
A Goodreads user
asked
Graeme Simsion:
Graeme, congratulations on your most innovative books - you may remember me when I was CIO of SE Sydney Health. In your Rosie books, did you see the characters diverge from your original plot, shaping the outcome? In my books, fiction, and currently history, I find the characters have a major influence on the story line. Or do you manage to stay very close to your original outline and direction? Bryn Evans, Sydney.
Graeme Simsion
Great to hear from you - it's easy to lose touch with people from my previous life, though I've done keynotes at a couple of data conferences in the last few months - along the lines of "things I learned in IT that helped me write a novel" or "things I learned in writing a novel that I'd use if I went back to IT". In fact I'm doing a talk at the Australian Computer Society in Sydney on Nov 6. And I gather you're now in the writing world too, if you were not before. I plan my story in advance - what do you expect from an ex ITer? - but I find that being true to the characters often requires me to change it substantially as I write and revise, particularly the final 25% of the story. At this point, you've put characters and events in place, and there's often a certain inevitablity to what must logically follow, even if that isn't what was planned. In THE ROSIE PROJECT, my original plan had a different outcome for the father project…
More Answered Questions
Brendan
asked
Graeme Simsion:
What is your writing process like? I'm one of those people who will sit and go for everything in a rough draft. I like to discover where I plan to go and not be bound by a set story. I normally will slowly shape the characters and story from this first draft. I really enjoyed The Rosie Project and the Don Tillman character, does that character share some of your traits or flaws?
Neha
asked
Graeme Simsion:
Hello Graeme, I simply loved both your books. (I'm yet to finish the second one). I like to believe that Don doesn't really have Asperger's Syndrome, but is just odd and very close to such persons behaviorally. How did you intend him to be? My second question is, do you know someone like Don who inspired the character? I want to know how you were able to paint the character of someone like Don so vividly.
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