Saturday, January 08, 2011

Interview - Anne Bishop originally posted on mcnallyrobinson.com

Interview - Anne Bishop by Kent Pollard - Friday, Mar 14, 2008 at 9:41pm

Two of the highlights of March's schedule for us booksellers are the appearance in pocket book size of Anne Bishop's Belladonna as well as the release of her new Realms of the Blood book, Tangled Webs, featuring Surreal SaDiablo. It also marks the tenth anniversary of the publication of her first novel, Daughter of the Blood,. With nearly a dozen books in ten years, her fans are fortunate in having an author who can keep them satisfied, while keeping them guessing. I'm fortunate that Anne has agreed to do an interview with me, via email, which I'm pleased to share with you below.

KP: Anne, thanks for chatting with me today. I'd like to start by asking a bit about what brought you to writing as a career. When and why did you begin writing, and was there any particular catalyst that started you writing?

Anne: I began learning the basics of writing stories before I ever put stories down on paper. As a child, I would insert a “Mary Sue” character into a favorite TV show and replay the show in my head with my character being one of the heroes. From there I advanced to writing teenage-girl-and-her-horse stories, as well as ghost and horror stories. (The “Twilight Zone” was a strong influence in terms of showing me how to take a walk on the weird side, and we do tend to write what we like to watch and/or read.) After graduating from high school, I stopped writing until I was 30. Then the Muse came knocking, and I opened the door. I haven’t closed the door since that day.

KP: There is a strong mythological component to the Blood books, and to a lesser extent in Ephemera. Did you have a particular interest in myths as a child?

Anne: I don’t think I separated stories into categories during childhood. Was there a difference between Jason and the Argonauts and The Black Stallion? Or between learning about Greek and Roman mythology and absorbing the information that there’s a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow? Asking when I developed an interest in myths is like asking when I first started liking dogs. My answer has to be, “Was there a time when I didn’t?”

KP: Do you manage to make a living from your writing full time, or do you rely on other revenue?

Anne: I can support myself with my writing these days, but I still work part-time as a proofreader because I like my co-workers and I like the work. The biggest change in the past couple of years has been scaling back to part-time at the day job, which gives me more time for writing.

KP: What are you reading now, for fun, and/or research?

Anne: Recently I binged on J.D. Robb, Patricia Briggs, and Charlaine Harris. I’m also dipping into the work of Donna Andrews, Kat Richardson, and Carrie Vaughn. As for research, if I need to know a specific thing—what if X happens to Y—I either look it up or ask someone who works in that field. Most of the time, my idea of research consists of simply paying attention and making notes of sights, sounds, images, or tangible things that blip on the Muse’s radar as potential. An example: In a PBS “Nature” show, an octopus moved through a small-diameter pipe in order to get from one tank to another. That piece of imagery helped shape the Eater of the World in the Ephemera books.

KP: I think many of your readers would like to know a bit more about the writing process, and how it works for you. Is writing always smooth for you, or are there particular aspects of the process that you find more difficult than others?

Anne: Drafting is like putting together a jigsaw puzzle that has a rough pencil sketch of the finished piece as a guide, some pieces in full color for the scenes and information I know, and blank pieces for all the bits that are unknown. I think about characters and place, the reason for the story (what is happening or about to happen to these people), the culture(s) and the world. Pieces get put together and work or don’t work. Ideas about how the world works get added or discarded. Then comes a moment when I hear that internal “click” and the world and people are set. I have the who and the where. When I know as much as I can know, there are still big gaps and blank spaces, but those can’t be filled in until I begin the journey with these characters. I learn the story as I write the story. I know the destination, but there are a lot of ways to get there, and that’s what I discover as I write.

First draft is to catch action and emotion. The second draft is where I try to fill in the details and record the scene I see in my mind. The hardest draft for me is the Editor’s Revisions because that’s where I’m trying to smooth out whatever rough edges are left or spots where the details didn’t make it to the page.

KP: Do you write to any sort of time or word-count schedule?

Anne: I have four writing days in each week. When I’m drafting, the goal is to hit 6000 words each week. When I’m doing second draft or revisions, I put 20 hours into the writing. That’s usually as much as I can do well, and it gives me time to ponder what needs to be pondered.

KP: Do you ever run into problems moving forward with a story and if so do you have any favorite technique for getting past it?

