My Halloween Interview with Vladimir Poignard by Bill Kirton
On the Halloween that’s just gone, I
was fortunate enough to have been granted exclusive access to the normally
reclusive Vladimir Poignard, writer of some of the most chilling horror stories
to have appeared this century. Poignard is consciously part of a tradition
which stretches back to Poe, Wilkie Collins and even encompasses the
excrescences penned by the Divine Marquis himself. When I went to meet him, I
was surprised to be shown into the parlour of a small terraced house
in Wigan by a woman in her seventies. She sat me down, brought
through two cups of tea and a plate of shortbread biscuits, settled herself
opposite me and said ‘Well, shall we get started?’.
In the course of the interview which
followed, nothing compared with this revelation that the purveyor of some of
the most explicit violence and psyche-shattering episodes in the whole of
western literature was, in fact, Ethel Gringe, 78. Her three husbands had all
died in mysterious circumstances but left her with a comfortable inheritance
and all the free time she needed to write. When the shock of this discovery had
subsided, I switched on my recorder and began.
BK: Thank
you so much for agreeing to see me, Mrs Gringe.
EG: Call me Ethel, dear.
BK: Er, well... Ethel, I must confess that you don’t fit the image I had of Vladimir Poignard.
EG: Call me Ethel, dear.
BK: Er, well... Ethel, I must confess that you don’t fit the image I had of Vladimir Poignard.
EG: I
know, dear. That’s why I decided to come clean at last. I’m getting rather
tired of all these emails from young women who want to marry me, or at least
spend some time in the dank cellar they think I have here. Goodness knows where
they get such ideas.
BK: Well,
that’s surely a tribute to the authenticity you achieve with your novels – the
gory cellar sequence in Unbridled Chastity, for example. When
Jessica vomited up the spectral essence and made it eat her sister’s eyeballs –
that was pretty explicit.
EG: Explicit,
yes, but also absurd. And deliberately so.
BK: In
what way?
EG: Well,
what would you say that book’s about?
BK: Evil,
primarily. I mean, Jessica's elimination of the members of her family in
progressively more chilling ways – the scalding, the epidermal peeling, the
induced prolapses. It’s a chronicle of undiluted savagery.
EG: Nonsense,
I was just poking a bit of gentle fun at the point of view brigade.
BK: Hmm,
I’m not sure I got that from it.
EG: Oh come, Mr Kirton. The eyeball clearly sees the saliva on the essence’s tongue. We even have the visuals of its journey down the oesophagus - a literal POV. I mean, the optic nerve’s been
severed, after all, and the sister’s in no condition to be a passive observer
anyway. She’s only got sockets, for goodness’ sake. I thought it was just an
amusing way of debunking one of those persistent creative writing myths.
BK: Yes,
I suppose that’s what I should have started with – your decision to become a
writer. Your first book, Wolf, Baby, wasn’t published until 2002.
Surely you’d written lots before then.
EG: Yes,
mainly romance. Remember Nurse Gossamer? It was adapted for TV.
That was one of mine.
BK: Really?
So why the change of genre?
EG: Comfort. Reassurance. With viscera you know where you are. I
suppose it started when I was watching my grandson, Charlie, empty a cat. He's always been curious about things. In the end, his parents had
to stop buying him pets. It’s a pity. I got some of my best ideas watching him
play with various little animals. And that time with the cat …
well, when you’ve spent years writing about chaps with floppy hair, whose eyes smoulder and whose lips and fingers are adept at caressing the soft
flesh of whichever part of the body your publisher is comfortable
with, the idea of penetrating that flesh, folding back layers of it to find the
real people beneath it, serving it to lovers with cauliflower cheese … well, it’s more meaningful than happy endings, isn't it?.
BK: Perhaps, but your meanings often require the application of a questionable morality.
EG: Oh,
come, Mr Kirton. Morality and moron – they’re obviously from the same root.
BK: Well,
no actually. I think morality comes from Latin and moron from Greek. But are
you saying your writing has no moral dimension?
EG: Let
me ask you a question. How moral is Halloween?
BK: I
don’t understand.
EG: Parents
dress their little darlings as witches, vampires, blood-spattered zombies and
the rest, then send them out to beg for ‘treats’ from neighbours who just want
to relax and watch TV. If the neighbours refuse to open the door, smile at the
blackmailers on the step and hand over candies which they’ve been forced to
buy, their house gets pelted with eggs. Is that moral?
BK: I see your point, but take your story Halloween Ooze. Two
child witches burned at the stake? Seven other children drowned while bobbing for apples?
EG: I don't see your problem with that. It's the only way to convey the irony of the pathetic fallacy. They dress as witches and suffer the
consequences. Their greed for apples causes them to duck their heads into
water and they drown. Logical, crime and punishment, natural justice. Showing, not telling.
BK: But
it was your hero, Igor, who burned and drowned them. No one punished him.
EG: Why
should they? He's just the narrator.
(At this point, I heard a series of
knocks and other muffled noises and, indeed, they’re faintly discernible on the
recording. They seemed to come from beneath the floorboards but Mrs Gringe
showed no reaction to them.)
BK: Can
we get back to your working methods? You’ll admit, I think, that you’ve
invented some fairly extreme scenarios, some of which have had unfortunate
consequences.
EG: I
suppose you mean that one with the baby and the fan belt.
BK: Er,
no. Actually, I was thinking of Plague Village. Your
descriptions of the symptoms and physical effects of the disease caused
outbreaks of projectile vomiting across Europe.
EG: Caveat lector.
BK: But that's what’s troubling about your success
– this marrying of the extremes. On the one hand, there’s psychological,
spiritual and physiological mayhem on an industrial scale; on the other it’s
marketed as entertainment.
EG: Oh
dear, Mr Kirton. Have you never felt road rage, anger at queue-jumpers, a
desire for revenge or retribution?
BK: Yes,
but—
EG: But
you’ve suppressed it, toed the line, felt smug in your moral superiority to
those who’ve wronged you. My characters always redress the balance, remind us
that we’re all carrying dark forces, savage impulses, and they unleash them.
The priest who stirs real blood into the communion wine, the gravedigger with
his necklace of teeth – these are the honesties I deal in. My people don’t
pretend. Now, would you like another cup of tea?
I paused the tape and waited as she
refreshed our cups. There were more muffled sounds from beneath us but, when I
asked Mrs Gringe about them, she shook her head dismissively and said they were
just part of her research for her current project.
And, unfortunately, that was where the
interview was abandoned. A phone call from the local psychiatric hospital urged
her to come over immediately. It seems that Charlie, her grandson, had escaped
from his secure unit and was holding seventeen patients and two doctors hostage
in the chapel. He’d already crucified a doctor and two patients and was prising
the lid off the entrance to the catacombs to find spaces for them. As she
replaced the receiver, Mrs Gringe chuckled and said, ‘He’s such a rascal’.
Comments
PS In those days she was unmarried and had a different name. Clarice Sparrow or something. Some sort of bird, anyway. (Oh here we go - more journalistic sexism!)