Prague is known as the Mother of Cities, the Golden City, the City of a Hundred Spires. These days it’s also known as a destination for stag and hen parties, but to me in the early millennium Prague was cold and lonesome, a monochrome dream. My memories are impressionistic: a winter-sting in the air; frost crystals on your breath. Bitter-chill sips of Becherovka and slivovitz. An ever-present cold. The sensation of being numb, of being encased in a cold coccoon, as I wandered the streets, both aimless and purposeful.
I had no contacts there, no friends or relatives to look up. I’d booked a bedsit on the internet, unbelievably cheap for the location, in Vinohrady, within walking distance of Prague 1, the Old Town and tourist district. I paid the equivalent in koruny of about $200 Canadian per month. Eira’s room in the novel is based on it. Too small to be called a studio flat – maybe ten by twenty feet. A shower in one corner. The toilet in the hall outside. A battered cupboard with a single hotplate. A bed that resembled an army cot. Musty carpet and stale smoke. Peeling wallpaper. Cracked paint. It was exactly what I’d wanted.
Even an aspiring writer couldn’t sit at the desk all day. In the afternoons, wandering became part of my routine. I’d often walk from Vinhohrady to Wenceslas Square, where Eira meets Mario, the street hustler. Then on to the Old Town, the elaborate Astronomical Clock with its mechanical figurines. And across Charles Bridge, the Vltava, the boats like the one Eira uses to escape, and over to St. Vitus Cathedral, Prague Castle. Close to where Pavel and Valerie, the villains of the piece, live in their ominous manor house. I wandered further afield, too – on day trips – by bus and train. To Terezin, the unspeakable show-town of the Nazis, and Kutna Hora, where Eira hides out – with its bone church decorated with human remains: tibias and fibulas, spines and skulls. An eerie monument to life and death.
I existed like that for a couple of months: amid people but not with people, in a city but in isolation. To contact anybody back home I had to go to a payphone or an internet café. Being cut off, I felt my personality dissipating. Without social interaction, removed from friends and family, I began to learn how much of myself was a construct. The result wasn’t anxiety. I remember feeling quite calm but detached. Alone, but not lonely.
We were a small group of about a dozen students, from Japan, Bangladesh, Australia, Holland, Britain. In the old classroom with rattling pipes we huddled together, reciting nouns and verb conjugations and recorded dialogues. After, we often went out for coffee or drinks. Now that my budget was blown I was laissez faire about this, but I never had lunch with the others, grew to savour the giddy-buzz of alcohol and caffeine on an empty stomach. In the classroom and those gatherings after, my old personality re-emerged. I could still be the friendly, congenial, Canadian boy I’d been.
The stories were a learning experience, but the process – the combination of writing and wandering – also eventually led to this novel. I was creating my own map of the city, embedding it in my memories, to return to at the right time. When that time came, many years later, I found Prague was all still there: waiting for me to travel back, to wander those same streets and routes, to visit those same towns, and use that terrain to build Eira’s story.
Thanks to Tyler for this wonderful piece – I’m sure many of you will be struck by parallels with what we’re all living through now, as well as by the great insights about writing.
As my Books of the Year post is currently taking shape, I’m going to kick off with a spoiler and tell you this is one of them. Randomness fascinates me and the inciting incident for this story is an extreme case, when a young woman’s life is torn apart by the senseless murder of her husband, prompting her to return to the city where they got engaged. There’s a transcendent quality to novels which wrest tenderness and beauty from brutality and ugliness, and this one has it in abundance. And whilst this is rooted in empathy, it’s reinforced by the writing itself. There’s a cleanness to Keevil’s style that allows the reader space to hear what’s being said, what isn’t, and who’s doing the talking.
Your Still Beating Heart has the emotional heft of a character-driven literary novel despite being a palpitation-inducing page-turner, a rare combination and, as writing challenges go, an ambitious one. The story has elements I wasn’t expecting at all. The journey Eira embarks on when she gets to Prague is not just a high-stakes mission involving some very dangerous people; it’s the road back to meaning and to life from a place of profound grief and shock. If she makes it back. I found it moving, gripping and evocative of place – if you enjoyed Judith Heneghan’s Snegurochka (set in Kiev) or Garth Greenwell’s What Belongs To You (set in Sofia), there are shades of overlap, but this book’s heart beats to its own tune.