The Mango Orchard
Travelling Back to the Secret Heart of Mexico
 
 
   
 
                   
                     
   
   
Robin Bayley

The Author

Robin Bayley was born in a shooting lodge in the middle of a North Yorkshire moor. He grew up in Sheffield and after college, moved to London where he worked in advertising and children’s TV. He has also worked as a teacher in Colombia and was once cast as a drug smuggler in a Bollywood feature film. The Mango Orchard is his first book.

In August 2004, as he was starting work on The Mango Orchard, Robin was interviewed by John Peel for BBC Radio 4’s Home Truths, in what turned out to be one of Peel’s last interviews.

Q & A

Q: What’s the worst job you ever had?
A: I once worked as a sales rep for a magazine called International Electronics for China. I drove around the country for a whole year, and managed to sell just one quarter page advertisement, which was later cancelled. 

Q: How did you finance five years of writing?
A: I sold my flat.

Q: Where are you living right now?
A: London. It’s a difficult place to leave as it pretty much has everything, apart from good weather, good public transport, beaches, a laid-back population. Come to think of it, I may move quite soon.

Q: Why did it take you take five years to write The Mango Orchard?
A: The story concerns two continents over two centuries and involves hundreds of people so it took a lot of thought. Also, I’m not a very fast writer.

Q: In those five years, did you ever think, “What the hell am I doing?”
A: Save the occasional off day, not really, but I think my friends did.

Q: Do you miss the job you left behind to write the book?
A: I miss the people I worked with. And the money.

Q: When did you start to travel?
A: I was seventeen when I went on my first foreign trip without my parents. My grandma would give me money with the express instruction that I was to go travelling. I used to wonder if she was trying to get rid of me.

Q: What is the stupidest thing you have done when travelling?
A: Refusing to pay a stoned taxi driver in Managua, Nicaragua. He then tried to kill me, but being stoned, he didn’t make a very good job of it.

Q: Are you still in contact with your Mexican family, and the other characters in the book?
A: Yes, I’m in pretty regular contact with most of them, and at least weekly contact with the Mexican family. When I first returned from Mexico, it was limited to faxes. Now it’s Skype, e-mail, Facebook etc. And Javicito, Tío Javier’s grandson, and my Godson, has been to visit me this year.

Q: Describe your typical writing day.
A: Initially I’d write well into the night, but I found that if I did that I wasn’t very productive the next day. I have now adopted cricketing hours: two hours before lunch, two hours before tea and two hours after tea. And obviously if it’s raining, I take the day off.

Q: How do you get yourself out of writers’ block?
A: I swear at the computer and then try writing with pen and paper. If that doesn’t work, I swear at the computer again and go for a walk.

Q: Are you surprised with how The Mango Orchard has turned out?
A: I guess if I bumped my head and forgot the whole writing process I would be, but having been with it day after day for so long, we sort of grew together, so I’m not surprised, just pleased.

Q: There have been discussions about a feature film, who would you like to play your character?
A: James McAvoy or Leonardo DiCaprio

Q: Where will you be appearing at book fairs or signings?
A: Watch this space for announcements in the spring of 2010.

Q: What did the process of writing The Mango Orchard teach you?
A: The virtue of patience.

Q: What is the subject of your next book?
A: That’s what my agent keeps asking me. I have to keep reminding him about the virtue of patience.

Interviewed by Amy Lawrence of The Observer

 

 
 
                     
Film & TV
Design and Build by Tanya White
Site Design based on original book cover design by Giles Cooke Design