Q&A

Book Description

This is the story of Athena, or Sherine, to give her the name she was baptised with. Her life is pieced together through a series of recorded interviews with those people who knew her well or hardly at all - parents, colleagues, teachers, friends, acquaintances, her ex-husband.

The novel unravels Athena’s mysterious beginnings, via an orphanage in Romania, to a childhood in Beirut. When war breaks out, her adoptive family move with her to London, where a dramatic turn of events occurs…

Athena, who has been dubbed ‘the Witch of Portobello’ for her seeming powers of prophecy, disappears dramatically, leaving those who knew her to solve the mystery of her life and abrupt departure.

Q&A

Q. How would you sum up the central theme of your latest novel The Witch of Portobello?
A. It’s difficult to sum up a book, but I would say that it revolves around the awakening of the female energy in both men and women.

Q. Which is the difference between feminine energy and masculine energy? Why do we have to awaken our feminine side? What’s wrong with our masculine side?
A. Both energies are necessary; we need to be compassionate and implacable. Christ consecrated these two: the energy of bread, that is solid, and the energy of wine, that adapts itself. Sometimes is it not the sword that brakes the stone but the patience of water.

Q. Is there something new in this novel that you haven’t done before?
A. The style is different: it is made of testimonies from people that got to know the main character, Athena. Also, it’s the first time that a main character of mine has a child. This is the first novel where children appear.

Q. Did the idea of the novel spring from real life?
A. Yes, in October 2005, I met in Transylvania a roman stewardess that inspired me the story of Athena. She told me how she had been adopted by an Austrian family and about her gypsy roots. Of course, she was the starting point of the novel; many aspects came from a myriad of situations and people I met along the way. I’m also portrayed in this character.

Q. You deal with very delicate issues in this book, such as prejudice, religious intolerance and dogma. Aren’t you afraid of being excommunicated from the Catholic Church with this novel? After all you defend the idea that God is the Great Mother.
A. I’m not afraid of that. I go every year to a Benedictine retreat in Austria, called Melk. There I spoke to abbot Buckhard about catholic tradition and, during our talks, the issue of women’s exclusion came up. He told me that the Benedictine have prayers dedicated to the Goddess-Mother. In 200 years I believe that feminine divinity will no longer be a taboo.

Q. One of the questionings that keep on recurring in this book is Athena’s need to live with her “empty spaces”. Does Paulo Coelho have “empty spaces”?
A. Of course I do. Who doesn’t? The whole problem is not about having empty spaces, but about admitting that they exist. Today’s society is so preoccupied about coherence that many get trapped in the misconception that all is explainable. Society tries to convince us that we have to be completely transparent, not only to world but to ourselves. There is where the danger lies. It’s necessary to admit that some things can’t be grasped, that our empty spaces exist and that we have to respect and honour the mystery. I would say that Athena is my feminine side.

Q. Do you believe in witches?
A. Of course I do. Unfortunately the word “witch” has still many prejudices. To me, a witch is a woman that is capable of letting her intuition take hold of her actions, that communes with her environment, that isn’t afraid of facing challenges. In my latest novel, I precisely talk about the prejudice that modern witches face in modern society.

Q. What about the fear of being different?
A. In all my books I approach this issue. In all my writings I talk about the importance of accepting one’s differences. Since my childhood, I’ve been drawn to it. It was very important to me to accept my differences.

Q. Isn’t harder to accept other people’s differences?
A. Indeed, it is more difficult to accept other people’s differences, but it’s also very complicated to accept one’s own. The reason for this is that there are always prejudices; there are always misunderstandings. There’s a whole system consolidated that doesn’t want to change, that doesn’t want people to change. Now, we are seeing that this system is starting to evolve thanks to people like Athena. She’s the prototype, a sort of icon of these courageous people that face society and question it’s values.

Q. Why are people so afraid of change?
A. If you don’t change, the world will change you. Only vampires don’t change. To change is necessary, but if you don’t allow it, you will nevertheless succumb to it… Tragedies, hardships will always present themselves and you will be forced to adapt yourself.

Q. One of the themes of your book is dissatisfaction…
A. The world revolves because of this. See the example of children, which are closer to the essence of life. Are they satisfied? Never. I believe that we all preserve in our core this child that is always curious about the outer world.

Q. Are you satisfied?
A. No, of course not. I’m the typical example of a person that is never satisfied.

Q. Do you know what the book is about before writing it?
A. I never take notes and never know where the book will lead me. It would be extremely uninteresting if I had the whole plot in my head.Actually in the Witch of Portobello, the conclusion came to me during the night. I woke up with the idea in my head, immediately wrote it in my pc and worked on it for the next days.

