Family

‘WHEN YOU'RE YOUNG, EVERYTHING IS STRANGE AND UNUSUAL'

Esther Freud talks to Allan Radcliffe about her fascination with relationships between parents and children, and why she finds it hard to read about books set in Italy

sther Freud has been called ‘the best writer

about childhood we have.‘ Certainly. since her

1992 autobiographical debut Hideous Kinky. the tale of two young girls accompanying their free- spirited mother on a pilgrimage to 1960s Marrakech. her work has been characterised by child protagonists’ attempts to make sense of a strange. and occasionally terrifying. adult world.

Freud's sixth novel is another sympathetic coming of

age tale. its edges darkened by a creeping menace. Love Falls is told from the point of view of 17-year-old Lara. who accompanies her absentee father Lambert. a writer. to Tuscany in the weeks leading up to the royal wedding of 1981. Excluded from her dad‘s reminiscences. Lara is increasingly drawn to the neighbouring Willoughby clan. particularly beautiful youngest son. Kip. only to find herself embroiled in bitter familial infighting and power games.

While it is perhaps fitting that a member of the famous Freud dynasty (her father is the painter. Lucien) should be so fascinated by relationships between parents and children. the author simply sees the child‘s eye view as a rich dramatic device. ‘I like writing about things as if they are freshly discovered.‘ she says. ‘When you‘re young. everything is new and strange and unusual. There are so many dramatic possibilities to having a child or a teenager as a protagonist that just

wouldn‘t be there if the story was told from the point of

view of one of the adult characters.‘

Lara‘s passage from gauche adolescence to adulthood is played out against the backdrop of the most iconic fairytale love story of the media age. ‘I was playing

24 THE LIST 24 May—7 Jun 2007

with the idea of romance. and the royal wedding was such a symbol of romance that it seemed a great backdrop.‘ she continues. 'And especially because so many things about that event. and all the hype that surrounded it. have been undermined by everything we know now about that relationship.” While there’s a dreamlike quality to the writing in Love Falls. reflecting the sensory overload of this long. hot. formative summer. the novel is also distinguished by a vivid sense of place. as we follow Lara through Florence‘s narrow streets. markets and galleries and across the Tuscan plains.

Yet. Freud reveals that while she did make a pilgrimage to Italy during the writing of the novel. she remains ambivalent about research. preferring to get lost in the world of memory and imagination. ‘I took a break for about ten months to have a baby and when I went back to the book I realised I‘d written endless descriptions of cathedrals and libraries and piaz/as. most of which I ended up taking out.”

While writing the novel. Freud was also aware of the long shadow cast by previous Tuscan-set literary romances. most notably FM Forster’s classic comic portrayals of the English abroad. A erm with a View and Where Angels Fear m 'I'reurl. ‘When I started trying to write about Tuscany. I had other books about Italy hanging over my shoulder. and realised that I couldn‘t win and that it had been done and done and done. So I decided: “I will never read another book set in Italy.”

Love Falls is published by Bloomsbury on Mon 4 Jun.

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>2: William Mollvanney A good fat-chewing session with the man behind Docherty and the Jack Laidlaw detective stories. Borders Books, Glasgow, Tue 5 Jun.

>i< Lewis Trondheim This iconic French comics guy is happy enough to come out of self-imposed retirement now and again and here he gives us the one-off Mister I, a tale both comic and primal. See review, page 26. NBM.

=1: Howard Chakyn and Mike Mignola In the days before Hellboy, Mignola adapted Fritz Leiber’s sword and sorcery tales, collected here as Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. See review, page 26. Dark Horse.

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* Miranda July For a performance artist with a crazy website, July still knows how to put her finger on true. deep emotions, as her short story set No One Belongs Here More Than You proves. See review. page 25. Canongate.

>1: Owen Sheers A poetic fantasy novel set in WW2 about British women carrying on in the face of Nazi occupation. Resistance should be met with open arms. See review, page 25. Faber.

>i< Nury Vittachi The Shanghai Union of Industrial Mystics is as off~kilter as the title would suggest. bringing together vegan terrorists, ruthless property developers and feng shui crimefighters into an impressive melange. See review. page 25. Polygon.