
Résumé:
Anita Blake, tome 21
When
a fifteen-year-old girl is abducted by vampires, it’s
up to U.S. Marshal Anita Blake to find her. And when she
does, she’s faced with something she’s never seen
before: a terrifyingly ordinary group of people—kids,
grandparents, soccer moms—all recently turned and
willing to die to avoid serving a master. And where
there’s one martyr, there will be more…
But
even vampires have monsters that they’re afraid of. And
Anita is one of them…
A conversation with Charlaine Harris, best-selling
author of Deadlocked, and Laurell K. Hamilton, best-selling
author of Kiss the Dead
Question: Did you ever imagine that your series
would run as long as it has?
Charlaine Harris: I was just glad to sell
the first book. It took two years of my agent sending it out
to get a bite. I never even dreamed that Sookie would be so
popular, that I would find so much to say about her and her
world.
Laurell K. Hamilton: No. I had over two
hundred rejections for the first Anita Blake novel. They were
the nicest rejections, with editors suggesting other
publishing houses to send it to, but they, themselves,
couldn't figure out how to market it. When I got that first
three book contract, I remember thinking, "Well, at least
I'll get to write three of them." I actually did think I had
at least ten books in Anita and her world, but I don't think
anyone can plan to write twenty-one novels in a series and
still be excited about starting the twenty-second.
Did you ever dream paranormal would be this
hot?
LKH: I remember being told that mixed genre
didn't sell, before the term paranormal became a genre. I was
also told that no one wanted to read about vampires. More
than one editor told me that particular monster was dead and
gone. I thought there was life left in the old legends, but I
never saw this level of popularity coming.
CH: Yes, even my agent didn't expect
Dead Until Dark would be an easy sell, maybe
especially since my books contained a lot of humor. Vampires
were passé, and books that crossed genres (Except for
yours: I think you had three or four books out when I wrote
the first Sookie, and I was so glad to discover them!) were
called "unshelvable.’ I could never have anticipated
shelves and shelves of cross-genre books.
Does fan response play a part in your planning
process?
CH: Not in the sense of changing plot
direction in my novels. This is my story to tell, and I have
to write it the way I see it. But every now and then when
reader response to a character is unexpectedly
enthusiastic--or the opposite--I'll take a second look at
that character to see why he/she is coming across in a way I
didn't expect or anticipate.
LKH: I don't change plot direction for fan
reaction either. My story, my world, my books, my stuff, my
way. The only people who can change the direction of my
novels are my characters. It's their life, after all, so if
they're really insistent on a different plot, then they win.
I agree that reader response to a character can make me
puzzle over them more, but it doesn't usually change how
often the character is on stage, or how big their role is,
because weirdly if the fans are interested, then I'm already
intrigued. Best example is Edward who started out as this
cold blooded assassin, almost a bad guy, and now he's one of
Anita's best friends, and he's a U. S. Marshal. So, not what
I had planned for him.
Have you ever had a character totally surprise you
with their choices?
LKH: A lot of my characters have minds of
their own. Edward went away on his own and got himself
engaged to a woman with two children from her first marriage.
Edward-- assassin, ex-military, current police officer,
taking a six-year-old to ballet lessons with all the other
moms both amuses and hurts my head. Anita's love life went
into a completely different direction than I'd ever
anticipated. I so didn't see Anita dating this many men, or
being in love with more than one man, and having everyone she
loved okay with that.
CH: I've discovered some surprising things
about my characters as I wrote them. I know that their minds
are really my mind, but sometimes it doesn't feel that way.
It's like knowing a character has a secret (I'm thinking of
Bill), and then suddenly realizing what that secret is. I was
genuinely aghast. Sometimes my creative brain thinks a lot
faster than my conscious brain. And it's certainly a lot more
devious.
How do you keep a world with paranormal elements
credible?
CH: I anchored my skewed world with
real-life elements. Sookie has to pay her bills, she has to
do her laundry, and she has family obligations. My vampires
buy their clothes at the mall. My werewolf runs a surveying
business. One of my fairies works in customer service at a
department store. Readers seem to enjoy the fact that no
matter what creature you may be, there's a process of
surviving that has to be gone through; but there's all these
other elements that make that process so different.
LKH: I make sure any real life facts are as
real and well-researched as possible. Because I'm asking
people to believe in vampires, wereanimals, and zombies, I
need to make sure the guns, cars, and real crime are as
realistic as possible. Once a reader catches me wrong in an
area where they are expert they won't believe my monsters are
real. But I have found if I'm right on the hard facts even
experts will let me fudge, or take that next fantastic leap,
because I've proven myself by laying the foundation of
reality to make my leap into the unknown.
