Profile of Brian Moore (25 August 1921 – 11 January 1999), the renowned Northern Irish novelist and author of acclaimed titles including The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne (1955) and The Emperor of Ice-cream (1965).
Brain Moore discusses the life experiences and cultural touchstones that were pivotal in his development as a writer. He shares his thoughts on the writing experience and quotes from his own novels.
For Brian Moore, becoming a writer was an act of defiance. He rebelled against the notion that he should follow a pretermined career path - in his case to become a doctor. An aptitude for French helped him get a job in North Africa during WWII and, in the process, helped him escape his parents' expectations. After the war, he would emigrate to North America.
In a candid interview, Moore describes the stifling Catholicism in which he grew up and notes that, despite growing-up opposite an Orange Hall, it wasn't until he was an adult that he "met a Protestant".
Despite his personal upbringing, Moore states that he is not in the least bit personally religious and, whilst several of his novels have a strongly anti-clerical strand - he appreciates the Protestant and Jewish cultures for their "artistic" merits.