Albertine Clarke
Albertine Clarke received an MFA in fiction from the University of Florida and studied English Literature at the University of Edinburgh where she won the Lewis Edwards Memorial prize for creative writing. Raised in London, she now lives in Brooklyn, NY.

The Body Builders is her debut novel.
How much work does your title do to take readers into the story?Follow Albertine Clarke on Instagram.
My title, The Body Builders, is possibly slightly misleading, in that it makes the novel sound like it’s about body building. While the father of the protagonist is a body builder, this is more in the background than one might expect. Really the title is a pun, because there are two other varieties of body builder – the mother, who has literally built Ada’s body with her own, and the mysterious beings that provide Ada with the synthetic body. I imagine readers might find their expectations subverted, possibly frustrated, which is what I wanted.
How surprised would your teenage reader self be by your new novel?
I think my teenage self would not be surprised at all. The feelings I had when I was a teenager – mostly a desperate, aching loneliness – make up the bedrock of the novel. I think she would feel very seen, and I hope she would feel that someone had taken her seriously.
Do you find it harder to write beginnings or endings? Which do you change more?
I find beginnings easy, and endings almost impossible. It’s like a romantic relationship. The beginning is the fun part, and the ending is where you have to think about what you’ve done, and how it relates to the world. I changed the ending of The Body Builders several times, and each change retroactively changed the emotional balance of the entire book. Ultimately, I landed on something quite elliptical. In my short stories I change the endings a lot.
Do you see much of yourself in your characters? Do they have any connection to your personality, or are they a world apart?
Ada is me, but she’s a drastically extrapolated version of me. I have struggled with my mental health throughout my life, but I’ve been lucky to be surrounded by people who have wanted to help me and have succeeded. Ada does not have that privilege. She’s marooned inside herself, with far fewer links to the concrete world, and far stranger things are happening to her.
In terms of plot, basic points map on to my life – my parents’ divorce, and a relationship with an older man – but I wanted to challenge myself to use my imagination, which is partly why I used speculative elements. I think it’s important to do the work of translating experience into metaphor or representation. There has to be a reason for something to be a novel, rather than a memoir or an essay. I think all fiction draws in one way or another from the authors life; it would be difficult to write something completely random, and why would you want to do that, anyway?
However, fiction has to be a dialogue between individual and universal experience, and imagination often forms the bridge between the two.
What non-literary inspirations have influenced your writing?
I watch a lot of sci fi movies. Blade Runner, Minority Report, The Matrix, and 2001: A Space Odyssey all have played their role in building my aesthetic sense. I would love the novel to be adapted into a movie.
--Marshal Zeringue


















