High-end
author A.L. Kennedy dives into sci-fi with Dr. Who
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[August 26, 2015]
By Andrew Heavens
LONDON (Reuters) - A.L.
Kennedy, the feted British writer of high-end literary
fiction, knew she was reaching a different audience when
websites such as Nerdist.com started praising her
depiction of Dr. Who.
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The Scottish author, a Fellow of the Royal Society of
Literature and a Costa Book Award winner, has just switched
dimensions into sci-fi by publishing "The Drosten's Curse", her
first novel starring the face-changing time lord first made
famous on BBC TV.
"I've always loved the Who world, although not obsessively, and
it seemed a fun thing to do. I'd been asking for ages and they
finally let me," she told Reuters in an interview.
The novel makes her a fully fledged member of the Dr. Who
universe - a phenomenon that started as a British children's TV
series in the 1960s and, boosted by a revamp 10 years ago and a
dedicated fan base, has spread to win audiences on BBC America
and beyond.
Kennedy's past grown-up novels such as "Day" - which delves into
the psyche of a World War Two veteran - are all page-turners but
are not scared of challenging readers with their narrative
complexity.
"The Drosten's Curse" kicks off with the sentence: "Paul Harris
was dying" and charges on with the Doctor and his helpers
confronting a carnivorous golf bunker which turns out to be a
mind-bending monster "at the edge of reality's nightmares".
CHANGING, EXPLORING
"In literary fiction you're ideally going through a process that
produces prose that's as crafted as poetry, but also pushing
ahead a plot and characters - that's the toughest gig you can
have as a writer," Kennedy said.
"In genre fiction, you're serving a kind of brand, certainly in
this case, and you're reining in some of the prose because it
would get in the way of the forward motion. It's a different
kind of story and you're using a different part of your voice."
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Her Dr. Who is clearly based on actor Tom Baker's TV portrayal of
the time-travelling alien through the 1970s, complete with scarf,
jelly babies and manic, toothy grin.
"The invention of sci-fi is exhilarating because that isn't a part
of literary fiction so much," said Kennedy, now based in London.
"You can't usually alter the real world that much, unless you're
writing magic realism, which I don't generally."
The book has drawn praise from both the Who-verse - "10/10" Blogtor
Who - and her usual reviewers, with The Independent newspaper
calling it "giddying and adventurous".
It remains to be seen whether space-travelling tales prove more
lucrative or popular than literary novels.
"I'd doubt that and that's not really why I did it," she said.
"There will be other excursions in other directions. It's best to
keep changing and learning and exploring, I think."
(Editing by Michael Roddy and Gareth Jones)
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