|
The
No.
1
Ladies'
Detective
Agency
 Alexander
McCall
Smith
Questions
and
Answers
Q:
You
have
written
more
than
fifty
books
(from
specialist
titles
such
as
FORENSIC
ASPECTS
OF
SLEEP
to
children's
books,
including
THE
PERFECT
HAMBURGER).
Was
THE
NO.
1
LADIES'
DETECTIVE
AGENCY
your
first
attempt
at
writing
a
mystery?
A: The
No.
1
Ladies'
Detective
Agency is
my
first
foray
into
this
territory,
although
I
do
not
think
of
it
as
a
mystery.
I
like
to
think
of
it
as
a
novel
about
a
woman
who
happens
to
be
a
private
detective.
Mind
you,
I
suppose
that
makes
it
a
mystery
...
of
a
sort.
Q:
Your
detective,
Precious
Ramotswe,
is
a
wonderfully
unique
character—a
Batswana
woman
of
traditional
build
who
decides
to
become
a
professional
private
detective.
Is
Precious
based
on
someone
that
you
knew
when
you
lived
in
Botswana
or
is
she
a
creation
of
your
imagination?
A: There
is
no
particular
person
upon
whom
Precious
Ramotswe
is
based,
but
there
is
an
incident.
Years
ago
I
was
in
Botswana,
staying
with
friends
in
a
small
town
called
Mochudi.
A
woman
in
the
town
wished
to
give
my
friends
a
chicken
to
celebrate
Botswana
National
Day.
I
watched
as
this
woman—traditionally
built,
like
Mma
Ramotswe—chased
the
chicken
round
the
yard
and
eventually
caught
it.
She
made
a
clucking
noise
as
she
ran.
The
chicken
looked
miserable.
She
looked
very
cheerful.
At
that
moment
I
thought
that
I
might
write
a
book
about
a
cheerful
woman
of
traditional
build.
Q:
Did
you
know
immediately
that
the
story
of
Mma
Ramotswe
would
be
the
basis
for
an
entire
series
of
novels?
A: No,
I
did
not.
What
happened
is
that
I
became
so
fond
of
the
character
that
I
could
not
let
her
go.
To
leave
her
where
she
was
at
the
end
of
the
first
novel
would
have
been
rather
like
getting
up
and
leaving
the
room
in
the
middle
of
a
conversation—rather
rude.
Q:
It
is
rare
for
an
author
to
explore
the
evolution
from
amateur
sleuth
to
professional
detective,
but
one
of
the
most
appealing
aspects
of
Precious's
character
is
that
she
doesn't
always
know
what
she's
doing.
In
TEARS
OF
THE
GIRAFFE
(the
sequel
to
THE
NO.
1
LADIES'
DETECTIVE
AGENCY),
she
even
sends
away
for
an
instructional
manual,
Principles
of
Private
Detection.
What
interests
you
about "education
of
the
detective"?
A: Mma
Ramotswe
sets
up
her
agency
without
any
relevant
experience.
However,
she
does
have
intuition—in
abundance—and
that
is
very
much
more
important
than
anything
she
could
learn
from
a
book.
In
fact,
the
passages
she
cites
from
The
Principles
of
Private
Detection
are
ultimately
not
particularly
helpful
to
her,
the
point
being
that
a
person
without
any
training
can
achieve
great
things
if
he
or
she
has
natural
intelligence
and
ability.
In
many
African
countries,
including
Botswana,
people
have
great
respect
for
books
and
for
the
learning
they
contain.
I
would
hope
to
point
out
that
this
should
not
obscure
the
importance
of
real,
practical
wisdom.
Q:
Although
Mma
Ramotswe
is
confronted
by
greed,
lust,
dishonesty,
and
murderous
intent,
these
novels
are
rather
optimistic
and
often
humorous
in
tone.
How
do
you
maintain
this
rather
delicate
balance?
A: I
think
that
many
people
living
in
Africa—in
circumstances
which
are
sometimes
quite
difficult—maintain
that
balance
themselves,
and
with
great
dignity.
I
think
that
I
merely
reflect
what
is
there
in
those
fine
people.
Q:
In
the
Precious
Ramotswe
novels,
Botswana
emerges
as
a
vivid
character
and
a
wonderful
place
to
live.
What
do
you
hope
that
American
readers
will
discover
about
Africa
while
reading
these
novels?
A: I
very
much
hope
that
American
readers
will
get
a
glimpse
of
the
remarkable
qualities
of
Botswana.
It
is
a
very
special
country
and
I
think
that
it
particularly
chimes
with
many of
the
values
which
Americans
feel
very
strongly
about—respect
for
the
rule
of
law
and
for
individual
freedom.
I
hope
that readers
will
also
see
in
these
portrayals
of
Botswana
some
of
the
great
traditional
virtues
in
Africa—in
particular,
courtesy
and
a
striking
natural
dignity.