Anne: There are several reasons why a story can block for me: physical or mental fatigue, input overload, something else absorbing the creative energy, a shift into left-brain-let’s- do-filing-mode, or a piece of the story puzzle is missing and I can’t go forward until I figure out that piece. Fatigue is solved by getting enough sleep or taking an evening to do nothing. Input overload is solved by quiet time. If other kinds of storytelling (either reading or watching movies) is absorbing energy instead of feeding the creative well, I’ll avoid those things for a few days. Since Left Brain usually kicks in when the creative side is tired, some days it’s just smarter to close up the computer and do busywork. And story puzzles are solved by “musings.” That’s when I just ponder on the page, thinking about the characters or the story, what is happening or needs to happen, and how the characters might get from point A to point B.

KP: Do you find yourself itching to write something outside of the fantasy genre, or is it more of a comfortable home for you?

Anne: I did write a story a few years ago for the Mossy Creek series of books. I love that series, so it was great fun to write a story in someone else’s sandbox. (For those who might wonder, that’s the “Laurie and Tweedle Dee” story.) But I like the magic and wonder of the fantasy genre. For me, it is a landscape with tremendous scope, and there is no type of story that can’t be written within its boundaries. Romance, mystery, thriller—these are being blended with the traditional imagery of the genre. So more than being a comfortable home, fantasy is the most natural fit for my particular creativity.

KP: Do you do a lot of traveling to promote your work, and do you generally find travel invigorating, or is it a tiring process and do you find it inspirational, or does it tend to interfere with your writing?

Anne: My Muse works better within the confines of routine, so I don’t do much traveling. Being somewhere new and visiting with people is fun and invigorating. The actual traveling is exhausting and usually requires a fair bit of recovery time.

KP: Next I'd like to ask a bit about your philosophy of writing. How do you see the role of the author, in general, and the fantasy author in specific?

Anne: The Storyteller holds up a mirror that shows us a reflection of the world. And in that reflection we are entertained by events and people that let us laugh, let us cry, let our hearts pound with excitement or fear, or let us look at emotional truths that would be hard to look upon in the world we live in. Stories are the soul’s bread. The Storytellers are the bakers.

KP: The rise of the Internet has redefined many author's lives, with the rapid access to research material and, at the same time, distractions. Do you find it has been a help or hindrance to your efforts?

Anne: E-mail and discussion groups available through the Internet have made it possible to be in contact with readers in ways that weren’t possible before. Having a website means readers can find out about new releases and read excerpts of a new book. But because there is so much information available, I reach overload a lot faster on the Internet than I do browsing through a few books, so I don’t spend much time online and rarely surf the net.

KP: Now I'd like to move on to your work. It's ten years now, since the first of the Black Jewels books was published. You continue to explore the world and its people, and I wonder if the world has always been complete as it is now, for you, or if there were things you've discovered about the world as you write that were not part of the original concept?

Anne: The culture was set by the time I started writing the first book, and that hasn’t changed. The Blood are the Blood. So the world doesn’t change, but I continue to learn new things about the people and their history.

KP: Your latest novel, Tangled Webs, is out this month. Is this a story that has always been at the back of your mind to tell, or did it come up more recently?

Anne: It’s a more recent idea—as in the past 2-3 years. I like reading mysteries, and I started wondering what it would be like to write a locked-room mystery. Then I pondered writing a getting-trapped-in-a-haunted-house mystery. Then I wondered, “What would happen if someone like Surreal got trapped in a haunted house?” From there I began to gather thoughts about how that could happen, and by the time I finished writing the Ephemera books, the idea had enough shape for me to start writing the story.

KP: Do you have any favorite characters in the Blood? Perhaps characters that are particularly difficult to do damage to in the stories?

Anne: As a group, it’s the SaDiablo family, but edging out the others just enough to be the favorite favorite is Daemon. Is it hard to write the scenes when one of them gets hurt? Oh, yes. Especially when the damage can’t be fixed.

KP: Have you noticed a clear favorite among your fans?

Anne: There are four that seem to have equal weight among fans: Daemon, Lucivar, Saetan, and Surreal. There is also a fair amount of interest in Karla.

KP: Surreal is front-and-center in Tangled Webs. She seems to strike a chord with a lot of people. Do you have any theories on why that is?

Anne: She’s a strong, scary woman with a lot of sass and attitude (not to mention sharp knives). She also cares about people, and she’ll put everything she is on the line if that’s what it takes to protect someone. And she has some vulnerable spots. That combination makes her a lot of fun in a story.

KP: Many writers find that they can't look at earlier work without wishing they could go back and do it over again. In light of your time spent preparing for the newer Black Jewels book, if you had to do the original series over again, would you change anything?

