Bernadette at Reactions to Reading is the "problem poser" at Weekly Geeks this time.
She says... I have been pondering the issues of whether it is possible to separate an author's non-writing life from the books they produce ....Does an author's politics matter to you?
I believe some writers write as they do as a direct consequence of their political beliefs. I can think of a number of crime fiction writers who actually use their novels as a vehicle for social commentary.
Henning Mankell for example is constantly asking what has gone wrong with Swedish society. In my review of THE MAN FROM BEIJING I wrote "Mankell has used an extraordinarily large canvas - in part as a platform for his criticisms not only of today's Norwegian society but also what might happen in Mozambique, where he lives, and other African countries, as a result of Chinese economic colonialism."
This was also a point that Henning Mankell made in the foreword to PYRAMID. He says he is conscious of making Kurt Wallander his mouthpiece: talking about what is happening to Sweden, the erosion of traditional values, the rise of violence, the influx of refugee immigrants who do not share the same value systems.
He is not the only author to whom politics matters. I believe it matters greatly to Ian Rankin and Donna Leon too. This was a point that I made in one of my very early blog posts.
For example Ian Rankin beds Rebus's finale in EXIT MUSIC against the issues of real time Scotland, focussing on Scottish independence, an issue that dominated the Scottish elections of 2006.
SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN by Donna Leon is a story set against themes of baby trafficking and surrogacy. Declining fertility in the Western world is contrasted with the apparent fecundity of refugees and immigrants; and the desire of women for children is set against the apparent willingness of some to sell the only thing they can produce: their child.
And I can't let the post finish without reference to Ruth Rendell who admits that many of the issues that surface in both her Wexford and her Barbara Vine books are directly the result of research she carries out because of her position as an Life Peer.
Rendell is a convinced Labour supporter and still defines her political views as 'socialist'. Rendell’s progressive political views are reflected in her novels, which try to innovate a fundamentally conservative literary genre. Ruth Rendell writes mysteries in the vein of a social critic who observes and exposes social inequalities, racial and sexual discriminations and gender biases.more
So, yes I think an author's political beliefs probably do matter to me, not so much which political party they belong to, but whether I am comfortable with the social observations they make. That's probably why I like Agatha Christie too- because I believe her books are full of a largely unrecognised social commentary.
Most crime fiction writeres are not writing in a social or political vacuum. They are part of the times that they live in, and can't help either reflecting that, or in some way commenting on it. They may simply be using in their novel an exploration of something they have seen in a newspaper, or an idea that has been worrying at them.


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