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Desert Island Discs

Minette Walters

Desert Island Discs

BBC

Society & Culture, Music Commentary, Music, Personal Journals

4.413.7K Ratings

🗓️ 30 June 2002

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

After Minette Walters' father died of injuries sustained in World War II she won a scholarship to Godolphin School, and eventually became Head Girl. From a young age she shunned girls' story books, preferring the more gripping Biggles and later, Agatha Christie. Her ambition was to be a writer. She says, "I just adored the whole thing of escapism into somebody else's world. When you're a writer and you are creating a world - you can only relate to one reader at a time, so it's: how do you persuade people? how can you draw the reader into that world so you can share it together? It's very exciting and any good writer, that is exactly what they do - they are tempting you into a world of their creation." Minette Walters went to Durham University to read modern languages. When she left she took on barmaid and secretarial work that would allow her to continue her writing but all her many manuscripts, in particular plays to BBC Radio, were rejected. Her efforts in magazine publishing were more successful and, after a stint as an editor, she soon found herself writing 30,000 word hospital romances. She was inspired to attempt a novel and after having two children she turned her attention to crime fiction, a subject that had held her interest since childhood. But she says of The Dark Room: "there is virtually no comparison with Agatha Christie - it's much deeper and darker and more naturalistic, realistic, gritty. That's why I put 'fart' in the first paragraph, because I thought, whoever reads the first page of this book is not going to think they are reading an Agatha Christie!" She has written eight books in ten years and received the Edgar Allan Poe Award for the best crime novel published in America for The Sculptress and won the Gold Dagger Award for best British Crime novel in 1994 for The Scold's Bridle. Her books have been translated into 36 languages and five of her books have been made into television films. Minette says she never knows who has done the crime until she finishes the book: "I set up a limited number - if I knew which one was guilty I would either underwrite them or overwrite them and if I don't know then I still explore them in depth. This joy, of going inside their heads, I'd be bored stiff if I knew what was going to happen." [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Free as a Bird from his Orlean's Function by Louis Armstrong Book: The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations by Elizabeth Knowles Luxury: Van Gogh's Irises

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, I'm Kirstie Young and this is a podcast from the Desert Island Discs archive for rights reasons

0:06.1

We've had to shorten the music

0:08.1

The program was originally broadcast in 2002 and the presenter was Sue Lolley

0:13.3

My cast away this week is a novelist, she trained in one of fiction's hardest schools, churning out romantic stories for women, six chapters, no sex, no alcohol

0:35.3

After marriage and children, she returned to writing this time on her own terms

0:40.3

Over the past ten years, she's published a selection of clever, creepy, exciting crime thrillers

0:46.3

which have brought comparison with the likes of Agatha Christie and Dorothy L Sayers

0:50.3

except for the alcohol and sex which these days does feature in her books

0:54.3

Most of them, memorably the ice house and the sculptress, have been adapted for television and all of them sell worldwide, translated into 36 different languages

1:03.3

I think we all have a dark side, she says, but most of us learn to control it

1:09.3

She is minute-walters or in your case, minute-exploited that dark side

1:13.3

You invariably start with a body, don't you, and one remembers certainly the sculptress where Pauline Quirk was sort of hacking her mother and sister to pieces in the kitchen

1:24.3

Why do you do that?

1:26.3

When I started the ice house, I was very aware that I was going to be compared with Agatha Christie

1:33.3

because I set it in a country house

1:36.3

and I thought it's going to be terrible if people pick this book up and read, assuming they're going to be reading in the Agatha Christie

1:45.3

It's a very, very dark story of the ice house

1:48.3

So I actually thought I must put the body right at the start with all the disgustingness of a corrupt body

1:54.3

which this thing had been lying around for quite a few weeks

1:58.3

You do seem to enjoy the smell in the last two years

2:00.3

I do like that

2:02.3

It's quite a challenge creating on the page a really unpleasant dead body

...

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