9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 When people ask me what is my main inspiration 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I say it is the ancient Greek drama 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 if you take a play like Medea that's written 2300 years ago 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 it is about a woman who murders her children because of jalousy in relation to her husband 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 if that is not a crime story, I don't know what a crime story is 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 the only difference is that there is no police officer in it 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 because in Greece at that time there was no police force 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but I can assure you if they had had a police force, there would also have a policeman in the play 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but this story uses the mirror of crime to look upon contradictions in society 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 that is what interests me. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Look at McBeth, take McBeth and put Richard Nixon in there: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you have the same story, in a way. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And then I can say that, yes, there are also pure crime fictions that inspire me. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 For example Sherlock Holmes. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Because many histories talk about English society, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 about hypocrisy, about many things 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 So, I don't see any differences by writing crime fiction or another novel 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think, I put up my cheek a little and say that crime fiction is one of the oldest literary genre that exists 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 it's not invented by Edgar Alan Poe, it's much older than that. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 All of my ancestors were musicians, they were playing in churches, organ players and 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 my grandfather was a composer and I think that when I was young I also thought of myself as a musician 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but I realised quite quickly that (I was playing the violin) I would never be as good as I would want to be 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 so I, in a way, chose another instrument because you have to understand that writing is a sort of instrument you have in your hands 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 But on the other hand you might say that music is a very essential part of writing 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 as it is in painting, as it is in sculpturing, as it is in any other kind of art making, I would say 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 My home was full of music but it was also full of books 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and I think I grew up in what you can call a really, really liberal family because 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 first of all no one said anything if you were late at night reading 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and secondly no one asked you what you read 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and that is to me a good definition of what is a liberal family 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think that the specific thing with my childhood was the fact that there was no mother around 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 she had left the family so I grew up with my father and he was very occupied 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but I can still remember at night sometimes I would tell him something about what I had read 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and he was clever enough to take two minutes to listen to all the stupid things that I said 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and about what I read 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and I think it is one of the lessons that I learned: you always have to listen to a child 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think that the real artist is the child because if you remember back when you were 4, 5 or 6 years old, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you know, you had an enormous belief in the fact that you could transform a stone into a car, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 or a piece of wood into whatever 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Now, then you start school and you know what happens 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 rationality takes over … maybe it is necessary 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but later on when you maybe eventually would like to become an artist, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 then you have to reconquer the thing you had as a child 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think that it has to do with the sort of connection back to the courage you had as a child 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 to ask the really, really difficult questions 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I sometimes ask people when I am out talking: 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 who do you think is my greatest idol? or icon? 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and people guess this, and that, and I say 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 no, I have photo, a small photo on my wall 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and the greatest idol is myself as a 12 year old 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and when I watch this guy, this boy, this me at 12 years old, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think that at time I was at my best. I didn't see any limit to life. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I believed in imagination, in fantasy, and reality 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I thought every mountain was possible to climb, every desert was possible to get through 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 so I look at that boy and I try to imitate him, I try to be as brave and as good as he was. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 The sensation of being able to put one word after another word making a sentence, and then making another sentence, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and then having a story … this is to me a miracle. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And this is the understanding of reading 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and then obviously came the next miracle: that you realise that you could do that yourself. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 It was the next miracle. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I still remember that the first thing I ever wrote was a verse on Robinson Crusoe on one page 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I would give a finger to have that paper left 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 but I don't have it, it's gone of course … I probably was 6 years old when I wrote it and I, by the way, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 still believe that Robinson Crusoe is the best novel ever written 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 for a very simple reason: because Robinson is not alone on the island before Friday comes, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 he is alone on the island with the reader and that's important 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you are on that island, with Robinson, … you help him out 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 that is a genius way of telling a story. I could never think of a plot better than that one 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 You could take out certain characters in certain books, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 take them out of the books and bring them with you as friends. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think one of the most important thing with art is that you get friends there 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you could have a painting somewhere; when you see someone in a painting 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you could take that person out of the painting and make that person a friend 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 that follows you in life. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Art to me is essential to see how the world looks, to understand the world by seeing how other people demonstrate it 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 it could be Francis Bacon or Goya or Ken Holtz (?) 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Sometimes I can understand it immediately 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 sometimes I don't understand it at all 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and sometimes I don't want to understand it. I just want that feeling to be sucked into my universe and stay there 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think real art, whether it is a painting or music, or whatever, always gives you a certain surprise 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 if there is no surprise, I think it falls down. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I go down to the Prado museum in Madrid once a year, it is a sort of pilgrimage that I do, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I spend two days there. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 And you know to walk the rooms full of paintings by Velasquez and then come into Goya, for example, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 well, it is not the same museum; it is not the same … it is like it is two different worlds 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 you could say they are both painters but there is something more they are different in, 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 they tell me different stories about the human condition 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I think you cannot come closer than that to defining art: a good artist tells you A story of life. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Another artist tells you another story, a bad artist doesn't tell you anything. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 I'm not afraid of talking about good art and bad art. I think we are living in a time when people are afraid of talking about that 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 and I think it is not good because we must be able to say that some art is better than other 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 then we can discuss that: what do you mean by that?, I don't agree with you … but we can have the discussion. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 Today I think that critics are very … they lack courage in a way. 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000 9:59:59.000,9:59:59.000