Posts Categorized: Interview

Alright! As promised here is the second, and meatier, portion of my interview with Patrick Rothfuss, author extraordinaire and the man behind this year’s biggest fantasy debut, The Name of the Wind. If you haven’t already read it, make sure to check out Part One of the Patrick Rothfuss interview!

The Interview

Q: Much of Kvothe’s story revolves around a certain female character who puts him through his own little piece of hell (and a little piece of heaven, too), was this woman inspired by a real life counterpart?

     A: Oh yes. Definitely yes. But over the years she has developed into her own person.

Q: “The Four Corners of Civilization” has been created with a lot of depth, there are little things in the novel which subtly add to the depth of the world without overwhelming the reader, such as one-off mentions of random coins in Kvothe’s purse. Would you consider yourself a strong world builder? Or is it just one of the necessary evils in the fantasy genre as it is today?

     A: I love worldbuilding. It’s as much fun for me as writing itself. It’s like a hobby of mine.
      I think I have two things working in my favor as a worldbuilder. One, I’ve got a solid grounding in history, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, etc etc. That means I actually have a good idea about how societies change and evolve. I know how a lot of them have actually functioned through the years. I can put together a culture that’s cool and different, while still being logically consistent, so that it feels real. So many fantasy worlds are either implausible, cookie-cutter, or both. Mine aren’t.
      The second thing that helps me do a good job is that I don’t feel the need to explain everything about the world to my reader. I’m not writing a history text on the Four Corners. I’m telling a story that’s set there. The setting belongs in the background for the most part, and it’s easy for fantasy authors to forget that. That’s one of the unfortunate parts of Tolkien’s legacy, in my opinion. Read the first hundred pages of the Fellowship of the Ring and you start to get pissed, “Shut up about the Shire’s museums! Isn’t the world supposed to be in peril or something?”
      Don’t get me wrong, I grew up reading Tolkien, and I love him. But I love him in the way that you love that rambly old grandfather. You have to sit through some pretty off-topic stuff before he starts telling his cool old war stories.

Q: Will we see more of “The Four Corners of Civilization” in further books? Or does the University continue to be a central setting for the rest of Kvothe’s story?

     A: Both. The university is central, and Kvothe likes it there. It’s more of a home to him than anything else that he has in the world. In some ways he’d like nothing better than to stay and learn everything he can…
      But his life is more complicated than that. For one thing, education doesn’t come cheap, and Kvothe doesn’t have the means to support himself indefinitely at the University. Perhaps more importantly, he’s smart enough to realize that many of the things he wants to know can’t be found in books.
      So in book two Kvothe goes abroad to seek his fortune. He heads to Vintas and learns something of the political situation there.
      Hmmmm…. I don’t think I’ll say any more than that. I’m not big on spoilers….

Q: Well, then, perhaps you can answer this question (spoiler-free, of course!): one of the things I enjoyed the most about The Name of the Wind was that the story and plot did not rely on the heavy action scenes and big army battles that so many Fantasy novels use as their crutch. This was a breath of fresh air, but can we expect to see the swashbuckling ramp up as Kvothe travels out into the wide world over the course of the next two books?

      A: Yes. It’s fair to say that there is more action in the next couple books. It wouldn’t be realistic to have twelve year old Kvothe doing much swashbuckling. But sixteen year old Kvothe? Yeah. It’s safe to say that he’ll be buckling a little swash.

Q: Rumor has it that you turned down another publishing house offering you more money and instead signed with DAW Books. What was it about DAW that drew you to their publishing house?

