![]() ![]() It started with my cheeky impulse to rewrite the story of my great-grandfather’s mysteriously abandoning his wife and child to become a homesteader on the Saskatchewan prairies and ended up unexpectedly becoming a hybrid of Maurice, Brokeback Mountain and an old-fashioned western. It’s a departure for me, both in being historical and in being told from a single viewpoint. Tell us a bit about your new novel A Place Called Winter. Paul McVeigh is is the author of The Good Son, director of the London Short Story Festival and associate director at Word Factory, London’s short story salon. ![]() He’s a director of the charities Endelienta and the Charles Causley Trust and chairs the North Cornwall Book Festival. He has a two-part original drama being filmed for BBC1 next year and is adapting Edith Wharton’s The Age Of Innocence for BBC2. He is the author of 15 novels and two books of short stories. Paul McVeigh talks to his fellow author about plundering the family vaults for his fiction and his love of music including an annual pilgrimage to the Wexford Opera Festivalīorn on the Isle of Wight in 1962 and educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford, Patrick Gale has spent most of his working life in Cornwall where he lives on the last farm before Land’s End. ![]() Patrick Gale on A Place Called Winter: ‘a hybrid of Maurice and Brokeback Mountain’ ![]()
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