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http://www.popmatters.com/pm/features/article/56143/jeanette-winterson/
Photo by Peter Peitsch
20 QuestionsJeanette Winterson[17 March 2008]Jeanette Winterson's philosophy, as revealed in her response to PopMatters 20 Questions, seems to be: let Art engage and challenge you, and engage yourself artfully, in turn. by PopMatters StaffFor award-winning novelist Jeanette Winterson, the boundaries we place upon ourselves can be traversed, we need only muster the courage. In her new book, The Stone Gods, available in April, misfits of mankind wish to escape the boundaries of their world. So naturally, Winterson expands upon PopMatters 20 Questions, lest we think one can be clearly defined by virtue of their response.
1. The latest book or movie that made you cry?
Having endured There Will Be Blood, emptiness masquerading as content, (not the fault of Daniel Day-Lewis, it’s just that Hollywood’s idea of how to be serious is to slow everything down and turn cryptic), it was a relief to find this little movie.
2. The fictional character most like you?
3. The greatest album, ever?
One of the many good things about getting older is that you can have friends across generations. When you are in your ‘20s and ‘30s, your friends are all part of your own group. Later, as this changes, the mix brings in all kinds of things you wouldn’t find yourself. I have a friend called Natalie Clein, she records for EMI and she’s one of the finest cellists in the world. She’s 30. Her boyfriend is the pianist for James Blunt. That sort of combination is great. One day I can be listening to her play the Elgar Cello concerto in London’s Royal Albert Hall, and a few weeks later, we’re doing James Blunt in Paris.
4. Star Trek or Star Wars?
5. Your ideal brain food?
Brain death is to reduce everything to the level of the known. You have to keep taking yourself by surprise.
6. You’re proud of this accomplishment, but why?
Books give the reader time to think and something to think about - they also give him or her a language with which to do this thinking. And I’m not just talking abstract thinking. The concrete beauty of good writing allows for an emotional as well as a cerebral connection. The circuit is complete - right and left brain. We can be wholly human through the agency of books.
7. You want to be remembered for...?
But memory is selective - who knows how it will all turn out. I have planted a lot of trees, and the earth below and the birds above will remember me for that, and you know, that in itself would be enough. The necessary thing in life is to do something worthwhile, whatever it is, even if you have a dead-end job you can still do something outside of that job, and to be worthwhile. Don’t be a cheat or a bum. Be someone you can respect.
8. Of those who’ve come before, the most inspirational are?
There were times when I could not have done without Virginia Woolf. Times when the 18th century poet made my life bearable. Times when Ted Hughes, times when William Blake, times when Wagner, times when Picasso. Inspiration - literally having the spirit in you—is an everyday necessity. I look for it and I find it. For me it’s not in politics or in science - it’s in the strange need to make beauty and sense out of life, even at its worst. That’s what art does.
9. The creative masterpiece you wish bore your signature?
10. Your hidden talents...?
11. The best piece of advice you actually followed?
When young writers say to me mournfully, ‘all the papers hated my book’, I say, ‘You mean six people you have never met?’
No-one can be writer or an artist if they tear themselves up all the time over other people’s views. This is a very punishing age - we raise people up and we smash people down. In fact artists and writers just need some space and some respect. We don’t need celebrity or notoriety.
13. You feel best in Armani or Levis or . . .?
14. Your dinner guest at the Ritz would be?
15. Time travel: where, when and why?
16. Stress management: hit man, spa vacation or Prozac?
A good diet, loads of exercise, sex if you can get it, liberal but not embarrassing amounts of champagne, a sense of humour, and a cat or a dog. I admit that’s quite a list but it works for me.
17. Essential to life: coffee, vodka, cigarettes, chocolate, or . . .?
![]() I live in the country. It suits me because I think that hooting owls are better than hooting horns. I am thoroughly European, and love to take the train to Paris, eat lunch, and then travel overnight to Rome or Venice. But these are escapes. It is important to like where you live, and to choose carefully. People get trapped, we do a lot more self-snaring than we will admit. Even when life looks like it’s giving you no choice, there is usually a choice, perhaps hidden, like those kids pictures where you have to spot the mouse.
19. What do you want to say to the leader of your country?
20. Last but certainly not least, what are you working on, now?
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