Interview with Neil Griffiths of Weatherglass Books (#NovNov24)

Back in September, I attended a great “The Future of the Novella” event in London, hosted by Weatherglass. I wrote about it here, and earlier this month I reviewed the first of the two winners of the inaugural Weatherglass Novella Prize, Astraea by Kate Kruimink*. Weatherglass Books co-founder and novelist Neil Griffiths kindly sent review copies of both winning books, and agreed to answer some questions over e-mail.

 

Samantha Harvey’s 136-page Orbital won the Booker Prize, the film adaptation of Claire Keegan’s Small Things Like These is in cinemas: Is the novella having a moment? If so, how do you account for its fresh prominence? Or has it always been a powerful form and we’re realizing it anew?

I do wonder whether Orbital is a novella, by which I mean, number of pages can be deceptive – there are a lot of words per page! I think it probably sneaks in under our Novella Prize max word count: under 40K. Also, I wonder whether Small Things like These would make it over our minimum 20K. I don’t think so. But what I think we can say is that there is something happening around length.

My co-founder of Weatherglass, Damian Lanigan, says this: “the novella is the form for our times: befitting our short attention spans, but also with its tight focus, with its singular atmosphere – it’s the ideal form for glimpsing something essential about the world and ourselves in an increasingly chaotic world.”

But then if we look over the history of the prose fiction over the last 200 hundred years, there are so many novellas that have defined an era: Turgenev’s Love, Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, Carr’s A Month in the Country, Orwell’s Animal Farm, Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich.

 

Why did Weatherglass choose to focus on short books? Do economic and environmental factors come into it (short books = less paper = lower printing costs as well as fewer trees cut down)?

Economic and environmental factors play a role, but there is also craft. Writers need to ask themselves the question: does this story need to be this length, and the answer is, more often than not: no. I think constraints bring the best out of writers. If a novel comes in at 70K words, our first thought is to cut 10K. (I should say, my last novel, very kindly reviewed by yourself, was a whooping 190K words. It should have been 150K! Since then I’ve written two pieces of fiction, both under 35K.)

 

Neil Griffiths

We’ve heard about the bloating of films, that they’re something like 20% longer on average than they were 40 years ago; will books take the opposite trajectory? Can a one-sitting read compete with a film?

I don’t think I’ve ever read even the shortest novella in one sitting. I need time to reflect. I don’t think comparing the two forms is helpful because they require different things of us. Take music: Morton Feldman’s 2nd String Quartet is 5 hours long, without a break. I’d commit to that in the concert hall, but I couldn’t read for 5 hours without a break or sit through a film.

 

How did you bring Ali Smith on board as the judge for the first two years of the Weatherglass Novella Prize? There was a blind judging process and you ended up with an all-female shortlist in the inaugural year. Do you have a theory as to why?

Ali Smith

Damian kept saying Ali Smith would be the best judge and I kept saying “but how do we get to her?” Then someone told me they had her email address. I didn’t expect to get an answer. A ‘Yes’ came an hour later. She’s been wonderful to work with. And she’s enjoyed it so much she’s agreed to do it ongoingly.

I do think the shortlist question is an important one. Certainly we don’t have to ask ourselves any questions when it’s an all-female short list, but we would if it was all-male. What does that say? I don’t know why the strongest were by women.

 

Do you have any personal favourite novellas?

A Month in the Country might be the exemplar of the form for me. But there is a little-read novella by Tolstoy, Hadji Murat, which is also close to perfect. More contemporaneously, Gerald Murnane’s Border Districts. And I’m pleased to say: all three novellas we’re publishing from our inaugural prize are up there: AstraeaAerth and We Hexed the Moon.


*Though it won’t be published until 25 January, I have a finished copy of the other winner, Aerth by Deborah Tomkins, a novella-in-flash set on alternative earths and incorporating second- and third-person narration and various formats. I’ve been enjoying it so far and hope to review it soon as my first recommendation for 2025.

14 responses

  1. Elle's avatar

    This reminds me to pick up Hadji Murat! I’ve been aware of it for a while and I think Alma Classics publishes a good edition in the UK.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ve read The Death of Ivan Ilych but didn’t appreciate it at the time (I was too young, I think!) so need to reread it. I can’t say I’d heard of this other one.

      Like

  2. Rebecca Moon Ruark's avatar

    Great interview–thanks! I’m guessing we’ll see a lot more novellas and novels in flash coming down the pike.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Whether it’s about attention spans or the cost of paper, I don’t think it’s a bad development. Whatever gets people reading. Doorstoppers might be easier to read on electronic devices anyway.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Anne Bennett's avatar

    I love A Month in the Country, too. I need to investigate more Tolstoy novellas. He is so good at choosing just the right words. I also really liked The Bridge of San Luis Rey.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Ooh, yes, that’s a great one. We had it as a festival Big Read back when I was associated with the Greenbelt literature programme.

      Like

  4. Cathy746books's avatar

    Great interview Rebecca, looking forward to reading Aerth next year.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Thanks! Neil has been so kind to send us review copies. I’m halfway through Aerth and enjoying it.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Cathy746books's avatar

        I haven’t received Aerth as yet, but looking forward to it

        Like

      2. Rebecca Foster's avatar

        Just give Neil a nudge over e-mail and I’m sure you’ll have it directly!

        Like

  5. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    I really enjoyed this behind-the-scenes peek into the prize and am tickled to hear that Ali Smith will return as a judge. Wonderful!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      She’s a legend! (I just wish I enjoyed her own books more.)

      Like

  6. […] Prize by attending their “The Future of the Novella” event in London, reviewing Astraea, and interviewing Neil Griffiths. I’ll review Aerth soon, […]

    Like

  7. […] Last year I attended an event at Foyles in London introducing the two joint winners of the inaugural Weatherglass Novella Prize, as chosen by Ali Smith. I later reviewed both Astraea by Kate Kruimink and Aerth by Deborah Tomkins, and interviewed Weatherglass Books co-founder and novelist Neil Griffiths. […]

    Like

Leave a reply to #NovNov24 Catch-Up, II: Ingalls; Boas, Lindbergh, Toth | Bookish Beck Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.