Posted on 18 April 2008 by James Cormier at 11:21 PM | Comments (0)
Tags: Genre, George R. R. Martin, Interviews, Kate Elliott, Writing
Q: One of the things that most impresses me about you as a writer, is your ability to produce novels at a regular, almost yearly rate. What's your secret?Elliott is touching on a much larger question here -- the problem of being prolific. Perhaps more than any other genre, fantasy authors differ greatly in their comparative quantities of work product. Some authors produce more than two books a year; others take three years to publish a single volume. Is this difference entirely coincidental and based on personal ability and talent, or is there a ratio between quantity and quality? Presuming a certain base level of professional ability and talent, can we presume that those authors that publish less frequently generally produce deeper, better works?
Kate: Desperation.
On a material level, in terms of earning a living, a person might write and produce because s/he needs the money. I am currently able to write full-time, but I also have a spouse whose work provides lower-cost health insurance for our family. Obviously if I had to work another job and write, I would not be able to write as much.
On a career level, perhaps one is driven to produce regularly in order to maintain the momentum of a building career, or at least not to lose too much momentum. Big gaps between books can hurt shelf life, can cause an author to fall out of the public eye, can hurt sales. In some cases, a big gap between books might throw the much awaited novel of a writer into high relief (e.g. George R. R. Martin's forthcoming fantasy), but it's just as likely to set back a writer's career.
When my children were little--and given that I was home all the time with them--I often wrote in order to get mental space for myself, in my own world where others did not, for five minutes or an hour or two, intrude. Writing at that time was a form of sanity.
In the larger sense, I have difficulty conceiving of existing without writing, so in that sense I write and continue to write because it's like breathing. It's not that I'm desperate to breathe; it's that I have to in order to be alive.
Also, I am aware that we cannot predict what will happen tomorrow: my career or my life could be over next week (although obviously I hope not!), or I could (as I devoutly hope) be churning along still writing and publishing in my 90s like the late Jack Williamson. I have a lot of stories I want to tell, and boy will they be pissed if they don't get their chance to be told. That's desperation.
Posted on 13 March 2008 by James Cormier at 12:20 AM | Comments (0)
Tags: Genre, Science Fiction, Short Fiction, Writing
Don't confuse your gimmick with your plot. You may have a great idea for a piece of future technology, or some amazing mutation that turns a whole bunch of people into musicvores who survive by eating your memories of rock concerts. Maybe you have the most original basic premise evar -- but that's not your plot. Your plot is how your new widget changes the people in your story, and how it affects their lives. Or what decisions your people make as a result of this new technological breakthrough.could as easily be applied to magic in a fantasy story. A cool magical ability does not a plot make.
Posted on 11 March 2008 by James Cormier at 12:58 AM | Comments (0)
Tags: News, Science Fiction, Writing
Posted on 1 March 2008 by James Cormier at 3:07 AM | Comments (0)
Tags: News, Robin Hobb, Tad Williams, Writing
Q: “Renegade’s Magic”, which was released via Voyager in the UK on July 2, 2007, is the third and concluding volume in your most recent trilogy (Soldier Son) and is finally making its US debut on January 8, 2008 (EOS Books). Compared to the other two Soldier Son books, what was it like writing “Renegade’s Magic” and how do you feel about the way you closed out the series?For a writer of long fiction, be it trilogies or longer series, the need to catch the reader up eventually becomes a real issue. Many authors struggle with how to do it effectively and whether to do it at all. The late Robert Jordan once said that he had originally wanted his readers to be able to read The Wheel of Time starting with any of the books. Although the increasing length and complexity of that series made it effectively impossible, it is nonetheless a vital question for writers of fantasy: how much can I rely on the reader to remember? Do I have to summarize the events of the previous book for the readers of the current one?
Robin: For me, writing a trilogy is a single task. I break the manuscript into three publishable pieces, but I don’t really pause between books or see each piece as a separate entity. For that reason, probably the hardest task of beginning the third book was remembering that readers do experience a year’s gap between books and therefore plot points and characters should be re-introduced with enough information to either jog the memory or give the entering reader a place to start. Retreading ground without being obvious or boring is a really difficult task. I felt like the book ended pretty much as I had expected it would from the beginning, so that was satisfying.
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