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Ralph's Party

» Lisa Jewell

Penguin
Paperback : 06 May 1999

£7.99


Read an extract from: Ralph's Party

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Synopsis

Meet the residents of 31, Almanac Road in a romantic, engrossing novel that takes you up the garden path, through the front door and into the most intimate part of other people's lives.

Ralph and Smith are best friends. Until they fall for Jemima their new flatmate. Jem knows one of them's the man for her - but which one?

Karl and Siobhan live in the flat above. Happily unmarried for fifteen years, it looks as if nothing can spoil their domestic idyll.

Except maybe Cheri the femme fatale in the top flat. She's got her eye on Karl and she isn't about to let his fat girlfriend stand in the way ...

Interview

Ralph’s Party documents the tangled love lives of young, urban professionals sharing a London brownstone. How much of the novel comes from your own experiences?

I’ve never actually shared a flat with two guys before (not straight ones, anyway!), but during my early twenties I did live all over town, answering adverts, going for interviews and learning to live with strangers. I moved ten times in five years and never had the same experience twice! The house in the book is based on one I lived in in 1990. I was there for six months and never once saw the people in the flat below or above me, and I thought this was an intriguing premise for a novel. What would happen if that fiercely guarded urban anonymity broke down?

Some of the set pieces were based on my own experiences. Yes – I did have a chili-eating competition with my boyfriend (it was a draw, although he still insists he won!), I have wandered stoned around Chinatown and bought a vibrator from a sex-shop (haven’t used it though, obviously) and I did know a Manchurian butcher in Chinatown who invited me back to his flat for a drink once, but I certainly did not take him up on the offer!

The rest is pure fiction …

Men say that your writing captures them realistically. To what to you attribute your insight into the opposite sex?

I have no brothers, I went to an all girls school and I didn’t have a boyfriend until I was seventeen, so I’m not really sure! Ever since I stopped being scared of men, I have really liked them and maybe this comes across in my writing. I’m lucky enough to have never been really hurt by a man and just see them as human beings with different bits on the front, rather than aliens from Mars. Some men have a strong female side and some woman a strong male side. I don’t think it’s right to generalize about the sexes because everyone’s balanced differently. I think I’m about half and half!

Ralph’s Party was an overnight phenomenon in England. Were you surprised that people have responded so positively to your novel?

I was shocked silly! All during the purchasing, editing and publishing process I was convinced that someone, somewhere, had made a dreadful mistake. I kept expecting to get a call from my agent or someone at Penguin saying, ‘we’re terribly sorry, but we’ve had a rethink and it’s not really a very good book – can we have our money back please?’ I was horrified by the amount of money Penguin UK put into marketing and publicity – I thought it was very rash considering no-one, anywhere was going to buy the book! I expected terrible reviews and even worse sales. My first review came out a week before publication in the UK’s biggest selling tabloid. It was a full page and a rave! The second was on a highbrow arts review program on the BBC. All three panelists, who usually trash everything, loved it! A week later and it was flying out of bookshops at a rate that no-one could have predicted. No-one could have been more surprised, or thrilled than me.

Have you ever considered Ralph's Party being made into a movie? Name your dream cast.

It is actually to be made into a TV series here in the UK (fingers crossed) and my dream cast for a UK version would involve actors that no-one in the US would have heard of! But if it was to be made into a big Hollywood movie I’d cast it as follows:

Jem: Parker Posey (because she’s cute and quirky)
Siobhan: Kelly McGillis (big, handsome woman – good at angst)
Smith: James Spader (when he was ten years younger, though)
Karl: Michael Madsen (because he doesn’t get nearly enough work and he looks great in a Hawaiian shirt!)
Cheri: Bridget Fonda (good sly, calculating acting ability)
Ralph: Jonny Lee Miller (looks completely useless but very endearing)

Before Ralph’s Party, you worked as a secretary in a men’s shirt-making factory. What inspired you to become a writer? How has it changed your life? Do you like the lifestyle of a writer? What is a typical day like for you?

They always say that you should think back to what you were good at school when you plan a change of career and creative writing was literally the only thing I was even halfway decent at. I was laid off and was looking for temping work when a friend insisted I take some time to start a novel, first. It began as a bet and look where it ended up! The only thing that has changed about my life is that I can now wake up when my body tells me I’m ready to wake up (the ultimate luxury, and very good for you, too!) and that I work from home.

When I was a secretary, I really was the consummate ‘office girl’. I loved the whole culture of gossiping in the kitchen, after-work drinks and bitching about the management and really thought I would miss the environment and the camaraderie when I began to work from home. Well, I was wrong! I love working from home. Offices tend to be extensions of school and college, with petty rules and regulations and I now feel like a real grown-up, for the first time in my life. I am given some money, told to write a book, and no-one bothers me for a whole year!

I wake at 9 to 9.30 am, open my e-mail, surf the net and start work at about 10.30. I work through till 4pm, go to the gym, go grocery shopping, have a long, hot bath with a book, cook dinner, watch TV and go to bed. It’s far from exciting, but I love it!

What books are on your bookshelves? Who are your favorite authors?

I have wide-ranging tastes in literature – I tend to like to alternate a ‘literary’ read with a light read, and my shelves are lined with everyone from Bret Easton Ellis to Alain de Boton, and from Marian Keyes to John Updike. I also have piles of those ghoulish books about Serial Killers. My favorite (and by favorite, I mean authors whose books I buy just because their name’s on the cover) authors are Nick Hornby, Iain Banks and Geoff Dyer. I also – and I’m slightly ashamed to admit it – don’t read anything more than twenty years old. I toyed with the classics a few years ago and found that they just weren’t for me – I can’t relate to characters who don’t own a vacuum cleaner!

Product details

Format : Paperback
ISBN: 9780140279276
Size : 129 x 198mm
Pages : 368
Published : 06 May 1999
Publisher : Penguin

Other formats for Ralph's Party:
» ePub eBook: eBook : £6.49

Ralph's Party

» Lisa Jewell

£7.99


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