Author Q&A with Michael Carroll Michael Carroll lives in Dublin, Ireland. His work has been translated into French, German, Italian, Swedish and Polish. In addition to his novels, he has published many award-winning short stories. Q. Why superheroes? Why not write about wizards or secret agents or something equally exciting? A. Simple: Iâ??ve always loved superheroes! Everyone--I donâ??t care what they might tell you--everyone has at some time or another daydreamed about having extraordinary abilities. Who wouldnâ??t like to be stronger, faster or smarter than everyone else? Iâ??ve often been asked why I didnâ??t write this story as a comic-book: after all, superheroes and comics go together like strawberries and cream, Laurel and Hardy, peanut-butter and jellyâ?¦ But thatâ??s precisely why I chose not to write the story as a comic-book: superheroes in comics arenâ??t exactly a rare occurrence. In books, however, there are (or were, when I first started writing the series) almost no superheroes. I quickly discovered that thereâ??s a good reason for that: itâ??s hard to write prose superhero stories! Once I realized how tough it was, I knew I had to do itâ?¦ You donâ??t learn much by always taking the easy path. Q. How does Super Human fit in with your Quantum Prophecy series? A. Super Human is a prequel to the Quantum Prophecy series; itâ??s set about 23 years before the main plotline of the QP books, which is about thirteen years before all the older superheroes (and supervillains!) lost their powers. Super Human is a stand-alone story: itâ??s not necessary to know anything about other books. At the same time, itâ??s also designed to act as a sort of second jumping-on point for the seriesâ?¦ readers can start with Book 1 (The Awakening) or with Super Human. Iâ??ve been careful not to put too much in Super Human that might act as a spoiler for the other books! Q. So, did you always plan to write a prequel? A. Not as such, no. The whole QP series has been carefully worked out (my notes on the series run to around 250,000 words--about three times the length of Super Human), a process that took many years to complete, and--taking an idea from J. Michael Straczynski, the creator of the TV show Babylon 5--I built in several trap-doors. These allow me to completely drop certain characters and plotlines should that become necessary. One of the first trap-doors Iâ??d built in led directly to Super Human: the story of Krodin, the first superhuman. Originally Iâ??d planned that Krodinâ??s tale would be told in a later book through a series of flashbacks, but when then opportunity came to write a stand-alone novel connected with the series, I realised that Krodinâ??s tale would be ideal suited for that purpose. It introduces the world of these superhuman beings and shows us the origins of many of them. Q. How do you actually write a book? A. Every writer develops his or her own approach. Some writers come up with a strong opening and then figure out the rest of the story as they go along. That doesnâ??t work for me: Iâ??ve tried it a couple of times and the results wereâ?¦ pretty bad! My approach is the opposite: I plan my stories in great detail in advance, creating a sort of blueprint for the tale, then, when Iâ??m satisfied with that, I write the first draft. Once thatâ??s done, I set it aside for a week or two, then come back to it armed with a red pen. Iâ??ve trained myself to be pretty ruthless at this stage: anything thatâ??s not working is marked, whether itâ??s a simple phrase or a whole sub-plot. Then I begin the second draft, and again I attack it with the metaphorical red pen. The first approach--making it up as you go along--has been described by Stephen King (who uses that approach) as akin to archaeology: the story exists, buried in the ground, and itâ??s up to the writer to uncover it. However, Iâ??ve always felt that writing is more like sculpture: the story only exists because the writer creates it from the raw materials. The fact is, no matter how big or impressive a book is, every story starts with an idea. But an idea is not a story, no more than an acorn is an oak tree. The writerâ??s job is to turn that acorn into an oak tree, or--in some cases--a forest. For example: the Quantum Prophecy series started from a pretty basic ideaâ?¦ Like all story-seeds, it was a â??What If?â? ideaâ?¦ What if the most powerful person in the world was only thirteen years old? Now, as it stands that idea could describe a heck of a lot of books, so I had to build on itâ?¦ Why is this character the most powerful person in the world? What do I mean by â??powerfulâ?? I decided that my central character would be a superhuman, because--as I mentioned earlier--superheroes hadnâ??t really been done in prose form (not counting novelisations of movies or novels based on existing comic-book characters). Another reason I chose to make my character a superhero is that I really, really didnâ??t want to write about wizards or magic! Now we have the most powerful person in the world, and he (or she) is a superheroâ?