{"title":"Reinventing Lives: A Conversation with Steven Carroll","authors":"G. Dooley","doi":"10.22356/WIC.V6I1.41","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Steven Carroll is the author of twelve novels, including two series; one based around his family background in Glenroy in suburban Melbourne, and the other inspired by T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets. I have admired Steven’s work ever since I reviewed The Time We Have Taken, his 2007 Miles Franklin Award winning novel, for the very first issue of Transnational Literature. This was the third of the ‘Glenroy’ novels – there are now six in that series, the latest being The Year of the Beast (2019), based on the experiences of his grandmother in Melbourne in 1917.Recently, when catching up on some long-overdue reading, I picked up A World of Other People (2013), the second of the Eliot novels, to discover that, although it is never made explicit in the book, the heroine is a reinvented version of another of my favourite writers, Iris Murdoch. I immediately decided it was time to travel to Melbourne (on the Overland train, which Steven’s father used to drive) to interview him.We met in late January 2019 in bustling Lygon Street, Carlton, where it was too noisy to record our conversation. We found a quiet, shady table nearby on the Melbourne University campus and talked for an hour, till the heat drove us back to Lygon Street to continue chatting over a cup of tea. ","PeriodicalId":298270,"journal":{"name":"Writers in Conversation","volume":"22 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-02-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Writers in Conversation","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22356/WIC.V6I1.41","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Steven Carroll is the author of twelve novels, including two series; one based around his family background in Glenroy in suburban Melbourne, and the other inspired by T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets. I have admired Steven’s work ever since I reviewed The Time We Have Taken, his 2007 Miles Franklin Award winning novel, for the very first issue of Transnational Literature. This was the third of the ‘Glenroy’ novels – there are now six in that series, the latest being The Year of the Beast (2019), based on the experiences of his grandmother in Melbourne in 1917.Recently, when catching up on some long-overdue reading, I picked up A World of Other People (2013), the second of the Eliot novels, to discover that, although it is never made explicit in the book, the heroine is a reinvented version of another of my favourite writers, Iris Murdoch. I immediately decided it was time to travel to Melbourne (on the Overland train, which Steven’s father used to drive) to interview him.We met in late January 2019 in bustling Lygon Street, Carlton, where it was too noisy to record our conversation. We found a quiet, shady table nearby on the Melbourne University campus and talked for an hour, till the heat drove us back to Lygon Street to continue chatting over a cup of tea.
史蒂文·卡罗尔是十二部小说的作者,其中包括两部系列小说;一个是基于他在墨尔本郊区格伦罗伊的家庭背景,另一个是受T.S.艾略特的《四个四重奏》的启发。自从我在《跨国文学》杂志的第一期上评论史蒂文2007年获得迈尔斯·富兰克林奖的小说《我们所度过的时光》以来,我就一直钦佩他的作品。这是“格伦罗伊”系列小说的第三部,该系列目前有六部,最新一部是《野兽年》(2019年),取材于格伦罗伊祖母1917年在墨尔本的经历。最近,在补读一些姗姗来迟的读物时,我拿起了艾略特系列小说的第二部《他人的世界》(A World of others People, 2013)。我发现,尽管书中没有明确说明,但女主人公是另一位我最喜欢的作家艾瑞斯•默多克(Iris Murdoch)的翻版。我立刻决定是时候去墨尔本采访他了(乘坐Overland火车,史蒂文的父亲曾经开过这趟车)。我们于2019年1月下旬在卡尔顿繁华的Lygon街见面,那里太吵了,无法记录我们的谈话。我们在墨尔本大学校园附近找了一张安静、阴凉的桌子,聊了一个小时,直到炎热的天气把我们赶回莱贡街,一边喝茶一边继续聊天。