Benjamin Myers first came across the Booker prize-winning author Pat Barker when he was seven or eight and, though he didnât read her till much later, she made an impression, even then. âI was on holiday with my parents and found a copy of Union Street, Patâs first novel,â he recalls. âI asked my mum about it and she said: âOh, not only is that set round our way but the author is from Yorkshire.â I was so struck by that. Itâs partly what made me want to be a writer.â
A decade ago the two became acquainted, brought together by an old friend of Myers who was seeing Barkerâs daughter. By then, Myers was establishing himself as one of the most electrifying voices in British fiction, setting most of his work, such as the 2013 Gordon Burn prize-winning novel Pig Iron, in his native north-east. Barker, who has published 15 books over a stellar 40-year career, including the Regeneration trilogy and more recently a series of novels reimagining the Iliad from a female perspective, continues to be an inspiration for him.
Ahead of the publication of his new novel, Rare Singles, a meditation on grief, love and the redemptive power of music, and Barkerâs return to ancient Greece in The Voyage Home, the two friends met up over Zoom to discuss what it means to be ânorthern writersâ, the perils of inhabiting characters of a different race or gender, and the authors and books they love.
Have you ever felt the need to resist the ânorthern writerâ label [Myers lives in Hebden Bridge, Barker in Durham]?
Pat Barker Being a northern writer, even now â or perhaps especially now â requires a kind of courage or bloody-mindedness, because we are so deeply unfashionable. I remember Hilary Mantel saying that because she had a northern accent, she just had to accept that everybody who listened to her thought she was a bit thick. I think that prejudice still exists. And thereâs you [Ben] â male, pale, northern â how do you even get into print? Apart from your gigantic talent, of course.
Benjamin Myers Itâs weird, because being a fortysomething white male, itâs a position of privilege â¦
PB Not in the literary world, itâs not.
BM No. And as soon as you open your mouth and say youâre from a comprehensive school in the north-east of England⦠Last year, I was made a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Recently I was talking to another writer whoâs female and Asian and she said: âOh, you know we were brought in to up the diversity quota.â And I was like: âMe, why?â And she said: âWell, youâre from the north of England.â I was quite flabbergasted and embarrassed to hear that.
So you react against it?
PB Oh, I think I violently reacted against it at one point. I began by writing âmiddle-class lady novelistâ novels. They werenât published, they didnât deserve to be. I said to myself: âLook, you are a northern, working-class, female bastard, get on and write about it.â
In Rare Singles, Ben, you write about Yorkshire through the eyes of a complete outsider. Did that give you a fresh perspective?
BM I think so yeah. Itâs a novel about an old American guy who comes to perform at a northern soul weekender in Scarborough. I just thought, post-Brexit, we in England have been taking a long, hard look at ourselves â or some of us have been.
PB Not anybody in power, Iâm afraid.
BM No. But I thought I need some fresh eyes on the north of England. I went to Scarborough on a few occasions and thought: pretend youâve never been here, or to England. Look at what people are eating, how they dress, how theyâre talking. But the big difference is the character is of a different race to me, heâs black â¦
PB You are actually a very brave writer, and thatâs what I admire about you.
I was going to ask about writing so far outside your experience. Itâs probably quite an anxiety-inducing thing to do.
PB Itâs a terribly brave thing to do. It shouldnât be, but it is.
BM Well, there were advanced discussions about it. Someone suggested it wouldnât get published.
PB And the other character is a woman; even that is problematical these days.
BM But one of the main criticisms that Iâve had for my writing is that I write about men.
PB Brilliantly. They need writing about for goodness sake, whoâs the problem in all this?
BM Yeah. So [the main characters are] a black man and a woman, neither of which I am. But without being too reductive, people are people and we generally, for the most part, have the same fears and desires and needs. Rare Singles is a book about grief and trauma, and that goes beyond age, wealth, race, nationality⦠For the first time, one of my novels has been through a sensitivity reader.
PB How was it?
