Darren
O'Shaughnessy is
the real name of
this enigmatic
Irish writer who
has worked for a
cable TV company
in Limerick for
a couple of
years, before
setting up as a
full-time
writer. Although
Darren always
wanted to be a
writer, it was
only in his
teenage years
that he began
writing just for
fun, mainly
short-stories
and comic
scripts. The
first
"success"comes
at age of 15, as
a runner-up in a
TV
script-writing
competition for
RTE in Ireland,
with a dark
comedy script
entitled "A
Day in the
Morgue".
Over the next
several years,
he wrote an
average of one
book a year,
experimenting
with different
ideas, genres,
lengths and
styles - one of
them, published
also in Brazil.
He is also one
of the
contributors to
upcoming
homage-book,
Alan
Moore:Portrait
of an
Extraordinary
Gentleman.
-First of all,
please let's
begin with some
background.
Your age,
marital status,
sons? Where did
you born, grew
up and lives
today? Academic
graduation and
profession?30
(31 in July).
Single, but with
girlfriend. No
kids. I was
born in London -
and still have a
Cockney accent -
but moved to
Limerick in
Ireland when I
was six, where
I've lived ever
since. Earned a
BSc in Sociology
and English.
Have been a
full-time writer
for 8 or 9 years
-- and have even
been
making money for
the last 3 or 4
years!!!
-How did you get
started?
As a child
who loved to
write. I've
always enjoyed
telling
stories, as far
back as I can
remember.
-What is it that
attracted you to
writing? What
were your
influences?
I loved being
able to impress
my friends --
and girls!!
Horror was my
main influence
from a very
young age.
Since then I've
gone through all
sorts -- sci-fi,
fantasy, crime
thrillers, and
more mainstream
and off-beat
stuff. I tend
to pull in
ideas from
everywhere.
-How you first
become
interested in
morbid,
terrorific and
dark stories?
What are your
earliest
memories as far
as that go?
I just always
enjoyed horror.
It was fun. I
liked watching
scary movies,
then thinking
about them in
bed and giving
myself delicious
nightmares!!!
-As a child, did
you spend a lot
of time indoors
reading?
Yes,
especially when
I moved to
Ireland -- since
I lived in the
countryside, and
had very few
neighbours my
own age, no VCR,
and a TV which
only received 2
channels, there
wasn't much else
to so except
read!
-Why the
interest for
comics, also?
Comics seem
to have always
been part of my
life. Up until
my teens it was
British comics
--starting with
kid's comics
like the
Beano and Dandy.
I began reading
the re-launched
Eagle comic in
the early 1980s,
and it was the
first comic I
collected
religiously,
every week. My
next step up
was 2000AD,
which I started
collecting back
around the time
before the third
Halo Jones
story arc
(written by a
certain Alan
Moore!). I
didn't read that
many American or
European comics
until my late
teens, when I
began on Frank
Miller,
Cerebus,
Moebius, Love
& Rockets,
Sandman, and
loads more.
-What was the
first comic by
Alan Moore did
you read?
The first
story of his I
read was in
2000AD, a
year or two
(maybe more)
before I began
to collect it.
My younger
brother picked a
copy up
somewhere, and I
read it. I
wasn't that
interested - I
was too young -
but one story
caught me and
stuck in my
mind: it was
about people
living on the
sun, and a man
who commits a
murder there. I
later found out
this was one of
Alan Moore's
Future Shocks.
So that was my
first exposure.
The first
continued story
of his that I
read was, I
think, Halo
Jones (or it
might have been
one of the
D.R. & Quinch
story arcs) --
if memory serves
me right, I read
the collected
editions of the
first 2 Halo
Jones books
together, then
book 3 when it
came out in
2000AD. And I've
been reading
him ever since!
(Oh -- and when
the Halo
Jones books
were released,
it was around
the time that
that year's
2000AD annual
was released, so
Alan did a
signing with
several other
writers and
artists. I went
along and got
book graphic
novels signed by
him -- the only
time our paths
have crossed,
to date. I
remember him
looking at me
strangely as I
was walking away
-- I think he
was thinking,
"What the hell
am I doing here
signing comics
for kids?" Or
maybe he had a
psychic flash
and realized
that I'd be
writing a story
about him nearly
20 years
later!!!!!!!)
-Did it had a
special impact
on you? Why?
All of his
comics have had
an impact on me.
His 2000AD
stories were
unlike anything
else I was
reading at the
time, full of
ideas and
wickedly sharp
humour.
