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Gerard Woodward

It is 1970 in the suburbs of north London and, from the untidy comfort of her crowded house, Colette Jones is watching her older brother go to pieces, drinking himself into oblivion on home-made wine. Colette knows the solace a drink can provide, being partial to an evening at the Red Lion herself. But soon she finds she cannot afford to ignore the destructive effect the alcohol is having on her family and with gritted teeth Colette is forced to exile the alcoholic son she loves so much from the house. But this act takes its toll and, just as she can t resist a drink, so she can t resist allowing…
About Gerard Woodward
Gerard Woodward lives in Manchester. His first novel, August, was published in 2001 to great acclaim, and he has also written three award-winning collections of poetry. When he is not writing, Gerard refills the chocolate machines at Manchester University.
topAbout the Book
It is 1970 in the suburbs of north London and, from the untidy comfort of her crowded house, Colette Jones is watching her older brother go to pieces, drinking himself into oblivion on home-made wine. Colette knows the solace a drink can provide, being partial to an evening at the Red Lion herself. But soon she finds she cannot afford to ignore the destructive effect the alcohol is having on her family and with gritted teeth Colette is forced to exile the alcoholic son she loves so much from the house. But this act takes its toll and, just as she can t resist a drink, so she can t resist allowing Janus back into her life with heartbreaking consequences for everyone. Gerard Woodward s magnificent second novel continues the story of the Joneses, so memorably introduced in August . By way of an odyssey through the pubs, parks and shopping parades of suburban London, it lurches from farce to tragedy as the members of one unforgettable family build and destroy their lives.
topGerard Woodward interview/review
- Before your first novel August you had written collections of poetry. How far has the poet shaped and influenced I’ll Go to Bed at Noon?
I always feel that good prose should have something of the qualities of good poetry, whilst remaining distinctively prose – not sure what those qualities are but it is something to do with compression, sonority, balance…
- The Economist called I’ll Go to Bed at Noon the best portrayal of drunkenness since Kingsley Amis. Was it always your intention to explore drink and drinkers to such a degree in this novel?
Yes it was, although it is primarily a book about families and the dynamics of families – this family happens to have a drink problem, but at the same time I wanted to explore drinking as far as I could, and even to celebrate it. I think the ambivalence of the novel rests on the fact that the family are both sustained and destroyed by drink. I was also keen to get in as much detail as I could about the pubs of the era, and there are several epic drinking sessions which allow this.
- The novel opens with a quote from Andrei Bely’s Petersburg about rooms and the Jones’ house features prominently in the novel. How far do you believe people’s homes shape their lives and reflect their personalities?
Someone described the house in the two novels as another character, which I was pleased with, and it will feature in the third novel as well. I believe houses almost literally shape the lives of their inhabitants, it is something I have explored in my poetry as well, and in the process the houses are also shaped, and bear the traces and marks of the lives lived in them. If you think about this long enough you even begin to wonder where exactly the boundaries between houses and people lie – Heidegger (who was a big influence on me), said a lot about this, as did other phenomenological philosophers (eg Merleau-Ponty) I came across them during my years as a student of anthropology, and became intrigued by the idea that categorical boundaries are not as sharp as we might think, we might even question whether any boundaries exist at all, and houses become a kind of outer skin or exoskeleton. At the same time there is nothing so clearly bounded as a house, and the rooms become compartments – hence the beauty of the Bely quote.
- The title of the novel is a line spoken by the Fool in King Lear. Can you explain why you chose this particular quotation for your title?
They are the last words spoken by the fool, and are taken to mean ‘I’ll die young’, which was appropriate for Janus, who I think of as being a bit like a fool or trickster in the novel. Also the quote evokes drunkenness, and at one point Janus is on nightwork, so literally goes to bed at noon. The theme of Lear is taken up elsewhere, Aldous strongly identifies with the character of Lear himself
topStarting Points for Discussion
- The Jones’ never stray far from their jumbled, chaotic home. What does the house add to the novel and our understanding of the workings of the Jones family?
- ‘Drink is the family’s passion, their element and their occupation’ Sunday Times – Explore the author’s attitude towards and depiction of drink and drinkers.
- At the heart of the novel lies the love between Colette and Janus. How does this relationship shape the dynamic of the Jones household?
- Gerard Woodward is a prize-winning poet. How does his attention to language and the minutae of life add to the atmosphere of the novel?
- The plot of the novel is essentially bleak, yet I’ll Go to Bed at Noon is also extremely funny. From what does the humour stem and how does it add to the feeling of the novel?
Other Books by Gerard Woodward

A Curious Earth
You don t need to have read Gerard Woodward s previous two novels, August and…

August
Ever since Aldous Jones careened over the handlebars of his bicycle in 1955 and…

Caravan Thieves
Most of these vivid and unsettling stories are rooted in apparently everyday…

I’ll Go To Bed At Noon
It is 1970 in the suburbs of north London and, from the untidy comfort of her…

Island To Island
In Island to Island, his third collection of poetry for Chatto, Gerard Woodward…

We Were Pedestrians
In a return to poetry after his two highly acclaimed novels, August and I’ll…
Suggested Further Reading
- August ~ Gerard Woodward
- Things my Mother Never Told Me ~ Blake Morrison
- Paradise ~ A L Kennedy
