October 2005
Three Monkeys Online were lucky enough to exchange a number of emails with Mr Faber recently, to discuss The Fahrenheit Twins.
TMO: Agreeing to the interview, you wrote "now let’s visit The Fahrenheit Twins". It’s a phrase that charms and intrigues. I read it as if the collection, as a whole, takes on a personality or character, as if it were a place or a person that we could visit.
Michel Faber: I said "Let's visit The Fahrenheit Twins" because I was tickled by the thought of us helicoptering to their polar hideout. Of course I know that the twins are only words on a page, and I'm certainly not the sort of writer who talks to his characters or harbours any illusions about the creative process. But at the same time, I think it's juvenile and arrogant when literary writers compulsively remind their readers that the characters aren't real. People know that already. The challenge is to make an intelligent reader suspend disbelief, to seduce them into the reality of a narrative. Readers have invested deep emotions into my books, particularly The Crimson Petal and Under The Skin. I respect that relationship and I believe that those characters have integrity; I know what they would or wouldn't do in a given situation. They deserve to be treated as human beings.
TMO: Do your books assume for you a particular identity once published? How would you describe the character of this particular collection?
Michel Faber: Overall, this collection is darker than my debut in 1998, Some Rain Must Fall. I haven't necessarily grown more pessimistic or gloomy in the seven years since, but I'm less likely to write lightweight pieces. There are several stories in Some Rain Must Fall - Half A Million Pounds And A Miracle, for example - which are charming and funny and well-written, but quite slight. If I found myself conceiving a story like that now, I would abort it before it got to the page. Nowadays, I only want to write things that will shake people up quite profoundly, move them deeply, change the way they see the world. This tends to mean that it's the more serious pieces that I expend my time and energy on, because they're more substantial.
That said, I did worry that this collection would be too dark. Initially, I was thinking that it wouldn't include The Fahrenheit Twins in it, because that story had already been published in another book in North America, and I didn't want to cause headaches for my American and Canadian publishers. But then I realised that the story was essential to this collection, for the humour and transcendence that it brings to the book as a whole. And in the weeks leading up to the deadline for the editing of the collection, I worked round the clock to get two more stories into it: Explaining Coconuts and Mouse. Mouse in particular gives the book a burst of the gentle humour it needs.
TMO: How much do the Fahrenheit twins weigh on the rest of the stories in the collection? It seems to me their characters, and story, are almost emblematic, giving a unifying theme to the other stories. Or is it just that a book, by default, must have a title, and this was as good as any?
Michel Faber: No, it was deliberate. The book is a journey from alienation towards a tentative connectedness. The Fahrenheit twins, peculiar and slightly creepy though they are, are children with lots of inner resources, lots of juice. They see life as a big adventure. By contrast the protagonist of the first story, The Safehouse, is emotionally depleted; he sees himself as marooned somewhere beyond the end of all adventures. By making The Fahrenheit Twins the title - and concluding - story in the collection, and giving the twins' hopefulness the last word, I'm trying to tip the balance towards optimism.
(Article continues »»)

Is there a book in this blog? is a group blog to discuss books. Our writers post on books they've read, are reading, or, perhaps have no intention of reading. Literary news, and debates over narrative voices are not uncommon.
Latest Post:Roberto Saviano and the new Italian epic
Regular readers of Three Monkeys will know that we have a soft-spot for the Italian literary collective Wu Ming, the people behind novels like Q and 54 (which is very much on our 'to-review' list). Wu Ming I (there are five of them) has just published a...
Are you a budding/established writer? Would you like to see your work appear in Three Monkeys Online? We're always on the look out for new material - check here for our submission guidelines
All comments will be reviewed by TMO editorial staff, and if judged appropriate and in accordance with our comments policy, will be published.