Thursday, March 15, 2012

Under the Skin - Writer Maggie Rainey-Smith reports from the Festival


I’m not quite sure why this session was called ‘Under the Skin’, so I may have missed something.   Lynn Freeman was the Chair and the two writers were Paula Morris (right), and Linda Olsson (left).  Both ex-pat kind of girls in that Paula is a Kiwi who has lived and worked abroad now since 1985, but she returns home regularly and Linda is from Sweden and has lived in New Zealand off and on for over twenty years.
               Paula Morris is a very striking presence, a person who looks entirely comfortable in her own skin, whereas in contrast, Linda presented in a quieter manner and took time to seem entirely comfortable.   This intrigued me, as when they were both asked about their ex-pat status. Paula had no problem being a Kiwi abroad and strongly identifying with her New Zealand roots, in spite of having lived abroad for so long.  She regularly visits New Zealand, has US citizenship (to avoid the pat-down when she re-enters the US, and in order to vote), but seems completely comfortable and certain of her Kiwi identity.   In contrast, Linda spoke of her ongoing struggle with identity and a sense of belonging, either in Sweden or in New Zealand. Something which Lynn Freeman suggested perhaps she is channelling her novels, in particular her first two, the themes of grief and loss.
                 I found this contrast between the two writers quite striking to observe and it would be interesting to have listened to them talking to each other around this identity issue, one so certain, the other less certain.           
               Linda said that she arrived in New Zealand from Sweden as an ‘accompanying spouse’ over 20 years ago and had time on her hands when she arrived to go back to university and complete a BA in English and German literature at Victoria University – she studied for the joy of it and was living in NZ with a ‘three-year perspective’ and as the time extended, she kept renewing the ‘three-year perspective’.   Then she entered the post graduate creative writing programme at Auckland University and her thesis became her first published novel.  Interestingly, her latest novel “The Kindness of your Nature” she wrote parallel in English and Swedish.  She remarked it was only after this achievement that she began to feel confident to put ‘writer’ on the immigration card when entering the country.   In contrast Paula said, that she was putting ‘writer’ when she was still a publicist for a record company – revealing the difference between them (and of course, Paula was being humorous too).
               I was very interested to know more about the factors(age, cultural background, etc) that might have affected these two different reactions to sense of place, or if in fact it was the circumstances of their dislocation.              Paula says she can write anywhere.   She wrote her latest YA novel set in winter in England while sitting in the sweltering heat of Mexico with no internet connection hand-writing as the paper curled in the heat.  You get the sense of someone who sees writing as sheer hard work – and she gets down and does it.   With Linda, I got more of a sense of someone who having come to writing later in life is less sure of herself (but not a lesser writer) and in spite of her big success both locally and internationally with her first novel.
               Linda spoke about first generation immigrants (as she sees herself) and her children.   She felt that ‘childhood forms you’, and is the country in you, and she believes it may take more than one generation, saying that her own youngest child still identifies strongly with Sweden.  And she commented that perhaps her grandchildren will be “proper Kiwis”. Linda has travelled a lot in the United States because of her novels and observed the similarities between Sweden and New Zealand in their love of nature and their ability to name nature, a flower, or a tree, whereas in the United States she felt intimate connection and naming of nature was less likely.    Although Linda has very strong feelings for the landscape she told us all her novels have started with a person and the landscape came after.
Paula told us about the writing of her latest novel ‘Rangatira’ and how she was back in New Zealand completing research for an earlier book and standing looking at a Lindauer painting of Paratene (Ngati Wai Rangatira Paratene Te Manu) and this is where her inspiration came from.   She had the advantage of having family connections (whakapapa) with Ngati Wai which she agreed eased the access for her to be entrusted with his story – although she also pointed out there were still many gaps to fill and that she had to imagine his life.   
               Both writers agreed that writing in the first person is much more difficult than writing in the third person because of the need to create and sustain an authentic voice.   Paula said that her students often want to use first person because they think it’s easier.
               Lynn chaired the event dedicating specific time to each writer.   So, although both writers got equal time to be heard, there wasn’t the same chance for the two writers to engage and spark off one another.   Although they both got a very fair hearing and their stories told separately, made for quite a striking contrast, I couldn’t help feeling how lovely it would have been to just hear the two of them ‘chatting together about writing’.
Maggie Rainey-Smith

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