Ashbourne News Telegraph

I’d written a lot about the end of love... this time I wanted to write about the beginning

Despite mega success, novelist David Nicholls admits he still wrestles anxiety and dissatisfa­ction with his own work, as HANNAH STEPHENSON discovers

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HE HAS achieved massive success with best-selling novels including One Day and Us and his skills as a screenwrit­er are in huge demand – yet David Nicholls admits he is constantly anxious.

Meeting the amiable author, who is softly spoken and naturally quite shy, you get the impression that he’s more comfortabl­e putting his heartfelt emotions, humour and nostalgic thoughts down on paper, than saying them in person.

He blames the anxiety and sleepless nights on the fact he’s working on a new four-part adaptation of his last novel, Us, for BBC1, starring The Night Manager’s Tom Hollander, while at the same time embarking on a major book tour for his new one, Sweet Sorrow.

“I’m a wreck, actually. I feel if I can just make it to October then I can have a day without deadlines. I haven’t had that for three years,” David, 52, confesses.

“I’ve always been anxious about work, missing deadlines and getting things wrong, and my work not being as good as it can be, but I don’t want to overstate the anxiety because I am very lucky.”

How does David cope with the worry? “Not very well,” he admits.

“I haven’t had a lie-in for 20 years. I don’t know what I would do there.

“I can’t sit around on a beach. I haven’t relaxed in recent memory, but I do love my work. And I love going for long walks, often by myself.”

It was David’s third novel, One Day – in which one-night lovers spend 20 years finding and losing each other – which really raised his profile.

Since it was published in 2009, it’s sold more than five million copies worldwide, and spawned a hit movie adaptation

in 2011 starring Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess.

This followed an earlier big-screen adaptation of his first novel Starter For Ten, starring a young James Mcavoy, Rebecca Hall and Benedict Cumberbatc­h, all of whom have gone on to mega-stardom.

Filming of Us is already underway, while David is on the book tour for Sweet Sorrow – a comingof-age story set in 1997, about 16-year-old school leaver Charlie Lewis who reluctantl­y joins an amateur dramatics group staging a production of Romeo And Juliet, so he can pursue the girl he’s fallen for.

“It’s a by-product of being deep into middle-age,” David says of the subject matter. “I didn’t want to write about getting older. I wanted to reset the clock and refresh things. I’d written a lot about the end of love, about divorce, and I wanted to write about the beginning this time.”

Wanting to turn back the clock in his fiction is not part of a mid-life crisis however, he points out.

“I’m just not as blasé about middle-age as I thought I’d be. When I was a kid and I used to see grownups not want to celebrate their birthdays, I used to think, ‘That’s bizarre’. But you get to 52 and you think, ‘Let’s give it a miss this year’.

“I’m not buying sports cars or any of the clichés,” the Hampshire-born writer continues. “I’m not having a mid-life crisis in the convention­al way.

“I don’t love it (middle-age). The danger of it is you become quite backward-looking and a little bit nostalgic or rueful about the past, and I don’t want to do that.”

Sweet Sorrow is funny, poignant and painful, evoking memories of the feelings of uncertaint­y when you leave school, the gradual fading of old friendship­s and the allencompa­ssing emotions of first love.

David throws an extra element in as Charlie struggles to look after his miserable father, who has turned to booze and pills in the wake of his wife leaving him.

The author may not have had the traumatic family experience­s of his fictional character, but he has felt the same insecuriti­es of so many youngsters as they leave school.

“There’s a bit of autobiogra­phy in the social insecuriti­es, the worries about how you are perceived and about your friends, the self-doubt and awkwardnes­s.

“It isn’t carefree. There’s also loneliness, anxiety and sadness.”

David says he was a swot at school who was academical­ly ambitious and wanted to go to university (he studied drama and English at Bristol before going to drama school in New York). For nearly a decade after, he was a struggling actor – his second novel The Understudy was partly inspired by his experience­s.

“Over an eight-year stretch, I was employed for about three-and-a-half years, and the rest of the time I was working in bookshops or pubs.

“I was sitting around worrying in bedsits. It was a very stressful time,” he recalls. “I really wanted to do something well but I wasn’t a particular­ly remarkable actor.

“I was quite ordinary, or competent at best, and a lot of the time not even competent. I understudi­ed a lot. I was often Waiter Number Two.”

But the experience helped him as a scriptwrit­er and he went on to contribute to ITV series Cold Feet, wrote the screenplay­s for the Starter For Ten and One Day movies, and later adaptation­s of Tess Of The D’urberville­s, Far From The Madding Crowd and, most recently, TV drama Patrick Melrose starring Benedict Cumberbatc­h.

“I find screenwrit­ing much more stressful than writing a novel,” David adds. “Writing fiction can be quite stressful if it’s going badly and an idea isn’t working, but when you are a screenwrit­er you have all of those fears and anxieties in a room full of 30 people, who all have notes, criticisms and things they want to change. It’s much more confrontat­ional.”

David, who lives in north London, works in an office away from home and says he is able to switch off when he’s with his family. He has two children, Max, 13, and 11-year-old Romy, with his partner Hannah Weaver, a script editor.

“I never wanted to tell the kids to be quiet outside my door. If I have to do something work-wise at home, I’ll get up very early to do it, while everyone’s asleep.”

Despite his success, he admits there are always elements of his work that leave him dissatisfi­ed.

“The finished film or TV series is when you notice what’s wrong, by which time it’s too late.

“I wouldn’t necessaril­y sit down and watch what I’d written for fun because I’d find it quite stressful.

“I’d think, ‘Why did I put that joke in?’, or, ‘Why didn’t I fight for that line?’ You always have regrets.”

He’s not sure if Sweet Sorrow will be adapted for screen.

“It’s a tricky one because even though it’s about teenagers, it’s really for adults and theatre is a very hard thing to put on the screen, with a flashback structure. It may never be a film and that’s fine – I just want it to be the best possible book.”

■ Sweet Sorrow by David Nicholls is published by Hodder & Stoughton, priced £20.

 ??  ?? Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess in the big-screen adaptation of One Day David Nicholls, left, and his new book, Sweet Sorrow, above
Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess in the big-screen adaptation of One Day David Nicholls, left, and his new book, Sweet Sorrow, above
 ??  ?? Tom Hollander will star in a BBC1 adaptation of Us
Tom Hollander will star in a BBC1 adaptation of Us
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