-What do you
think is his
best work to
date? Why?
Hard to
choose.
Watchmen
blows me away
every time I
read it, and
ideas-wise is
probably his
best. From Hell
is a
magnificent
beast, and
research-wise is
unbeatable. It
would probably
be one of those
two.
-What do you
think about
Big Numbers,
if you read the
two published
issues?
I read them
when they first
came out and was
fascinated -- I
thought they
held the promise
of something
great. I've
actually bought
several pages of
the artwork to
the unpublished
issue 3 -- but
there's no word
balloons with
them!
Aaaarrrrrrrgggggghhhhhhh!!!!!!!
I'd love to see
it concluded.
I've spent a
long, fragmented
decade and a
half waiting
for Alan Moore
stories to
finish --
Marvelman, From
Hell and Lost
Girls (which
I began to read
when they first
appeared in
Taboo), and
while most have
progressed and
finished -
albeit very
slowly - Big
Numbers
seems to have
been discarded.
I think that's a
real shame,
especially
since it appears
to have been
because of a
fall-out
between Alan
and Bill
Sienkiewicz ,
not because he
lost faith in
it. I've been
hoping he'd find
a new artist to
take over
(maybe even
start from the
beginning again)
-- but so far,
no luck.
-What do you
think Alan would
have intended to
convey with
this very
promising story?
To be honest,
I haven't read
it since it came
out, so I can't
recall all that
much about what
happened in the
first 2 issues,
never mind
speculate on the
others to
follow!!! :-)
-Do you agree
with Chaos
theory that our
world (and the
Universe as a
whole by
extension) is
ruled by
fractals,
strange
attractors and
so on, where a
little
alteration on
initial
conditions could
cause big and
unexpected
alterations on
the final ones?
Every action
provokes a
reaction, and
you can trace
the smallest of
any action
through the
series of
reactions which
follow, all the
way to just
about any
subsequent
major event.
But can a major
event be
entirely broken
down and reduced
all the way to
it millions and
billions and
causal starts? I
don't think so.
But it's fun to
play with the
notion!!!
-Could a
graphic-novel
comprise all the
complexity of
human existence,
common life, the
whole Universe
and so on, as an
unique, united
system, as AM
intended to do
with Big
Numbers?
I wouldn't
think so,
especially as
the universe is
forever
changing. I
would think, if
you quizzed Alan
about it, you'd
find that his
view of life,
the universe and
everything has
changed
substantially
since he started
Big Numbers,
so even if he
thought he could
sum it all up
then, he
wouldn't believe
so now. Of
course, I could
be wrong ...
-What are your
ideas about
Watchmen's
innovations?
As I said
above, an
amazing work.
I've read it
more than any
of his other
comics, and
still find new
things in it
after all these
years.
-And for From Hell, do you think it could be considered a history
of the cradle to
the 20th
Century, with
all its
paranoia,
conspirations
and corruption?
Well, yes ...
but those aren't
new or unique to
the 20th
Century! I think
Alan's novel,
Voice Of The
Fire, shows
just how far
back 20th
Century views
and ways
stretch.
-What are your
impressions on
Brought to
Light and
its references
to the CIA's
covert
operations
around the
world?
Although I read
it, I wasn't
that taken by
it, and it
doesn't stand
out as one of
the more
memorable Alan
Moore comics
for me. But I've
read a lot more
about political
intrigue since
then, so I do
hope to return
to it some day
soon, and maybe
it'll mean more
to me this time.
-Do you think
that comics can
be a political
instrument ,
that they can
reach and appeal
to a large
audience?
Quite
frankly, in the
Western world,
no. Where
they're a major
part of a
nation's culture
- as in Japan -
then maybe yes.
But comics in
the States and
most of Europe
are the
pleasure and
realm of the
minority. I
think it would
be unbridled
idealism to
believe that
they can affect
the political
structure of
society at
large. Unless,
of course, the
Big Bang comes
and the world's
reduced to
rubble, and
those who crawl
out of the ashes
are the literate
few who realize
the true worth
of comics, and
build a new
society based
on them ... :-)
-And AMīs
debuting in
mainstream
literature with
Voice of the
Fire, do you
think it
accomplished
itīs intention,
to tell the
history of
magic,
wichtcraft,
shamanism and so
on, through the
history of
Northampton?
Absolutely!