Anne: I would consider whether the life spans of the long-lived races should be quite that long. Other than that, I wouldn’t change anything about the world or the characters.

KP: The stories in Dreams Made Flesh fill out some important and interesting details for the original series. Are these stories you always hoped to tell, or have they grown out of readers' interest in the background?

Anne: The embryo for two of the stories—Lucivar and Marian’s courtship and Zuulaman—were part of the original trilogy and were stories I knew I would write one day. And I, like many readers, wanted to see Daemon and Jaenelle get married. Happily, I had the opportunity to write those stories.

KP: The Realms of the Blood are dark and dangerous, yet you manage to convey that without resorting to the prolific shock images that have become so prevalent in the entertainment industry. Do you have any comment on that?

Anne: Atmosphere and attitude. The darkness and the danger are inherent to the people and the place, so there is nothing that the Blood do that isn’t steeped in atmosphere and attitude. I’m not a fan of those shock images you mentioned, so I prefer to imply a lot or show the results of the violence rather than the violence itself. The exception is when not showing a graphic scene would cheat the story. While I don’t pull any punches when I do write that kind of scene, I also don’t see any reason to say more than is necessary.

KP: Do you have to do more books about the Blood in the future, or are there other projects drawing your attention?

Anne: I would like to go back and do more stories in the Ephemera and Tir Alainn worlds, but those stories are still gestating while the Blood are clamoring for attention. In fact, I just turned in another Black Jewels book, which goes back to the Realm of Terreille and has a connection with the characters from The Invisible Ring..

KP: Is there anything else you'd like to share with the readers?

Anne: The enthusiasm readers have felt for my work has been a wonderful experience. I hope I can continue to entertain people—and offer some emotional truths in the process—for a long time to come.

Interview - Walter Jon Williams Originally Posted At mcnallyrobinson.com

Interview - Walter Jon Williams by Kent Pollard - Thursday, Jul 17, 2008 at 9:39am


Walter Jon Williams has been successful for over twenty years in writing mostly hard science fiction while many of the genre's authors have turned to fantasy to satisfy readers. Part of that success has come from looking for places that no one else was writing, and finding, or creating a gap to fill. From his early cyberpunk-esque work Hardwired and the related novels, through the complex fantastic science-fiction of the Metropolitan series and the galaxy-spanning Dread Empire books, Walter's work has consistently asked us to look at how our philosophy shapes the world we live in. Nowhere is that more true than in his latest book Implied Spaces, new this month from Nightshade.

KP: Walter, I'd like to thank you for taking the time to chat with me. I'd like to leap right off the start to your newest book. Implied spaces reminds me very much of the feeling I got when I read Voice of the Whirlwind 20 years ago. Was there anything intentional in that, or is it simply a natural progression of interest?

WJW: I wasn't deliberately looking back to Voice, but I'm pleased you thought the books had the same feel. Voice is one of the books I'm most proud of.

That said, I'm not sure what Voice has in common with Implied Spaces; aside from the fact that they're both relatively short, at least as compared with my other books. Of course they're both by me, in which case I'm glad you stayed around as a reader!

KP: Implied Spaces is one of the most enjoyable post-singularity books I've read, and has attracted some nice comments from Vernor Vinge and Charles Stross, among others. It treats machine intelligence in an unbiased fashion, allowing machines to truly be their own intelligent life form, rather than being an emotionless stand-in for some ideal human. Did that attitude come quickly for you, or has it developed slowly over the years you've been writing?

WJW: I think it?s a logical development of the type of machine intelligence that I envisioned for the book. Given that the AIs in Implied Spaces were very large computing platforms with a high degree of autonomy, they would over time develop their own interests and a degree of personality. Given that they were hardwired to obey human commands and forbidden to harm humans, and given as well that humans had more or less "colonized" them and were living on and inside them, they would have evolved personalities that were capable of interacting with humans.

The character of Bitsy, the protagonist's companion, is a special case. In that case the AI suspects that Aristide has the keys to its freedom, and has evolved a personality meant to be pleasing to Aristide. The fact that Aristide is perfectly aware of this adds a sophisticated dimension to the relationship.

I also have to say that large, unknowable, incomprehensibly intelligent AI make poor characters in fiction. They're fine for sitting in the background--like God--but when you want your characters to interact with them, they should have more quirks than mere omniscience.

KP: Do you think that machine intelligence is close, and do you think that we will be ready to identify it when it emerges, or will it simply slip under the radar?

