This is a Q & A Asimov's sent me last year to run on their website when my short story 'An Alien on Crete' was published.
What is the story behind this
piece?
Again,
as is usual with me, I was ahead of my publishing contract with Macmillan
having one book The Human (third book of the Rise of the Jain trilogy) ready,
bar a bit of editing, for publication almost a year before I needed to hand it
in. I’ve wanted to return to writing more short stories for some time, since it
was through them I got my first stuff published. I also feel that the change,
the discipline and the necessity for brevity are good for my writing. I can
explore stuff outside of my long-running space opera series too. It also makes
good business sense to expose readers who might not have heard of me to my
stuff. And opportunities had arisen (which I can’t talk about) concerning the
TV streaming services. So I started writing some more short stories.
How did this story germinate? Was
there a spark of inspiration, or did it come to you slowly?
I
am lucky enough to spend half of my year on the island of Crete and there,
besides kayaking and swimming, I spend a lot of time walking in the beautiful
mountains. One of the advantages of only needing a laptop, or even just pen and
paper to do your job, is that you can do it anywhere. Being an SF writer I of
course visualized all sorts of sensawunda stuff in those mountains: starships
in the sky, alien plants growing amidst the rest, some places where you could
think you were on an alien world, how the walk would be while installed in a
new Golem chassis and, of course, an alien landing there. This last was the one
I took – a very tiny spark of inspiration – and expanded. As they say: ten per
cent inspiration, ninety per cent perspiration.
Is this story part of a larger
universe, or is it stand-alone?
This
is a standalone. As I noted above, writing short stories gives me a chance to
explore other stuff. I have started a follow-up to it, but then meandered off
into writing something else.
Do you particularly relate to any
of the characters in this story?
I
do relate because, well, I walk in the mountains like the protagonist and so
much of what he sees is exactly what I see when I’m out there. I’ve sat
drinking raki at a kazani and shopped in that butcher’s shop in Makrigialos.
Some things I changed out of narrative necessity. The house in the story is
very similar to mine, but there’s nowhere you can back a vehicle up close to
the back door. The cisterns I see are normally quite shallow so not enough to
trap a creature, though I was quite happy recently to see a deep one that fit
the bill!
How did the title for this piece
come to you?
It’s
a very simple title. Does what it says on the tin. Though I have to add that
there is a little bit of a twist there – a bit of a double meaning – because
the protagonist is ‘An Alien on Crete’ since it is not his home country.
What made you think of Asimov’s for this story? What is your
history with Asimov’s?
As
I was working my way up through the writing world I started by getting stuff
published in the small presses (while in the meantime banging off synopses and
sample chapters of my books to book publishers), and gradually moved on to
larger publications. In my youth I did of course read Isaac Asimov and had
known about the magazine for some time. When I was a teenager my mother brought
home a bunch of such publications from a charity shop for me and I loved them.
Asimov’s was a prime target for me – a validation. I finally did get a story
accepted when Gardner Dozois was the editor and subsequently had more taken.
Titles are Softly Spoke the Gabbleduck, Alien Archaeology, The Other Gun . . .
I lose track – there might be others. The cover pictures for the magazine were
taken from a couple of them. Thereafter just about every one of them went on to
appear in anthologies like Hartwell and Kramer’s Year’s Best SF and Dozois’s
The Year’s Best Science Fiction. It’s good to be back.
Who or what are your greatest
influences and inspirations?
Years
and years of reading SFF had its effect. At one time I was polishing off an
average of ten books a month. The acknowledgements in The Skinner (my second
book from Macmillan) begin like this: Thanks to all those people whose names
stretch through the alphabet from Aldiss to Zelazny. . . A deep interest in the sciences and much
reading of them also informs my work, and of course various excellent films. I
must at least tip my hat towards Alien and Aliens, Terminator and others
besides.
How much or little do current
events impact your writing?
My
Polity space operas are set far in the future in an AI run utopia that’s a bit
rough around the edges and not quite as utopian as it should be, especially
when there’s an alien race that would like to exterminate humanity and plenty
of dangerous ancient alien technology lying around. Our present is their
ancient past and does not impinge very much. My Owner trilogy (not in the
Polity) is an extrapolation from the present day to create a dystopia, I mean,
every SF writer should have a crack at a dystopia, right? In the short stories
it just depends on what and when I’m writing about. An Alien on Crete depicts a
little of present day Crete. A recent story called Longevity Averaging is a
product of my reading on biotech developments in life extension, and likely
political outfalls from that (longevity averaging is what happens to your
pension). But when it comes to present events I try not to proselytize. As far
as I am concerned my job is to entertain and create that good old sensawunda.