     A: Actually, we turned down two other publishers before we took DAW’s offer.
      I went with DAW for a lot of reasons. Both of the other publishers had good things going for them. But Betsy Wollheim at DAW was really, really enthusiastic about my book. Geeky excited. Catgirl at an anime convention excited. You can’t buy that.
      Frequently, an author gets “orphaned” at a publisher. What this means is that an editor buys their book, then ends up getting fired, promoted, or transferred to a different job somewhere else. It sucks for the author because suddenly the person who liked your book enough to buy it isn’t around to help you edit and promote it.
      I knew that would never happen with DAW, because Betsy owns the company. She’s the President and CEO. She can’t leave. Furthermore, nobody can tell her, “No.” She’s the boss. I didn’t have to worry about getting my opinion slapped down by anyone but her.
      Also, everyone I talked to told me that DAW was incredibly faithful to their authors, supporting them in the long term and helping them build their careers. I wanted that.
      And I’ve been very happy with them. Every day I’m glad I went with them. The other publishers probably would have been great, and I liked the editors a lot. But things at DAW have been really idyllic.

Q: It sounds like things are falling into place nicely for you and DAW, as you mentioned earlier with the increased print run. How have you found your life has changed since entering into the publishing world? I imagine with your newfound fame it’s all champagne, private jets and nights of debauchery by now.

      Heh. You’d think that wouldn’t you?
      Truth is, my life is anything but rockstar. I have a mound of credit card debt, and I just had to sift through my change jar and pick out quarters so I could fill up my gas tank. I’m still living my familiar student lifestyle.
      You want to know how lean I live? A friend of mine just moved, and when she left town she gave me a box of ramen. I normally go for the Maruchen ramen. Chicken flavor. It costs about a dime a pack. That’s my staple. But this ramen was, like, super fancy. It had the usual a flavor packet and noodles, but it also had ANOTHER packet with some dried seaweed and little radish bits and stuff. It was seriously high class.
      That’s the level of my success and debauchery right now. A windfall box of ramen drastically improves my lifestyle. If this first book sells well, hopefully things will get a little better. I’ve even heard rumors of ramen with THREE little packets of stuff.
      But between you and me, I think that’s just faerie tale nonsense.

Q: So, with the second and third books in the Kingkiller Chronicles done, where do you go now? What do you have planned to come after the trilogy is published?

      When I created my world, I was careful to make it big enough to hold all sorts of stories, not just this one that centers around Kvothe. So I think it’s safe to say that will be more novels set in this world in the future, featuring some of the same characters.
      I’ve also had an idea for a modern-day faerie tale that I think would make a great stand-alone novel. The idea’s been running around in my head for years now, so it should be ripe by the time the trilogy is finished.
      And just a month or two ago, someone who dug up a copy of my anthology of satirical humor columns suggested to me that I could write humorous urban fantasy in a college setting. I think that would be fun, too.

Q: Sounds like you have a lot of good things in the pipeline! I notice you mention a stand-alone novel and I also seem to remember hearing that you originally wrote “The Name of the Wind” as a stand alone, before realizing how big it really was. What appeals to you about the stand-alone format?

      Stand alone books are nice because they have everything all in one tidy little package. Neverwhere was awesome because you get action, adventure, character development, the exploration of a strange world, PLUS resolution of all the problems and mysteries at the end. No lines no waiting. That’s very satisfying.
      Multi-volume stories are satisfying too, just in a different way.

Q: Well, Patrick, any final words before we wrap this thing up?

      In the interest of full disclosure, I feel the need to mention that I have said one untrue thing in this interview. Just one, though. Everything else is the truth.

Q: So, it’s safe to say you either are a rock star… or you do have a favourite Cher song?

      No. Those are both true. The lie I told is somewhere else….

Q: Well, I suppose I’ll have to leave it up to my readers to figure that one out. This also seems like the perfect place for a cliffhanger ending! So, with that I’d like to thank you and wish you luck with “The Name of the Wind” and everything that follows after it. If your first novel is any indication, we’ll be seeing a lot of you in the future!

      Thank you, Aidan. You are a gentleman and a scholar.

Check out the links below if you are interested in ordering The Name of the Wind
US | Canada | UK

Here it is! As promised A Dribble of Ink recently conducted an interview with this year’s “It” author, Patrick Rothfuss. By the time Pat and I concluded the interview we realized just how long things had became and decided that everyone would be better served if we split the interview into two shorter, more palatable chunks.

