I'm delighted to feature on The Literary Pig this week, talking to Tracy Fells about writing Scratched Enamel Heart.
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AN EXCERPT:
Today I am delighted to
welcome one of my favourite writers as a guest on the Blog. Amanda Huggins has
kindly returned to talk about her new short story collection Scratched Enamel Heart (published by
Retreat West Books).
Amanda Huggins is the author of Scratched Enamel Heart, a new short
story collection which features ‘Red’, her prize-winning story from the 2018
Costa Short Story Award. Her previous short story collection, Separated From the Sea, received a
Special Mention in the 2019 Saboteur Awards. She has also published a flash
fiction collection, Brightly Coloured Horses and a poetry collection, The Collective Nouns for Birds, which
won the 2020 Saboteur Award for Best Poetry Pamphlet.
Scratched
Enamel Heart
The
resilience and frailty of the human heart lie at the core of this second short
story collection from award-winning author, Amanda Huggins.
A
lonely woman spends a perfect night with a stranger, yet is their connection
enough to make her realise life is worth living? Maya, a refugee, wears a bracelet
strung with charms that are a lifeline to her past; when the past catches up
with her, she has a difficult decision to make. Rowe’s life on the Yorkshire
coast is already mapped out for him, but when there is an accident at the
steelworks he knows he has to flee from an intolerable future. In the Costa
prize-winning ‘Red’, Mollie is desperate to leave Oakridge Farm and her abusive
stepfather, to walk free with the stray dog she has named Hal.
These
are stories filled with yearning and hope, the search for connection and the
longing to escape. They transport the reader from India to Japan, from mid-west
America to the north-east coast of England, from New York to London. Battered,
bruised, jaded or jilted, the human heart somehow endures.
Animals and nature feature in so much of
your writing, is this intentional? What part do animals/wildlife/nature play in
your own life, do any of your fictional creatures come from your own experience
of animals?
No,
it isn’t intentional, however I do have a deep-rooted love of animals and the
natural world, so I guess it’s inevitable. My partner and I are members of the
RSPB and really enjoy birdwatching, both at nature reserves and while walking
on the moors or the Northumberland coastal paths. We also have a menagerie of
seven part-time cats – four semi-strays which we feed, and three others which
are perfectly well looked after but have just latched onto a good thing!
I
always aim to convey a strong sense of place in my stories, and rural
landscapes feature regularly in my work. I’m originally from the Yorkshire
coast, so the sea plays an important part in a number of my stories – such as
‘Where the Sky Starts’ and ‘Light Box’ in Scratched
Enamel Heart – and it is also the all-encompassing theme of my debut novella,
All Our Squandered Beauty.
I find my characters are shaped by the places they inhabit, particularly in
those stories set in the distinctive landscapes of India, Japan and North America – for example, ‘A Longing for
Clouds’ and ‘Red’.
The
locations which feature in my stories are always inspired by real life travels
– I would never set a story somewhere I hadn’t visited myself. The koi fish and
the beautiful garden in ‘A Potential Husband’ were inspired by my travels in
Japan, as were the fireflies in ‘Soul of a Fighter’. Nature also features
heavily in my poetry, and one of my favourite poems in The Collective Nouns for Birds is
‘At the Kitchen Table’, which I wrote when snowed-in in the North Pennines.
Hal,
the dog in ‘Red’, is a creature of the imagination, though I’d love to own a
dog like him! Similarly, Jigsaw, in ‘Where the Sky Starts’ isn’t based on a
real pony, though I loved horses and horse riding as a child and often
pretended that the grey stallion which lived in a nearby field was mine! The
only real life creature I have written about is my favourite cat, Duzzy – she
was the inspiration for the poem ‘Not-Quite-You’ in The Collective Nouns for Birds.
You can read the full interview here