New Straits Times

Philippa’s picks

Philippa Gregory, author of The Last Tudor, avoids reading her own genre, for good reason!

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WHAT BOOKS ARE ON YOUR NIGHTSTAND NOW?

Oh dear, I am English. I don’t have a “nightstand.” The closest thing I know to a nightstand would be a headstand, and I don’t think that’s what you mean. What I do have is an overloaded Kindle, of which the first four titles are: Marilyn Waring’s

and

Ian Mortimer’s What Isn’t History?; Anne Ancelin Schützenbe­rger’s

and the and Tom Stoppard’s

You can make of that what you like. It seems an odd mix to me, and I’m the one who chose them.

WHAT INFLUENCES YOUR DECISIONS ABOUT WHICH BOOKS TO READ? WORD OF MOUTH, REVIEWS, A TRUSTED FRIEND?

Like a lot of people, I find it hard to find books that I want to read. I quite often read several books from the same author once I have found him or her. I read reviews, and they often alert me to a book that I am going to like, and I often get ideas from others, especially other historians and novelists who are as picky as me.

WHAT DO YOU THINK MAKES FOR GOOD HISTORICAL FICTION? WHO ARE YOUR FAVOURITE WRITERS IN THE GENRE?

What I don’t read is historical fiction in the period that I am writing. Firstly, the characters as described by anyone else drive me mad. The idea of Katherine Howard as a sinless victim or a willful slut is so offensive. Surely we all accept by now that women are never one-dimensiona­l? Not apparently if they’re in a hood. Also, I dare not read historical fiction when I am researchin­g the period, in case the author has inserted something wrong or something fictional that may stick in my head. But I suffer terribly from Pen Envy — when I read a good book I wish I had written it, when I read a poor book I am furious that the author has spoilt the story. That’s why I only read very, very good novelists — only with them can I sit back and enjoy the experience.

HOW DO YOU LIKE TO READ?

PAPER OR ELECTRONIC? ONE

BOOK AT A TIME OR SEVERAL SIMULTANEO­USLY? MORNING OR NIGHT?

This is incomprehe­nsible in a way — determinin­g how I like to read is like determinin­g how I like to breathe! I read all the time, all day, and I read a chapter of something before I go to sleep at night. I study with hardback books because they are old or specialist, so most of the day in my study I am reading from paper. At lunchtime I read a paper newspaper; I have a ridiculous, oldfashion­ed prejudice against newspapers online, but somehow it seems perfectly well-mannered to read a newspaper at the lunch table where it would seem rude to read from a screen. In the evening, I read fiction on my e-reader, and before I sleep I might read fiction or a history book on my e-reader.

HOW DO YOU ORGANIZE YOUR BOOKS? I love my shelves, which are now so many and so loaded that I can call them a library. Sometimes, I think fondly of going the full Dewey. I started buying secondhand hardbacks when I was a student, and so I have all the classics in hardback, and even a couple of inherited first editions. I now buy in book and e-book form, and my books are arranged by author’s name, alphabetic­ally. I have thousands of books now and 554 on my three-year-old Kindle, of which I have read all but a handful. I love the serendipit­y of the library that puts Austen beside Althusser and E. P. Thompson beside James Thomson, Tennessee Williams beside Raymond. I have created a cosy space in the bookshelve­s that line the room — for my reading corner and for the one-legged rescue kestrel who lives with me while learning to fly free. She likes a classic hardback under her foot.

WHAT BOOK MIGHT PEOPLE BE SURPRISED TO FIND ON YOUR SHELVES?

I have to observe that I have an odd section on witchcraft and a section on skiing history — this is like the fossil record of my research eras.

WHAT’S THE BEST BOOK YOU’VE EVER RECEIVED AS A GIFT?

My godfather gave me a beautiful illustrate­d

when I was about 7, and I started with the limericks and comic poems and went on to the great heartwrenc­hing story-poems. I kept the book and read them to my children.

WHAT KIND OF READER WERE YOU AS A CHILD? WHICH CHILDHOOD BOOKS AND AUTHORS STICK WITH YOU MOST?

I was a solitary child, and I read voraciousl­y. I used to borrow four books a week from the library, and this is why I strongly support public libraries now. The books that have stayed with me are the childhood classics: Elizabeth Goudge’s

Rudyard Kipling’s Alison Uttley’s As a teenager I adored Georgette Heyer and E. M. Forster.

YOU’RE ORGANIZING A LITERARY DINNER PARTY. WHICH THREE WRITERS, DEAD OR ALIVE, DO YOU INVITE?

You would be mad to invite three writers to dinner, but if you had Ernest Hemingway, Dorothy Parker and Christophe­r Marlowe then the inevitable fight would be interestin­g.

WHOM WOULD YOU WANT TO WRITE YOUR LIFE STORY?

Picking my biographer is a game I have recently learnt to play. It’s about as much fun as picking out the smuggler when you’re in a line waiting at immigratio­n. (Oh, doesn’t everyone do that?) It came with the horrified recognitio­n that people are now writing about me (Ph.D. theses, blogs, journalism, reviews) and sooner or later someone is going to want to plumb the depths. As a highly private person who loves publicly talking about my work but hates talking about my life, this is a nightmare. I was raised by a mother who talked about “Never Doing Dirty Washing in Public” (the capitaliza­tion is all hers and has to be heard to be fully enjoyed). Her metaphor is dated — it obviously precedes launderett­es — but the message was a powerful one.

So I have chosen my biographer, and she is a young woman writer of talent who understand­s my horror of my own biography, my love of the novel as a novel, my commitment to my own privacy and my determinat­ion that my family and friends who have never been recruited for publicity are not signed up to speak. She is a writer who understand­s the power of an empty page, of silence. I have given her the task of not writing my biography, and I think she will fulfill it beautifull­y.

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