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Life after Corelli
Louis de Bernieres, author of the bestselling novel Captain
Corelli's Mandolin, tells Hannah Stephenson how his early
success has proved a tough act to follow
THE best-selling romantic novel, Captain
Corelli's Mandolin, may have put Louis
de Bernieres on the literary map, but it's
been difficult for the author to move on
from that early success.
I'm just waiting for the refreshing time when
people don't mention Captain Corelli's Mandolin
when they are interviewing me,'' he smiles. As you
can see, he's not quite there yet.
The 53-year-old award-winning writer, who took
ten years to write another novel after Corelli, which
was made into a film starring Nicolas Cage, recalls:
After Captain Corelli I got a fit of writer's stroppiness.
I felt I had the world looking over my shoulder
and it was irritating.
I was all that time working on the next novel,
Birds Without Wings, but never very flat out. I finally
wrote most of it in the few months when I was
expecting my first child because I knew that after
he was born I wouldn't get much time.''
He may have felt stroppy'' about the pressure to
produce another bestseller, but eventually ignored
it and decided to go his own way.
You tell me what to do and I'll do the opposite,''
he says. It's just a character flaw.''
His latest novel, A Partisan's Daughter, is an unusual
love story about Chris, a middle-aged salesman
trapped in a loveless, sexless marriage in the
1970s, who one night invites a prostitute into his car.
Roza is Yugoslavian, recently moved to London,
and the daughter of one of Tito's partisans. She proceeds
to tell him tales of danger, romance and
tragedy from her life. You never really know if she's
telling the truth, but Chris is mesmerised anyway.
Another character in the book, Bob Dylan Upstairs',
who lives in Roza's building, is modelled on
de Bernieres when he was in his 20s, he reveals.
Bob Dylan Upstairs was me in 1979. I was living
in exactly that house with pretty much that woman,
who used to collar me and tell me her stories. She
was very fascinating and quite scary. I wrote all her
stories down. I never really found a way of turning
it into a good novel, because it was just one thing
after another. Finally, I came up with a plot in the
form of Chris.''
The novel is set in the winter of discontent, when
the country was in the grip of strikes, power cuts
and misery.
I remember that time very vividly. It was the
most depressing period I've ever lived through. I
hated being young then. All of the optimism that
had come along with the hippie revolution had just
completely disappeared with the hippies.
Punk had arrived. I thought it was gross and vulgar.
I loathed the music, although funnily enough
I like it a bit more now than I did then.''
He grew up in Surrey, boarded at prep and public
schools and signed up with the Army as a teenager
- but only lasted four months at Sandhurst. He
couldn't stand people telling him what to do and
didn't like telling people what to do either, he says.
He studied philosophy at Manchester University
instead and went off to Colombia to teach, became
a cowboy in Argentina for a while and had a succession
of jobs back in England, including as a car
mechanic and landscape gardener.
HIS experiences in South America gave him
the inspiration for his first three novels before
his fourth, Captain Corelli's Mandolin,
put him on the bestsellers' list.
The genial author, who lives in a Georgian rectory
in Norfolk with his partner, actress and director
Cathy Gill, and their two children, Robin, aged
three, and four-week-old Sophie, did not become an
instant millionaire with Captain Corelli, he says.
Because the book became successful very slowly,
the money arrived slowly. Consequently I didn't
have a time when I suddenly went barmy.
One of the things that money and success can
do is make you very paranoid because you suspect
that people are after you, not because they like you
but because they want something out of you.
I'm glad I didn't have to cope with that. Nobody
recognises me, thankfully. Nobody recognises writers
unless you're Salman Rushdie. That's not the
kind of recognition I want.''
He has always preferred to stay out of the limelight,
even when Captain Corelli was at its peak.
"I'm happy to be well known but I don't want to be
a celebrity. I absolutely determined not to mess up
my life by doing that. And anyway, I'm not young,
beautiful and slim."
Away from writing, he collects instruments and,
indeed, plays quite a few of them, including the
flute, the guitar and his beloved mandolin.
While other writers are disciplined, setting themselves
targets and working a particular number of
hours a day, de Bernieres simply writes when he
feels like it.
I don't get writer's block because I never try to
write when I don't feel like it. I do have other things
to keep me contented.
I have got far too many clarinets and flutes and
guitars and mandolins. I play them all and every
now and then I do concerts with friends of mine -
maybe one or two a month.''
His two children happily also take up a lot of his
time, he says. Coming into fatherhood later on has
been an absolute joy.
The overwhelming sensations of love that go
through you make you much happier,'' he reflects.
If I'd have had children when I was younger I probably
wouldn't have been such a good father. I would
have resented the intrusion much more.
Fatherhood has changed my life. I'm now permanently
horrified as to whether I can afford to
carry on living. It's been very good for me emotionally
but it hasn't been very good for my writing.
I wrote A Partisan's Daughter in the garden shed."
Despite the distractions, he currently has three
books on the go - two are collections of short stories
and he's started his next epic.
He still has ambitions, but they are quirky ones,
he admits. In the past my huge ambition has been
to do as near as I can get to something as good as
War And Peace. Captain Corelli was one attempt
which fell a bit short. Birds Without Wings was
much more like it.
I have ambitions like wanting to become good at
the classical guitar. I don't really want to be Prime
Minister.''
While he had mixed feelings about the film version
of Captain Corelli, a bittersweet love story set
during the wartime occupation of the Greek island
Cephallonia, he hasn't ruled out his other novels
being made into movies.
I thought Nicolas Cage was miscast in the role,
but I was mostly annoyed by naff changes to the
story, which is entirely the director's and producer's
fault. I was also puzzled as to why there was no
mandolin music.
"If there was another film made of another of my
books, it might be a triumph, it might not. But I'd
quite like to do the soundtrack myself."
* A Partisan's Daughter by Louis de Bernieres
(Harvil & Secker, £16.99)
12:16pm Monday 17th March 2008
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