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Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

I was pretty excited when Tor invited me to blog over here. I’m the new kid on the block, with only one science fiction book to my name, The Adoration of Jenna Fox, which came out last year, and one sort of fantasy book, The Miles Between, that just came out this month. I say “sort of” because even in their review, Kirkus wasn’t sure what genre it fit into. The Miles Between does have an element of fantasy, more along the lines of slipstream or magical realism, a certain surreal quality, but it is not full-blown fantasy. It will be interesting for me to see how it is categorized. I am usually surprised.

Genre classifications can do that to me, because most books, including my own, seem to be part of many worlds. I don’t think about genre as I write. I am thinking about the character, their world, and probably the pickle they are in and I’m trying to understand what they are thinking and feeling, and heck, what are they going to do next? Usually I feel more like an observer watching a story unfold than the person pulling the strings trying to make it fit into one genre or another, and I am quickly trying to transcribe what I am seeing and hearing. It is almost an out-of-body experience . Hm, does that make the writing process itself, sci-fi? Could be.

For instance, the other day I was driving along and a revelation about my current work-in-progress hit me when I got some insights into one of the secondary characters. It was an aha! moment where I literally said to myself, “So that is her secret. I never would have guessed! Wait until [the main character] finds out.” This revelation came completely out of left field. It wasn’t a question I had even been wondering about, but it made perfect sense. So either there really are muses whispering into our ears or our brains love keeping these secrets from us until just the right moment. (Though sometimes they keep secrets much too long–I think they forget we’re all on the same team.)

Anyway, I’m actually kind of surprised I didn’t venture into the science fiction and fantasy realm sooner. I grew up rabidly watching The Twilight Zone, The Outer Limits, Star Trek, Lost in Space, The Prisoner, Dark Shadows, Wild Wild West, Batman, The Time Tunnel, and more, and adoring books like The Velveteen Rabbit, Alice in Wonderland, The Crystal Cave, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Fahrenheit 451 and still later, The Giver, Tuck Everlasting, House of Scorpion, One Hundred Years of Solitude, and so many more. 

I think all fiction tweaks the real world so we can see it more clearly. Sometimes subjects are too close to us and we gain that distance we need by seeing it through someone else’s eyes, or someone else’s world. And maybe science fiction and fantasy ups that one by giving us more distance or perhaps a unique perspective that helps us see our own real world with fresh eyes. Or maybe it gives us glimpses into how far we, as human beings, can rise up or fall short and where we hope we might fall in that continuum.

So that is what happened with me in writing The Adoration of Jenna Fox—by taking place just a mere fifty years in the future, it gave me the distance I needed to explore the questions that niggled at me. For me, it really couldn’t have been written any other way, and I think The Miles Between—do I dare admit this—echos my own quirky perspectives on the curves life throws us, and how utterly insane and wonderful it can be at the same time. And in many ways, the tinge of fantasy that surrounds this book, really doesn’t even seem like fantasy at all when you look at the real world. Life is, as they say,  way stranger than fiction.   As writers, I think we pass up a lot of juicy material all the time because no one would believe it.  I mean, look at Octomom.  Can you imagine that as a fiction proposal?  Although there was that old woman in the shoe . . .

Thanks for letting me hang out in your digs. I’m looking forward to many conversations about books, reading, and writing, and who knows what else.


Mary E. Pearson is the author of five novels for teens, most recently, The Miles Between  just out in September, and newly out in paperback, The Adoration of Jenna Fox which has been optioned by 20th Century Fox for a major motion picture and translated into thirteen languages, both from Henry Holt Books.

About the Author

About Author Mobile

Mary E. Pearson

Author

Mary E. Pearson is the author of several award winning books for teens, including The Adoration of Jenna Fox, and The Fox Inheritance, where the seeds of “The Rotten Beast” are planted. She is a native Southern Californian and writes full time from her home in Carlsbad, California where she lives with her family.

Her awards and honors include the Golden Kite Award, ALA Best Books for Young Adults, the Andre Norton Honor, and The South Carolina Young Adult Book Award.

The author on: LiveJournal | Goodreads | Twitter | Facebook | www.marypearson.com

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