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Arts & Ideas

Free Thinking Festival - Colm Toibin

Arts & Ideas

BBC

Society & Culture

4.2599 Ratings

🗓️ 7 October 2014

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Colm Toibin is one of Ireland's finest writers, whose books explore issues such as Catholicism, immigration and homosexuality. This month he has published Nora Webster - a novel set in Ireland in the late 1960s which features a cameo appearance from one of his characters in Brooklyn. In 2012 he published a re-imagining of the life of the Virgin Mary - The Testament of Mary. As booking opens this week for this year's Free Thinking Festival at Sage Gateshead, hear the conversation he recorded with Philip Dodd at the 2012 festival. First broadcast on 6th December 2012.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back to the home of the oxymoron. Evil genius. He asked the newspaper to print his obituary early so he'd enjoy it. That's like hiding at your own funeral. Yeah, it's a big, great gig. I'm Russell Kane. Join me to weigh in on whether the biggest players in history are more evil or genius. Becoming that rich, I'd say that at some level of genius. It also helps that it's a long time ago, right?

0:23.4

It's like the podcast version of telling your kids

0:25.5

the ice cream van plays music when it's out of ice cream.

0:28.9

Listen to Evil Genius on BBC Sounds.

0:42.9

His new novel wraps itself around Mary, the mother of Jesus.

0:49.7

In the time after the crucifixion, her emotions muffled by what she's lived through.

1:00.3

An earlier fiction, the master, imagines the great American novelist Henry James, anguished by love and his inability to show it.

1:11.8

But combed to being my guest in extended conversation here at the Sage Gateshead, in association with writing North, is just as much at ease with more contemporary figures,

1:18.3

with Alicia Lacey, a young Irish woman in the 50s in his award-winning novel, Brooklyn,

1:24.5

who never dreamed of Leaving Ireland, but does so, only to be pulled back home.

1:29.7

Although many characters often love lawn deliberately so in his short stories,

1:36.2

one volume of which is called the empty family, another mothers and sons.

1:43.0

Comteabine was born in 1955 in Ireland, into a family, some of whose members were involved in the Easter Rising of 1916,

1:46.2

and he lost his own father when he was 12.

1:49.4

A child who loses a parent never recovers, he has said.

1:54.2

He's the author of six novels, has published essays,

1:57.0

one volume of which is acerbically called New Ways to Kill Your Mother,

2:01.9

taught creative writing and lives in the US, Barcelona, as well as Ireland.

2:08.1

There seems to be an imprincipled restlessness about him,

2:12.9

like one of his heroes, Henry James.

2:15.8

But there seems to me come tobe, to be one thread that

2:19.9

weaves its way through. And it's here in this new novel in the Testament of Mary, you love

...

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