Q:
How
have
these
books
been
received
in
Botswana?
What
about
other
parts
of
Africa?
A: I
was
recently
in
Botswana
and
I
was
delighted
to
find
that
people
there
liked
the
books.
I
was
worried
that
they
might
have
reservations
about
an
outsider
writing
about
their
society.
No.
They
appear
to
like
the
way
in
which
their
world
is
portrayed.
I
believe
that
they
recognize
themselves
in
them.
Q:
You
were
born
in
what
is
now
known
as
Zimbabwe
and
you
have
also
lived
in
Botswana,
the
United
States,
and
Edinburgh.
In
what
ways
have
your
international
travels
informed
your
writing?
A: The
fact
that
I
have
been
all
over
the
world
means
that
I
tend
to
use
a
variety of
locations
for
my
work.
I
think
it
is
important
for
a
writer
to
see
other
societies
and
attempt
to
understand
them.
Of
course,
you
have
to
be
careful.
It
is
easy
to
get
things
wrong.
One
might
put
palm
trees
in
the
wrong
place,
for
example
in
New
York.
Q:
Do
you
see
the
Precious
Ramotswe
books
within
the
context
of
the
tradition
of
the
classic
African
novel
of
writers
like
Isak
Dinesen
and
Chinua
Achebe?
Or
do
you
see
them
as
a
revamping
of
the
mystery
genre?
A: I
think
that
these
books
might
be
difficult
to
put
into
any
particular
tradition.
They
are
obviously
about
Africa,
but
they
are
very
different
from
the
works
you
mention.
Some
people
say
that
they
remind
them
of
the
novels of
that
great
Indian
writer
R.K.
Narayan,
which
is
very
flattering,
but
I
suppose
I
can
see
the
similarities
in
the
world
which
his
and
my
books
portray.
Q:
Anthony
Minghella,
who
has
directed The
English
Patient and The
Talented
Mr.
Ripley recently
optioned
THE
NO.
1
LADIES'
DETECTIVE
AGENCY
to
be
a
major
motion
picture.
Will
you
be
involved
in
the
production
in
any
way?
A: I
hope
that
this
goes
ahead
as
planned.
They
have
shown
me
a
script,
which
I
read
with
interest.
They
said
that
I
could
come
and
see
the
shooting,
one
of
these
days.
I
shall
stand
well
back
and
I
suspect
that
I
shall
say
nothing.
Q:
The
Precious
Ramotswe
books
have
a
devoted
following.
Have
you
ever
had
the
opportunity
to
meet
with
the
Mma
Ramotswe
fan
club
that
is
based
in
New
York?
What
question
are
you
most
frequently
asked
by
your
fans?
A: There
seem
to
be
many
fans
of
the
books
in
the
U.S.A.
I
receive
wonderfully
warm
letters
from
American
readers,
which
I
greatly
enjoy.
As
far
as
New
York
is
concerned,
there
is
a
splendid
group
of
readers
whom
I
met
when
I
was
last
there.
They
love
Mma
Ramotswe
and
she
would
love
them
too.
They,
like
many
other
readers,
ask
me
when
Mma
Ramotswe
and
Mr
J.L.B.
Matekoni
will
eventually
get
married.
I
must
think
about
that.
Q:
Next
spring,
Pantheon
Books
will
publish
the
fourth
in
the
series
of
the
Precious
Ramotswe
novels.
Will
there
be
other
books
in
the
series
as
well?
A: I
hope
so.
I
am
writing
the
fifth
at
the
moment
and
I
am
thinking
of
the
sixth.
Q:
In
addition
to
writing
novels,
you
are
also
a
professor
of
medical
law
at
Edinburgh
University,
and
as
if
that
wasn't
enough
to
keep
you
busy,
you
also
conduct
a
symphony.
How
do
you
find
the
time
to
do
it
all?
A: I
struggle
to
find
the
time
to
do
things.
I
have
many
commitments,
but
writing
these
books
is
such
a
pleasure
for
me
that
I
shall
always
find
the
time,
somehow.
I
don't
conduct
a
symphony—I
play
in
a distinctly
amateur
orchestra,
of
which
I
am
the
co-founder.
I
play
the
bassoon,
but
not
the
entire
instrument,
as
I
dislike
the
very
high
notes
and
stop
at
the
high
D,
which
I
think
is
quite
high
enough.
This
orchestra
is
pretty
awful,
and
that
is
why
it
bears
the
name
The
Really
Terrible
Orchestra.
This
brings
it
a
wide
and
enthusiastic
following.
Recently
we
had
a
request
from
an
American
amateur
orchestra
to
use
our
name.
We
said
of
course.
So
somewhere
in
the
U.S.
there
is
a
bad
amateur
orchestra
called
The
Really Terrible
Orchestra.
They
will
go
far,
perhaps.
RETURN
TO
ALEXANDER
McCALL
SMITH
BOOKS
|