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  • Philip McGowan

Philip McGowan

Read Philip's full Writers' Rooms interview here...

Where are you? 
Not so much a room as a nook 鈥 or is it a cranny? 鈥 between the kitchen and living-room which doubles as my 鈥渙ffice鈥 where life in lockdown and otherwise has mostly been spent. This is my Zoom, Teams, Skype and FaceTime salon, as it were, and just looking at the photo I realise I need to do a bit of a tidy.

What are you working on? 
I鈥檓 not a writer writer, though I do write things: academic stuff for the most part. I鈥檝e just sent off the draft of a new edition of The Great Gatsby for Penguin in the US and the next thing I will turn my hand to will be revisions on a chapter for a composite biography of Fitzgerald coming out next year. For that, twenty-two Fitzgerald scholars have all chosen a specific two-year period of Fitzgerald鈥檚 life to write about: I chose 1900-01, when Fitzgerald was four, five, then six years old. After that, and with a sabbatical coming up, I鈥檒l be going back to some other ideas about Elizabeth Bishop鈥檚 poetry.

 

What鈥檚 that over there?
You mean the fishtank? Or that there? [points]: that鈥檚 Lila, a now four-year-old rescue dog who right now is snoring lightly in her bed after chasing up and down the beach at Helen鈥檚 Bay earlier on.

 

What鈥檚 that sound?
Apart from the snoring and the hum from the fishtank? Probably the kettle which has seen more use in the last 6 months than nearly any other device in this house. Otherwise, it鈥檚 pretty quiet here. And now the 12th has passed, the helicopters have been returned to their helisheds.

 

How does isolation help or hinder you? 
If you鈥檝e had the misfortune of reading any of my tortured critical prose you will quickly realise it takes a great deal of silence and time to be able to pull that stuff out of the ether. I鈥檓 easily distracted 鈥 please, distract me 鈥 so I can only make headway with anything when I have solid blocks of time to concentrate on it. So, in some ways, lockdown hasn鈥檛 changed that much of how I go about things. The Gatsby edition and revisions on an essay on Bishop 鈥 sorry, again, Jonathan and Angus for taking THAT long 鈥 these aside I have found it almost impossible to write anything during these months. Partly that has been due to a pretty regular stream of online meetings and partly the daily need just to survive to the end of the day during a global pandemic鈥

Time for a break鈥? 
It鈥檚 July in 抖阴短视频, so obviously it鈥檚 raining 鈥 a turn in the garden is therefore out as an option. It would just mean throwing a tennis ball for Lila to fetch and drop expectantly by my feet for another throw-and-fetch round. I鈥檝e phd work from students looking at me from my inbox, so I should really turn my hand to that. Maybe after another tea though.

What are you [reading/watching/listening to] these days? 
I鈥檓 keeping Richard Ford鈥檚 new story collection Sorry For Your Trouble for a few days鈥 holiday in Galway. Otherwise, I鈥檝e been working back through Bishop鈥檚 letters in the One Art selection 鈥 she is so dry and on point in almost every single letter. It鈥檚 taken me years to pluck up the courage to write about her poetry: I doubt I would ever have said hello to her if I鈥檇 had the chance to meet her in real life. I鈥檝e also just finished reading Bernard Sumner鈥檚 autobiography Chapter & Verse which I鈥檝e been meaning to get to for years 鈥 fine, dry laconicism occupies every page. I can鈥檛 believe he turned 64 this year鈥

TV-wise, last night I got to the final episode of Schitt鈥檚 Creek. Slow to gather momentum but then it was just everything you鈥檇 want from a situation comedy: sharp, funny, empathetic, perfectly judged.

As for music, I put shuffle on at the start of writing these responses: currently The Organ is playing 鈥楤asement Band Song鈥 and that feels oddly appropriate. Otherwise, when walking Lila, I鈥檝e developed a lockdown habit of listening to podcasts 鈥 anything from the Wicked Game series about every US Presidential election since Washington, old episodes of Desert Island Discs, analyses of S酶ren Kierkegaard鈥檚 writings, and podcasts dedicated to the glory that is Leeds United, risen again to our rightful place having just won the English Championship under the brilliant enigma that is Marcelo Bielsa. (I had to get Leeds in somewhere.)

What might you revisit in times of crisis or uncertainty?
When I want to read something that leaves me brimful but consoled I either go to Marilynne Robinson鈥檚 novels Gilead or Home 鈥 I can鈥檛 wait until the fourth Gilead novel Jack comes out in the autumn 鈥 or William Maxwell, whose They Came Like Swallows is a thinly veiled fictionalisation of his mother鈥檚 death in the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918. (You can maybe just make out a picture of Maxwell and his wife, the painter Emily Noyes, on the wall above my fishtank; Maxwell died twenty years ago on 31 July 2000, eight days after his wife had passed.) Not enough people read Maxwell these days, which is very disappointing 鈥 and, also, their loss. And, of course, there鈥檚 always Wallace Stevens to turn to for anything that鈥檚 needed at any time. 

As for movies to get lost in, North By Northwest, or Vertigo, do it every single time.

Best advice for writers?
Don鈥檛 do it! But, if you have to 鈥 and if you are a writer, you have to 鈥 find a way to say something real about what this life, your life, is. My advice is more for phd students starting their ascent, and I remind each of mine of the following on a fairly regular basis: if you鈥檙e climbing Everest, or any mountain for that matter, you only need to climb one side. You can鈥檛, nor do you need to, climb each and every side.

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