Bruno
asked
Janet Roger:
Hello, Janet. First of all, I thank you for sending me a request for friendship and best wishes to you and your loved ones from Croatia. I'm curious about your tastes, when it comes to literatures from all over the world. Do you have favorite authors, works or countries that have made a great impression on you?
Janet Roger
I was interested to think back and find this out myself. Thank you for asking Bruno. I started by looking at my reviews on Goodreads - and what a mixed bag they are – ranging from Play It As It Lays (Joan Didion); Maigret’s Memoirs (Georges Simenon); Mahoney Reconsidered (David Van Zanten); The Complete Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant, and Monet’s Impression Sunrise (Marianne Mathieu).
But I travel a lot and often my choice of reading is determined by which country I find myself in. For example I came across Olivia Manning’s Balkan Trilogy in a bookshop in Bucharest, which is where her story begins. So how could I not read it? And many years ago, in a hotel room in Swaziland of all places, I browsed the first couple of chapters of Dr. Johnson’s Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland. Then on a chance visit to second-hand bookstore on quite another continent, there it was again, and so of course I snapped it up. Serendipity. You just can’t beat it.
For influential authors let me start with Raymond Chandler. My noir crime thriller Shamus Dust tips its hat to the novels of Chandler in all sorts of ways. After all it’s a dark take on city crime, corruption and a series of murders set in 1947, when not only Chandler’s Philip Marlowe mysteries but the entirely new form of film noir were both hitting their stride. But it also owes much to Charles Dickens, with his well-observed, powerful descriptions of the seedy underbelly of London with more than its fair share of murderous thieves and villains from the gutter to the government - a hundred years before my own story begins.
But I travel a lot and often my choice of reading is determined by which country I find myself in. For example I came across Olivia Manning’s Balkan Trilogy in a bookshop in Bucharest, which is where her story begins. So how could I not read it? And many years ago, in a hotel room in Swaziland of all places, I browsed the first couple of chapters of Dr. Johnson’s Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland. Then on a chance visit to second-hand bookstore on quite another continent, there it was again, and so of course I snapped it up. Serendipity. You just can’t beat it.
For influential authors let me start with Raymond Chandler. My noir crime thriller Shamus Dust tips its hat to the novels of Chandler in all sorts of ways. After all it’s a dark take on city crime, corruption and a series of murders set in 1947, when not only Chandler’s Philip Marlowe mysteries but the entirely new form of film noir were both hitting their stride. But it also owes much to Charles Dickens, with his well-observed, powerful descriptions of the seedy underbelly of London with more than its fair share of murderous thieves and villains from the gutter to the government - a hundred years before my own story begins.
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Janet Roger
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