Credit…Rebecca Clarke By the Book Even after doing research in Montana, a draft of the book that became “The Heart in Winter” was “dead on the page,” he says. Back in Ireland, the runaway lovers now at its center “suddenly appeared to me.” Credit…Rebecca Clarke What books are on your night stand? I’m neck-deep in Willy Vlautin’s new novel, “The Horse,” and it’s just as good as all his other books. I just finished Caleb Azumah Nelson’s “Small Worlds,” a beguiling take on first love in Peckham and the spiritual release of dancing. I also recently dug Sheila Heti’s “Alphabetical Diaries,” an artful cut-up of her journals, and Vinson Cunningham’s elegant “Great Expectations.” Describe your ideal reading experience. Probably a filthy winter’s night at home in County Sligo, in the bed, with the rain rattling the windows and the wind shaking the four corners of the house, and a fire in the grate, and I’m probably rereading something old and beloved and slightly eccentric like a Jean Rhys or a V.S. Pritchett or an Iris Murdoch. Why did you decide to set “The Heart in Winter” in America? In the summer of 1999, I was walking in the mountains in West Cork in Ireland when I came across some abandoned copper mines. I learned that they’d played out in the 1880s and all the miners had left for Butte, Mont. I thought, This is a western, but with County Cork accents — I’m in. Did you spend time in Montana before writing? Indeed. In October 1999, I took a 14-hour Greyhound trip from Seattle to Butte and I had a blast out there. Butte is very proud of its Irish heritage and the welcome laid on for a native son was elaborate. I got great material for a novel, all lovely, ripe stuff about the bars and brothels and opium parlors of the 1890s, and I read the long-gone miners’ lonesome letters in search of brides, and much more. I went back to Ireland and wrote 120,000 words and it was all dead on the page. Walking through the […]
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