Patrick Rothfuss is one of Fantasy’s newest authors, but that has not stopped his first novel, The Name of the Wind from garnering a lot of favourable reviews and a whole beehive full of buzz. And, if you read my review you’d know that the buzz was well deserved. The Name of the Wind, the story of a young orphan named Kvothe, is an easy contendor for not only Fantasy Debut of the Year, but also for Fantasy Book of the year!

So, without further adieu, we have the first half of the interview!

The Interview

Q: Pat, let’s start this off with the really important stuff:

Q: Favourite Member of the Beatles?
     A: Lennon. He might have been crazy. But he’s my kind of crazy.
Q: Favourite Meal: Breakfast, Lunch or Dinner?
     A: Isn’t dinner the same thing as lunch? Are you trying to trick me with these?
Q: Favourite Cher song?
     A: I honestly can’t think of one. You say that name and my mind is immediately overwhelmed with the image of her strutting around on a battleship wearing a thong. Was that a video, or some deeply submerged nightmare? Boy, I hope it was a video….
Q: Favourite TV show you love to hate?
     A: I don’t actually have cable. I watch TV, but only shows that I buy on DVD. As a result my TV rage factor is pretty low right now.

I do have a real distaste for those extreme makeover shows. I once caught a roommate watching one and proceeded to rant for almost 15 solid minutes about how, in watching that bullshit, she was actively contributing to the destruction of all civilization.
Q: Favourite Ice Cream Flavour?
     A: Blue moon.
Q: Favourite Pizza Topping?
     A: Singularly – Pepperoni. In tandem – pineapple, bacon, sauerkraut, and olive. Trust me. It’s good. It’s like a tasty civil war right in your mouth.
Q: Favourite Book?
     A:The Last Unicorn. Read it. Live it. Love it.
Q: Favourite Winter Olympic Sport?
     A: Luge. I would be hard pressed to explain what the actual sport is. I just like the word Luge.

Luge.
Q: Favourite Fantasy-Book-Review-Blog-Run-by-a-Guy-Named-Aidan?
     A: Heh.

Q: Alright, now that we’ve got the must-ask questions out of the way we can move on to the more pedantic questions. “The Name of the Wind” is being hailed by many as the Fantasy Debut of the year. How do you keep yourself grounded while listening to accusations such as this?

     A: Hmmm. I’ll answer this question like I answer most questions. With a little story.

The day the book finally hit the shelves I got a call from my publisher telling me they’d decided to increase the print run. That’s awesome news, as more books means more sales. Ten minutes later, I got an e-mail from a reviewer. She told me that The Name of the Wind was the best book she’d read in years.

Next I drive onto campus, and what do I find? The perfect parking spot waiting for me right by the door to my building. Not only that, but I could see from my car that there were 40 minutes left on the meter.

It was like the universe was smiling on me. Right about then I was pretty sure that I was the sum of all creation. I was like Optimus Prime, the tenth avatar of Krishna, and Steve Tyler all rolled into one, great sticky gob of awesome.

Then I tried to parallel park. I pulled in… crooked. I pulled out and tried again… turned too sharp and my tire hit the curb. Again. And again. And again. I had to take five different runs at parallel parking before I got it right. Best of all, because it was right by the building my students and fellow teachers were walking by and watching while this was going on.

That’s how I keep my feet on the ground. It’s hard for me to take myself too seriously when I’m constantly experiencing firsthand what an incredible gimp I can be.

Q: There have been many other authors to begin their career with a lot of praise… only to wind up in the bargain bin down the road. How do you plan to avoid a similar fate?

     A: Through sheer force of will? By destroying all those who oppose me? I give up. Do you have and tips on how to avoid fate?

