Author Profiles – Valerie Volk
Another day, another profile of one of Wakefield Press's amazing authors!
Valerie Volk is a former secondary teacher, tertiary lecturer, and director of an international education program. She has won awards for poetry and short fiction and has published widely in journals, anthologies and magazines. Her first book, In Due Season, won the Omega Writers CALEB Poetry Prize in 2010, and there have been enthusiastic reviews of both her verse novel A Promise of Peaches and her sardonic modern versions of Grimms’ Tales, Even Grimmer Tales. Her fourth book, Passion Play: The Oberammergau Tales, reflects both a love of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales that was born during a Year 12 English course many decades ago and also her fascination with the infinite variety of human beings.
We caught up with Valerie to ask a few questions about Passion Play, which is a verse novel based around the Oberammergau Passion Play, performed every ten years in a tradition dating back to the 17th century.
Have you ever attended the Passion Play at Oberammergau?
Yes, three times, in 1990, 2000, 2010 – but I first discovered Oberammergau when driving through southern Germany in 1973 (a non-Passion Play year) and became fascinated by the place and the ten-yearly event.
How did you develop the structure and characters for your verse novel Passion Play?
I've always wanted to do a modern parallel to Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, so this four day bus trip and its group of varied characters travelling to the Passion Play provided me with the perfect structure for such a creation. Except that these people do not copy Chaucer's and tell stories to entertain each other; instead they reveal their own lives in monologues or discussions that are often painfully honest. As for the characters? Most of them are today's equivalents of the Chaucerian group - even to Chaucer's Cook becoming a modern TV cooking contest winner ...
What is you favourite line or two of verse in the book?
This is so hard – it's difficult to extract lines from a novel, which is basically a narrative. Perhaps the journalist, as she returns and sits in Changi airport, waiting her last stage flight home :
How that word sums it up.
I am in transit.
Around me all the buzz of airport lounge.
The crowds of travellers,
arrivals weary as they trudge
to baggage claims,
then out into the humid dark
of Singapore, its tropic night,
its frangipani air.
If you weren’t a poet, what do you think your occupation would be?
I'd be properly retired, sitting in the sun, reading a crime novel … instead of feeling compelled to write!
What are your favourite Wakefield Press titles, aside from your own, and why?
A long way back favourite, Peter Goldsworthy's Bleak Rooms, for its brilliant vignettes of life in a short story collection, and his amazing understanding of people.
Lolo Houbein's One Magic Square, for its vision of sustainable life, which almost sent me out to plant my own small plot of ground.
John Neylon's Robert Hannaford, for the insight it gave into this great South Australian artist, and the wonderful reproductions of his work – I'll never be able to afford an original, but I can enjoy them in the book.
Jude Aquilina's poetry, especially in the witty and sardonic WomanSpeak.