John Ajvide Lindqvist interview

The author of Let The Right One In talks about his latest novel Harbour (out in paperback this week), his career as a comedian, and his love of Clive Barker

SFX: Let The Right One In concerned a vampire, and your second novel, Handling The Undead , was a different spin on zombies. Was that a deliberate approach, to take these classic monsters and reinvent them?
“Well it wasn’t, because when I started thinking about the story [for Let The Right One In ] I wasn’t even sure that the ‘monster’, so to speak, was going to be a vampire, I just knew that something terrible from the other side would come to Blackeberg [the Stockholm suburb where Lindqvist grew up]. It was only when I realised, when I started writing the story, that the main character Oskar would befriend or even fall in love with this monster that I realised that this couldn’t be a werewolf or a blob from outer space or anything - a vampire was the best choice! And then I started to think very hard on how I was going to portray this vampire and what this was going to be, because I’m not a vampire kinda guy!”

SFX: Harbour is structured in an interesting way too, with lot of memories and stories and flashbacks. Was that something that you particularly wanted to play with?
“From the beginning I had decided I wanted to write a book that had a more epic, so to speak, tone, where you have a place and its whole history is affecting the present, beginning with this pact hundred of years ago… So yeah, I wanted this structure where I jumped back into older days to explain what’s happening now. This was very deliberate.”

SFX: Do you find yourself developing and changing as a writer? Are you finding yourself drawn to different types of storytelling, different images?
“Developing in a different direction. I think for better or for worse I tend to think in a more epic scale generally. The next book I’m writing, which will be called X – like X on a treasure seeker’s map - if my publishers allow it, will be a huge thing, going through what really is our place here on Earth. There’s going to be monsters – yes, there will be blood, and the feeling that I had when I was reading these really cheap horror stories when I was like 13/14/15 when I got bored with the classics, the things I know now are really bad were the ones that I enjoyed the most! So I try to retain that pulp feeling but within a more epic context. I think that Let The Right One In is my best story but Harbour is my best book and so I’m going more in the direction of Harbour generally.”

Harbour is now available in paperback , from Quercus.

Deputy Editor, SFX

Ian Berriman has been working for SFX – the world's leading sci-fi, fantasy and horror magazine – since March 2002. He's also a regular writer for Electronic Sound. Other publications he's contributed to include Total Film, When Saturday Comes, Retro Pop, Horrorville, and What DVD. A life-long Doctor Who fan, he's also a supporter of Hull City, and live-tweets along to BBC Four's Top Of The Pops repeats from his @TOTPFacts account.