Every four years or so I tend to move. House, city and sometimes country. I am a lifelong island hopper, moving from England to Cyprus and back again all too frequently. I have spent a total of eight years living in Cyprus excluding holidays and extended visits. The first time I upped sticks and went to live there I was in my late twenties and fed up with life in London, desperate to escape an unsatisfying job. I was a local newspaper reporter, living in Ealing, working in Uxbridge, tired of the daily commute, parish council meetings, office politics and writing local news. It wasn’t me, I didn’t fit.
So, I escaped to Cyprus (though Italy was my first choice), the cheapest and easiest option. I spoke Greek and my parents had a small house on the island, it was a place I knew well from family holidays. I quickly found work as a freelance, writing magazine articles and presenting a radio programme on the island’s culture and traditions. I planned to stay a couple of years, to recharge my batteries before returning to England but I shot myself in the foot. I met and married a native and Cyprus become a permanent fixture in my life.
I spent the first years of my married life in Cyprus where my daughter, Emily, was born. I gave up work to pursue my real ambition – to write a novel. Being in Cyprus gave me the time and space I needed to devote myself to writing, to explore the island’s history, folklore and customs and organically soak up the culture. Living in situ was invaluable as I wrote my first book, a light-hearted novel about a Greek Cypriot teenager growing up in the UK and straddling two cultures. It was the story of my generation and an exploration of the island’s turbulent history
Living on the island allowed me to explore the backstreets and find the real treasures. Potters studios and artisan bakers, authentic Cyprus foods and hidden away places known only to the locals, like the creepy little votive candle shop, hung with effigies of babies, heads, hearts and other body parts. These candles, called tamata, are offered to an icon in church as a reminder of the giver’s particular need. So a heart could symbolize a prayer for a broken relationship or a heart problem. The shop made such an impression on me it will definitely feature in my next book.
What I like most about Cyprus is the people – the real people and in particular the older generation. The shawled elderly woman in the market selling mountain produce, the sturdy fruit picker with the craggy weather beaten face, the street hawker selling minted yoghurt with a life story that’s the stuff of fiction. Everyone has an interesting story to tell, if you bother to ask and I did and still do.
For a year, our lives ran smoothly and we spent more quality time together as a family. I finished The Spice Box Letters and set up a writing course, making firm friends with a group of very able writers. We amassed a family of feral cats in the back garden and kept chickens for a short while. I began working with a group of film professionals revising the script and met lots of creative people: authors, poets and food writers.
But the good life came to an abrupt end. In March 2013 the island suffered an economic crisis, becoming the first country in the Eurozone to shave bank deposits as part of a 10 billion euro bailout agreement. People’s savings disappeared over night and in the weeks that followed banks closed, businesses went under and wages were cut. My husband’s job went and the film funding was frozen – everything we had come for evaporated within a matter of months. While my husband got on with the job of setting up a business I panicked about the future and where I wanted to be long term. I yearned for the security of home – England – and made plans to leave. Just over a year later I returned to the UK with the children and the cat. At the moment my husband commutes which is far from ideal while I wrestle with guilt – should I have bolted or ridden the storm – should I be here or there?
Thank you to Eve for sharing her own story in this lovely piece.
IN BRIEF: My View of The Spice Box Letters
This isn’t a long novel but it’s full of appealing ingredients. The 1980s story of Katerina and that of her grandmother Mariam, author of the letters, are equally engaging (hard to do) and skillfully interwoven to produce not just the compelling story of a family divided by conflict, but the subtle blend of darkness and light which is such a strength of this novel. It is vividly evocative of Cyprus and the horrors of the Armenian genocide which took place one hundred years ago and may be unfamiliar to some readers, as it was to me. The writing is beautiful, engaging all the senses, and the mouthwatering descriptions of food were a delight. There is plenty of warmth and humor to offset the traumatic episodes and the two stories of love against the odds are very sweet and touching without being sentimental. Reading The Spice Box Letters was a journey I didn’t want to end.
*POSTSCRIPT*
I am thrilled that Patrick Gale will be joining me on the Literary Sofa next week to talk about the inspiration behind his latest novel A Place called Winter.