From an obscure writer, Phineas Fletcher, and his even obscurer poem The Purple Island (the island being a person, mind and body) followed by a paper chase through the index of Gray’s Anatomy and a load of etymological research. You did ask!
Such an interesting time and place – the peasantry uprising in independent pockets all over Europe due to famine, political upheaval and industrialisation; people forced to extremes in order to survive, like breaking into zoos to eat all the animals.
I’ve always had an interest in the odd and bizarre, and the whole tradition of popular and street entertainment provides exactly that, all about people existing on the margins, being on the outside looking in.
I write in the bottom half of my kitchen, surrounded by a load of bookshelves crammed with my most referenced books – it’s the easiest room in the house to keep warm, and very near the kettle.
I’ve read so much and so diversely throughout my life it’s difficult to pinpoint any one in particular, but Mervyn Peake springs to mind. His Gormenghast trilogy is a masterpiece that no longer gets the attention it deserves.
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