Stephen
asked
L.E. Modesitt Jr.:
As a long time fan, especially of the Recluce novels, I have often wondered about your methods. My most pressing question: Just how much time you spend researching a character's occupation (metal working, wood working, etc) before putting pen to paper?
L.E. Modesitt Jr.
Sometimes, I "cheat." That is, I tend to write about what I know. Although my father was an attorney, one of his spare-time loves was wood-working. I also tried it, and discovered that while I really wanted to be good at it, I was much better at other things -- although I did make a passable cherry wood cradle for my daughters which has been since also used for their offspring. I write about space pilots because I was a helicopter search and rescue pilot, and because I spent a time dealing with military issues as a Congressional staffer. The environmental consultants come from my background in that field, and, obviously, the political understanding comes from nearly 20 years in the political arena in Washington, D.C. Sometimes, I've had to write about matters I didn't know well enough. Researching metal working added several months to writing The Magic Engineer. Getting all the calculations and science at least in the right ball park for Solar Express also added several months to writing that book.
Some of the research is just part of my daily routine. As my wife has noted, the mail carrier's truck is always lighter after he leaves our house. Between the two of us [and I also read some of her music periodicals], we subscribe to and read something like 30 periodicals every month and some of them are weeklies, like New Scientist, Science, Aviation Week, and the Economist.
Because of all that, it's hard to give a number to exactly how much time goes into research -- except that, over my lifetime, it's been a lot, and it continues that way.
Some of the research is just part of my daily routine. As my wife has noted, the mail carrier's truck is always lighter after he leaves our house. Between the two of us [and I also read some of her music periodicals], we subscribe to and read something like 30 periodicals every month and some of them are weeklies, like New Scientist, Science, Aviation Week, and the Economist.
Because of all that, it's hard to give a number to exactly how much time goes into research -- except that, over my lifetime, it's been a lot, and it continues that way.
More Answered Questions
Nicole
asked
L.E. Modesitt Jr.:
I just finished reading Mongrel Mage and Outcasts of Order (both wonderful!), and I'm very pleased to learn you have a third book coming out so that Beltur, Jessyla, Lhordaraak, Tulya, and Taelya can reestablished Haven. I have a vague idea or theory, but I wondered if you could tell us more precisely when Beltur's tale fits in the overall timeline or history of this world?
☯ Rikuson R. Rozan ☯
asked
L.E. Modesitt Jr.:
Have been trying to purchase The Magic of Recluse in Hardcover. But unfortunately they have been sold out for a very long time. Only ones selling it online are 2nd handed sellers for prices that are double, triple & sometimes more than quadruple to what the original price was. I wanted to know if there's any way or hope that you can contact Tor Publisher to look into doing Hardcover Reprints! Can you look into this?
Thomas Walsh
asked
L.E. Modesitt Jr.:
I read your work from the beginning of the Saga of Recluse but became frustrated with the seeming lack of direction that the series had after 3-4 books. I've always been interested in revisiting the series but my frustration with reading the early disorganization of related stories without an explanation makes me hesitant. What do you say to draw back in early readers of the Recluse series who abandoned it?
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