The Guardian (USA)

Joseph O’Connor: ‘My scepticism about monarchy began at six with a Ladybird book’

- Joseph O’Connor

My earliest reading memoryI’d say I’m four, nearly five. The year I start in school. I’m in our house near Dún Laoghaire in Dublin, sitting under the kitchen table, and I’m trying, and failing, to read a book of fairytales by the Irish writer Sinéad de Valera.

My favourite book growing upI’m going to cheat a bit and choose a series – Richmal Crompton’s Just William books – so arch and funny and tonguein-cheek. And exotic. The version of suburban Englishnes­s she gently skewered was like something from another planet.

The book that changed me as a teenagerTh­e New Journalism, an anthology edited by Tom Wolfe and EW Johnson, was published in 1973. Six years later, on a trip to London, I bought a copy in Collet’s on Charing Cross Road. To read Joan Didion, Barbara Goldsmith and Hunter S Thompson at that age was a revelation. Also, John Cooper Clarke came into Collet’s as I was paying for the book. So, somehow, he’s a part of the experience.

The writer who changed my mindA copy of A Ladybird Book: British Kings and Queens was given to me by the smiling nun who taught me when I was six. I often think it’s where my scepticism about monarchy began.

The book that made me want to be a writerEnco­untering the first sentence of JD Salinger’s The Catcher in the Rye when I was 17 was like hearing the brilliant X-Ray Spex for the first time. “If you really want to hear about it, the first thing you’ll probably want to know is where I was born, and what my lousy childhood was like, and how my parents were occupied and all before they had me, and all that David Copperfiel­d kind of crap, but I don’t feel like going into it, if you want to know the truth.” It had never occurred to me that fiction could be so defiant. By the time I finished the novel, I wanted to be a writer.

The book or author I came back toI hated Ulysses when I was young, perhaps because the student character in it, Stephen Dedalus, is so unlikable. I tried it again in my 40s and was blown away. Bits of it are like listening to Brian

Eno or Laurie Anderson: it isn’t asking to be understood, just experience­d.

The book I rereadI have two novels that I come back to every couple of years because I loved them so much when I was in my 20s: Toni Morrison’s Jazz and Peter Carey’s Oscar and Lucinda. Rereading them is a pilgrimage and a pleasure.

The book I could never read againAnyth­ing involving a hobbit.

The book I discovered later in lifeProust’s Swann’s Way, with those extraordin­arily beautiful long sentences. He suffered from severe allergies and asthma, but his writing is so full of spaciousne­ss. Prose as breathing.

The book I am currently readingI love books about Rome, where my novel My Father’s House is set. Just Passing Through is a collection of the diaries and photograph­s of Milton Gendel who lived there for 70 years, documentin­g fashion, art and la dolce vita. The photograph­s are good, but the writing is knockout. One acquaintan­ce is “like a lizard with a high IQ”.

My Father’s House by Joseph O’Connor is published by Harvill Secker. To buy a copy go to guardianbo­okshop.com

 ?? ?? ‘I hated Ulysses when I was young’ … Joseph O’Connor. Photograph: Patrick Bolger
‘I hated Ulysses when I was young’ … Joseph O’Connor. Photograph: Patrick Bolger

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