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  • The gentleman writer's epic

    The Globe and Mail, Canada
    July 22 2004

    The gentleman writer's epic

    The remarkable success of Captain Corelli's Mandolin in 1994 has
    allowed Louis de Bernières to write his latest exotic epic at a
    leisurely pace at his English country house, he tells REBECCA
    CALDWELL

    By REBECCA CALDWELL
    Thursday, July 22, 2004 - Page R1

    It shouldn't come as a surprise that Louis de Bernières's latest
    novel, Birds Without Wings, is a grand saga encompassing the full
    range of human experience in the lives of villagers in the tiny
    hamlet of Eskibahce in Turkey around the time of the First World War.
    Fans of the author's 1994 sleeper bestseller Captain Corelli's
    Mandolin, an epic tale fleshing out the extent of humanity on a tiny
    village on a Greek island during the Second World War, would hope for
    no less. No, the real shocker of Birds Without Wings is that the book
    began not in some sun-drenched Mediterranean paradise, but in
    Calgary.

    Before Cowtowners start rejoicing at their newly minted literary
    importance, it should be noted that the first line of the book that
    de Bernières wrote in 1996 while a writer-in-residence at the
    University of Calgary's Markin-Flanagan Distinguished Writers program
    is shot through with insanity and tragedy: "The people who remained
    in this place have often wondered why Ibrahim went mad."

    "It might have been from being in a tiny little office with no
    windows at a university," he jokes during a phone interview from his
    home, a country house in Norfolk, England. "No, I'd had this going
    through my mind for some time, and I think I was waiting for one of
    my victims to arrive and I just had this idea about what the first
    page should be."

    Although he ended up completing his manuscript on a return journey to
    Calgary last year as well, the real inspiration for Birds Without
    Wings was a visit to a ghost town in Turkey about a decade ago.

    De Bernières was struck by how he could still see the pretty pastels
    of the ruined houses of a once-harmonious multicultural community,
    home to Christians and Muslims, Greeks and Turks, that was devastated
    by political turmoil and a disastrous policy of expulsions and
    resettlements, first of Armenians, then of Christian Greeks,
    following the First World War, one of the first swellings of a new
    wave of 20th-century nationalism.

    "They obviously used to have a sophisticated and pleasant life. All
    the houses had water systems that filled up off the gutter on the
    roofs and had an outside loo on the corner," he said. "When [the
    Christians] left, the local economy collapsed. They lost everybody
    who knew how to make anything, and everybody who knew how to do
    anything. Some people did come to replace the Christians, but they
    were never the same again."

    It was in such a town where de Bernières imagined the setting for his
    sketches of young lovers, Christian Philothei and Muslim Ibrahim;
    childhood friends Karatavuk and Mehmetcik; the two spiritual leaders
    of the town, Father Kristoforos and Abdulhamid Hodja; and the wealthy
    landlord, Rustem Bey, his wife Tamara and his Circassian mistress
    Leyla.

    Interspersed between their vignettes are nearly straight segments of
    the historical events of the early 20th century that would shatter
    the bucolic world, notably the rise of Mustafa Kemal. Better known as
    Mustafa Ataturk, he would lead the disintegrating Ottoman Empire
    through the First World War and the savage Gallipoli campaign,
    eventually consolidating his own power as the first chief of the new
    nation of Turkey.

    With 625 pages broken into 95 chapters, plus six epilogues and a
    postscript, Birds Without Wings feels a bit episodic, a result not of
    intended structural design but how his work evolves from short
    stories, he says. De Bernières's seemingly characteristic impulse to
    write about Big Ideas such as nationalism and religious intolerance
    also wasn't a deliberate artistic aim. That he happened to write a
    book about the historical failure of nationalism and religious
    fanaticism at a time when issues of nationalism and religious
    fanaticism are once again radically dividing the world was
    coincidental, he says. If anything, the civil and religious wars that
    tore through the former Yugoslavia in the nineties were more salient
    when he started the book, he points out.

    "What gets me interested in a story is a narrative," said de
    Bernières. "The themes, I suppose, come up almost by accident when
    you're writing a book like this. They're there, but you don't have to
    put them in on purpose. There's all sorts of things, you know,
    there's nationalism and religion and honour and love, war,
    comradeship, all of these things. But I would never sit down and
    think, ooh, I must write a book about comradeship."

