Emma Donoghue: I write historical stories because they still feel alive to me

Author Emma Donoghue is best known for her novels âRoomâ and âThe Wonderâ. Picture: Fergal Phillips
Author Emma Donoghue is up early. Itâs a crisp autumn day in Canada, a lovely mix of sunny and cold and sheâs just back from bringing her teenager get her driverâs licence.
âIâm terrified at the prospect of my 16-year-old driving,â she admits, âbut thatâs just one of those irrational maternal emotions best kept for my fictionâ.
The gripping nature of the 53-year-oldâs fiction has earned her too many accolades to list, but Donoghue is probably best known for her novels
and , both of which were successfully adapted for screen.Across her prolific 30-year career, her novels have ranged widely in content and context, but the intensity she brings to constrained spaces and complex relationships is a constant.
Her latest book,
continues with that devastating intensity. Donoghue tells the story of two young girls on the margins of life, forging a connection that will last forever.ÂItâs a mesmerising portrayal, inspired by the real-life diaries of 19th-century Eliza Raine and Anne Lister, âthe first modern lesbianâ known as Gentleman Jack.
I try to spend at least an hour or two a day on [a treadmill] to stay fit.
Iâm always reading. I call it âfood for the mindâ.
I may not always write something new, but I always open the laptop and I try to do something for one of my projects. Iâm like a gardener keeping an eye on her plants.
Iâve never drunk alcohol. It actually tastes like poison to me.
Malicious commentary, but for my partnerâs ears only.
The inevitability of death.
I really enjoy sitting down to a good compulsive TV drama or even a witty comedy.
I honestly donât care enough about any type of sport to have one.
I love the smell of gingerbread. Iâd bake it just to fill the house with the scent.
I cried this morning. I was reading a play called
.
That happiness helps you live longer.
I really donât like when people have difficulty apologising.
Iâm not a fan of arrogance or being judgemental.
Yes, I do.
If Iâm having a bad day, I feel better by complaining in great detail to my loved ones.
Lin-Manuel Miranda and no one else â I wouldnât want to share his attention with anyone. (Miranda is an American songwriter and actor known for creating Broadway musical
and the soundtracks for animated films and .)
Probably less than it should â but yes. I donât fly on a whim anymore, for example.
I love William Faulkner: âThe past is never dead. Itâs not even past.â I write historical stories because they still feel alive to me.
If Iâve kept mum about it for 53 years, Iâm hardly going to share it with readers of the
now, am I?
- DubrayBooks.ie. She will also be speaking at the Dromineer Nenagh Literary Festival on October 5. Tickets from dnlf.ie is Emma Donoghueâs latest novel. Itâs published by Picador. Emma will be reading in Dublin on October 4 at the Unitarian Church. Tickets from

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