With the latest John Banville novel making its way in the world, and a new Benjamin Black novel about to make an appearance, the author of both chats with the Herald on subjects ranging from the legacy of the Celtic Tiger to artistic bullying to the scandal rocking the church.
“You can know and choose not to know at the same time,” he says bleakly. “The Germans did that. The Turks did it and are still doing it with the Armenians. The Rwandans did it. This is a very, troubled, dark, little country.” Could he live anywhere else? “I’d love to live in Italy but I wouldn’t be able to write a word there. I’d just live. I can only write here.” He points through the window to a rain-filled, platinum sky. “Isn’t that absolutely beautiful. That’s the colour inside my mind.”
Thanks for this. Everything about this interview makes me love Banville even more. We need writers who love dictionaries.
Posted by: Tracy | April 06, 2010 at 10:31 AM
What a terrific quote!
Posted by: Raining Acorns | April 06, 2010 at 05:36 PM