Do people ever expect you to be your
characters?
LKH: If I had known people would get
confused between fiction and fact I'd have made Anita look
less like me, but it just never occurred to me that there
would be a problem. I've had fans want to know what weapons
I'm carrying. They assume all the men are based on real
people, and they aren't. I don't actually base characters on
real people. Since I can't lighten Anita's hair, I've
lightened my own and I get less fan confusion. I've had fans
ask for the phone numbers of the men and get angry when I
tried to explain I couldn't give them the contact info for a
fictional character.
CH: Ha! Well, I'm much older and rounder
than Sookie, so I'm definitely no stand-in for Sookie. In
fact, readers who have never met me before are usually
astonished when they meet me; so were the actors on
True Blood. Some of my readers who came to me after
watching
True Blood get the characters in the books sort of
conflated with the actors who play them on television. In
their minds, Alexander Skarsgard IS Eric, Stephen Moyer IS
Bill. It can lead to some confusing questions when I'm at
signings.
What scenes in your novels are the most fun for you
to write? Action? Sex? Relationship drama?
CH: All of those are fun, depending on the
outcome! But I have to say, I love to write a good fight
scene. I find the "relationship" scenes a challenge. When
people talk about their relationships, it's a messy
conversation. People aren't too articulate about their
innermost feelings. And such conversations don't proceed in a
linear way, but jag back and forth as each speaker voices the
issues that are most important to that person. So it's hard
to make sound realistic, coherent, and yet condense such a
conversation enough to make it tolerable.
LKH: It depends on my mood. Sometimes a good
fight scene can be very therapeutic, and give a productive
outlet for negative emotions. The more people involved in the
action the more complex the fight choreography can become,
and that can be a challenge, and slow down the emotional
content for me. I enjoy doing sex scenes, but they are a
different kind of challenge. On a day when I can get in the
mood for the scene, they’re great, but on a day when
real life interferes, it’s a bit like real sex.
It’s hard to concentrate on it when you have too many
interruptions from the non-sexy side of your life. I guess
that’s true of all writing, though, too many
interruptions disrupt the process in general. The biggest
challenge for the sex scenes is that sex is a very personal
and individual activity, so I have the same girl involved,
but different men and I want each man’s style to be
unique. Relationship drama? Yuck, can I just say, yuck again?
This kind of drama isn’t fun in real life and the only
thing that makes fictional relationship drama tolerable is
that it’s fictional, and I’m not having to endure
it in my real life, but other than that it sucks just as
much. It also tends to complicate my life as a writer,
because almost nothing screws up a story arc like
relationship choices, though I have had action scenes go so
differently from what I’d planned that an entire third
of a book had to be thrown out. It was a better book for it,
but still, near deadline that was hard.
What’s the hardest thing about writing such a
long running series?
LKH: The beginning of the book is easy,
because you always want that to be interesting and lure in
both old and new readers. It’s the middle of the book
that becomes more complicated. As a writer you always have to
think that you may have brand new readers picking up your
book, so you have to explain the characters, the world,
everything, but you don’t want to over explain to the
long time readers. The other problem with a series is that
each book needs to stand alone as much as possible, but you
also want character growth and world development from novel
to novel, so again, it’s a balancing act. I make sure
that each opening is different enough that you won’t be
left wondering, did I read that already. It’s an issue
I’ve had with other series that I read. It gets very
challenging when you get in double digits to make everything
fresh, but familiar. I’m lucky that I’m still
discovering new things about Anita, Jean-Claude, Edward,
Nathaniel, everyone, and the world continues to grow and
surprise me. My fictional world is like the real one, I never
know quite what’s coming next.
CH: The hardest thing is keeping track of
previous developments and details. My memory just wasn't up
to it, and I had to hire someone (the fabulous Victoria
Koski). When you create a world, there are a thousand small
things that make it credible, and it's easier than you'd
think to forget whether someone is a werefox or a werelynx,
or whether it's still daytime during the narrative or if
you've passed into darkness. I think it's important to catch
as many little errors as you can, so readers don't get yanked
out of the world. I'm not the kind of reader who notices, but
there are many readers who do. Photo
Laurell K. Hamilton © Stefan Hester Photo
Charlaine Harris © Sigrid Estrada "Hamilton
remains one of the most inventive and exciting writers in the
paranormal field." "[A]
wildly popular paranormal series." “Long
before Stephenie Meyer’s Twilight series and Charlaine
Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse novels, [there was] sexy,
strong-willed vampire hunter Anita Blake.”
Étiquettes: saga, Bit-lit, Sentimental, Lang:en
Review