¦ But we still donâ??t know why heâ??s the most powerful. So, suppose that there used to be other superheroes but they all lost their powers for some reason, then years later one of their kids starts to develop superhuman abilities. We still donâ??t have an actual story, but weâ??re getting closerâ?¦! For each book this process continues--often for many months--until the time is right to write the story. Q. Whatâ??s going to happen in the next book? A. Oh, all sorts of exciting things! (What, you really think Iâ??m going to tell you whatâ??s coming up? No chance--I never give spoilers!) Q. Who are your influences? A. Pretty much every book or comic book Iâ??ve ever read has probably influenced me in some way. But my greatest influence is the science fiction legend Harry Harrison. One of Harryâ??s books--The Stainless Steel Rat--was serialised in the British weekly comic 2000 AD. I loved the story and bought the novel. Itâ??s a cracking tale of a far future, when mankind has spread to the stars. Careful genetic screening has more or less bred all criminal elements out of humanityâ?¦ But there are exceptions, and James Bolivar diGriz is one of those exceptions! Heâ??s a crook, a con-man, a thief--and in the first book heâ??s recruited by the mysterious Special Corps because thereâ??s someone out there attempting to start an interplanetary warâ?¦ Set a thief to catch a thief! In the following years I managed to get a copy of every book Harry Harrison has ever written, and they are all tremendous fun. Other influences include Terry Pratchett, Douglas Adams, Tanith Lee, Stephen King, Orson Scott Card, Carl Hiaasen, Christopher Fowler, James Morrow, Bob Shaw, Alan Moore, John Wagner, Stan Lee, J. Michael Straczynski, Joss Whedon, Alan Plater, and of course my friend Michael Scott (author of The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel). Q. I want to be a writer too! What should I do? A. Write! Simple as that. If you want to be a writer, you write. If you donâ??t write, youâ??re not a writer. And you need to read, too. Read everything, every kind of book you can find. If itâ??s something you donâ??t think youâ??re going to like, read it anyway (if you only ever read the sort of books you think youâ??ll like, the only thing youâ??ll learn is how to write the same sort of book over and over). When you come up with a good idea for a book or a story, write it down. Donâ??t tell anyone else (not even other writers) about your idea. If you do, theyâ??ll either tell you that itâ??s already been done, or youâ??ll have got the story out of your system and you wonâ??t feel the need to write it. Equally important: Finish what you start. This is of course true for everything in life, but itâ??s especially true for writers. Very few unfinished books are ever published. Q. But the day-to-day process of writing is really tough! Isnâ??t there an easier way? A. If there was, Iâ??d have discovered it a long time ago! Q. Iâ??ve got a great idea for a book but I donâ??t know how to write it. So, Iâ??ll tell you the idea, you write the book, and weâ??ll split the money. A. Sure! But letâ??s split the money fairly: Coming up with the basic idea is .0001% of the work, so youâ??ll get .0001% of the money. This means that if the book makes $10,000 your share will be one cent. Q. How did you get started as a writer? A. I sort of fell into this almost by accident. I suspect that happens to most writers! Iâ??ve always been a voracious reader and somewhere along the way I decided that I wanted to be a writer. But, of course, I wasnâ??t a writer then: â??Sayinâ?? itâ??s so donâ??t make it so.â? In other words, wanting to be a writer is not the same thing as being a writer. A writer writes. A wanna-be writer talks about the writing he or she is going to do one day. I was a wanna-be writer until I was about twenty-two, when I joined the Irish Science Fiction Association and began to submit short stories for their fiction magazine FTL. Iâ??d had quite a few short stories published by the time I met Michael Scott in 1991. Even then, Michael was an accomplished full-time writer, and he encouraged me to attempt a full-length novel. Long story short: I was working in the software industry and wrote many books in my spare time (and even had some of them published), then in 1999 the company for which I was working laid off a whole bunch of us, and I decided to give full-time writing a go. So far, itâ??s worked out pretty well, but I wouldnâ??t recommend my path as suitable for anyone else. Iâ??m very lucky in that my wife has a very good job and kept us afloat in the â??leanâ? years--such as the year I earned less than a thousand dollars from my writing! (A thousand dollars might seem like a large sum, but break it down: thatâ??s twenty dollars a week, and for an eighty-hour week that comes to 25 cents per hourâ?¦ and I didnâ??t even earn that much!)
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