Again I'm not sure who I did this for. 2017 and regarding Infinity Engine.
1. What
is your short 'elevator pitch' for Infinity Engine?
It is the
beginning of the universe, and the end.
2. We are
at Book 3 of the Transformation series, how are the stakes raised in Infinity
Engine?
It has
been a wild ride but in has to come to an end. When I set out to write a book
or a series of books I don’t plan, there are no post-it notes above my desk, in
fact I’m as eager to know what comes next as I hope the reader is. All my
creations have a purpose (well, if it turns out they don’t they end up deleted either
by editing or laser carbine) and Penny Royal – that ‘dark intelligence’ –
revealed its purpose as the series progressed. Here you have a rogue AI who is
a potential paradigm changer in a massive human and AI Polity. It should
therefore not be surprising that its purpose and its aims are tremendous. Penny
Royal has the power to
transform just about anything, including people, and ultimately it can use that
power on itself.
3. Did
you have a favourite character to write in the Transformation series, and if
so, why?
Opinions
on my characters vary from cardboard and flat to wonderful – it’s all a matter
of perspective and really I think more to do with how the reader enjoyed, or
not, the story. I enjoy writing my human characters and getting into the
intricacies of the workings of their minds, but I don’t want to do too much of
that simply because it slows down the story. But the characters that interest
me the most are the non-human ones. I like my drones – machines made for the
apparently cold, ruthless and efficient destruction of an enemy who are
irascible, sometimes comedic and often cock a snoop at authority. I like my
aliens because I can imagine the completely different societies they arise
from, the ways that they will think that in some cases will be similar to that
of human beings (they are evolved creatures after all) and sometimes wildly
different. And my AIs: godlike patience with the slow development of humanity
contrasted with super-fast thought and instant access to masses of information.
Sverl, my favourite character in the books, is a combination of them all. He
was an alien prador who had a cultural problem. Believing in the superiority of
the prador he could not understand why the Polity, with its weak humans and
detestable AIs, came close to defeating his kind. He went to Penny Royal for
answers and as ever, in deals with that devil, got more than he bargained for.
His transformation turned him into a tri-part being: prador, human and AI. In
him I could illustrate what people think it means to be each of these, and how
that might not be right. I relished that, just as I relished his grotesque
physical transformation and the final truth of his existence.
4. Which
book, film or TV programme do you always recommend to people and why?
I do make
recommendations but with no expectation that what I recommend will be enjoyed.
It is all subjective. Because of its insight, even though written quite a few
years ago, I often recommend the book Half-Past Human by T J Bass. For me it
perfectly depicts a future Earth if we don’t get up and leave. Trillions live
in cylinder cities underground while the Earth’s surface is all for
agriculture. All animals are extinct. The humans don’t use large resources –
they are four-toed nebbishes with rosewater blood. There’s a Sharps Committee
that goes around taking away anything a person might harm himself with – the
ultimate extension of today’s Health and Safety. The humans are programmable
and are the drones in a vast human hive with no purpose beyond continuing to
exist. It’s a dystopia but an enjoyable one with the introduction of the
Buckeyes – original high-resource humans. But it is also a good lesson in where
homogenizing humanity to fit some ideas of what society is will take us.
5. What's
your top writing tip?
My top
writing tip remains the same: write. You learn to run a marathon by running.
And there is no rolled-up trouser leg and special handshake that will expedite
you to success. You just have to write well.
Speaking of favorite characters - what became of Vagule and Pogrom?
ReplyDelete-Jessie Grey