The Rest Just Follows

BORN in Belfast in 1961, Glenn Patterson grew up through the Troubles, when virtually everything anyone ever heard about Northern Ireland was violence, bombs and sectarian strife.
His latest novel, The Rest Just Follows, begins in the early 1970s and spans almost four decades, but for an author who says he writes âin the spaces in-betweenâ, it is by no means a âTroubles novelâ.
âWhat I really wanted to do with this book was to take a group of people and follow them from their pre-teens through to their early middle-age,â he says .
âThey were going to have to live through a whole load of other stuff that Iâd lived through, but also that the whole city of Belfast went through as well. Some of that has to do with the economy, some of it has to do with the politics and the Troubles â but itâs all just the stuff of the world that they all have to live through and deal with.â
While the Troubles serves as a muted backdrop to the story, itâs much more a celebratory tale of how three teenagers â Maxine, Craig and St John â grow up making the same kinds of mistakes and experiencing the same kinds of joy as kids in cities all over the world. Glenn mentions David Holmes, the Belfast-born DJ, whom he interviewed for a TV documentary a couple of years ago.
âWe were talking about growing up in Belfast â for him it would have been the 1980s and into the â90s, when he was starting to DJ in Belfast. And he said that he was really happy that his children didnât have to grow up in what he grew up in. But then he paused and he said, âBut Iâm really glad that I did.â I think itâs very hard to regret your own teenage years. So much of who we are has to do with what happened to us at that age that it doesnât really matter what was going on in the public domain.
âThatâs your only chance to be that age.â
The Troubles, inevitable, impacts on the lives of the characters, but itâs often in a non-direct or tangential fashion.
âYou can take statistics and you can talk about the number of people who left during those particular years,â says Glenn, âand you can look at the number of people who were injured during those years, people who knew someone who was killed â and I can include my own family in that, on all of those counts â but there are also many other ways of measuring what it was to be living through those times.
âThe novel starts in the early â70s but it carries on through the decades up until the year before last, so the characters grow through all that. And the messes in their lives are mostly of their own making rather than anybody elseâs.â
The Rest Just Follows is Glenn Pattersonâs ninth novel, but while most of his stories are set in the recent or historical past, they are less concerned with what actually happened than they are in what-might-have-been.
âMy books are, I suppose, alternative histories,â Glenn says. âThe phrase I always use is, âThis also happenedâ, or âThings like this also happened.â So this book is also a version of that particular time. These are the kinds of things that went on, but theyâre stories that maybe arenât as frequently told.â
Indeed, one of the characters in the novel, Craig, grows up to become a history teacher who questions the official versions of what happened in Northern Ireland during the Troubles.
âI think one of the things that has happened in the last 20 years is that versions of history have hardened,â says Glenn. âEverything has become neater.
âThere are these ideological straight lines â all this happened because of all of that then, and everything was undeviatingly for that purpose. But that doesnât express the chaotic nature, the opportunistic nature, the vindictive nature of all that went on.
âThings that happened to peopleâs lives ⊠I just donât believe any of those official versions. I think they need to be undercut slightly, because itâs all a lie. So many of those neat versions of the past are either lies of omission or commission.â
Wonderfully entertaining, and at times very funny, The Rest Just Follows takes its characters on an odyssey through the Troubles years and the Peace Process and on into contemporary Northern Ireland, a place where stories can be told, and movies made, about topics that arenât necessarily concerned with sectarianism and violence. One example is last yearâs Good Vibrations, a film biopic of Belfast punk impresario Terri Hooley which Glenn co-wrote with Colin Carberry (the pair were last month shortlisted for a Bafta award in the âOutstanding Debutâ category). The subtext of the movie was that Northern Irelandâs punks were far more interested in the music than they were in the political or religious affiliations of their peers, a theme that also runs through The Rest Just Follows.
âIt was the first time Iâd ever been involved in any film,â says Glenn, âand at the start all you hope for is that itâs going to get into the cinemas. So everything else just felt like a bonus, and the Bafta nomination was the most surprising one of all.â He was disappointed not to win the Bafta, naturally, but thoroughly enjoyed the glamour of being in the same room as Tom Hanks, Cate Blanchett et al. âI would be a big fat liar,â he grins, âif I said it was anything but just a very nice place to be.â
Another sign of Northern Irelandâs changing times, Glenn believes, is that it has become âa healthier placeâ in terms of the diversity of its literature. He has even found himself turning his hand to writing crime fiction.
âI would be naturally quite reluctant to try things that I havenât done before,â he says, âbut then thereâs the other side of you that is the eternal optimist. So I thought, when I was asked last year about Belfast Noir [edited by Stuart Neville and Adrian McKinty] that Iâd give it a go. It was lovely to be asked, even if it was slightly terrifying. I donât write short stories at all, and Iâve never written anything that could have been considered even noir-ish.
âBut whatâs interesting to me,â he adds, âis that a healthy literature is the one that contains many different types of writing â a healthy poetry, healthy playwriting, the novel in all its moods and forms. So itâs a much healthier place now. Itâs really, in recent years, taken on shapes that you can only applaud.â
As a Belfast writer who has always employed his home town as a setting, Glenn Patterson knows to his cost that applause wasnât always the first response when publishers and readers were confronted by Belfast, the Troubles and all that followed from those bitterly divisive years.
âThere always seemed, in the past, to be this slightly ambivalent attitude on the one hand, especially with London publishers, when youâd occasionally get this attitude, âOh God, not another thing about Belfast.â They never knew how to deal with it. You almost had to apologise for having set something in Belfast. Happily, that no longer seems to be the case.â