My Life in Books: Reading ‘Adrian Mole’ made me want to be a writer

Lynda Marron says she wants to read about flawed characters being put through the wringer of real life, then to see them coming out the other side with something learned and a bit of hope
My Life in Books: Reading ‘Adrian Mole’ made me want to be a writer

Lynda Marron: Mary Wesley’s quirky and uplifting 'An Imaginative Experience' inspired my debut, 'Last Chance in Paris'.

Lynda Marron lives in Bishopstown, Cork, and published her debut novel, Last Chance in Paris in 2024. Her latest book, The Bridge to Always (Eriu) is out now in paperback, eBook and audio.

Books on your bedside table

The Maiden of Florence by Katherine Mezzacappa. Also, my notebook. The best ideas come knocking at dawn.

Books for cheering up/escape/comfort

For comfort, I love the sass and wisdom of mid-century women writers like Dorothy Whipple ( Someone at a Distance), Elizabeth von Armin ( The Enchanted April), and EM Delafield ( Diary of a Provincial Lady). Barbara Kingsolver ( Unsheltered) always gives me hope about the world, and David Nicholls ( Starter for Ten) has never let me down.

Book you didn’t finish

Dr Zhivago has been looking down on me from my shelves for 35 years. I read a lot of big novels in college, but Pasternak defeated me. I can’t part with it now. It’s like the snowball in the freezer; it takes up space but reminds me of a happy time.

Book that made you want to be a writer

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13¾ by Sue Townsend. When Adrian wrote ‘I am an intellectual, but at the same time I am not very clever’, I knew I’d found my hero. More directly, Mary Wesley’s quirky and uplifting An Imaginative Experience inspired my debut, Last Chance in Paris. That Wesley was 70 when her first novel was published left me, at 40-something, with no excuse.

Book that made you happy

I want to read about flawed characters being put through the wringer of real life, then to see them coming out the other side with something learned and a bit of hope. Kent Haruf’s Plainsong trilogy, Gráinne Murphy’s Greener, and The Horse by Willy Vlautin all made me smile.

Book that made you sad

Departure(s) by Julian Barnes. It’s a treatise on memory (what we keep and what we lose), and it’s his valedictory note. It’s morbidly funny and poignant, and brave. Reading it felt personal. A beautiful thing.

Book that changed your mind

It took considerable convincing to make me pick up an 856-page door-stopper about aging cowboys herding cattle, but Larry McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove changed my mind about Westerns. I followed up with Sebastian Barry’s Days Without End and Kevin Barry’s The Heart in Winter. Who knew Westerns were so romantic?

Book that taught you something valuable

In Carrying the Fire, a memoir of the Apollo 11 mission, astronaut Michael Collins taught me that the guy who took one great leap for mankind could never have got home without the guy who sat waiting, alone, on the dark side of the moon.

Book that needs to be written

Hopeful books. Funny books. Books that ease the pain and let the reader know they are not alone.

Book everyone should read

The Country Girls by Edna O’Brien, Amongst Women by John McGahern and Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan, to understand where we were and how far we’ve come. Paul Lynch’s Prophet Song, Orwell’s 1984, and Cormac McCarthy’s The Road to see where we must not go.

Book-to-film adaptation that trumps all others

The Muppets Christmas Carol is a work of unparalleled wit and warmth. Oh, to be immortalised on screen by Gonzo the Great!

Favourite bookshop

For new books, Leaf and Bower in Ballincollig, Waterstones and Dubray in Cork. For old, Prim’s in Kinsale and Vibes and Scribes in Cork.

Book organisation — alphabetised shelves or chaos

Alphabetised: André Aciman to Marcus Zusak.

Book accompaniment — tea, coffee, alcohol, cake, spaghetti?

Americano, please, and a fat cheese toastie.

Book character that has stayed with you

Laura from The Glass Menagerie. I think of her whenever I see a rose with even a hint of blue.

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