And this is a problem for me.
I like answering mail. I'm incredibly slow about it, because I have a thousand other things I need to be doing at the same time, and a message that just says "thanks for writing books" but isn't from a teenager or asking questions may just be smiled at and tucked into my files. At the same time, these questions make me dread opening my inbox.
How do I say "no" without coming off as an arrogant bitch? How do I explain that these are questions I can't answer, because it isn't fair to all the readers who didn't ask me? And most of all, how do I explain that I can't answer because I don't want to lie to you?
Things change. As far as I'm concerned, if something isn't in a book that you can buy on the shelf, it isn't set in stone. I mean that literally: while there have been very, very few last-minute changes, there have been at least two instances where the ARC came out, I did my ceremonial "I will now read the ARC to see how it feels as a book," and have then called my publisher in tears, begging that something be fixed. Even the ARCs can change. If you had asked me who the important characters in the Toby series were going to be before the first book came out, my list would not have included Quentin, Raj, April, Walther, Etienne, or Danny. Danny actually didn't exist until after Rosemary and Rue had been purchased by DAW.
If I say "oh, don't worry, X is happening in book Y," there's a good chance I'm wrong. The original villain of One Salt Sea isn't in the book. At all. The original first chapter of An Artificial Night didn't even make it to my publisher. And those are just the examples I can give that don't come with associated spoilers.
It's really difficult. I have a lot of trouble navigating these questions, and no matter what I say, I wind up feeling like I'm being mean. I'm not, really. I just don't want to spoil any surprises, and I definitely don't want to tell any accidental lies. So please, don't ask those questions. I can't answer them, and it makes me want to cry when they just keep coming.
Bah. Writing is hard.
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January 12 2012, 16:10:16 UTC 5 years ago
At the same time, anybody who doesn't accept some form of "I can't tell you that yet" when asking an author for what amount to spoilers for upcoming books, anybody who would take that "no" as arrogant bitchiness, Just Doesn't Get It, and that reflects on that person, not on you.
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Solved!
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Ooh, I so want this to happen. (Sorry, Thailand, nothing personal.)
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January 12 2012, 16:25:12 UTC 5 years ago
:-)
January 12 2012, 17:26:06 UTC 5 years ago
I think of that (horse's digestion) every time I fix oatmeal. (but only because of an episode of Bones).
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January 12 2012, 16:27:41 UTC 5 years ago
What worked quite well in my case, was to say something like "I'd hate to spoil you -- it's classified at this point in time." Or "Come now, you don't really want me to tell you that here. Not when you could read it properly if you just wait a bit..."
Admittedly, that's a little easier on the scale of fanfic and fic readers, but the tone of such as these might help a bit.
January 12 2012, 19:34:55 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 16:29:54 UTC 5 years ago
And even a simple "I don't know" or "I can't say" isn't bitchy, it's simple fact. Your books are your business and your living. As one wouldn't ask a top Apple exec what the next i-product is and expect an answer, so one shouldn't ask an author. (sorry for th epoor grammar, it's the only way I could make sense.
January 12 2012, 19:35:45 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 16:31:45 UTC 5 years ago
Ya...not very helpful...I know. :)
January 12 2012, 16:42:47 UTC 5 years ago
/threadjack
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January 12 2012, 19:36:12 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 16:34:57 UTC 5 years ago Edited: January 12 2012, 16:35:46 UTC
I think that a few others have made good suggestions for responses. I would add that you could point these people at this post as well. I think you make excellent points here.
Also, thank you for writing books and this blog.
January 12 2012, 19:36:24 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 17:41:46 UTC 5 years ago
"You expect my answer to follow some Reimann Reason?"
Seriously, though. I treat my novel writing like I'm playing a D&D game, only I get to control my characters -and- the scenario and the plot. Most of the time, I don't know who the murderer is in a murder mystery, or how the heroes will win in the end -- or IF they win in the end. If someone asks me where a certain character is going to be, or if they find out just who the eyeball they found at the bottom of a mine on Mars belongs to, I just smile and say, "I'll figure it out when I actually write the scene. Until then, your guess is as good as mine."
"How can you not know? You're the one writing this!"
I always explain it like this:
When I'm running my RPG, sometimes the best plot twists come from the characters themselves -- I have them now trained to say: 'Oh gods, I just gave the GM a horrible idea. He's SMILING'. I have an idea of where I'd -like- the adventure to go, but I don't believe in railroading the PCs into a spot where they feel like they didn't have a choice. So my characters in my stories work out the same way. Sometimes a minor character takes off in a completely different direction than I expected, and then the story plot follows them around because I like them better than my main character. Other times, I don't like my main character as much as I thought I would, or they develop differently than I initially thought them to. Still other times, some unplotted part of their past gets blurted out in response to a question another character asks them.
Writing isn't like recording a song. You have the general musical theme in your head somewhere, but the actual lyrics don't get written until you get to that particular verse, and sometimes you scribble out bits to put -better- lyrics in. That's part of what filk is about -- you keep the tune, but you make new lyrics.
-Traveller
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January 12 2012, 17:18:49 UTC 5 years ago
What you say makes perfect sense to me. Your characters have taken on a life of their own, as you write, they reveal matters to you.
I love the fact that you are an organic writer, allowing the characters their voices instead of forcing them to dance to your outline. I love the thought of you sitting there, busily writing and suddenly having an epiphany as it all comes clear.
Personally, with regard to Tybalt, I'm betting he isn't entirely sure himself how long he's loved her and I'm entirely certain that Toby doesn't entirely know it even now. I hate to say this because it makes me feel bad about myself, but I was glad that Connor didn't survive One Salt Sea because ... I really didn't like him and I didn't think that he was good for Toby. Too comfortable, you know? He didn't challenge her enough. When he died, I thought 'great! now Tybalt has a chance!'
January 12 2012, 18:27:45 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 17:19:23 UTC 5 years ago
I agree with the suggestion of polite refusal, with an option for canned responses. Actually, the two sentences starting with "If something isn't in a book..." make a pretty good explanation of why you can't answer some questions.
January 12 2012, 19:37:35 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 17:31:19 UTC 5 years ago
I strongly suspect that evolving a cheery catchphrase for this is how professional writers deal with it, so that even though you're repeating the same thing over and over again, it's charming. I am reminded of River Song's constant refrain of "Spoilers, sweetie!"
You are not obligated to spill the beans on your character creation before the proper time of unveiling. Just because people now have unprecedented access to their favorite authors doesn't mean the rules have changed. You still have to wait for the book to come out, or for the author to release a chapter or short story in-universe. Just like it's always been.
*sending strength*
January 12 2012, 19:38:00 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 17:32:59 UTC 5 years ago
This is true, and a tough one: and how do you deal with changing things when you write short stories in one of your novel universes? I've had a bit of that problem with the novel I'm working on now--I've sold a short story in its world, and as I engage more deeply in the novel-edit, I find myself thinking, I really should change/clarify this, but I have to keep it consistent with the story...
January 12 2012, 18:09:52 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 17:33:46 UTC 5 years ago
...although I guess that's just another way of saying RAFO; but if you make the acronym obscure enough, true fans will be rewarded by searching for its meaning. :-P
As an author, you _are_ allowed to keep certain things to yourself (frustrating as that might be to the rest of us).
January 12 2012, 19:38:47 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 17:43:03 UTC 5 years ago
"Dear :
Thank you for your question about (X). I wish I could answer you..
However, these are questions I can't answer, because I don't want to lie to you?
Things change. As far as I'm concerned, if something isn't in a book that you can buy on the shelf, it isn't set in stone. I mean that literally: while there have been very, very few last-minute changes, there have been at least two instances where the ARC came out, I did my ceremonial "I will now read the ARC to see how it feels as a book," and have then called my publisher in tears, begging that something be fixed. Even the ARCs can change. If you had asked me who the important characters in the Toby series were going to be before the first book came out, my list would not have included Quentin, Raj, April, Walther, Etienne, or Danny. Danny actually didn't exist until after Rosemary and Rue had been purchased.
If I say "oh, don't worry, X is happening in book Y," there's a good chance I'm wrong. The original villain of One Salt Sea isn't in the book. At all. The original first chapter of An Artificial Night didn't even make it to my publisher. And those are just the examples I can give that don't come with associated spoilers.
All I can ask is that you keep reading, and if it fits the story, maybe I will be able to answer your question in the future.."
January 12 2012, 19:38:57 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 18:22:09 UTC 5 years ago
Because 'are you going to take on (pick a title) as your next project?' Required such. If there were in negotiations for that license or not. He'd tangled enough times with the legal system over the finer points, and he'd gotten very good at it.
Very good. Glint in the eye, swagger in the stance and humble smile. I'm pretty sure that I'd be taking a page from that approach, were it my problem to navigate.
You? You're the one with the stories. They're the ones with questions that will be unanswered and as such, there will be some letdowns. A 'd'aw, thanks but I can't tell you' is plenty nice, I think. The rest is up to them.
January 12 2012, 19:39:12 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 19:46:08 UTC 5 years ago
I have my own questions about Toby. You know what? Those questions make for great wine-and Doritos-soaked debates among fellow fans (yeah, we throw a classy party at my house). When in doubt, don't pester the author, especially when she's as gracious and fan-friendly as you are.
Correction: pester George R.R. Martin. Although I guess he's got another 28 year free pass until the next book. ;)
February 8 2012, 16:32:19 UTC 5 years ago
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January 12 2012, 22:46:27 UTC 5 years ago
Please, do not be worrying about sounding mean.
It's a serious question, and you are taking it seriously.
But there really is a point where you can't please everyone.
This all reminds me of the readers' letters section in the Superman comics of my youth.
E..g.: "You showed Clark Kent going into the phone booth in a blue suit, but after Superman saved Lois, Clark comes back wearing a brown suit.
Did he go home and change, or does he have some secret stash of clothing at the Daily Planet Office?"
And so on, indefinitely.
In those long-ago, pre-interwebs, days I thought this obsession with the minutia of someone's creative vision was pretty weird.
Little did I know....
My thoughts?
This kind of hedging and filling of the world of a story is ultimately the stuff of fanfiction, which at its best exists to fill these vacuums, because no writer can fill in every detail about an invented world.
There is always going to be some corner you haven't gotten to.
(I haven't even looked, but I am sure there must be scads of Toby-goes-to-my-high-school and the rest of it out there.)
If you haven't filled in a spot, people may go play there, off-canon, as it were, or may just Want To Know this or that factoid.
Readers will have that basic Want to know when stories really work for them.
When a writer makes a world sufficiently enticing, we want to go off the limited territory of the story and poke about in the undefined spaces.
But later a writer may need just those very open spaces.
You may want to tell us about the zombie frog in the biology lab, and the resulting amphibian phobia.
Maybe someday, to fill your copious spare time, you will give us Tybalt's sense of the birth and growth of his feelings.
If you need it somewhere, if it fits, when it fits.
(BTW, I had an English teacher from the deep south in ninth grade when we read Romeo and Juliet, and hence always hear in my head a poly-syllabic Ta-Eye-Ba-Ault. almost a full glottal stop in the last syllable. I would give a lot to have that version of the name out of my head!)
Or maybe, Tybalt's feelings just aren't any more clear to him than they are to the reader who asked about it.
Sometimes the empty spaces are there for the reader, and are a part of the story.
You've already provided as much information as anyone would have who doesn't live either in Tybalt's mind, or yours.
Every author leaves lacunae, even the most prodigious of world-builders.
What were Aragorn's days as a Ranger like?
Where, exactly, does Gandalf go to research stuff - does Gondor have a library system?
And tell me these, and I'll have a dozen more, endlessly.
No matter what, you literally cannot paint in all the corners.
For one thing, life is short, art long.
For another, you may want that space for something else, someday, and don't want to have pointlessly given up the freedom to do with it as you will.
Um, so is there a short polite way to say all this?
I dunno: "I'm not sure either. It'll turn up in a story when I know."
February 7 2012, 18:13:06 UTC 5 years ago
January 12 2012, 23:35:02 UTC 5 years ago
February 7 2012, 18:12:26 UTC 5 years ago
<3
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