A little bit spooky
Neil Cross talks to
Craig Sisterson about drunken murder, Booker nominations, and writing award-winning
British television
- Neil Cross's racist, outsider, religious crank of a stepfather was a positive influence for the author
- Although crime fiction often features calculating killers, in real life “most murderers are just pissed and angry.”
- Cross has been longlisted for the Booker Prize but is no longer interested in foisting ‘meaning’ onto his work, instead preferring to “tell an engrossing story”
A fascination with the inherent complexity,
even hypocrisy, of human nature seeps from the brooding, slightly off-kilter
tales spun by Wellington-based novelist Neil Cross. Throughout six previous books,
bleak yet menacing settings are populated with characters neither starkly good
nor evil, but smudged shades of grey.
The thing is, only five of those books were
fictional. In his 2005 memoir, Heartland,
Cross recalls growing up in a mouse-infested Edinburgh slum, under the influence of a caring
South African stepfather he now describes as “the angel on one shoulder and the
devil on the other”. Derek Cross cast both light and shadow on Neil’s childhood,
and still evokes conflicted appreciation in the now middle-aged author.
“In many ways I couldn’t ask for a better
parent, which is kind of why I took his name,” says Cross. “He is the single
most formative influence on my life. But he was also a white supremacist, a
thief, an adulterer, possibly a bigamist, and essentially a religious crank.” Cross
was exposed early to the flawed complexity of human nature.
His stepfather raised him as a racist and an
outsider, but also taught him the value of literature, reading Cross the
classics from an early age. “The first
one was Treasure
Island by Robert Louis Stevenson. And the second was Tom Sawyer. It was a very, very good
way to start.” While his prejudiced upbringing lies far in the past, Cross
retained the lifelong love of reading and writing his stepfather instilled. In
fact, all Cross ever wanted to be was a writer.
From being bullied and bloodied in the
Scottish schoolyard, through delinquent teenage years back in Bristol after his
racist stepfather eloped with a black woman, through a half-decade and more
happily languishing on unemployment, to completing Bachelors and Masters
degrees at Leeds University and working at a publishing company, Cross spent
his spare time writing. “While I was on the dole it was first chapters,
outlines, short stories, massive amounts of poetry, and song lyrics,” he
recalls. All of it unpublished. “Nobody even read them.”
Now, eleven years after he broke through with
Mr In-Between, a disturbing tale of
a violent hired gun whose life is turned upside down by a chance encounter with
old friends, his sixth and latest thriller is being released in Australia. Drunken
antics, guilty secrets, and a touch of the paranormal collide in Burial, a book inspired by universal
fears and murder stats.
“The initial spark was that… by far and
away, the vast majority of murders are committed by people when they’re drunk,”
says Cross. Although crime fiction often features calculating killers, in real
life “most murderers are just pissed and angry.” That fact, coupled with the common
fear of waking up after a drunken night – being slowly hit with panic, realisation,
then self-hatred for uncharacteristic behaviour the night before – was the creative
impetus for Burial.
“I thought, what would it be like to wake
up after a party, after you’ve been completely caned, and realise oh my God I’m
a murderer… I’ve buried someone in the woods last night. It would be
life-changing.”
For Nathan, the protagonist in Burial, that becomes a nasty reality.
He’s no murderer, but a drunken, coked-up witness to the sudden death of 19-yr
old Elise, who expires while entangled in the back-seat with Nathan’s strange
friend Bob. Panicked, the pair hastily bury Elise in the woods, and for years
don’t speak. Then one day Bob arrives on Nathan’s doorstep, convinced Elise is
speaking to him from beyond the grave, and threatening to upturn Nathan’s
carefully constructed new life.
Readers will find thematic echoes of Cross’s
previous work in Burial; bleak yet
menacing settings, flawed characters forced into emotional and psychological
maelstroms, and occasional literary flourishes – though less of the latter than
earlier in his career. Cross was long-listed for the 2004 Booker Prize for Always the Sun, a frightening tale of the
steps a gentle man takes after learning his child is being bullied, inspired by
Cross’s own “Travis Bickle sort of “ paranoia for his newborn son. But he considers
himself “a crime and suspense writer”, rather than embracing the literary
label. He’s no longer interested in
foisting ‘meaning’ onto his work, instead preferring to “tell an interesting
and engrossing story”.
His engrossing stories aren’t limited to novels.
Cross recently taught himself screenwriting by adapting Always the Sun, earning a contract for an episode of acclaimed BBC TV
show Spooks. He then became lead
writer for the sixth and seventh seasons, commuting between his Wellington home and
British homeland for episode read-throughs. Now planning another British-based
TV project, while working on his next novel, Cross couldn’t be happier with
life. After all, he’s a writer.
This feature article was originally published in print form in Good Reading, a popular books magazine from Australia, in mid 2009.