Q. Your book ends on February 25th 2006, exactly at 19:47. British punctuality?
A. When I finished the book, I looked at the clock in my computer and saw the time 19:47. I was mesmerised by this since I was born in 1947. That’s why I wrote it down in my manuscript.
You see I let myself be guided by signs. Signs are the language of God and they will take you where you have to be taken.
It’s a personal language that you develop throughout life.

Q. What is important?
A. You never know. You can only unravel it during the journey. It all starts with a sign that takes you from a point to the next. Or makes you think about an action you’re about to take.

Q. In what do you believe?
A. I believe in dreams, in man and in the goddess.

Q. You dedicate your book to S.F.X. Who is he?
A. A man that left everything to go after his dream, in a very young age. Well, I took much longer to follow my dream. I was nearly 40 when I decided to be guided by my dream. I had the courage once I made the pilgrimage to Saint James of Compostella.

Q. How was the experience of making literature through your blog?
A. Amazing. The experience of making available 1/3 of my book in Spanish & Portuguese enabled my readers to judge by themselves the value of the book. This direct contact is, in my view, the best bet for literature.

The first chapter will be on-line on: 21.2.07

Any message about any chapter can be left in the “readers’ corner” post. 

34 Responses to “Q&A”


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  1. 34 Saleem Boumaroun Apr 24th, 2007 at 8:27 pm

    Dear Mr. Coelho, I am a US born citizen but my parents are lebanese, and I am currently living in lebanon. I immediately bought the book when i saw that your main character was raised in Beirut. Why beirut? why have you chosen our city? Have you ever been to Beirut? I am sure many Lebanese like me will be asking the same question when they read your book. In case you didn’t know, many people here read your books and love them, in french and in english.
    Thank you

    Answer: I was in Lebanon in 1996, right after the end of the civil war. And I intend to go to Beirut again in August or September.

  2. 33 rohit Apr 20th, 2007 at 3:52 am

    like they say…. a river has to end up in an ocean…irrespective of the way.. it decides to follow. n it ends, always. but what it does.. through the course of its journey is important… it may choose to travel through short cuts….. or it may choose to travel the longest distance possible. there lies a big difference in the two…. short ways, it may have a greater power, more efficient influence.. where as through the long distances.. it may be parted in smaller streams, but as such it may have an influence over more land…
    then the purpose of the river may be to flow or to shrive the waylay…
    shorter distance.. greater flow
    longer the distance… more land to nourish… more waylays to shrive…

    i have been a lost soul, though i m only 19… but after reading Paulo coelho..i dont say i have found myself or my way back to me.. but yes, i have learned to be lost n lost forever, in the darkness i choose.. in the jungle of my choice.. in the dwellings of my fancies…. lik million others i decided to be a writer n a poet.

    i don’t have the slightest of clue that paulo coelho will be reading it or not.. but like everyone alive, i have different ways waiting for me to come n walk on them n live them… i know that one of the ways will surely take me to him….. someday… someday…

    alchemist is a universal phenomenon… n is liked by everyone…n even i do
    but my personal fav. is “the zahir”… n my intuition says.. though its cover says.. ‘fiction’… this is the best non-fiction one can find or write… its all so true… so true…

    an imagining n dreaming heart…. rohit. india

  3. 32 Efrain Apr 12th, 2007 at 11:00 am

    Mr. Paulo

    I dont Know if this message is going to be read, but the only thing I know for sure, is that although i haven’t read all your books Mr. Coelho, you have made a truly change inside of me. Not just a stereotypical spiritual one, not just that. You have reached a level of influence in my thoughs that had clearly open mi way of think. Since I read the Alchemyst I discover a whole new world of wonders in the books. I have decided to be a writer, I admire you among some other great icons of the legacy of the wisdom. For example, i admire Nikola Tesla, Giordano Bruno and many other geniuses. I think that within your books you share (or try to) the wisdom you have reached in a certain level. I hope that some day, you visit my country. A little centroamerican country, Panama. It will be great to have you here were you have, a great number of readers, must of them young readers like me. Now I have to found my path, still dont know if my path will be of good or evil, but I know that someday if magic is in my way, it will show like you once told me in a reply. Thank You very much for all the great job you have done,

    An Aprentice of RAM.

    Efrain Alvarez

    Panama, Panama.

  4. 31 nasreen Apr 8th, 2007 at 5:13 pm

    dear Paulo

    i am revising for exams at the moment and fancied a little inspiration which i found in a chapter from your new novel.I also enjoyed the Q & A session. You are very good at articulating your experiences and indirectly those of others. I hope that i will beable to carry the same compassion into my job and indeed relationships with friends and loved ones.

    When one is tired or low it is more difficult to really listen to others and how they feel. It is difficult even for a person to listen and be in touch with his/herself when they feel like that.

    But you remind me to keep trying

    i look forward to reading the book when it comes out.

    regards

    nasreen

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