It is not to use my writing as a vehicle for partisan politics.
Are there any themes that you
find yourself returning to throughout your writing? If yes, what and why?
I
have a trilogy called The Transformation Trilogy – Dark Intelligence, War
Factory & Infinity Engine – and I think that kinda defines a lot of my
work: transformation. As is expected in any book the characters will be changed
by the events that occur. But I always take it a stage further with
technological and organic transformations: life extension, mental uploading,
downloading and editing, humans loading their minds to crystal substrates, AIs
loading their minds to something organic, body switching, physical adaptation
to new environments, mental expansion and cerebral additions. Throughout my
stories many of my characters change in radical physical and mental ways. Why
do I keep returning to this? Because I am fascinated by what we might become.
What is your process?
I’m
not a planner. I don’t map out a plot first and fill up a pin board with
post-it notes. I’m a seat of the pants writer. Sometimes I’ll have a vague image
of where I want to get to and stuff I want to include, then I simply sit down
and write, and it all happens at the keyboard. I aim to write 2,000 words a day
five days a week and usually hit that target. The next day I read through the
previous day’s stuff doing a bit of editing, then just continue. Times when I’m
not writing like that are usually when I’m dealing with the publisher’s
editing, or later on. I find that as I write, plots threads and ideas
proliferate and require thinning out. I move stuff around, make alterations
throughout to make it work. I blend characters together, excise characters and
make additions. I often chop out large chunks and have a file called ‘BitsSF’
where I put them. These can sometimes use elsewhere. In fact a story I had published
in Asimov’s The Other Gun was, initially, one such excised chunk of text.
How do you deal with writers’
block?
In
the far past this was something I struggled with occasionally, but not now.
I’ve spent so long being disciplined about my writing I just write. I suspect a
lot of writer’s block stems from lack of confidence and an inability to tear
apart something you’ve already written, as if it’s a stone sculpture near
completion and you have to be careful with the chisel. Writing is nothing like
that. It’s protean, disposable and can be shifted about like a magnetic
montage. Whenever I hear this question a quote I vaguely remember comes to
mind. It has been paraphrased quite a lot, the current Stephen King version
being ‘Amateurs sit and wait for inspiration, the rest of us just get up and go
to work.’
How did you break into writing?
I
climbed up the entire ladder with people stepping on my fingers all the way. I
started writing longhand with a fountain pen and typing on a manual typewriter
when I was a teenager. The fantasy trilogy I inevitably produced did the rounds
of publishers (by post) and still sits in my files. I wrote another fantasy
then had a crack at something contemporary (dated now – no mobile phones or
computers). I picked up a writing magazine at about this point and discovered
the small presses: little A5 magazines printed from people’s home and with
readerships at most of a few hundred. I started sending stories to them and, it
being that only subscribers could submit stories, had to buy the magazine
before submitting. I had an acceptance but the mag concerned closed before it
was published. My first story appeared in a magazine called Back Brain Recluse
in 1989, for which I got a free copy of the magazine. Onward and upward. I got
a novella published by a publisher called Club 199 for which I actually got
paid money, just before the publisher went bankrupt. Slightly larger magazines
started paying for my stories. A small publisher did a collection called The
Engineer (it can be found under the new title of The Engineer ReConditioned). I
wrote a book called Gridlinked and that was to be published, the publisher went
bankrupt. I wrote another called the Skinner that went nowhere. I had a novella
called The Parasite published. By this time I had learned that it’s a good idea
to put in reviews etc with those samples and synopses you send to publishers.
Conveniently I’d just had an excellent review of The Engineer in a national
magazine called SFX. I sent a colour copy of that to Macmillan along with
synopsis and sample chapters of Gridlinked and later got a phone call from a
very posh sounding guy called Peter Lavery who was the Editorial Director
there. That was in December 1999 and by the next year I had my first three book
contract. The rest as they say, is history.
What inspired you to start
writing?
As
I grew up I had interests in all sorts of things: painting, electronics,
biology, sculpture, chemistry, microscopy and of course reading piles and piles
of SFF . . . I flipped from one thing to another all the time. One day, in
school, instead of the usual boring English lesson, the teacher told us to just
sit and write a story, any story. Maybe she was tired and bored and wanted to
take a break from the usual. I had great fun writing something completely
derivative of E C Tubb’s Dumarest Saga and at the end was singled out and
complemented by the teacher. Writing now became one of my interests. Later,
maybe in my early twenties, I realized I would not be able to build a laser
rifle, matter transmitter or create a monster, or invent some fantastic
chemical process. I also looked at what was appearing in the Tate Gallery at
the time and decided that if that was art it was not for me. But I was still
interested in all these things and understood that in writing I could
incorporate them all. That was when I made a decision to take it seriously and
make it my singular goal.
