Anthony Horowitz, author of the Alex Rider and Power of Five series spoke at the Auckland Writers Festival this weekend. Ms Morrin and I were lucky enough to get tickets to see him and he was very entertaining. Here is a review of his session.
AWF15: Bond and Beyond, with Anthony Horowitzby booksellersnz |
Michael
Williams introduced Horowitz as “a master of life and death.” Horowitz’s
backlist is huge, between his TV writing and his novel writing, for teenagers,
and for adults. He is best known to me as the author of the best-selling Alex
Rider series, familiar from when I worked at the airport bookstore and managed
the children’s section. He was the lead writer of Foyle’s War, had
previously written episodes of Midsomer Murder (of which he said “I
wrote seven episodes of Midsomer, before I realised that everybody in the town
was already dead.”
The
session was a truly dynamic interaction between author and chair – Michael
Williams runs the Wheeler Centre, and is clearly a long-term fan of Horowitz.
Saying that, Horowitz himself was a frenetic presence, talking at a rate of
knots about his writing, and never without an answer (except when it came to
future Tintin movies. “Hollywood producers are horrible and scary,” and
he is not sure if anything came of the other scripts he wrote for Tintin, but as
it didn’t do well enough in the USA, they are unlikely to see the light of
day.
Horowitz
had a terrible time at boarding school, and reading, and making up stories for
the other boys in his dorm, were his escape. Many a brilliant career has been
borne of this trope. He acknowledged that in writing Alex Rider he was writing
the story of the childhood he never had, and posed the question of himself
whether he would have preferred a happy childhood, or 96 million books
sold?!
In
writing in other authors’ voices, Horowitz sees his job as to be invisible. He
is more than happy to follow where his favourite authors – Ian Fleming, Arthur
Conan Doyle – lead him, and to merge his style with theirs. Sometimes too
successfully, according to his wife, who made him take some of the sexism out of
House of Silk. This is the challenge, to bring these authors up to date
with current opinions, without taking way from their style, or making it his own
in any way.
Williams
asked Horowitz why it is we love whodunits so much, to which he answered it was
to do with our desires to twitch back the lace curtains of the house next door
and watch the less pleasant parts of human nature play out. Sounds like why
others watch reality TV to me!
When
speaking about Tintin, Horowitz said, it was very hard to get the motion of
Tintin and the suspense onto a screenplay, because Herge was such a genius with
his pacing. He was never credited for his script, though he didn’t explain this
beyond creative differences with Speilberg, but he did enjoy meeting Peter
Jackson very much, and visiting his secret room. Horowitz was the type of child
who knocked on walls to see if they were false – I wanted to yell out ‘me,
too!’
Horowitz
struck me as an incredibly generous writer. To be able to write for yourself,
and on behalf of others (which is in a way how he approached his Bond and
Sherlock stories) shows a generosity of spirit rarely seen. He had a few pieces
of advice for young writers: Read everything, do something naughty but don’t get
caught, and believe in yourself. He pointed out that it takes hard work (and in
his case, 15 books) to get to the big time, but it is worth it if you believe in
yourself.
I
will be seeking out Horowitz and reading as many as I can, and passing them to
my boys as they grow older.
Reviewed
by Sarah Forster
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