Koning Cool: An Interview with Author Hans Koning
Published December 30, 2004
A: China, Russia, Egypt, East Germany, Cuba, World War I and II, Mexico, Argentina, a.o. No agency, just directly for the magazines (note: as above question).
Did you ever fear for your life on such assignments?
A: In China and Indonesia I've been in tight spots. But "fear for my life" is too strong.
You've done so much nonfiction and yet you are a prolific fiction writer as well. That's hard to do - most people are good at one, not both. How do you reconcile your fiction with your nonfiction? is there any intersection of the two works - i.e., examples or events that you experienced that you then fictionalize, or is it all purely made up?
A: I hardly see an intersection. The subject of fiction, for me, is the human condition, "love and death". Non-fiction is concerned with human action-reaction in history. But clear writing is clear writing.
That makes me wonder, do you believe that fiction is ever truly made up? Or do you think that all fiction writers tend to draw on their own lives and their own experience and then gussy it up, fictionalize it a bit?
A: Some do, some don't; a novel "is" a man or a woman, but the "it really happened" label is stupid and assuredly not something that makes a book literature.
Of your own fiction - then apply the last question - is most of it fantasy, made up? or is Hans Koning in there in some ways? I mean, isn't that unavoidable to some extent?
A: Of course I am in there (see above) but this is not something to "avoid." What happens in a novel is secondary. Primary is that the ideas and actions ring true, throw light on la condition humaine.
You've lived in the states for a long time now. Do you go to Europe for part of the year or head home just to touch bas with your roots, or do you live in the states year round?
A: I go to Europe as much as feasible, just to stay sane. Not to Holland necessarily or in the first place.
You have been in your life and extremely political person, yet I see a balance there. At one time, I know you still carried a pistol - was that a lay-over from the Black Panther days, or do you and did you then, still fear that living in this climate, one needs to carry a weapon, that one is safer? I know you've had some real personal hardships, and we don't need to go there, but you must have your reasons — tell me about that.
A: I still have one (little) pistol. It would make things more equal if I had to protect myself or a daughter of mine or whomever against an eighteen year old mugger. I was in a rifle and fence club as a student, those were Olympic sports, a very diff. atmosphere than the Am Rifle guys. And then also of course "my" war. I had a Luger with a swastika on it that was taken from a German sergeant.
Would you say that any writer's have influenced your work? i.e., who did you read and admire when you were just starting out and do you see parts of that author in the work that you've produced?
- Koning Cool: An Interview with Author Hans Koning
- Published: December 30, 2004
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- 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
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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