| SPRING 2005
I’ve just finished writing the film script of “These
Foolish Things” for Working Title. It’s been very
fascinating; at first the characters stayed stubbornly on the
page, locked into their novel-life. Then, after a few weeks,
they blinked and shook themselves free, stepping out of the page
into their new identities. They did bolder things, because film
characters do behave differently; they push the action to the
ultimate. For instance, in the book Evelyn just visits the call
centre and tells the kids about Enfield; in the film she puts
on a headset and becomes the star of the place. There’s
a movie-moment when the kids remove their headsets, one by one,
as she charms the English callers. So the characters alter, subtly,
as well as the plot. The new story now lies like a hologram over
the novel, it’s rather disorientating. But one of the advantages
of adapting ones own novel is that you know the characters so
deeply you have a lot to draw on, and can somehow absorb any
changes. Still, it’s a weird business...(There are also
a lot of new jokes).
“These Foolish Things” ( the novel) has been made
the “Daily Mail” Book Club choice for April. Book
clubs all over the country read it and the paper suggests questions
and so on. They also buy the novel at half-price. There’s
a lot to discuss – the subject is so very topical, each
day there’s a story in the papers about care of the elderly,
dwindling pensions and so on. Not to mention outsourcing everying
to call centres in Bangalore. Why not outsource the elderly?
The thought of sipping a gin-and-tonic in the sunny garden of
a retirement hotel in India, rather than gazing at the rain sliding
down the window of a cabbage-smelling Home in Worthing, is certainly
seductive, don’t you think?
Due to the Book Club business, the paperback of “These
Foolish Things” is published in April. It was supposed
to come out in February, so sorry about that. But you can buy
it now, so go on…
Several of my other novels have now been re-issued in paperback,
with nice new photographic jackets. “Porky”, my novel
about incest, “Driving in the Dark”, about a coach
driver looking for his lost son, “Seesaw” about a
teenage kidnap, “Stolen” which is about a muslim
father abducting his children – they’re also in the
bookshops now. And more titles are to be re-issued in the coming
months.
I’m going to be giving a talk in Amsterdam about “Tulip
Fever” on April 8 (part of the BritLit season), and I’m
appearing at the Hay Festival on 3 and 5 June, giving a masterclass
on my movie adaptation of “Pride and Prejudice” and
doing a Good Housekeeping Literary Lunch with Sandy Toksvig,
Mavis Cheek and Jane Fonda. I’m also the guest on Radio
3’s “Private Passions” on 8 May. “Pride
and Prejudice”, as I wrote before, looks completely wonderful.
It’s still in post-production and will appear in cinemas
in September. That’s the latest news on a release date,
anyway. I’ll tell you if it changes. No new news on the
film of “Tulip Fever”.
Still haven’t thought of a novel but hey, it’s
spring. Do email me, I love hearing from you.
DEBORAH MOGGACH
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