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Q&A
LAWRENCE HILL TALKS ABOUT WRITING THE ILLEGAL
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Why did you make running so integral to Keita’s character? I ran for decades and loved it, so I know the world— I know what it feels like to be on mile 20 in a marathon. But also, it just seemed perfect that Keita would be a marathoner. When he arrives in Freedom State, he’s not running for Olympic glory or to win a gold medal; he’s running for his life.
How did writing The Illegal differ from your past work? I’m trying to be somewhat funny and sometimes downright satirical in The Illegal. And it’s hard to do that. It’s hard to write about painful issues and to be funny at the same time.
What do you want people to take away from The Illegal? Millions of people today live in terrible conditions because of their inability to stay in the country where they came from. I’d like people to imagine more deeply what it means to flee your country and take refuge, sometimes legally, sometimes illegally. The novel seeks to open up the windows of our imagination so we can try to see these people, and thus be more receptive to their presence and make it more possible for their lives to unfold with dignity and with freedom. Two Years Eight Months and Twenty-Eight Nights
(Knopf Canada) by Salman Rushdie, $34 Available Sept. 8 In Salman Rushdie’s usual manner of carefully constructed magical realism, this book weaves the magic of the Arabian supernatural creatures called the jinn into a War of the Worlds tale. It begins when a jinnia falls in love with a mortal man, the real-life philosopher Ibn Rushd. With him, she births countless offspring who later help her wage war on the malicious and destructive jinn who were her childhood friends in a battle that lasts for two years, eight months and 28 nights. The tale unfolds with dry humour and depictions of brutal destruction along with loving descriptions of old, tired bodies and fragile broken hearts. — Lisa de Nikolits
Must-Reads “One day, I was standing in my son’s room, looking at a newly framed print of Alex Colville’s Pacific, and it suddenly hit me like for Fall a ton of bricks how perfect the painting was for Sleep, with its mood of quiet violence and all its unanswered questions, and its sense of being poised at a border RECOGNIZE THIS not unlike the one between waking COVER? and sleep.” — Nino Ricci The Illegal (HarperCollins) by Lawrence Hill, $35 Sleep Available Sept. 8 In his first novel since 2007’s The Book of Negroes, (Doubleday Canada) by Nino Ricci, $30 Lawrence Hill invents a fictional world that is Available Sept. 30 frighteningly close to reality. It’s a world where History professor undocumented refugees are left to struggle for survival David Pace wants in a place where they’re told they don’t belong. nothing other than Keita Ali has nowhere to go. After Keita’s mother is academic success, but killed during a coup in Zantoroland, the new powers his career begins to that be come back for his journalist father—and it’s unravel—along with his marriage and not hard to see that Keita will be next. The young man his relationship to his son—when a will surely die in Zantoroland, but when he flees to brain disorder impairs his sleep the wealthy Freedom State, he’s an illegal—no ID functions and self-control. Soon, one of card, no name, no rights. Once the fastest in his class, the few places where David can feel Keita becomes a marathoner who relies on prize fully present is at the gun range. With money to sustain himself. As he tries desperately to David’s compulsion for self-destruction, escape deportation, he crosses paths with people with his story can’t end well. This latest book different backgrounds and political views who help by Governor General’s Award–winning decide his fate. — Jill Buchner Nino Ricci offers a window into a tortured mind that’s caught on the READ THE FULL INTERVIEW AT precipice between dream and reality. canadianliving.com/lawrencehill. — Andrea Karr