What other projects are you
currently working on?
I’m
at about twenty-six published books now. For a while I’ve been writing
trilogies and have noted that as my oeuvre grows it needs more points of access
for the new reader. While working on a short story (again from that ‘BitsSF’
file) I found it expanding and it eventually turned into the first draft of a
book called Jack Four. It’s a standalone set in the Polity and readers do not
need to have read the other books to enjoy it. I then started another short
story that grew. It’s complicated because a lot of what I was doing was telling
backstory and the timeline is all over the place. But considering that Iain M
Banks’ Use of Weapons is one of my favorite books, I’m okay with that. It
concerns the colonization of a world, human radical adaptation to that world,
right at the time the Polity comes across the hostile alien prador and an
interstellar war begins. This will be another standalone. I’ve nearly finished
it now . . . but that’s my aim: a few standalone books set in the Polity to
draw readers in. After this one, whose publication date will be over two years
hence, I’ll get back to those short stories and doubtless another one will grow
in the telling.
If you could choose one SFnal
universe to live in, what universe would it be, and why?
My
own. Yeah, some nasty stuff does happen in that future, but it’s a big wonderful
universe with everything in it I love from the thousands of books I’ve read:
FTL travel, matter transmission, godlike AIs, post-scarcity, human immortality
and more besides. I have to add that in the Polity I created a future in which
I could tell just about any story I chose. As such, the possibilities, if one
were to actually live there, are endless.
What SFnal prediction would you
like to see come true?
Right
now, since I’m 58, human longevity so I can get to see Musk putting people on
Mars, I can get to see the solar system of The Expanse, I can get to see the
starships heading out and perhaps climb aboard one. Maybe I would get to see an
alien, or stand before a panoramic window gazing out at the shifting clouds of
a gas giant. Endless possibilities again, which all disappear if you’re dead.
What are you reading right now?
Frankly
not enough. I wonder if I’m starting to get a bit jaded because it’s not often
I’ll pick up a book and fall into it like I did in my youth. I think a problem
with being a full time writer is that it’s difficult to turn off the editing
head, so I find myself reading something and wanting to make corrections or
alterations. I also don’t get so much time to read, what with the writing, gym
visits, walking, kayaking, repairing furniture, growing chillies and my current
attempt to learn Greek. I must make time!
Do you have any advice for
up-and-coming writers?
Write
every day. Count words. Stop thinking about ‘being a writer’ and be one. Get on
with it and do it. Remember the 10,000 hours principle. There’s an analogy I use
here when wannabe writers baulk at the prospect of writing a 150,000 word book.
Someone who runs a marathon might well have, in their past, got out of breath
walking up the stairs. But then they walked a bit further, then they started
running, just a little way at first, then further and further. That’s how you
do it: a bit at a time and then more and more. There’s that aphorism too: How
do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.
What is something we should know
about you that we haven’t thought to ask?
I
write. I live in the UK in Essex half the year, and the other half on Crete.
I’m a widower as of five and a half years ago, having watched my wife die of
bowel cancer. One day I will write a book about my experiences on Crete and
with grief. It will be called Walking to Voyla – an Ottoman ruin I walked to
over a number of years while trying to get my mind straight again. Not much
else.
What other careers have you had,
and how have they affected your writing?
I’ve
done all sorts. I’ve worked in many factories, making steel furniture and
aluminium windows for houses and boats. I trained as a production engineer then
toolmaker. I’ve operated all sorts of machinery like milling machines and
lathes, including programming the numerical control varieties. I’ve been a
builder, done council contract grass cutting, run my own business chopping
trees and hedges, putting up fences and sheds, laying concrete – basically
anything that came along. I’ve driven skip lorries and delivered coal,
renovated motorbikes and cars – all practical stuff in essence. All of this is
grist to the writing mill but I would say that the engineering background
definitely shows through. I know how stuff works and can make that real in my
work.
How can our readers follow you
and your writing? (IE: Social media handles, website URL…)
I
have a blog at http://theskinner.blogspot.com
this is also copied across to my website at nealasher.co.uk. I can be found on
Twitter @nealasher and on Facebook at Neal Asher.
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