Before the Fire - the new novel from Sarah Butler
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| Click here to buy 'Before the Fire' |
Sarah Butler’s debut novel '10 Things I've Learnt About Love' is published by Picador and in 15 other countries around the world. Her new novel, 'Before the Fire' is published in March 2015. She runs UrbanWords, exploring the relationship between writing and place through projects and writing-residencies.
McVeigh: Your first novel '10 Things..' was a huge
success selling in 15 countries. Pretty much every debut novelist’s dream. What
was that like at the time and how do you look back on it now?
Butler: It was incredible! I’d been writing seriously for
ten years before I got my deal with Picador. That was a real dream come true,
and then the foreign deals were completely unexpected, and brilliant. I look
back and think how lucky I was to have all those things fall into place at that
particular time. I think these things are always a mixture of hard work and
luck.
McVeigh: What was the impact of reviews - good and
bad?
Butler: Good question! They had an impact on my mood and
self-esteem, of course - the good ones lifted me, the bad ones depressed me. I
try hard to be sanguine and accept that there is no book in the world that everyone likes, but that is easier said
than done. There were a few which made me think differently about my own work.
I think ideally that’s what reviews would offer: another way to think about
your writing and its effect on a reader.
McVeigh: Every author I've spoken to urges me to start another
project before my novel comes out. Did you? Would you offer the same
advice?
Butler: I did. I felt very strongly that I needed to be
working on a new project when my first novel came out, so I wouldn’t put too
much pressure on the ‘success’ or ‘failure’ of the published book (that was the
theory anyway! And I put those words in inverted commas because they are hugely
subjective and relative terms). Once a book’s published there’s not much, as
its creator, that you can do about it. You can do your best to publicise it,
but you can’t stand in every book shop and make people buy it, nor follow them
home and make sure they read it and interpret it in the way you want them to.
It felt important to me that I had something – a new project – which I could do
something about. I’ve done the same with Before
The Fire – and am already fairly far on with a first draft of my next
novel. It keeps me grounded. Plus I’m
miserable if I don’t write, so it wouldn’t make sense for me not to be working
on something new. In terms of advice, though, I think everything does this
strange job differently and the most important thing is to know yourself, and
what you need, and go with that, rather than with someone else’s idea about
what you should be doing.
Before the Fire:“A brilliant, punchy and utterly contemporary novel” Bidisha
McVeigh: Recording artists traditionally have that
difficult second album syndrome and more and more I hear authors talking about
that difficult second novel syndrome. Did you experience that?
Butler: Do you know, people keep mentioning that to me too!
My response is, yes, it is difficult writing a second novel, but then it was
hard writing the first, and I know damn well that it will be hard writing the
third and the fourth and the fifth. It is difficult, end of. Also, I’d written
two unpublished novels before Ten Things
I’ve Learnt About Love, so actually Before
The Fire is my fourth novel – and yes, it was difficult!
Of course, it is different too – I had a two book
deal and therefore an (almost!) guarantee of publication, and a deadline, and a
series of real and imagined expectations to contend with. Having my first novel
published was a more problematic experience than I’d anticipated: you are
vulnerable, you are judged on public platforms, you are interviewed about your
personal life and some of that can be difficult to manage. Maybe writing a
second with the knowledge of the challenges involved in being published invites
a certain amount of worry and self-doubt.
McVeigh: The central character in Before The Fire is a
teenage boy, how did you approach writing from that POV? Were there any
difficulties/concerns and how did you overcome them?
Butler: I found it completely terrifying! It’s strange how
little control I feel I have over my novels at times. Originally the novel was
going to have four narrators: two mothers and two teenage sons, but Stick – the
main character – was the only one I could write. He was the character I was
interested in; his was the voice in my head, if you like. I spent a lot of time
worrying about whether or not I had the right or the ability to tell his story.
I made my boyfriend and a couple of male friends (you included!) read terrible
early drafts in order to reassure me that I was able to pull it off. In the end
I decided I just had to trust myself, trust that I had talked to, worked with,
and listened to enough teenage boys to be able to fully imagine my character.
It’s a risk, but then any writing is a risk. The spark for Before The Fire came from my anger with how young people were
stereotyped and labelled in the media and political discourse after the riots
of 2011. I wanted to tell a story about a young man that summer. And this is
the great thing about writing a novel – I’m not writing about all teenage boys,
I’m writing about one teenage boy. I think if you really commit to imagining a
character fully, you can write anyone, and there is power and value in that act
of empathy and imagination.
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| Sarah Butler |
McVeigh: The novel is set in Manchester leading up to the
riots of 2011. What research did you do for this?
Butler: I grew up in Manchester, and moved back here just
as I started to write Before The Fire.
I spent time walking and cycling around the areas that feature in the novel. I
also worked with students at a primary school and a secondary school in the
area where the main character lives, talking to them about their lives and
attitudes. I wasn’t in Manchester when the riots happened, so I watched a lot
of YouTube videos, read newspaper articles and research reports and talked to
people who had experienced them.
McVeigh: I tried to use research for a story I wanted to
write and in the end abandoned it completely having gotten lost in the history.
Have you any tips for writers who want to use research in their work?
Butler: I’m not sure I’m the best person to answer that
question! I often end up feeling I haven’t done enough research... Friends of
mine who write historical fiction tell me not to worry too much, to read a few
general books and then not be afraid to make stuff up. That’s the thing, isn’t
it? If you’re writing fiction, you’re allowed to make things up. I think it’s
about feeling secure enough in your world to give yourself permission to play.
