Malazan Empire: Paul Kearney Q&A - Malazan Empire

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Paul Kearney Q&A

#41 User is offline   Svaran 

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Posted 10 June 2005 - 04:55 AM

quote:
I haven't read Glen Cook, though people have made quite a few comparisons between he and I. Do any of you out there read James Barclay or Maggie Furey? I'd be interested to know which books really get your goat, fantasy-wise. I personally know of one fantasy author , a callow youth, whose book was published only becuse he had a famous writer mother who stamped her foot and pouted at her publisher - and even then they had to get a team of editors on the typescript to make it even vaguely readable. (They still shovelled a hundred grand in advance at the callow youth though. So to turn the questions around - which fantasy books baffle you with the fact that they ever got published in the first place???



Paul where do I start? The Belgarion, Mallorean, The eternal "Wheel of Time" series..... pretty much most of it. I find that most fantasy epic writers lack decent writing skills.
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#42 Guest_Narrefisse_*

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Posted 19 July 2005 - 05:30 PM

quote:
Originally posted by ChrisW:
Oh come on you lazy sods! Posted Image Paul takes the time to chat with you and you can't write a review for his book Posted Image.

Posted Image

Look you made him go thud!Posted Image


Hey, I considered saying I'd do it. And I even would. But then I realized the chances of you featuring something I wrote were somewhat less than non existant.
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#43 User is offline   ObsoleteResolve 

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Posted 01 May 2005 - 05:05 PM

Some mild book 3 spoilers:

I have yet to get to the end of the Monarchies of God (since I have to order them off of Amazon because I can't find them anywhere I usually end up distracted (I just finished Iron Wars)) but I have to say, thus far, it has had some very amazing moments in it- the fall of Aekir and the refugee's exodus, Abeleyn's injury, the idea of Ramusio and Ahrimuz as one and the same, the final image of Iron Wars with Hawkwood at the helm of his ship sailing back. Images that stick in the mind far after the book is done.

I definitely enjoyed the unabashed brutality of the world- adding a lot of tension and breathless expectancy to reading it. Far too often all the good guys live, the bad guys die, and everyone Rides Off Into The Sunset. Which isn't bad, but it's definitely nice to see a grim realism that is lacking all too often.

And, on book length. Sometimes an eight-hundred-page monstrosity (and frequently they are just that, especially mass-market paper-backs with their shoddy bindings* Posted Image) is daunting, and othertimes just what is needed. I don't automatically say no way because something's short, just as I don't exactly shell out the money for a longer work.

That said, I'll ask the question alot (though not all, I'm sure) of people here are thinking but haven't asked: as a published, known author, what advice would you give to people striving to achieve that?

I better duck out of the way of rotten fruit that's probably about to be chucked in my direction. Hey! It had to be asked! :-/

Oh, and that said, it'll definitely be a loss to fantasy when you stop writing in the genre.

Thanks for your time,
.david
*- I've had to buy too many books multiple times because of the things falling apart. I've finally given up and, if I like a book enough to buy it twice, my second copy is a trade paperback. They stay in one piece better.
"Say what you will about the sweet miracle of unquestioning faith, I consider a capacity for it terrifying and absolutely vile!"- Kurt Vonnegut
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#44 Guest_starnberg_*

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Posted 25 July 2005 - 12:30 PM

I haven't read it yet. Waiting for the small paperback.
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#45 Guest_corfe_*

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Posted 06 July 2005 - 11:58 PM

Starnberg, you really should try and make it to the far frozen north sometimes - it's worth the effort. So are the Mournes, come to that...
Ben, I do indeed know Mr Talbot - small world! As for the 2nd Beggars book, it's being knocked into shape for delivery to the publisher in two months time, and is more nautical than the first, but still with large chunks on land. I thought Beggars would be a trilogy, and all the books are self-contained, but I could see it going longer now..
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#46 Guest_bluesman_*

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Posted 29 April 2005 - 05:59 AM

Not if half of the size contains filler material (ala Tad Williams). A good average size around 600 pages is just perfect for me. Though I consider the huge Nights Dawn Trilogy to be among the best SF i've read.

A well edited thick book is allways good.

marcus
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#47 User is offline   ChrisW 

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Posted 22 June 2005 - 06:24 PM

Kingdom a stand alone? If so I might just check it out from the library and see what all you people are raving aboutPosted Image.
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#48 Guest_corfe_*

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Posted 29 April 2005 - 02:42 AM

I've never read Stephenson either, though this Quicksilver series does sound intriguing. I'm a sucker for any fantasy or historical fiction in which the world is post sixteenth century - pretty rare unfortunately.

I read a review of my books once in which the complaint was that I should have used twice as many words - whereas my whole outlook is to use as few as possible. (Read a couple of Orwell essays on the English language - he promotes brevity, clarity, a kind of linguistic humility as it were.).That's one reason the Monarchies are so short I suppose. Also, I've often found that if a shocking event is described in very few words, it can sometimes make it all the more shocking.Having said that, Ships is the only book I look back on with regret. At that stage of the game I was wondering why I bothered writing at all, and thinking about getting a day job. It came through in the story, for which I profoundly apologise!

