The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

AUTHOR INTERVIEW

Christina Sweeney-Baird’s The End Of Men is a prescient tale of a pandemic, writes Nora McElhone

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Author and lawyer Christina Sweeney-Baird’s tale of a world-altering pandemic was eerily prophetic but the writer was careful to separate her imagined world and the reality of Covid-19.

London-based Christina, 29, had always wanted to write and spent much of her childhood scribbling. She says that she worked on, “the beginnings of novels and essays all through my teens... I have a chronologi­cal shelf of over 30 journals covering over 20 years.”

She penned her first novel while she was training to be a lawyer. “I never had an idea that was The One, I just wanted to know if I could write a novel and actually finish a piece of work. Then I had the idea for The End of Men and I knew it could really be something; I was so excited by the idea. What does the world look like without 90% of its men?”

The End Of Men takes the idea of a pandemic and adds an extra twist – what if the disease working its way through the population was more dangerous for men than women? As her novel was moving towards publicatio­n, the very real Covid situation was unfolding around the world, something that Christina found: “completely surreal at first, especially when there started to be reports that men were more likely to be affected by Covid than women.

“Although I tried to keep the book I had written and the experience of early 2020 compartmen­talised for my own sanity. And I do think Covid is very different from The End of Men; the gender elements of the novel’s page change the world’s response so very quickly the book doesn’t resemble anything we’ve actually experience­d.”

Christina’s pandemic begins with a patient zero on the Isle of Bute, with much of the novel’s action centred on the city of Glasgow, a location that is close to her heart.

She said: “I know Glasgow very well, having grown up there, and there’s a particular sensibilit­y to Glaswegian­s that I wanted to write.

“The Glaswegian character, Dr Amanda Maclean,

is funny, wry and no-nonsense. And I had gone on holiday to the Isle of Bute and been struck by how remote and beautiful it was.”

Rather than focussing on one viewpoint, Christina has chosen to tell the story through several voices. “I think because of the breadth of the story. It’s such a huge question – what does the world look like without men? One narrator would inevitably limit the answer to one country and one person’s experience,” she says.

“I wanted to explore the global aspects of the story and also have different women and men’s perspectiv­es: how would it change things if you were a doctor? A politician? A mother of two boys? A man stuck on a boat in Iceland?”

Christina says she found the concept of building a fictional world based around women and their needs exciting. She was able to address everything from the small things like the, “phone too big for my hands to the huge concerns: Sexism in medicine and medical research which literally puts women’s lives at risk. The broken childcare system. Structural sexism and sexual harassment...”

Still continuing with her law career, Christina says that she is enjoying the balance of writing and work so far. “I’m working on my next novel, which I hope to complete (very!) soon. I think I’ll keep both going for now – as they say, if it ain’t broken, don’t fix it!”

The End Of Men by Christina Sweeney-Baird is out in paperback on May 12, published by Borough Press.

 ?? ?? Author Christina Sweeney-Baird.
Author Christina Sweeney-Baird.

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