INTERVIEW

An Interview with Patrick Mackeown, Author of The Expendability Doctrine

Written by Ambrose Musiyiwa
Published March 05, 2007
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Who would you say has influenced you the most?

Very recently, Ismail Kadare’s Broken April, without question. It’s a story that haunts the reader long after its final page. It has a sadness that hangs outside the novel. It touches the subject of mankind’s beastliness in a tender and almost loving fashion.

And, of writers generally, I’d say that Gerald Durrell’s humour is rarely far from my mind. To constantly poke fun at life, I think, is a writer’s solemn duty. Any refugee from DickensHard Times, who has been made to sit through a dose of Josiah Bounderby’s insufferable rhetoric, will know that well enough. In contemplating what cannot be contemplated, William Golding’s The Inheritors showed me that an author can write magnificently about sensory perceptions which Neanderthal Man possessed, and modern humans do not.

How have your personal experiences influenced the direction of your writing?

I can’t honestly say that many of them have, at least not that I’m aware of. Thankfully I’ve never been pursued by armed men, or tortured. That said, however, I suspect that the cynicisms, which I acquire during my researches, find an outlet in my poems. "Cruel World" is a good example. It was published only days ago, in Lionheart Press’ poetry anthology: Ancient Heart Magazine.

What are your main concerns and challenges as a writer?

That’s a difficult question, almost too difficult; I have several. The accuracy of my research troubles me to distraction. I’ve been known to telephone foreign embassies to ask them about the colour of their carpets. I must stop doing that. But, on a more sombre note, I’d have to mention corruption and genocide.

It’s a task of thriller writers to point out how political elites abuse their charges. And, it’s certainly a task I relish. However, it’s difficult to study inhumanity on a daily basis and still believe in goodness. I’d have to say that I find that aspect of my work challenging.

How do you deal with these challenges?

Put simply, the question is: How can I continuously write about abuses of authority without becoming jaded and cynical? There might be a temptation to assume that I succeed! I hope it’s possible to be cynical without becoming too jaded.

Cynicism visits all of us, occasionally, I’m sure. But, my wife reminds me, simply by being there, that life itself has a beauty which can’t be measured. I think, when pressed, I remind myself that mankind possesses the unfortunate ability to promote his own interests above everything else. And, this is a mistake. I suspect that it’s my realisation that individual men are in error which releases me from a constant cycle of worry.

Do you write every day?

I write for at least eight hours a day. But, I do include research in that calculation.

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Ambrose Musiyiwa has worked as a freelance journalist, book reviewer, and a teacher. One of his short stories has been featured in an anthology of contemporary Zimbabwean writing, Writing Now: More Stories from Zimbabwe (Weaver Press, 2005.) He is a regular contributor to OhmyNews International. Currently he is working on a series of interviews with published and self-published authors on the work that they are doing.
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An Interview with Patrick Mackeown, Author of The Expendability Doctrine
Published: March 05, 2007
Type: Interview
Section: Books
Filed Under: Interviews, Books: Thriller, Books: The Writing Life, Books: Politics and Affairs, Books: Literature and Fiction
Writer: Ambrose Musiyiwa
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Ambrose Musiyiwa's personal site
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