowy world where one of the
city's most powerful men uses the cover of politics and religion to make
obscene profits.
More information about Benjamin Black and his work can be found on his website.
Interview ©Ayo Onatade/ Shots January 2016
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