Seriously though. Now that I understand how publishing schedules work, I can understand why many authors have the sophomore slump. A year is a long time to wait for a sequel, but it’s a short, short time to WRITE a sequel.

Luckily for everyone concerned, I’ve already written my entire trilogy. So my books probably won’t start to suck until after those three are in print.

Q: The Name of the Wind is a big book, and I’m sure the two books comprising the rest of the trilogy are the same. It’s clear you spent a lot of time preparing the story and the novels before taking it out to publishers and agents. How would you say that having a large trilogy already finished affected your ability to get a publishing deal?

     A: Hmmm. Yes. But probably not in the way you’re thinking. It didn’t make me more appealing to publishers, if that’s what you’re asking.

While fantasy is generally pretty cool with big books in series, that doesn’t mean that publishers are excited about the thought of a 250,000 word novel. It costs a lot to print a book that big. Plus, who wants to buy a whole trilogy from an absolutely unknown author? Not a lot of people were excited about that.

Think of it this way. You’re a publisher, you buy a book from a newbie author and it doesn’t sell. Irritating and financially sucky. But if you buy three books…. you’ve kinda tripled your risk. It’s important to remember that Tad Williams, George Martin, and Robert Jordan didn’t start their careers writing the big fantasy series. They started with smaller stuff.

Q: Here’s a chance to both toot your own horn and bring yourself back down to earth a little. Where do you feel your strengths and weaknesses lie as a writer?

     A: That’s a hell of a question. If I talk about what I’m good at, I seem like I’m a conceited egomaniac. Then when I answer the other half it’s like I’m giving a negative review of my own book.

Can we just skip this question and assume I’m modest and my book is awesome?

If that isn’t the most perfect question to finish off the first part of the interview I don’t know what is! Check back in just a couple of days for the concluding half where Patrick will tell you just why his book is so awesome!

EDIT: Part Two of the interview can now be found HERE!

Check out the links below if you are interested in ordering The Name of the Wind
US | Canada | UK

Alright everyone!

As promised in several posts, my interview with David Anthony Durham is finally live! I’m thrilled to have David Anthony Durham as the first ever interviewee on A Dribble of Ink! I’m currently reading his latest novel, ACACIA: The War with the Mein, and it is every bit as good as the buzz is indicating. Be sure to check back soon for my official review!

Enjoy!

The Interview:

Q: David, I would first like to thank you for taking part in this interview! It’s a great way for me and my readers to kick off the launch of A Dribble of Ink!
     A: No problem. Thanks for wanting to talk with me.

Q: First, why don’t you introduce yourself and tell us a little about your latest novel Acacia: The War With the Mein?
     A: Ah. Well, let me start with the latter and work backwards. Acacia: The War With the Mein is an epic fantasy. It’s the story of a long-ruling empire that’s attacked by a devious foe. The young children of the royal family are thrown out into hiding in the wide world and have to mature with an eye toward reuniting and fighting to gain their empire back. One of the main problems in this, though, is that the benevolent empire the children thought they were part of never existed. Acacian power was won with magical treachery and held in place illicit trades that both exploits the populace and keeps them sedated. So these royal exiles are faced with fighting to create a new empire, one based with the ideals they had as children instead of the hidden realities. It’s no easy task for many reasons.

Q: The past few years have seen a deluge of great new fantasy authors, from Scott Lynch to Joe Abercrombie to Patrick Rothfuss, how do you feel that Acacia helps you set yourself apart from all the other new fantasy authors out there?
     A: Good question. I just gave the basic plot beginning, but I think Acacia is a bit different than most epic fantasy in how I’ve written it and how things play out on the page. My three previous books were historical novels with a “literary” flavor. I’m one of those MFA-educated writer types that spent most of my college years reading literary fiction. (Don’t hold that against me, though. I’m on your side now.) This does affect my writing style. I know that might not necessarily seem like a good thing to some people, but I’d like to think it means mainly that readers will find my story complex on many levels, with carefully crafted language and complex characters that don’t act in simple ways. To me this is a literary novel, but it’s a literary novel in which tons of stuff happens, where there’s throne room treachery and ancient curses, banished sorcerers and fantastic beasts and warrior princesses. It bugs me that literary-types have forgotten that literature was once about such things, but anyway…

