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Interview: Amy Bloom

A Bloom with a view — or two

March 18, 2010 12:32
180310 Amy Bloom thumb
3 min read

The first story in Where the God of Love Hangs Out, the new collection by American writer Amy Bloom - who shared a memorable session with Lionel Shriver at this month's Jewish Book Week in London - opens with happily married best friends William and Clare watching late-night news together and edging awkwardly, under cover of the TV, towards their first kiss: the beginning of a serious affair. Only a few pages long, Your Borders, Your Rivers, Your Tiny Villages delicately and comically begins a series of stories of breathtaking intimacy and audacity.

This is Bloom's second collection of stories (she has also written two novels and one non-fiction book). In it, she takes on death, incest, unexpected confessions of love and hatred, and total breakdown of family feeling.

She sees these as natural subjects - "sex and death are certainly at the top of my list" - and explains that "this book comes out of an interest in mortality and change and ageing, as well as in love and passion, and I don't think that you give up one in the presence of the other. What's interesting about the second half of people's lives is what they do with the presence of both those things."

The new book contains only four stand-alone stories. The rest consists of two "quartets" of linked stories, the first about William and Clare, the second about a very different, loving, transgressing couple, Lionel and Julia.