    For the record, though, the abuse of nationalism and religion is
    something he feels strongly about. In a way, writing about the topic
    is his inheritance: De Bernières may be a French name, but he is
    English, a descendent of Huguenots fleeing persecution in
    18th-century France.

    "I actually think religion is evil when it's in its militant phase,"
    he said. "When you're militant, and you think you have God on your
    side and you have a direct telephone line to him, then you're going
    to start all sorts of unpleasant mayhem. I actually think it is
    absurd to claim to know things that are actually unknowable. And I
    know that nationalism is a load of rubbish. Look at my country. There
    is no such thing as a purebred Englishman."

    In the slow summer book season, newspapers in Britain have been
    anxiously awaiting their turn to weigh in on what's being touted as
    the adult equivalent of a Harry Potter novel. As with Captain
    Corelli's Mandolin, the initial critical reception to Birds Without
    Wings in Britain has been mixed (North American reviews will wait
    until the book's official release date on July 24). The Independent
    declared it a masterpiece; while Peter Kemp of The Sunday Times
    accused him of "stereotypes spray-painted with exoticism."

    The somewhat publicity-reluctant de Bernières -- he's not doing any
    television interviews in Britain because, "As soon as you are on the
    television, you become interesting to the tabloid newspapers, and
    then you have people on the lawn with cameras" -- doesn't go out of
    his way to read reviews, although people will call him up with
    congratulations or commiserations.

    "Sometimes you read criticism which is actually quite helpful, and
    you think, hmm, yes, that's a good point," he said. "The Peter Kemp
    one -- he was annoyed with me that everyone was called Ali the
    Broken-Nosed or Ali the Snowbringer, or etc, etc. The fact is that
    back in those days, Turks didn't have surnames, so that's what they
    were being called, but Peter Kemp thought that was just me trying to
    be fake-exotic. That kind of criticism is just so ignorant, it just
    makes you feel contemptuous rather than hurt."

    De Bernières, 49, is in the fortunate position of being able to take
    the occasional bad review in stride. He's earned his professional
    cred long ago, selected as one of the Best of Young British Novelists
    by Granta in 1993 and claiming a fistful of Eurasia-region
    Commonwealth Writers Prizes -- for a double-dose of magic realism,
    1990's The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts and 1991's Senor Vivo
    and the Coca Lord. Captain Corelli's Mandolin won the overall
    Commonwealth Writers Prize in 1995, but more important, Corelli won
    him some creative breathing space.

    Since being released in 1994, Corelli has sold 2.5-million copies in
    the Commonwealth alone, propelled by a marketer's impossible dream --
    word-of-mouth sales. The film rights were sold for roughly £200,000
    (almost $486,000 Canadian). With his money, de Bernières was able to
    stop scratching out a living as a substitute teacher and buy his
    country house, which he shares with his partner, an actress and
    director. There, the rural-Surrey-bred, prep-school-educated author
    has built his own Arcadia.

    In the 10 years since Corelli, he's leisurely produced Red Dog, a
    children's book about a legendary Australian mutt, and Sunday Morning
    at the Centre of the Universe, a radio play meant as a farewell to
    his old London community before he left for the country. De Bernières
    has plans for two more novels as well as two books of short stories,
    but he's not racing to write them, although not because the success
    of Corelli means he doesn't have to.

    "I only ever wrote when I felt like it, so that hasn't changed," he
    said. "There was never a time when I suddenly thought, ooh, my life
    has changed, everything is completely different, because it was all
    happening so gradually. The best thing is that I bought myself a
    house in the country where I can live with lots of space and
    tranquillity."

    He spends his newly purchased spare time not writing more, but
    tinkering about with cars (he has fixed up three, his oldest a 1947
    Ford Pilot) and indulging in his one real obsession: playing music
    and restoring instruments. He's fond of woodwinds, and "things with
    frets and strings" including guitars, banjos and, of course,
    mandolins.

    "It was the first time I'd had any money or spare time and I found
    that when I quit teaching, I suddenly had that much more time for
    hobbies, so I didn't write any more than I did before," he said. "I
    also wanted time for my style and approach to change a bit, to
    mature. I didn't want to write Captain Corelli's Mandolin twice."
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