Personally, I tend to do enough research to give myself some confidence and then
start writing. It takes me a long time to work out the shape and structure of
my novels, and I always end up changing things quite dramatically. So I’ll
write in order to work all of that out, and most importantly to work out the
emotional truth of what I want to say; then I’ll go back and do more research,
once I’m clear about what it is I need to know.
McVeigh: You do a lot of creative writing projects with
community groups, how does that impact on your writing and what are the key
things you take away from those experiences?
Before the Fire: “A moving portrayal of a country in crisis, getting under the skin of both the issues and the people affected by them” - Emma Chapman author of 'How to be a Good Wife'
Butler: I think if we are open to the world then everything
we do filters into our writing in some way. I do community-based writing
projects because I love doing them (www.urbanwords.org.uk); because I am passionate about the
role and importance of creative writing and storytelling in the wider world;
and because it keeps me grounded and sane (more or less!). Yes, this work does
impact on my writing, though the impact it has is rarely planned or even
anticipated to be honest. So for example, I started working on my next novel
thinking it would be about a couple in their twenties set in 1950s London, but
I soon found myself writing about this same couple in their late 80s,
negotiating care homes and facing their own mortality. I am convinced that this
change happened because of a recent project I was involved with in Preston. I
worked in a day centre for people with dementia and had a lot of conversations
about ageing, care and home – all of those themes have seeped into my new book.
McVeigh: You also have a writing consultancy what are the
most common errors first time novelists make?
Butler: I’m a bit uncomfortable with the word ‘errors’! If
I’ve learnt anything about writing it’s that everyone does it differently, and
that just because you get published doesn’t mean you did everything ‘right’ and
just because you didn’t get published doesn’t mean you did it all ‘wrong’. We
have to find our own way, I think.
Saying all that, I do think that some writers founder
when they become so defensive about their work they won’t listen to well-meant,
constructive criticism. That too is a difficult balance: between believing in
your own work and vision, and listening to other’s opinions, but I know that
I’ve found feedback and editing hugely useful in my own work. I have heard a
handful of writers tell me that they don’t read, which I find extraordinary, if
only for its arrogance – if you don’t read, why on earth should someone read
your writing?! And we can learn so much from reading – it’s essential I think,
for writers at any stage of their career.
McVeigh: When is Before the Fire in the shops?
Butler: It’s
published on 12 March.
Here's an exclusive extract: the prologue from Before the Fire.
End.
Here's an exclusive extract: the prologue from Before the Fire.
9th August 2011
On
the corner of Market Street and Spring Gardens, a boy who is almost, but not
quite, a man flicks a plastic lighter until it yields a small yellow flame. His
hood is pulled up around his face and a JD
Sports bag slices a diagonal across his back. Behind him, people stand
and watch, their phones raised to catch his movements, the buzz of burglar
alarms and police sirens echoing across the city. The shop window is already
broken. He steps over smashed glass to reach his hand in through the security
bars, to the plastic dummy. She has a blank white face: no eyes, no nose, no
mouth. But she has breasts, and hip bones – visible beneath her scarlet summer
dress. He holds his lighter against a fold of material.
Then he turns away and crosses Market Street; stops by a
shuttered-up shop, adjusts his hood, squares his shoulders, and looks back.
Nothing but the smallest of flames, which seems to cling to the security bars,
suspended between floor and ceiling. It is hardly big enough to notice. The
people who watched him stand at the window with his lighter wait, nodding as if
in agreement. The rest: the scared, the excited, the curious, the high, just
walk past.
Soon enough the fire flares upwards – a skinny flame,
gathering orange around its edges. Now some of the passers-by slow and turn
their heads, though few break their stride. Something drops, molten gold, to
the ground and another flame starts, as if from nowhere, to the right of the
first, which is roaring now, reaching for the ceiling. The second is trying to
catch up. Its audience has grown. Staring. Filming. Hypnotised. Black smoke
gathers behind what is left of the window. The two flames join, and together
they are unstoppable.
And now, as the crowd holds its breath, as a teenage couple
kiss, as another alarm starts to wail, the fire grows. It stretches backwards
and sideways, billowing behind the shuttered doors. It rushes forwards, its
flames arcing from the window, pouring smoke up the brickwork, shattering what
is left of the glass. It reaches for the onlookers and they shrink away, their
movements short and panicked. Some turn and run. A man stumbles over a bike. A
woman half trips and then rights herself. The couple, though, carry on kissing,
their faces lit gold by the flames.
You can catch Sarah at a number of upcoming events.
Thursday 12th March 2015: 7pm @ Waterstones, 91 Deansgate, Manchester, M3 2BW: Launch of BEFORE THE FIRE with additional Manchester-inspired readings from David Gaffney and Kate Feld. Free, but RSVP to Lucie.CuthbertsonTwiggs[at]macmillan.com
Monday 16th March 2015: 7pm @ Pavillion Cafe, Ashton Gardens: Picador at The Pavillion, readings and conversation with Sarah Butler, Emily St.John Mandel and David Whitehouse
Tuesday 17th March 2015: 7pm @ Urmston Books, 72 Flixton Road, Manchester: Picador Panel, readings and conversation with Sarah Butler, Emily St.John Mandel and David Whitehouse
Wednesday 18th March 2015: 7pm @ The New Bookshop, 42-44 Main St, Cockermouth: Pizza and Picador, readings and conversation with Sarah Butler, Emily St.John Mandel and David Whitehouse
Thursday 19th March 2015: 7pm @ Tea & Tipple, Forum Books, 18 Market Place, Corbridge: Picador Panel, readings and conversation with Sarah Butler, Emily St.John Mandel and David Whitehouse
Here's an interview with Sarah I did on the publication of her fist novel.
Here's an interview with Sarah I did on the publication of her fist novel.


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