Bella's a globetrotter, with tightly scheduled lovers and global obligations, but she feels drawn into their lives despite the opposition of Valerie — the mother who gave birth to the youngsters but left the family and doesn't know them.
Farah, a Somali-born author of 11 previous novels, talks with NPR's Scott Simon about his homeland and his biggest challenge as a writer.
On parallels between the novel and his own life
It
feels almost everything that happens in Somalia is either part of my
life directly or indirectly. ... What happened in this particular case
is that I had done the first draft of a novel — submitted it to my
publishers — when something very similar to what happened to the
character Aar happened to my sister: [she was] killed in Afghanistan in a
Kabul restaurant on January 19, 2014.
On the challenges of writing and loss
I
go to Somalia a great deal, perhaps, in part, to feed my imagination
and also to be in touch with the experiences that other Somalis go
through on a daily basis. But, in terms of writing as a writer, there's
always a daily challenge when one goes into one's studio to write. And
the bravest thing, I think, for a writer is to face an empty page.
Almost everything else is less challenging until it comes to ... someone
close to you — as close as Basra was to me — fall[ing] a victim to
terrorism.
On writing about Bella's photography
I actually have very little understanding of how photography works — or had very
little understanding. But I had to train myself and I had to read lots
and lots of books. And then, after that, had to train myself, buy a
camera, and go digital/analog and do all these things.
On the power dynamic between a photographer and his or her subject
Just
as there is a power structure between the novelist and the subject the
novelist is writing about — it's the novelist who decides who gets the
power of speech. So, whoever puts their finger on the button that
ultimately decides what happens with the camera is the one who has the
power.
And anyone sitting outside of that power zone is turned into a
subject. So, I could see parallel between the novelist's writing, and
therefore, deciding, ultimately, the destiny of his or her characters —
in the same way that the photographer decides what position to take,
what light to use.
On whether he could live in Somalia
Mogadishu
has stopped being a cosmopolitan city; it was a cosmopolitan city many
years ago — one of the most celebrated cosmopolitan cities. I can
imagine living in Somalia, but Somalia has to change. I have changed and
therefore Somalia must change.
And that would be the case if: one, there was peace. Two, if I could live anonymously — which is not possible all the time, but it could be. And then, [three], if there are book shops and cultural stuff that one can do and get involved in. There is no such thing now. Civil war dominates everything in one's everyday life in Somalia, which is quite tragic.
From: NPR
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