Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Riot Asks Emily St. John Mandel
Riot Asks Emily St. John Mandel Emily St. John Mandel was born on the west coast of British Columbia, Canada. She studied dance at The School of Toronto Dance Theatre and lived briefly in Montreal before relocating to New York. Her third novel, The Lola Quartet, is out now from Unbridled Books in the United States and McArthur Company in Canada. Her previous novels are Last Night in Montreal and The Singers Gun. She is a staff writer for The Millions. She has an essay in the recent anthology The Late American Novel: Writers on the Future of the Book (Soft Skull, 2011), and her short fiction will appear in Venice Noir, an anthology forthcoming from Akashic Books in 2012. She is married and lives in Brooklyn. BOOK RIOT: What are you reading? Emily St. John Mandel: I am between books. I just finished Luminous Airplanes by Paul LaFarge. I started last night The Buenos Aires Quintet by Manuel Vasquez Montalban; itâs one of these books that just appeared in the mail, itâs from Melville House. I try to read one book at a time. Inevitably I start something else! I average 1.5 at a time. I donât always finish books that I startI try to stick to the 50-page rule. BR: Which book do you wish you had written? EM: Thatâs a good questionyeah, a lot of them! Like every other writer, I wish I had written A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan. Itâs so adventurous, she takes such risks I feel like you have to keep pushing yourself.. BR: Which book do you recommend over and over again? EM: Another resissue, After Midnight by Irmgard Keun, which is really about civilian life in Germany after WWII. The language is really beautiful, the book just combines this beauty and simplicity with a lot of power to it in describing a moment that we donât read a lot about. I also often recommend Dan Chaonâs Await Your Reply, a novel with the most dazzling structure. BR: Are there any books you think everyone simply has to read? EM: I feel like everybody should read Salingerâs stories of the Glass family. What Iâm always looking for is anything thatâs beautifully written with a strong plot: Chaon falls into that category. So does Roberto Bolano. BR: Who are your greatest influences as a writer? EM: I know there must have been some, but Iâve been writing all my life, so I have a tough time choosing. However, I can tell you some books that intensified my love of reading, and those were the volumes in Susan Cooperâs The Dark Is Rising series. BR: Which book do you re-read regularly? EM: I donât re-read books very often. Thereâs a book that Iâve read a couple of times called Spurious by Lars Iyer. But I deliberately donât go back to books. To put it bluntly, I feel like I really donât have time. I do blurb; I donât do it very often, itâs a difficult thing to navigate and can be an incredibly awkward conversation. I feel like itâs an honor, though, when somebody thinks your name belongs on someone elseâs book. BR: Describe your reading style/routine. EM: I read mostly on the subway I have a long commute to my day job, Iâm there five days a week, and read for an hour each way on the F train. Iâve really only been reading print books. I feel like I spend so much of my life staring at screens, itâs really nice to take a break. BR: Which book has changed your life? EM: I did read a book once, Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, that changed the way I thought about some social issues, some things I hadnât understood about urban poverty. Norman Mailerâs The Executionerâs Song changed the way I wrotethat incredible lucidity and simplicity in the prose had an influence on my writing style.
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