Koning Cool: An Interview with Author Hans Koning
Published December 30, 2004
In short, Hans Koning is anything but predictable and this may be but one of the keys to his great success as a writer and a journalist. And speaking of unpredictable on the day of our interview, we get a glimpse into classic Koning, quick, witty and fierce a radical as ever and always, carrying with him a sincere empathy and ferocity that seem at once contradictory and yet, coming from Koning, complimentary. At last, we have a rebel with a cause. Here is Hans Koning:
Hans, your first book, The Affair took two years to find a good home, where it finally found a good home and considerable success with Knopf. I know you and I have discussed this, but why do you think foreign or European writers have such a hard time getting published in America? Is there just a different sentiment? OR do you think that publishing has fundamentally changed?
A: Knopf was not a good home for Alfred hated The Affair; he was chagrined at is success and when I heard this, I decided to leave him (proud but stupid) Then he wouldn't let me go and we had to appeal with the Guild. About "foreign writers": well, the US is parochial, and of course publishing has changed drastically, the marketing director vetoes the editors. Literature is largely a dirty word. But Europe is hardly better, France is (still) different, translating is still a risk taken. (5 of my novels were published in France
Hans, I know you were for a time, Stoakley Carmichael's pistol-carrying bodyguard. Where you the only white member of the Black Panthers? What drew you to that group specifically? Where you politically aligned and if so, in what way... what were you politics at the time... it sounds like you were a bit of a radical to say the least. Tell me about that. .
A: I wasn't a "member" of the Panthers, no such thing. I, and other "honkies" (as sixties slang had it), were simply, on their side; justice, anti- Vietwar, and so on... Of course I was, and am, a radical (and paid for it; this didn't make you popular with publishers and critics).
I know you have written a great deal for The New Yorker and The Atlantic Monthly. What is the nature of the articles you write for them?
A: Mostly, reports from other places on the globe, the kind of reporting which The New Yorker did so well with its "Letters from --" A different approach than found in the NY Times. I (we) saw farther, weren't believers in "The US is the most moral country" as was basic then *(and will be again under Bush.)
At one time, I believe you were a foreign correspondent, is that right?
A: I was "Reporter-at-Large" for The New Yorker.
Which agency, if any one particular, did you work for? Tell me briefly or in depth, whichever you prefer, where you went, what sorts of things you reported on. It sounds like a dangerous job, but an interesting one. Tell me about that.
- Koning Cool: An Interview with Author Hans Koning
- Published: December 30, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Arts, Books: Fantasy, Books: History, Books: Literature and Fiction, Books: News, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Original Fiction, Books: Politics and Affairs, Interviews
- Writer: Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti
- Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti's BC Writer page
- Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
- RSS Feeds
- All RSS Feeds (240+)
Comments on this article
BC articles by Sadi Ranson-Polizzotti
Books: Arts
Books: Fantasy
Books: History
Books: Literature and Fiction
Books: News
Books: Nonfiction
Books: Original Fiction
Books: Politics and Affairs
Interviews
All Books Articles
All BC articles
All BC Comments
Comments
thanks, and do let me know about the quote, i'd be curious.
as for hans, his work is wonderful. i love his little book of comforts and gripes for a quick read, but his novels are terrific as is his nonfiction too. you can Google his name and find a great deal of work but i highly recommend reading his novels - all are different and have something to offer. by no means "easy" books, but then the best never are. Hans is the real deal - and always cool.
thanks for reading... and let me know if you do read his work.
stay well,
sadi



Very interesting interview, Sadi - one will commence reading the ouevre of this excellent writer that one seems to have missed out on.
I always thought that William of Orange used the motto je maintiendrai - will need to research a bit