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y hu Forums a Fictionxxxgirl i Fictionxxxgirl y’s ruthless productivity. I think I’ve done a much more comprehensive job of quantifying serrin flaws, and making them just another race and civilisation of people (as opposed to angels from heaven, unexplained and inexplainable) than a lot of fantasy does.
What other authors have you encountered through your own reading that similarly put effort in to their elves (or elfish analogue)?
I’m not much of a reviewer or analyst of other peoples work, I’ll leave that to experts like you! But again, I always liked how CJ Cherryh would create a race of people in SF or Fantasy who seem rather perfect at first glance, then ask ‘hang on, this apparent ‘perfection’ is going to cause a lot of problems further along, if you question how things actually work…’
What’s your favourite pizza topping and why?
I’m not much of a pizza person. I might be more of a pizza person if pizza in most places were more like the Italian original, and less like the American ‘death by cheese and carbohydrates’ version.
Who is your favourite character in the ‘A Trial of Blood and Steel’ series and why?
Well Sasha, obviously. If your main character isn’t your favourite, you’re going to struggle to write the series because you’ll be spending more time on less favourite characters. Not everyone will like Sasha all of the time, and therein lies her charm. What she is, is incredibly hard to be. Not just a warrior at her level, but as a woman in a man’s world. I think in most professions, when you look at individuals who have achieved something ridiculously difficult on an individual level – say number one tennis player, solo mountaineer, great musician, some achievement that has been all your own effort and not just the result of other people promoting and liking you — those people are incredibly driven. And as such they tend to be self-centred and somewhat egotistical, not always in a bad way, I think it’s possible to have a very high self-regard and not think everyone else is beneath you. It just means that they do their own thing first, and think about other people’s opinions last.
So to be such a tough nut, Sasha has to be completely uncompromising on many things, but still remain loveable. I think she is. I’ve seen some reader opinions from folks who didn’t like her so much because they found her pushy. Well yeah, this is a person who would think the physical and psychological workload of most pro athletes is soft, and is a largely fearless trained killer. Sure she’s pushy. But she’s also a big softy; with her horses, with her preferred siblings, and with her lover. And she’s super expressive, she’ll snarl one moment and laugh the next, and doesn’t mince her opinions for anyone… which makes for very entertaining moments when most characters would have shown some etiquette and deferred what they’re thinking, but Sasha comes right out and says it, and devil take the consequences. Given all of which, it’s hard to imagine a more fun character to write.
Where do you like to write?
I’d love to write in a big, quiet study with all the latest technology and tasteful furnishings, with huge windows showing a wonderful view of mountains or something magnificently natural, with a host of servants outside my door to bring me excellent food and drink whenever I want. Unfortunately I don’t have that, so anywhere moderately quiet and comfortable will do.
Do you listen to music? What sort?
All sorts. For writing, nothing that gets in the way of thinking. Nothing with intrusive lyrics, usually things I’ve heard many times before, or just movie soundtracks, because that’s what soundtracks were created to do, to make backing sounds that complement rather than obscure the visuals. My favourite is alternative rock. Anything with instruments; I can’t stand the lack of instrumentality in most modern pop music. But I’ll listen to anything instrumental, jazz, classical (western or Indian), whatever.
Having travelled widely, where is your favourite place to travel and why?
France. It’s a very unoriginal answer I know. But my favourite thing to do in France is to cycle and live off a credit card from one hotel to the next. Physically France is the most beautiful place I’ve seen, and everything is on cycling scale – you’ll have mountains and valleys one moment, then plains, then forests, then rivers, and every five or ten Ks yet another beautiful little village with great food and postcard settings. Southern France especially. France’s cities can be much more of a hassle, I sometimes say it’s the most advanced third world nation I’ve ever been to… but you get into the countryside and everything becomes delightfully simple.
OK, you are obviously a big sports fan. What are your favourite sports?
Favourite spectator sport – Australian Rules Football. It has everything, it’s fast, it’s spectacular, teamwork is vital but there’s still room for individuals to shine, it requires lots of brute strength but you can’t be good at it without serious skill and intelligence and most of the best players are small-to-midsized, and it can get technically incredibly complex but sometimes the simplest things are the most effective. So it’s filled with contradictions and complexities, just like real societies and real life.
Then I also like tennis, basketball and cricket. In fact, I’m not THAT huge a sports fan, because a lot of the world’s biggest sports (soccer, golf) I find pretty dull. But the ones I like, I like a lot.
Are you a fan of the Tour de France?
Of course! The scenery’s like a travel show, the speed on the descents can be like a thrill ride, the uphill climbs (where races are really decided) are like Olympic middle distance events where everyone’s killing themselves suffering for the prize but there can be only one, and the tactics are more complex than chess, and far more fluid. Plus an Australian won last year, so what’s not to like?
Amazon.com have recently announced that J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter books will soon be available to borrow through the Amazon Kindle Owners’ Lending Library.
To take advantage of this offer you must first be a member of the Amazon Prime programme, which UK residents can join for an annual membership fee of £49. Once a member, Kindle owners are able to choose from over 145,000 titles to borrow for free as frequently as a book a month, with no due dates. Titles include over 100 current and former New York Times Best Sellers.
So, in short, you need to own an Amazon Kindle and be a member of Amazon Prime programme. So, in reality, the books are not really but if you are a regular or voracious reader the weekly cost of just 94p should equate to quite a saving. And it should be mentioned that there are other benefits to be an Amazon Prime member besides borrowing ebooks – there is plenty of information on their website.
On June 19 2012, Amazon Prime members will be able to read all seven Harry Potter books (in English, French, Italian, German and Spanish) for free on their Kindle. Amazon have purchased an exclusive license from J.K. Rowling’s Pottermore to make the addition of these titles possible to the Kindle Owners’ Lending Library.
Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com said, "Over a year, borrowing the Harry Potter books, plus a handful of additional titles, can alone be worth more than the $79 cost of Prime or a Kindle. The Kindle Owners’ Lending Library also has an innovative feature that’s of great benefit for popular titles like Harry Potter – unlimited supply of each title – you never get put on a waiting list."
Hopefully Amazon and JK Rowling
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