WJW: SF has a tendency to envision large general technological advances that have broad applications across the spectrum of human behavior. For instance, SF created the idea of humanoid robots that would be jacks-of-all-trades, and largely ignored the idea of specialty robots that only did one thing, be it weld auto frames, aid bomb disposal teams, or bake bread on kitchen table tops.

Likewise, our fiction tends toward giant non-specialized AI, a sort of AI-of-all-trades that can rationalize city planning, answer complex sociological questions, command the military, plot courses between the stars, and diagnose us when we're ill.

We?re ignoring the specialized AI that's already here, and that does a lot of these things already, just not everything at once.

KP: Implied Spaces, as with so many of your books, requires the protagonist to take a hard look at philosophy and how essential our philosophy is to the underpinnings of society. My personal feeling is that with few exceptions, genre authors have invested more energy in commercializing their fiction, robbing the genre of these chances for introspection. Do you have any opinion or comments on whether you think philosophy is given short shrift in most modern commercial fiction? Do you have any other, related, comments?

WJW: People write about what interests them. Philosophy has always been the interest of a minority.

That said, I'd like to point out that SF and fantasy are tailor-made for discussion of all the Big Questions: Who are we? Why are we here? What is our purpose? One of the reasons that Star Trek and Star Wars had such an impact on our culture is that they both openly embraced these issues.

If you ask a fictional character his purpose, and his answer is, "I'm here to entertain the reader," you really can't complain, but on the other hand you're entitled to lament a certain lack of scope.

KP: I'd like to move away from your work now, to you and what brought you to writing. When and why did you begin writing?

WJW: I've been compelled to write as long as I could remember. Before I could even read, I dictated stories to my parents, who wrote them down for me.

KP: Do you manage to make a living with your writing, or do you have to supplement that income? If so, what do you do for supplemental income?

WJW: As of January 1, 2009, I will have made my principal living from writing for 30 years. I've written fiction, I've done graphic novels, I've written for computer games, and I've done movies and TV. On occasion I've taught, but 99% of my living has been through fiction of one sort of another.

KP: Could you share a bit about the writing process, and how it works for you?

WJW: I'm a systematic writer, and I prefer to do a lot of planning ahead of time. Some of my projects--Aristoi is a good example--were in the planning stage for years before I ever wrote a line of the actual novel. It's not that I'm not open to surprises when I write, but that I very much prefer to know where the story is headed before I begin. It enables me to keep things in focus as I write.

In the case of the Dread Empire's Fall books, I knew the last sentence of the third book before I ever wrote the first sentence of Book One. That way, I was able to aim every piece of the work at that ending, and I'm pleased to say that the ending has a lot of impact as a result.

When I'm working on one project, I'm thinking about the next, or often the next half-dozen. I'm gathering material, trying out ideas, doing research, trying to fit things together. Because I work my way into the material intuitively, the process takes a fair amount of time, but it saves a lot of work in the end. I don't experience a lot of false starts, and I don't write a lot of superfluous material that later has to be discarded.

Writers who enter a work without a plan frustrate me, because it's usually obvious when they do it, and their books end up bloated and wandering. I've often thought that I've missed a career as an editor--I'd like to get out a cleaver and chop those 450-page monsters down to a nifty, neat 200 pages.

KP: Has writing always been fairly smooth for you, or are there particular aspects of the process that you find more difficult than others?

WJW: I always know the beginning before I start, and I know the end. The middle part is hazy, however, and that's usually where I run into trouble.

KP: Do you write to any sort of time or word-count schedule?

WJW: When my deadlines are severe I'll impose that kind of discipline on myself, but generally I don't care for it. I'm naturally a slow-but-steady sort of writer, and usually I enjoy writing, so I'd prefer not to have to be hard-nosed and just enjoy the process.

KP: Do you ever experience "writers' block" and if so do you have any favorite technique for getting past it?

WJW: I've only been blocked for a few days at the most. I've learned that when I'm blocked it's because I've taken a wrong path, and my subconscious mind is telling me so. So when I can't seem to progress, I know to knock off work and let my subconscious sort out the problem for me.

KP: Many genre writers feel restricted by the categorizations. Have you found the SF label restrictive, and are there specific actions you have taken to get around such restrictions?

WJW: What I'd prefer is for the chains to have a "Really Good Books" category, and then they could put my stuff there.

