Nina Allan’s stories
have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies, includingBest Horror of the Year #6,The Year’s Best Science Fiction and
Fantasy 2013, andThe Mammoth Book of Ghost Stories by
Women. Her novellaSpin, a science fictional
re-imagining of the Arachne myth, won the BSFA Award in 2014, and her
story-cycleThe Silver Windwas awarded the Grand
Prix de L’Imaginaire in the same year. Her debut novelThe Racewas a finalist for the
2015 BSFA Award, the Kitschies Red Tentacle and the John W. Campbell Memorial
Award. Nina lives and works in North Devon. Her blog, The Spider’s House,
is here.
1.Tell us three
things about yourself.
One of my first
horror movie memories is of watching Jacques Tourneur’s Night of the Demon as part of one of the BBC’s Friday night ‘Horror
Double Bill’ features. The second half of that double bill was Freddie
Francis’s The Ghoul, but that was
deemed a) too late and b) too scary for me to stay up for. I enjoyed Night of the Demon, but remember being
disappointed that the actual demon didn’t get more screen time – Don
Henderson’s bloodstained feet creeping down the attic stairs in the trailer for
The Ghoul seemed much more up my
street. I still hold a lot of affection for The
Ghoul because of that early attachment, though it’s easy to see that of
those two films it is Night of the Demon
that is the cinematic masterpiece. Certainly to my adult self it seems even
more impressive now than it did then. Not a bad introduction to the genre.
When I was at
secondary school, I used to conduct impromptu readings from Herbert van Thal’s Pan
Books of Horror Stories for the
benefit, if you can call it that, of my assembled friends. I remember George
Fielding Eliot’s ‘The Copper Bowl’ and Flavia Richardson’s ‘Behind the Yellow
Door’ were among the most requested – although I don’t think my teachers were
so keen...
If I could only
take one horror novel to a desert island, it would be Joyce Carol Oates’s Bellefleur. For me, Oates’s dark fiction
is without equal, and this generation-spanning saga of a family who may or may
not have vampires among their number is a superb place to begin. There are
echoes of Mervin Peake’s Gormenghast
in the richness of the book’s language and the scope of its narrative, but
Oates is thoroughly her own writer and the wit, irony and erudition with which
she approaches her material make Bellefleur
a masterpiece of modern gothic. I feel I could spend a long time on that island
with only Oates to read and still find new delights to savour.
2.What was the first
thing you had published?
That was actually
a translation I worked on of a Russian novella called The Peasant, by Dmitri Grigorovich, which was published in 1990. My
first published piece of fiction was a short story called ‘The Beachcomber’,
which appeared in an issue of the British Fantasy Society journal Dark Horizons
in 2002.
3.Which piece of
writing are you proudest of?
I always tend to feel happiest with whatever work I happen to have
completed most recently, so in this case I’d have to name my second novel The Rift, which is due out next year. The Rift is about two sisters, Selena
and Julie, and the mystery surrounding Julie’s disappearance at the age of
seventeen. The book started life as a story about alien abduction, but
developed into something rather different. I am very pleased with the way it has
turned out, and I’m looking forward to seeing what readers will make of it.
4.…and which makes
you cringe?
Nothing I’ve
written makes me cringe, exactly – I’ve always tried to produce the best work I
was capable of at any given time, which is all you can do as a writer, really.
But I’m not particularly fond of any of the stories I wrote prior to 2007, when
my first collection came out. I find those early stories too derivative, too
tentative, although many of the themes and character types I’m drawn to are
already present, in embryo.
5.What’s a normal
writing day like?
I am
avowedly a morning person, and most of my first-draft writing gets done between
9am and 5pm. When I’m writing first draft I like to get 2,000 words in a day if
I can. I tend to discard a lot, and might need two or three attempts before I
can find my way into a story. I have huge admiration for writers like Jonathan
Franzen and Nicola Barker, who disconnect themselves entirely from the internet
while they’re working, and this is something I’m thinking of trying myself with
my next book. I’m actually quite disciplined about staying offline when I need
to, but it’s incredibly easy to get distracted, if you’re not careful. It’s
important to get rid of mental white noise, to create a space and an atmosphere
that fosters concentration at a deep level. I don’t agree, at all, with all the
doom-saying about how the internet has shortened people’s attention spans on a
permanent basis – I think the online life is as capable of stimulating
creativity as it is of stifling it – but for me at least it’s essential to switch
off sometimes, to get properly back in touch with what I think and feel,
without the running commentary of peer group opinion in the background constantly
badgering me to react to this or that. The main reason I don’t do social media
is that I find that level of intrusion – that sense of being constantly
available for comment – disastrous for work. Consequently I tend to use the
internet in what is a very old fashioned way: a kind of speeded-up version of
the postal and library services!
6.Which piece of
writing should someone who’s never read you before pick up first?
I think I’d
probably say The Harlequin, which won
The Novella Award last year. It contains some of the metafictional elements I’m
so fond of, but it’s also a relatively straightforward story about the effects
of war, both on those who experience the violence first hand and those who stay
behind, who are often left to pick up the pieces afterwards. It’s a story about
a haunting, and a murder and I like it a lot. The physical book, from Sandstone
Press, is a beautiful thing.
7.What
are you working on now?
Another novella, and my first
piece of full-on horror fiction for more than a year. I’ve wanted to write a
Lovecraft-inspired piece for ages, and I think it’s safe to say this is one,
although it contains no overt Mythos references. I’ve been having a lot of fun
with this story, which should hopefully see the light of day later this year.
A fine interview with a splendid writer.
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