Profile of the renowned Irish writer.
Edna O'Brien discusses the life experiences and cultural touchstones that were pivotal in her development as a writer. She shares her thoughts on the writing experience, discusses the writers she considers great and quotes from her own novels.
In terms of personal experience, she refers to the overbearing influence of her mother, of how "her sensibilities became mine". In particular, she notes that her own attitudes to personal relationships (with men) was, in effect, an echo of her mother's attitudes. Love and sex with a man - in or out of wedlock - was seen as a terrible wrong.
O'Brien's rural upbringing was another formative influence. She observes that she used language and imagination as a means of running away from a real life comprising "of cattle and donkeys". However, Ireland's landscape, she sees as a positive influence, and something that manifests in her work in important ways.
In summation, she believes that (good) writing comes from "the blood and guts of one's experience".