Hello,
thank you for agreeing to this interview. Could you tell us a little
about yourself as well as Birth
of An Assassin?
What
made you write about the Soviet, Post-War time period?
Relatives
told me of their parents living in ‘The Pale’ (a barren strip of
land where the Jewish population was forced to live – the reality
of Fiddler on the Roof). They escaped the czarist pogroms of the late
19th
century. Some came to England, others to the US and Canada.
I
looked into Jewish history in Russia and came up with an idea for a
story, but it didn’t fit the time of the White Russians, so I
trawled through the country's history until coming to the post-war
period. Without getting too philosophical here, Jez (the hero)
represents the whole of the Jewish population while Otto (the
villain) is those people whose prejudice is all-consuming. Apart from
it making a fit, I also took away the protagonists religion to
demonstrate that it isn’t only about beliefs.
Did
you find difficult to write about this period?
Researching
the Soviet Union in these times was challenging on occasion. This was
a part of their history when everything was hushed up or swept under
the carpet; I think clandestine is the word that fits. Sometimes I
couldn't find answers, which made me all the more determined to get
them. I could spend a couple of days of research to achieve a single
paragraph.
Was there a particular reason you chose to write about a Jewish Character?
Yes,
sorry to repeat myself, but as I said earlier I have relatives who
escaped Czarism at the end of the 19th century. I wanted to show how
people's lives can be transformed by single acts of prejudice. I
chose a Jewish protagonist, but he could as easily have been Afro
American or an English surf or a whole host of other peoples, that
list is infinite.
Do
you have a specific writing process and if so what is it?
I
go for a fast pace, no long fancy words that a reader might have to
scratch their heads in wonder at and no churning out of long, long
sentences to show everyone that I know what I'm talking about. Say
what you want and keep it concise. I begin with a sketchy beginning,
middle and ending. I add bones and put flesh on it as I go. I don't
get lost because I always have a waypoint I'm heading towards.
What
made you go back to school and get your degree in Mathematics and
Computing?
I
helped my daughter with her maths homework: she was the only kid in
class who got zero for it. My thoughts were to get to a point before
her so I could help rather than hinder. I wasn't particularly
stretched with the initial stuff and got carried away.
Are
there any books we can expect in the future from you?
Yes,
the follow-up to Birth of an Assassin is with the copy editor now. I
should have it back and be finished by mid-May, so hopefully it will
be available soon after that. This book is called The Turkish
Connection and, yes, it is set in Turkey.
Thank
you for answering my questions.
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