BM It was fine. Some comments came back that I didnât necessarily agree with.
Such as?
BM It was suggested that I mention skin colour more, and I donât mention skin colour at all in the book, because itâs not about skin colour, itâs about lived experience, grief, connection. And readers arenât stupid. They know who theyâre reading about and what theyâre experiencing.
Pat, would you agree to a sensitivity read?
PB I would have to, and I may have to, because I got very sick recently of writing about bronze age women. I want to write a modern novel with a male protagonist about the divisiveness in our society, set in the recent past in England. We are in a honeymoon period at the moment when it looks as if the divisions will be less prominent, but I do think that a year on from the election, peopleâs teeth will be at each otherâs throats with even more enthusiasm.
Pat, you said in the past that you werenât temperamentally equipped to being a writer, whereas Ben, you seem to love the process.
PB I sometimes love the process, and Iâm absolutely intolerable when Iâm not writing. So from everybody elseâs point of view, itâs quite clear I have to do it.
BM Itâs the same for me. I would say that writing is the only time that Iâm not anxious about the world, because Iâm in control of it. But the downside is, itâs compulsive for me. Sometimes an idea comes that is so strong and difficult to ignore that everything in my life gets put on hold while I do it.
PB What happens when you stop?
BM Complete mental and physical exhaustion. Last month, I decided I would have June off because I was so tired, but then I wrote 25,000 words of a novella.
PB You just cheat and start again so you donât have to face up to being you without the writing!
BM Yeah, writing is a perpetual attempt to avoid the real world. I donât fully live in the real world.
PB You should talk to [Barkerâs daughter] Anna about this. Sheâs just been trying to sort out my financial affairs, which have got into a muddle simply because I donât open things. I think theyâll go away if I ignore them, but it really doesnât work like that.
What books have you enjoyed recently?
BM The new Kevin Barry novel, The Heart in Winter, is brilliant. Itâs more about the language than the plot with him, but every line made me feel like giving up writing.
PB Prophet Song by Paul Lynch. I was just blown away by it.
BM Irish fiction is the stuff thatâs given me some of the most excitement â Kevin Barry, Sebastian Barry, Colin Barrett, Rob Doyle. On a different note, the comedy duo the Krankies wrote a very good book that is really vulgar and bawdy and a brilliant insight into the world of light entertainment and the club scene of the 70s and 80s. That wasnât the book I was intending to mention, but it did give me a lot of pleasure.
Pat, tell me about The Voyage Home. You say youâve reached the end of your time writing about bronze age women?
PB I think there is another book there but Iâm not sure I want it to be the next book. The Voyage Home is about revenge â the necessity of revenge, the pointlessness of it. It wasnât an easy book to write, but that was largely for personal reasons â things like the pandemic and moving house and being ill. It changes your attitude to a book if youâve had to really battle your way through it, and this one was forged in a furnace.
BM Pat, what would you be doing if you hadnât got published â if Union Street had never been pulled out of the bin and passed on to Virago?
PB Iâd still be writing, I think, because it does seem essential for my equilibrium. Otherwise, I might have become a therapist. Itâs the same focus on language, and listening carefully, and trouble, and thatâs the kind of novel I write. But Iâm glad my husband fished Union Street out of the bin, and that Virago thought it was worth publishing. Itâs not a bad career. One of the benefits of being a writer, of course, is that you could go on until you fall off your perch. Thereâs no retirement at 65.
BM I just feel really lucky to have a career in writing at all. And I know it can end at any point. I think all writers live in fear of the rug being pulled. The possibility of having to enter the workplace now is unthinkable to me, because Iâm not even fully socialised. Iâm the opposite of institutionalised, whatever that is.
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The Voyage Home by Pat Barker is published by Hamish Hamilton (£20) on 22 August. To support the Guardian and Observer order a copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply
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Rare Singles by Benjamin Myers is published by Bloomsbury (£18.99). To support the Guardian and Observer order a copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply