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The Great Science Fiction Writers Christmas Stuffing '03
An all-star lineup of authors - including Tom Holt, Robert Jordan,
Juliet E. McKenna, Laurell K. Hamilton, David Brin and Tad Williams
- interviewed with a few seasonally pertinent questions. Ho ho ho.
Which famous SFF figure
(writer or character) would you most like to bring to a Christmas
party? And which of your own creations would you invite to pull
a cracker or two?
Tom Holt: 'On the assumption that
the Christmas dinner party is our regular family bash, I'd invite
Aragorn; on the grounds that after months living on stale lembas,
liberated Orc field rations (probably pot noodles) and the occasional
spit-roasted squirrel, even our version of turkey & sprouts
would be welcome. I wouldn't invite any of my characters, not ever.
We aren't on speaking terms.'
Robert Jordan: 'Robert Heinlein and
J.R.R. Tolkien. I'd go for Mark Twain and Jane Austen, but you did
say SFF. And writers are, one hopes, more fascinating than any of
their characters because they contain all of their characters, who
might be let out if the wine flows freely. Heinlein and Tolkien
were two very interesting and very different men, with a few similarities
I believe, and it is the precise mesh of differences and similarities
that make for brilliant dinner table conversation.
If I could have a third, I'd make it John M. Ford. I know exactly
what sort of dinner companion Mike is, and his presence at a table
with Heinlein and Tolkien would guarantee an evening of marvellous
conversation. Between the three of them, they'd make sure that everybody
sparkled, if only by being pulled along in their slipstream.'
Max
Barry: 'I'd definitely take Philip K. Dick, my literary
hero. Of course, given his, uh, unique personality, I'd probably
have to keep him away from everybody else. At least, until the party
really got going.
Then he'd be yelling that aliens had dressed up as crab grass in
order to kill us all, but he might not be the only one. From my
own books, I'd bring along Jennifer Government - that barcode tattoo
would be an instant conversation-starter. Also, if there was a need
for crowd control, she's perfect.'
Juliet E. McKenna: 'Hmmm - I'd be
looking for someone who'd help get a party going, so I reckon Meriadoc
Brandybuck would just about fit the bill. From my own work? I'd
like to see a party get going, not get totally out of hand, so I'd
opt for Charoleia, who could be relied on for entertaining gossip
without the possibility of random magic or a fight breaking out.'
Laurell K. Hamilton: I think Robert
E. Howard for one. First, he was one of the writers that inspired
me as youth. Second, I'd love to see if I could talk him out of
committing suicide at such an early age. I've always wondered what
else he would have written, and made of his life, he had not let
despair destroy him. Of my own characters?
Well, how could I choose, and if I did, would everybody else be
mad at me? As for writers, maybe Robert Louis Stevenson, gotta love
a writer that wrote both Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and Treasure Island.
Or Louisa May Alcotte. She was a hero of mine when I was young,
and an inspiration. She wrote a great deal more than Little Women,
though most people don't seem to know that.
Ian Graham: 'My chosen dinner guest
would be H.P. Lovecraft - as long as he promised to tell a few eerie
tales. Stories of the supernatural - or, in Lovecraft's case, the
supernormal - almost always create a cosy, convivial mood. So I
wish you all a Cthulhu Christmas . . . In one way or another, most
of my characters are reprehensible. I wouldn't invite any of them
to a dinner party. In particular I would strenuously avoid bringing
Ballas along. He'd guzzle every drop of booze then steal away with
the presents!'
Kate Elliott: 'Mary Shelley, arguably
the mother of us all. I would invite the Mary of the later, less
"notorious" years, the woman who wrote The Last Man and supported
her son with her writing. From my own creations, I would bring Brother
Fortunatus, faithful acolyte of Sister Rosvita. He's smart, he's
funny, he's clever, and he's a bit of a gossip - that is, he's always
entertaining and agile in social situations.'
Steve Cockayne: 'It would have to
be Mervyn Peake - he was such an elusive, enigmatic figure, and
his 'Gormenghast' series has been more of an inspiration to me than
anything else I can name. And, of course, he was one of the few
authors to have been his own illustrator - making his vision all
the more complete.
From my own characters I would choose Laurel Greening. Although
she's treacherous and dangerous and self-seeking,, she's marvellous
company and has plenty of tales to tell. I'd just have to be extra
careful not to invite her home with me!'
Tad Williams: 'Previous to being a
grown-up guy I would probably have opted for some incredibly good-looking
and devastatingly clever female heroine type, but since I already
married one I suppose I'd go for something different here - historical
value, perhaps, a la H. G. Wells, or self-improvement with Michael
Valentine Smith (protagonist of Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange
Land).
Since he taught all those other people how to do magic with their
brains, perhaps Mike could do that for me as well while we're waiting
for dessert.'
