Entropy Central

Wednesday Writer – Mary Robinette Kowal

Today, we’re chatting with a writer who has burst onto the main stage of speculative fiction over the past few years, Mary Robinette Kowal.

© 2010 Annaliese Moyer

© 2010 Annaliese Moyer

I met Mary online in the writers workshop at Orson Scott Card’s website, Hatrack River. About a year later, we met at Card’s Literary Boot Camp. She is one of the most eloquent and charming people I know, so I’m pleased she took the time to answer a few questions for us.

I write all over the map in short form, so it’s a little tricky to sum up. I’ve written everything from SF horror to historical fantasy to mainstream. In long form, I focus on historical fantasy and my work is often described as like Jane Austen, with magic. For an introduction? I think the best introductions are short, so let me suggest First Flight, which is a time travel story.

The short answer is that I was one of those kids who wanted to do everything and puppetry combined them all. When I was in college, a professional puppeteer came to see a production of Little Shop of Horrors, which I was in, and I realized that people would actually give me money to do puppets. Instant change in career plans. The long answer is in a post, here.

Yes. I enjoy them both with a slight preference to whichever I’m not doing at the moment when the question is asked.

I do enjoy travel and find it one of the best ways to understand people. By seeing all of the regional differences we have, it makes it easier to spot the commonalities, which aren’t always what you think they would be. As for living without a car? Dead simple. You just have to pick a city where it’s possible and that requires living in a place with good public transportation.

Yes, it’s definitely been a surprise, and yes, I still experience imposter syndrome. I felt much calmer about having imposter syndrome after talking to Nancy Kress who says that she still has it. I think that as long as there are writers that one looks up to, the feeling that they are real writers will stick around. I’m not sure that’s a bad thing, since it keeps me continually striving to improve.

Twenty years in live theater, baby. I’m fortunate that my mother was an arts administrator so I picked up a lot of these skills from her, but it’s not something I’ve always known how to do. Granted, I don’t remember the transition, but I do remember being a painfully shy child. Most of networking though, really, comes down to finding other people interesting. That part is the part that’s hard to teach.

I cook? I mean… with the theater background, I did take six years of classical voice lessons but I’m not really a singer. I can sing, but that’s not my natural form of expression. In general though, I’m always game for learning a new skill set.

Orson Scott Card, Guy Gavriel Kay, Ursula K. LeGuin, Myrtle Reed, and O Henry.

Honestly, I’m really excited by book four in the Glamourist Histories. I’m waiting on my revision notes for Valour and Vanity right now, and can’t wait to dive back into it. When I pitched it to my editor, I described it as “Jane Austen writes Ocean’s Eleven. With magic.” Lord Byron is in it and I just love him.

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