It's a
captivating
read, a series
of linked
stories which
work on many
different
levels. I think
Alan's not only
a great comics
writer, but a
great WRITER
who's just as
accomplished
with prose and
novels as he is
with comics (a
rarity among
writers in the
comics field,
although I know
not all comics
writers see it
that way!!!)
-Tell us how you
become involved
in this new,
upcoming
tribute book
about him? (see www.alanmooresenhordocaos.hpg.ig.com.br/artigos14.htm
as well as my
Bibliography,
Wants List
and
Article 14 )
Through Gary
Spencer
Millidge. I'm a
big fan of
Strangehaven,
and bought the
original art to
several of the
covers. He
guessed I was an
Alan Moore fan
and asked if
I'd like to
contribute. For
me it was a huge
honour -- I
glowed for
weeks
afterwards! To
share page space
with Alan Moore
and the host of
writers and
artists who are
paying homage
to him ... to
me that's almost
more special
than seeing my
own books in
print!!!!!!
-Any other
projects related
to Alan?
Nope.
-What do you
think about
Magic and about
Alan's lyrics,
CDs, The
Birth Caul
and Snakes
and Ladders?
Interesting.
I try to follow
most of it, and
I think I
succeed --
mostly!! The
Birth Caul
was, for me, the
best of the
Magical, vocal
stuff he's done
(of those that
I'm familiar
with). I also
love his
exploration of
magic in
Promethea --
I think that's
the most
significant of
his ABC
comics.
(Though Top
10 is the
most fun!)
-Movies and
mainly music,
can affect us
deeply, rousing
imprevisible
emotions. So it
is Poetry. They
all can
transcend its
limitations as a
genre. What
about comics?
Could it have
this quality
also?Examples?
Absolutely.
The great thing
about comics is
that they can
cover so many
areas -- they
can be filmic
(like most of
the American
mainstream
super-hero
comics), poetic
(The Birth
Caul), even
musical (Cages
by Dave McKean).
It's a hugely
wide-reaching
art form.
- Returning to
your writing and
books, tell us
more about
them, their's
motivation,
generation,
objectives and
so on . What do
you think is
your best one
till now and
why?
I've written
a lot of adult
books which
covered all
sorts of
genres. Two (Ayuamarca
and Hell's
Horizon)
were published
in the U.K. but
weren't really
promoted by the
publishers, and
pretty much died
an anonymous
death. Then I
wrote a book
for younger
readers - 10 or
11 up - called
Cirque Du
Freak -
published in
Brazil as
Circo dos
Horrores, by
Rocco .That and
its sequels have
been worldwide
hits. They're
all part of a
single
storyline, a
dark
coming-of-age
tale about a
boy who becomes
a vampire's
assistant.
They're mostly
just fast-paced
reads, and an
attempt to
re-write the
vampire myths,
and the emphasis
is very much on
plot twists and
familiar
characters. I do
explore a
variety of
issues in the
books, but I
keep the
momentum kicked
up to 11
whenever
possible -- I
save my slower
scenes and ideas
for other
novels!! There
isn't really a
"best" one,
since they're
all one story
arc -- I look on
each book as a
chapter in The
Saga Of Darren
Shan.
-What about
the publication
of your book in
Brazil? Any news
about this? How
it occurred?
Have you seen a
proof of
translation?
My agent sold
the book to
Rocco. I don't
have much to do
with the sales
-- I focus on
the writing and
leave the
selling to my
agent! Yes, I
have a few
copies of the
translation --
it's very nice.
I'm not sure how
the books have
been selling in
Brazil -- you
might be able to
learn more about
that than me!
-What is it
that death,
darkness, horror
and so, attracts
us and has this
strange appeal?
We're all
going to die.
The darkness
waits. That's a
pretty horrific
thought. So I
think it's only
natural that
mankind focuses
on it. Whether
you explore it
through horror
fiction, or try
to make light of
it with
religion, it
all boils down
to the same
thing: our lives
are a pause
before the vast
darkness of
death, and it's
fairly
impossible not
to think about
what comes at
the end of the
pause.
-Any chance that
you send us a
short-story for
publication (in
English and
translated to
Portuguese,also?)
Of course we
are just fans,
and could not
afford to pay
for it...
Sorry -- I
don't write very
many short
stories -- I
prefer novels.
Well, Darren,
that is it for
now. Great
success to your
new books and
all projects,
and many thanks
to share your
very precious
time with us.
Cheers! It's
been a lot of
fun talking
about one of the
great influences
in my
imaginative
life!!