I haven't felt the constraints of the genre until relatively recently. SF sales fell dramatically in the 90s, and American publishers responded by becoming a lot more conservative in what they chose to publish. When I consider the kind of wild extrapolative explosions that happened in the field in the 60s and 80s, and compare that with what the major SF lines are doing now, I can't help but lament the wild flights of fancy that I know I'm missing, because nobody's putting them in print.

Fortunately the smaller presses are doing a pretty remarkable job of picking up the slack. Night Shade, for example, picked me up, which I can't help but think is a good thing.

KP: Could you share a few of the high points in your life that you feel have helped make you who you are, both personally and professionally?

WJW: Well, I got kicked out of grad school, which didn't seem like such a high point at the time, but it made me concentrate on writing, so it was positive in the end.

I never wanted to be one of those writers who spent his life staring at a wall, and who ends up knowing nothing but what he read in books--or, more latterly, online. I wanted to be engaged with existence. So I learned small-boat sailing, and took up scuba, and earned a fourth-degree black belt in Kenpo Karate. I try to take a trip abroad at least every other year.

And I'm married to a wonderful woman who puts up with all of this, and who likes travel as much as I do. I get to share a lot of the high points with someone else, and that is very nice indeed.

KP: Do you do much traveling to promote your work, and when you do, do you generally find that invigorating, or is it a tiring process?

WJW: My one and only signing tour was two days long, so I didn't have a lot of opportunity to get bored with it. Generally speaking, I envy all those writers who complain about the endless drudgery of their signing tours--at least their publisher is taking an interest.

I attend a few SF conventions every year, mostly to see my friends. Though I do signings, readings, and other promotional activities at cons, and though I live ever in hope, it has to be admitted that most con fans don't have a clue about who I am. Though I certainly have a readership, they don't seem to be the sort of people who turn up at signings and cons. Some day I'd like to meet them.

KP: You've taken a lot of risks with your career, pushing your writing in directions that are frequently untraveled by many other writers. Have you ever regretted the decision to generally avoid the more commercially accepted paths?

WJW: Shows you what I know! I've always thought my ideas were totally commercial! Of course I have a terrific imagination, possibly a better imagination than most publishing PR departments.

The one chance I thought I was taking was with Hardwired, which I figured would find an audience of about twelve people in a sweaty-walled underground jazz club in Prague or someplace. But then, before I finished the novel, Neuromancer appeared, and was a huge artistic and commercial success, some of which rubbed off on my work, and I was off and away.

KP: Do you manage to read very much yourself, and what are you reading now, for fun, and/or research?

WJW: I seem to have fewer and fewer opportunities for reading for pleasure. Most of what I read is research, or manuscripts for our local critique group, or a novel-of-the-moment that I feel obliged to read in the name of keeping up with the field, and which I usually want to edit with a hatchet.

Right now I'm reading Gore Vidal's Hollywood, one of his series of inter-nested historical novels that began with Burr. It's an absolute delight. One of the advantages of reading someone with such a lengthy career is that you can always find one of his books that you haven't read before.

Sort of like Jack Vance, now that I think about it.

KP: Are there any new authors that you have found particularly interesting?

WJW: I'm always wary of providing these kinds of lists, because there's always someone I inadvertently leave off who's going to get offended. So I'll confine myself to books I've read in manuscript.

Daniel Abraham's The Long Price Quartet is absolutely wonderful. The must-read fantasy series of the decade, if you want to know.

New writer Ian Tregillis has a terrific alternative-history series coming up called The Milkweed Triptych. Watch for it.

Melinda Snodgrass, who it must be admitted is not exactly a new writer, has a new series out beginning with The Edge of Reason. I believe it's been called The Left Behind series for rational people, which should intrigue you, I hope.

And S.M. Stirling, who is not new either, has a winner in Courts of the Crimson Kings. More fun than a barrel of meth-crazed monkeys.

KP: Is there anything else you'd like to share with the readers?

WJW: Because I keep reading books I want to edit with a hatchet, I started a writers' workshop which actually teaches plotting. No one else teaches this stuff, to my knowledge, because it's too freaking hard. ("Because they're idiots!" screams the Creature from the Id.)

Last year we had a wonderful time with Connie Willis teaching and a special appearance by George R.R. Martin, and this year we've got Kelly Link and Stephen R. Donaldson.

And we do it all in a lodge in the mountains above Taos, amid the aspen and ponderosa, with a mountain stream trickling by and occasional glimpses of deer, bighorn sheep, and bear.

And there's a hot tub. What more do you want?

Check it out at Taostoolbox.com.