Today I have the honor of sharing an interview with Heliopolis author James Scudamore. Mr. Scudamore was kind enough to answer a few questions about his Booker-nominated novel as part of my Publisher Spotlight series on Europa Editions:
1. Heliopolis combines a lot of different elements really successfully- plot, character and style- but what really makes the book for me is the setting. Sao Paolo came across to me as almost a post-apocalyptic ruined city, and some of your descriptions of high rises and city streets and the way people live in gilded cages, sounded like something out of science fiction. How realistic is the Sao Paolo in the novel? If I went there tomorrow, what would be different? What would be the same?
2. You've lived all over the world; why did you choose Brazil as the setting? Could you have told this story about another country?
The  starting point was simply a conflicted character who hated his job, who  could have existed in any city. Then all this Brazilian imaginative  furniture started to crowd things out and I realised that my character  was conflicted because he was adopted, and had graduated from one world  to another in a very stratified society, but wasn't accepted anywhere. I  also felt that the city in my mind was somewhere I hadn't read that  much about - it certainly doesn't conform to many of the stereotypical  images of Brazil. From then on, even though I never actually name it in  the novel, the action could only be happening in one place. Which isn't  to say that there aren't other megacities like this one: I imagine you  could find parallels in, say, Lagos, Mumbai or Mexico.  
 What made this Brazil, the one in the book, this way? What forces in society brought it to where it is?
Principally  an accumulation of fear. Fear makes people lock themselves away from  the rest of society, and when they are locked away they feel  increasingly afraid of what lies outside their gates, because they can't  see it anymore. The more they lock themselves and their families and  their stuff away from everyone else the more they feel that those on the  outside want to climb their walls and get at those things. Which makes  them build bigger walls. Which makes the people on the other side of the  walls hate them even more. I was also conscious of the force of  advertising and marketing in a city of haves and have-nots: Ludo's  working life is a extreme vision of a certain toxic workplace  philosophy.
 What themes are you trying to address through the story of Ludo, who seems stuck right in the middle of all this chaos? What is important for the reader to understand or take away from the story?
That's  not for me to say: the reader can take away whatever she or he wants.  One of the reasons I like the story is that it looks into the way people  can use generosity to take control of others: a cynical line of  inquiry, perhaps, but an interesting one. 
 How does your embattled hero find a place in such a starkly divided and troubled society?
To  begin with, he can't: that's the point. The man we are introduced to as  the novel opens, trapped in bed under the naked body of his adoptive  sister, is someone who has allowed himself to become inert because a  powerful group of people has hijacked his life and influenced its  direction. Over the course of the novel he tries to get back some of  that control, as well as to confront some of the various different  prejudices working against him based on where he is perceived to be  positioned in society.
 Why did you decide to write this story? What's compelling in it for you?
I  had to write it because otherwise I wouldn't have been able to get it  out of my head. If I hadn't got rid of them, visions of pollution  sunsets and derelict skyscrapers and helicopters full of rich people  flickering over pungent slums might still be preoccupying me,  potentially emerging at random in dangerously inappropriate contexts.  The same is true of the novel I'm finishing now: it's the repository for  a whole new set of images I'm trying to exorcise. But that's for  another interview.
Mr. Scudamore, thank you so much for taking the time to share your thoughts with my readers and me!
More in my Publisher Spotlight series on Europa Editions:
 
Week One:
- Introduction to the Series,
 - Tuesday: Interview with editor-in-chief Michael Reynolds,
 - Wednesday: Review of Heliopolis, by James Scudamore, nominated for the Man Booker Prize,
 - Thursday: Interview with James Scudamore.
 
- Monday: Review of The Hottest Dishes of the Tartar Cuisine, by Alina Bronsky, due out next month,
 - Tuesday: Interview with Alina Bronsky,
 - Wednesday: Review of Hygiene and the Assassin, by Amélie Nothomb,
 - Thursday: Review of The Jerusalem File, by Joel Stone.
 


4 comments:
I really liked this interview, and am glad that you asked him about the almost dystopian qualities of the book that you noticed. I also liked that he wants readers to find their own themes in the book and doesn't limit them himself. Scudamore speaks with a lot of passion about the book, which is also something I like. Fantastic interview!
Bravo! What a well done interview! I like his sense of decisiveness and passion in having to tell the story. Thank you!
Really great interview Marie. I always enjoy hearing more about an author's process and thoughts about his or her own writing. I find it fascinating that the author felt compelled to write the story so he could get it out of his head.
Thank you for this interview. I have been stealing every possible moment over the past week to read this absorbing book! My curiosity about James Scudamore as a writer led me to your fascinating blog. I am discovering other favorites here too. Well done!
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