AUTHOR INTERVIEW:
POET JOHN GARTH RAUBENHEIMER
I'd like to take a moment thank John Garth Raubenheimer for taking time to talk with us about his writing.
Q Can you tell us a little about
yourself?
A I'm a South African poet a long way
from home – I live in Settle, Yorkshire... I've just self-
published this book, The Voyage From Me To You: A Life In Poetry.
Q That's a beautiful shell on the
cover. I've never seen anything quite like it.
A It's an Argonaut shell, also known
as as a Paper Nautilus, very very rare. An octopus lays her eggs in
it. I suffer from schizophrenia and this shell was at the start, the
centre, of what turned out to be a fantastic delusion of grandeur.
Q Can you tell us about that?
A It might be best if you read my
poem, The Beauty And Comedy Of Madness. It's in the book.
Q I know you've struggled with mental
illness. You've made no secret about it and some people will know
you give readings on behalf of a charity, SANE. Do you want to say
something about what might be close to your heart.
A Perhaps let's keep it till later.
Q You've said that you're a poet by
default. That you wanted to write novels.
A Yes, I did. And I did try to write
one. I showed the great bog it turned into to a writer friend. He
said I was trying to do something even an experienced creative author
would balk at. Far too ambitious.
Q Who's your favourite author?
A Patrick O'Brian. I picked up the
whole set of his Master And Commander series, set in the Napoleonic
era, when the British Navy ruled the seas Wonderful, wonderful
stories, full of wisdom – particularly about the relations between
men and women - and humour and the need for courage, physical and
moral.
Q What else inspires you?
A Small town life. I work Saturday
mornings in a charity shop. Everyone and everything passes through
here.
Q Do you write every day?
A I hardly write at all. When I do
write It's usually because something has upset me. I write to regain
my balance. But that's only if prayer isn't enough. There's enough
poetry in the world.
Q You're joking, right?
A I'm not a regular writer. Jesus
Christ fills me with joy and self-forgetfulness and purpose.
Q And yet, here's this book.
A Sadly yes.
Q I have to record, John Garth
Raubenheimer is smiling... John... do you have any advice for other
writers or poets, particularly for young writers, just starting off.
A The hardest thing we have to deal
with - as potentially devastatingly good writers - is our own
perception of how far we are from what we would like to be writing.
And there's just no antidote to that perpetual disappointment. No one
can hurt our feelings more than we do ourselves.
The only way forward is to write. To
write. To write. And to read. To read. To READ what others have
written. In the hope that we'll eventually start speaking with our
own spare, natural tongue.
Q Writer's block?
A Years have gone by, when I couldn't
write. When I just had to suffer the silence, the frustration. But I
felt like a writer. No matter what else I was doing. Only a writer
can have writer's block.
Q We're getting near the end of this
interview and I feel we've hardly touched the mainspring of what
motivates you.
A LIFE motivates me. I was there when
my son was born. I took him in my arms and said, “Little John”.
That shocked me. Something primal had invaded me. I saw black people
being carted off in police vans in South Africa, only their fingers
visible twined round iron bars. I never forgot that. It got into a
poem. I went mad and suffered all the consequences. I lived and wrote
myself out of that deep dark well. I did it for myself and for
others. I started off life as an unbeliever, an atheist. I became a
willing Christian. It's all a big mystery to me. I know less and
less. A little bit of self-understanding. That's what I've achieved.
And I have this smart little book of poems.
Q If you could ask one question of any
writer, who would it be and what would you ask?
A I'd ask Joyce Cary to sign my copy
of The Horse's Mouth, his wonderful novel about incorrigible artist
Gulley Jimson.
Q Now that we've got the easy stuff
out of the way, let's talk about your book.
A Yes, thanks. It contains all the
poems from the last forty-odd years that I want to share. I've
arranged them in life event order. So they tell the story of a boy
born, a breech birth, just after the Bomb was dropped, who grew up
under apartheid, a privileged white person, travelled, spent time
down and out in Europe, married, divorced, participated in our
country becoming a democracy, married again. Came to live in England
with his British wife. Alone now, but among friends since she passed away.
.
The central theme, though very little
is said, is my experience of schizophrenia. Mental illness has
dominated my life and my work for SANE, reading to others from this
book in aid of mental health, is what I count most special in the
life I am trying to live for God's glory.
Your readers can look my SANE website
up and make donations to SANE via this link
http://www.justgiving.com/John-Raubenheimer
They can order my book from me at settlejohn60@gmail.com
I'm hoping to set up a website for The Voyage From Me To You: A Life
In Poetry... Might sell it through eBay too soon
Q Thank you John. It's been a pleasure
talking to you.
A Thank you, so much.frt8ud
This interview touched my heart. I've known John now for almost a year. He has a poem in his book that he wrote just for me entitled 'For Rebecca Scarberry...Author of Messages from Henry' (pg 118) and I think it's pretty special. He has read the poem to groups of people and I was told they love it. When I got a paperback copy of his book in the mail I was thrilled. I've read the poems over and over again. He's a brilliant poet! ~Rebecca Scarberry
ReplyDeleteThis was one of the most touching interviews I've doneso far. I'm glad he shared this with me.
ReplyDelete