The Scotsman

Tributes paid to author of A Year in Provence

Peter Mayle praised for way he captured French and British rivalry

- By TESS DE LA MARE

Sir Ridley Scott has praised the success and spirit of author Peter Mayle, who has died at the age of 78 after a short illness.

The film director, Mayle’s friend and neighbour, said his writing had depicted Anglofrenc­h competitiv­eness “brilliantl­y”.

The 2006 film A Good Year, directed by Sir Ridley and starring Russell Crowe and Marion Cotillard, was based on Mayle’s best-seller A Year In Provence.

He told the BBC: “It was all that humorous competitiv­e spirit between the French and the English that Peter captured brilliantl­y.

“It was quite true about the French, and it was quite true about the British.”

He added: “Peter was a very kind and successful man, and it was driven by his own spirit. You could feel whatever he did, whatever he touched was going to work.”

It was “typical Peter” that his first book became a bestseller, he added.

A Year In Provence had previously been turned into a TV series starring John Thaw in 1993.

Originally from Sussex, the author moved to France in the late 1980s and wrote several follow-on books inspired by his love for the country, including Toujours Provence and Encore Provence.

His works proved so popular that he later bought a home in Long Island, New York, to escape crowds of sightseers at his French cottage. In an interview with the Baltimore Sun newspaper in 1996, he said: “We had people coming up the drive from Japan, from Australia, from Germany, from Sweden, from England, from America. At the beginning, it was really quite exciting … Then it just increased in volume until we were getting four, five, six visits a day.”

In 2002 the author was awarded a Chevalier de la Legion d’honneur by the French government for services to French culture.

Publisher Alfred A Knopf announced on Twitter on Thursday night that Mayle died in a hospital near his home in the south of France after a short illness.

A statement read: “We are sad to report that Peter Mayle, the beloved writer who wrote multiple best-selling books about life in Provence, died early today at a hospital near his home in the south of France. He was 78.”

Mayle started out writing a series of educationa­l books for children, including sex education books and others discussing issues like life and death.

A Year In Provence was published in 1990 with a print run of 3,000 copies, and went on to sell six million copies in 40 languages.

Peter Mayle, an Englishman who started a writing career in his 30s with sex-education books for children, before making a spectacula­rly successful switch to the travel memoir genre with A Year in Provence, his 1989 bestseller about relocating to Southern France, died on Thursday at a hospital near his home there. He was 78.

His death was confirmed by Paul Bogaards of Alfred A Knopf, which has published Mayle’s books since A Year in Provence was released in the United States in 1990.

Mayle and his wife, Jennie, had moved to the village of Ménerbes in the Provence region in 1987, with Mayle intending to write a novel. But with renovation­s to the 18thcentur­y stone farmhouse they had bought in full swing, he kept getting distracted. His agent finally told him to shelve the novel and write about the distractio­ns.

“Everything catastroph­ic became useful,” he recalled in a 1993 interview with the New York Times. “Up to that point, I had kept a halfhearte­d diary. After that, I took copious notes, and the chapters more or less wrote themselves.”

The book relates the couple’s month-by-month encounters with local builders, lawyers, truffle hunters, boar hunters and more. Its British publisher, Hamish Hamilton, had not expected much, ordering 3,000 copies. But the book, aided by being excerpted by the Sunday Times, just kept selling, reaching the million-copy mark in England and 600,000 in the United States.

It was adapted into a television miniseries starring John Thaw and Lindsay Duncan. Mayle wrote a sequel, Toujours Provence, in 1991, and A Year in Provence inspired a wave of similar fare by others.

As the British newspaper the Telegraph noted in revisiting its success in a 2006 article, the book “somehow tapped deep into a slumbering, latent, hitherto unknown British desire for sunshine and fine wine, for peeling shutters and croissants, for distressed armoires and saucisson and the good life in the French countrysid­e.”

Mayle was born on 14 June, 1939, in Brighton, England, and started his career in advertisin­g, working for a time in New York. In a 2009 interview with The Connexion, a French newspaper and website, he said the discipline of writing advertisin­g copy later helped him.

“You’re obliged to stick to the plot – to be concise, informativ­e and if possible entertaini­ng,” he said. “These are not bad qualities for a writer to cultivate.”

His first book, Where Did I Come From?, published in 1973, sought to explain the facts of life to children. He followed that with one on puberty, What’s Happening to Me?

A number of other advice books followed, and Mayle also wrote for magazines. The Mayles began visiting Southern France on vacations in the mid-1980s and liked it so much, they moved there.

A Year in Provence elevated Mayle to a new level of literary success.

Some readers complained that the French people he wrote about came across as caricature­s, but the book, perhaps aided by its vivid descriptio­ns of the region’s food and drink, certainly boosted the tourism business in Provence.

Many visitors wanted to see the house Mayle wrote of, and they weren’t shy about knocking on the door or walking through the yard.

“The summer of 1991 was the worst,” he said in his 1993 interview with he New York Times. “It made us wonder whether we had lost all our peace. Most people just wanted a picture and an autograph.

“But a day without some visitor arriving out of the blue was unusual,” he continued. “Many brought marmalade because I mention in the book that I like marmalade. I think the marmalade pots now outnumber wine bottles in the cellar.”

Not long after the TV series was broadcast – it was also seen on the BBC – the couple moved to Amagansett, on Long Island, to escape the attention, and also to get back to Mayle’s native language.

“No longer did we have to ponder the niceties of addressing people as vous or tu,” he wrote in Encore Provence (1999), a second sequel, of the four years he and his wife spent back in English-speaking territory, “or to rush to the dictionary to check on the gender of everything from a peach to an aspirin.”

But, he continued in that book, they missed “an entire spectrum of sights and sounds and smells and sensations that we had taken for granted in Provence, from the smell of thyme in the fields to the swirl and jostle of Sunday-morning markets.”

They returned to Southern France, but to a different house – one whose location, this time, they kept a closely guarded secret.

France was prominent in Mayle’s other books, both nonfiction and fiction. They included French Lessons: Adventures With Knife, Fork and Corkscrew (2001), Provence A-Z (2006) and a series of crime novels with titles like The Marseille Caper and The Corsican Caper. His novel A Good Year was adapted into a 2006 film with Russell Crowe and Albert Finney, directed by Ridley Scott, another Briton living near Mayle in Provence.

Informatio­n on Mayle’s survivors, who include his wife, was incomplete.

Mayle was never keen on the television adaptation of A Year in Provence, especially not the way he was portrayed.

“John Thaw, who played me, seemed to be in a perpetuall­y bad mood,” he told The Connexion, “whereas I was absolutely delighted with my new life in France.”

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PICTURE: GETTY IMAGES Peter Mayle died in a hospital near his home in the south of France after a short illness
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