I think the authors you mention are great. I’ll be very happy if I can shoulder into their company because they’re doing wonderful work too. I have a different way of working within the genre, though. I’m partially writing out of respect for it, and partially writing with an eye toward adding things to it that I think have been missing. I’m also an African-American, and there aren’t many of us in the fantasy genre. I’ve spent my life balanced between a lot of different perspectives: black and white, American and European and Caribbean. So I’ve grown up seeing more than one side of any issue. That affects Acacia in that it’s not a story of obvious good and obvious evil. Both sides have valid points. Both sides commit unforgivable crimes. Both sides have characters to love and hate.

And I’d like to think that my academic education is a good thing for the book. I’ve studied writing carefully and taught at the graduate level quite a bit and written reviews, etc. All of this has meant that I’ve spent my adult life thinking about what makes writing really good and trying to write to the highest standard I could. My earlier novels, Gabriel’s Story and Walk Through Darkness, won literary awards and were New York Times Notable Books, etc. My third, Pride of Carthage, still got awards, but it also branched out into lots of foreign markets.
I’m only mentioning this because a lot of writers with similar successes would have stayed put, writing historical fiction. But my feeling about writing novels is that it’s such an amazing privilege that I have to do the most interesting, most challenging books I can each time out. The idea for Acacia got a hold of me. It felt exciting and important to add what I could to fantasy, and to encourage some “literary” readers to check out the genre too.

Q: Being an African-American fantasy writer is an unusual situation. How do you feel this has affected your first foray in the fantasy genre?
     A: I’d like to think that I bring an unforced cultural diversity to the novel. I’m of mixed Caribbean ancestry to start with, but I’m also married to a Scot and I’ve lived in Europe quite a bit. My children are mixed-race kids with a handful of passports to their name. When I crafted Acacia it was very natural to me to populate the world with diverse groups of humans. That was so interesting that I didn’t have look to hobbits or trolls for cultural diversity. The Known World of Acacia is a multicultural stew just like our actual world. I think that creates tons of potential story lines and themes, and I hope that readers from any background will like that they can open this book and spot characters and races that look like them. That’s not something I had when I was reading fantasy as a youth – with the exception of Ursula K. LeGuin. I still loved Tolkein and Alexander and Lewis, but I was reading of worlds that clearly didn’t include people that looked like me. They included people that looked like many of their readers, but not like me or other people of color. This may seem a small thing, but it’s not.

Q: How did your experience with Historical Fiction benefit your transition into writing a fantasy trilogy?
     A: The most direct comparison comes from writing Pride of Carthage. It’s a novel about the war between Carthage (Hannibal, really) and Rome. It’s set around 200BC. There was a lot of historical information to work with in terms of the machinations of the war, the switching allegiances and surprise turns of fate. There was also tons of large-scale visual stuff to imagine: elephants crossing the Alps in winter, massive battles between polyglot, multi-ethnic armies, amazing Mediterranean landscapes drenched in blood… That was great to work through. It gave me a lot to examine with as a model for how complicated large scale political and military upheavals are.

On the other hand, there’s not much information about the social history of a lot of players in the war. Like the North African tribes, for example, that had a role in this. I knew their names and the names of a few of their leaders, but not much else. So I did the best I could to create what felt like a credible version of their cultures.

Many of those cultures are incredibly far removed from us in terms of their world views, religions, and societal norms. They’re as different from us as we are from the people of an imagined world. So trying to balance what we knew about them with what I imagined with making them understandable for contemporary readers was really important.

