Alex
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
Hello! I loved the Sharing Knife and Chalion series, but Sharing Knife really resonated with me. It's such a unique world and I've never read one like it. While I'm sure you get these questions all the time, will you explore the Sharing Knife universe further? Perhaps maybe a 50 years into the future or something. I'd love to see how Dag and Fawn, and their children, change their world. Thanks!
Lois McMaster Bujold
I have nothing new going on with The Sharing Knife universe at this time. I don't rule anything out, because I've discovered my backbrain can ambush me unexpectedly, but certainly nothing soon.
Dag and Fawn's tale feels told to me (and at great length, too.) In general what I need to start a story, and what I want to explore during the course of it, is not a setting or an idea, but a character or characters. Once I have the characters, well, the question of "what ideas can challenge this person?" brings things into line nicely.
This is rather the opposite of some classic SF tropes, where the characters are got up to display the ideas. The clearest example being where some random Redshirt is sacrificed to demonstrate the capabilities of the alien weapon; what's most important about the scene is the weapon, not the person. This is also done on a much larger scale and less obviously not just with alien weapons, but with all sorts of things up to and including political ideas. My brain does not seem to work that way. So what I need to start a new project is not an idea, but a person (one who, for whatever reason, matters to me) to whom that idea will matter.
Ta, L.
I have nothing new going on with The Sharing Knife universe at this time. I don't rule anything out, because I've discovered my backbrain can ambush me unexpectedly, but certainly nothing soon.
Dag and Fawn's tale feels told to me (and at great length, too.) In general what I need to start a story, and what I want to explore during the course of it, is not a setting or an idea, but a character or characters. Once I have the characters, well, the question of "what ideas can challenge this person?" brings things into line nicely.
This is rather the opposite of some classic SF tropes, where the characters are got up to display the ideas. The clearest example being where some random Redshirt is sacrificed to demonstrate the capabilities of the alien weapon; what's most important about the scene is the weapon, not the person. This is also done on a much larger scale and less obviously not just with alien weapons, but with all sorts of things up to and including political ideas. My brain does not seem to work that way. So what I need to start a new project is not an idea, but a person (one who, for whatever reason, matters to me) to whom that idea will matter.
Ta, L.
More Answered Questions
William Lim
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Squid Game episode 4 gave me flashbacks to Borders of Inifinity's Cetagandan prison camp setup. Your thoughts?
(hide spoiler)]
Norine Luker
asked
Lois McMaster Bujold:
I am suffering from Pen and Des deprivation. Sigh. So since I need to ask you a question, now in this period of your life, where you are hopefully enjoying the well deserved fruits of your labor, what sort of things have moved you to pick up a pen? (sounds better than go to the computer.)
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Feb 22, 2015 05:36PM · flag
Mar 23, 2015 10:54AM · flag