Glad to take part in this Q&A by the way - I won't post every day, but I will do my best to answer all questions within a day or three.
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#49 Guest_korik_*

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Posted 22 June 2005 - 10:07 AM

i too enjoyed it, but it made me wonder if there was a autobiographical element in the writing?
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#50 Guest_starnberg_*

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Posted 28 June 2005 - 11:27 AM

sounds like a great place to grow up. One day I'm going to drive up to the glens of Antrim on a daytrip. Furthest I ever went was Newry. The speed camera signs everywhere kind of put me off cos it didn't say what the speed limit was. I saw kingdom in a shop once but didn't get it. I will the next time.
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#51 Guest_bluesman_*

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Posted 09 May 2005 - 11:47 AM

Paul,

Still curious though.

Have you ever considered or are you considering trying your hand at Science Fiction as well? Or is it completelly out of question? I mean a real meaty Space Opera, bible sized epic Posted Image. Well, something smaller would do too. But given your topics in your fantasy books I still wonder whether it wouldn't be totally out of place to write something like htat.

thanks in advance
bm
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#52 User is offline   ChrisW 

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Posted 12 July 2005 - 04:59 PM

Anyone want to write a review for Paul's first book in his latest series so I can add it to the featured reviews?
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#53 User is offline   Svaran 

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Posted 05 June 2005 - 04:52 PM

I'm not sure where to post this but any chance of the forum contacting Glen Cook and interveiwing him, I mean come on the Black company books comparisons can't be missed
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#54 User is offline   lfex 

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Posted 26 May 2005 - 12:39 AM

quote:
The way I envisaged it, they would more or less take over where the Second Empire left off, probably taking over Almark and Astarac at least.



And Perigraine too, I suppose? IIRC, Perigraine king still lives somewhere as a monk, but since he gave away his kingdom to Himerians, I suppose he is now compromised and there is no chance of people rallying around him.


And since nitpicking got mentioned, there is a character in Ships from the West who disappears. Brienne apparently boards Sea Hare with Isolla and is never heard of again Posted Image
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#55 User is offline   Tenaka Khan 

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Posted 19 July 2005 - 11:27 PM

*magically reappears* Posted Image

Have been quite busy the last couple of weeks.

Unfortunately I haven't read 'The Mark of Ran' yet. But since I'm back with my books now, I could perhaps write a review about some of the novels from 'Monarchies of God'. Don't expect them too soon though, have to reread them Posted Image
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#56 Guest_corfe_*

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Posted 28 June 2005 - 12:23 AM

Thanks for the kind words about Kingdom. As I said before, I still th9nk it's far and away my best book. As for being autobiographical, the farm described at the beginning of the story is in fact my grandparent's farm in north Antrim, though I knew it in the seventies, not the fifties. Apart from that, it was exactly as I described, down to the river, the bridge, the little meadow and the green, wooded valley of the Bann river it sat in. The people in it, also, were mostly real - some of them even retained their own names. Despite the fact that I knew it when the Troubles were at their worst, it remains in my mind the most peaceful place I've ever known - of course, this is seen through a child's eyes. Also, since I and my muriad cousins spent every moment we could out of doors, the countryside about it had to be part of the story. It seemed bigger than it really was. The Old Forest, as we called it, is long gone, twenty acres of tangled woodland which furnished the best environment for growing up imaginable,now lost to the twenty-first century's besetting sin; greed.
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#57 User is offline   caladanbrood 

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Posted 01 May 2005 - 08:07 AM

quote:
Originally posted by Paul Kearney:
I must say, I envy Steve his fan base.

I wouldn't if I were you, we're a demanding lot, he has to keep sending cronies to shut us up for a bitPosted Image

In the times when you aren't absorbed in writing your own books, are there other series by any author that you would love to have written? Or maybe had some great ideas of ways you would continue the storyline etc?
O xein', angellein Lakedaimoniois hoti têde; keimetha tois keinon rhémasi peithomenoi.
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#58 Guest_krabat_*

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Posted 02 May 2005 - 09:41 AM

My question is a simple one:
I have been wanting to buy Monarchies of god for quite some time now but postponed for one reason and another until now... just to notice that I cant get the books anymore Posted Image. I live in germany and my only source for english books is amazon. Problem is: Amazon only lists the first and fourth book of the series Posted Image. To my question: Will the books be republished in the near future? Really would like to get my hands on them Posted Image.
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#59 Guest_Arakasi_*

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Posted 25 May 2005 - 12:56 PM

Well since you asked about the length of your books, I'd like to share my experience from reading your series. Like you, Corfe was by far my favorite character. I really enjoyed reading his stuff the most. Now I am a big fan of epic fantasy. I've pretty much read them all. Or at least most of them.

What I found with your series was that yes, I would have preferred if they had been longer. I felt there was a conflict between the brevity and epicness of the story. I think for a story to be suitably epic there has to be enough characters in enough places to give us a view of the action. And also of course enough time spent on the characters and surroundings. For some reason while reading parts of the series I felt a lack of unity between some of the lines. They just felt disconnected to me for some reason, so instead of looking at is as a big epic, I looked at it as some smaller storylines in the same world. I guess I just didn't get sold on the epicness. But as a series of fairly tight individualized stories in the same world it worked fairly well. Like you I felt the last book could have been longer. Some more time to wrap things up would have been nice.

I also enjoyed the eastern stuff more than the west. I guess the Marduks as bad guys sold me much more than the guys from the western continent. Plus of course Corfe was there. Posted Image Thanks for coming on the board and answering our questions and comments. If you ever do rework that sci-fi book I'd be interested in reading it.
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#60 Guest_corfe_*

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Posted 31 May 2005 - 05:38 AM

Yeah, you've got me there. Though i'm a great believer in not throwing in too much extraneous detail - maybe Brienne was the sea-sick type and was too busy hurling to poke her nose into the plot ; )
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