David Brin: 'My hero, who would have
been a sci fi writer if he did not reinvent this world, would be
Ben Franklin, the guiding force who turned the theories of the Enlightenment
into the gritty, practical stuff of today. It is told that any party
that invited Ben had to hire armed guards to keep out all the gatecrashers
who wanted to take part.
He may not have written SF per se. He simply made it possible -
and permissible for the rest of us to do it. As to my own characters
... would dolphins actually be welcome, stomping about on their
mechanical walkers and wolfing down whole barrels of raw squid,
between expositions of zenlike haiku? I'd love to meet such people,
but I'd much rather attend their celebrations than invite them to
ours. I mean, really.'
What Christmas trimming would you demand
to be included on the menu?
Elizabeth Moon: 'No demands: if I
don't cook it, I don't make demands on the person who does. Any
large hunk of protein (ham, goose, turkey, roast of beef) will do.
But I do like something on the dessert tray to be chocolate...'
Tom Holt: 'The brains of my enemies,
chopped up fine, served on the half-skull with a sharpened sprig
of holly viciously stabbed into each one. Proverbially best eaten
cold.' (Ezine backed away from Tom rather quickly at this point!)
Kate Elliott: 'As the author of a
six volume trilogy I feel obliged to ask for two items: red cabbage
- called rød kaal in Danish - cooked down with apple cider
vinegar and currant jelly, and my absolute favorite of all time,
peber nødder; these tiny, hazulnut-sized cookies are made
with butter, cream, flour, sugar, egg, and a blend of cinnamon,
cloves, ginger, and nutmeg.'
Ken MacLeod: 'Cranberry sauce. It's
the only thing that makes turkey edible. It's not an accident that
there are about 360 days in the year we don't eat turkey.'
David Brin: ' The mind reaches ...
how about the seasoning that Valentine Michael Smith added to the
soup at the end of Stranger in a Strange Land? No, I'm not that
strange. I'll settle for some Dune spice and Niven's Boosterspice,
the better to see you all with... till I'm one hundred and eighty.'
Steve Cockayne: 'Science Fiction characters
often seem to live on vitamin pills and dehydrated food, but Fantasy
characters generally have a much better time at the table. My characters
have been accused of eating too much cake, so I'm sure they'll enjoy
a piece of Christmas cake. My personal weakness is for chocolate,
but I've managed to keep it out of my books so far.'
Martin Millar: 'I'm not a big eater.
Does whisky count as a Christmas trimming? If so I'd like a bottle
of Glenmorangie on the table, to finish off the meal. Possibly we
could put a little santa hat on top of the bottle...'
And what SFF movie would you all collapse
in front of after the feast?
Ken MacLeod: 'Star Wars, of course.
This is Christmas, after all.'
Robert Jordan: 'Not one, I fear. The
Fellowship of the Ring and the Two Towers, back to back, in the
expanded versions. Pull an all-nighter over brandy and cigars. Mr
Heinlein would be fascinated by the special effects and how they
were done, as well as by the story, of course. Mr Tolkien could
grumble about what the movies had done to his books.
I've never known a writer who didn't enjoy grumbling, at least
in private, about what the movies had done to his book. And Mike
and I could just enjoy. Maybe we'd toss in Pirates of the Caribbean
and make it a true all-nighter. I went to a charity Halloween ball
as Captain Black Jack Sparrow (hair beads by Elise Mattheson), and
I am told the resemblance between me and Johnny Depp was amazing.
Especially around the eyes. The eyes took two women half an hour
to get done!'
Andy Remic: 'Blade Runner, The Thing,
The Fifth Element and Starship Troopers back-to-back, enjoying the
huge comedy social moments in each film'
Max Barry: 'I'd say The Matrix, but
then afterwards we might get melancholy about how a terrific movie
was spoiled by such a crappy sequel. So Aliens. No, wait, the same
thing applies. Star Wars, then. No, damn! Okay, I'm going with Invasion
of the Body Snatchers. If nothing else, it'll push Philip K. Dick
right over the edge.'
Terry Brooks: 'Is there any question?
Nine hours plus of The Lord of the Rings!'
Martin Millar: 'We'd watch the Buffy
musical episode, and sing along...'
Tad Williams: 'Even though it's about
the wrong holiday I think the SFF movie most in tune with Christmas
is actually Groundhog Day. It's a fabulous comedy, and one of the
few films to use an SFF trope like being stuck in one day over and
over and take it seriously - really work it through all its permutations
and likely outcomes.
Plus the message itself is very similar to Dickens' A Christmas
Carol in that it's about being placed outside time for a chance
to achieve redemption. And of course, it's just damned funny.'
Thanks to Orbit Books (and Ben Sharpe) for permission
to post this interview. For more details of their SFF authors and
books, visit Orbit at www.orbitbooks.co.uk
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