When I began to write Acacia I had all that experience to work with. It helped me to have ideas on just what a world at war might look like, and served as a model for what sort of things I need to include to make the Known World seem real. It was great to be able to make it ALL up in Acacia, but the historian in me felt obligated to deal with all of things in my fantasy that I’d learned to deal with in my historical material. Acacia wouldn’t have been the same if I hadn’t written Pride of Carthage first.

Q: Why did you decide to change genres?
     A: Well, I’m not necessarily done with historical or literary fiction just yet. I’m about to start a job as an associate professor of creative writing in the Cal State University system. So in some ways I’m still the guy I’d been building toward being for years now. BUT, I didn’t want to forget that writing is important in lots of different ways for lots of different people. If I only wrote for the editors of the NY Times Book Review I’d be ignoring a whole lot of people, many of whom are just like people who are important to me – family and friends that don’t just read literary fiction.

Simply put, I shifted to fantasy because the idea for Acacia sunk its claws into me and wouldn’t let go until I dealt with it. So it was the story – and my desire to write it – that decided things.

Q: Can you explain how the ideas behind Acacia came together in your head?
     A: It began about ten years ago. In a very early form I modeled the Akaran children around my wife and her siblings. They are each distinct personalities, connected to each other but also flung all around the world. Something about that got me thinking of a fictional family in turmoil in an imagined world. The basic plot genesis began with that. Next, of course, came thinking about the kind of world they were going to live in, and then came building the political, social and cultural pressures that were going to drive the plot. I wanted all of these things to feel natural and true to the novel’s world, but they were influenced by my study of history. To some degree, current events and recent history shaped it too. Not in cut and dry ways, but in reminding me how difficult it can be to build alliances, to act with idealism in a cruel world, etc.

Q: The world you have created in Acacia is very culturally diverse, and moves beyond those of most stock fantasy world. Where did your inspiration for “The Known World” come from?
     A: Earth, the only real model of a world there is.

Q: One of the dangers of the Fantasy Genre is that it is full of clichés and stereotypes. What did you do to ensure that you did not fall into the same pitfalls that catch so many other authors?
     A: I just tried to right my own story in my own way. I do see writers (both published and aspiring) that really just want to write stories like somebody else’s. That’s never interested me. I’m inspired by other writers, sure, but what gets my interest is when I see cracks and gaps in what’s out there, storylines and themes that I can sink my teeth into in a manner that nobody I’ve read has before.

All four of my novels are set in genres with a lot of clichés. Gabriel’s Story is a Western, but in my case it’s a black Western with a lot of the standard roles reversed. Walk Through Darkness is a fictional runaway slave narrative, but I turn the relationship between hunted and hunter on its head. Pride of Carthage is an ancient war novel full of massive battles, but it’s more about the damage of war than it is about heroism. Acacia is a fantasy, but there’s not an elf, dwarf or dragon to be seen. I think my approach – and a focus on letting characters create their own identities and actions – means that cliché is easy to avoid.

By the way, all of these genres are enduring for reasons. They connect with something we feel – or want to feel – about ourselves and our world. My attraction to them has to do with getting at that, breaking some the clichés away and getting at new stories told within old traditions.

Q: Without spoilers (of course!), what can we expect in the future from you?
     A: My next book will be a continuation of Acacia. For one thing, know that the story expands from the Known World into the Other Lands. (The Other Lands might be the title, actually, but it’s too early to know for sure.) It deals with the Lothan Aklun and with the race of people beyond them, the Auldek, who are only mentioned briefly in the first novel. Expect to see a ratcheting up of the fantastic elements – more magic, more mythology, more bizarre creatures!

Q: David, I would like to thank you for your time, hopefully it will help satiate those who have already read your works or inspire those who haven’t to go pick up Acacia: The War with the Mein!
     A: It was a pleasure, Aidan. Thanks for your interest. And I hope that a few of your readers pick up Acacia also – if for no other reason than that I want to keep writing books like this. I need readers to be able to do so, though. So here’s to readers!

To preorder ACACIA: The War with the Mein:
US
UK
Canada

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