Madge
asked
Erin Bow:
in plain kate, how would you describe Linay? Is he an anti-villain or anti hero and how did Kate view him?
Erin Bow
I'm not great at English-teacher kind of labels, but I am interested in villains who have actual human motivations. Real people don't set out (for example) to destroy a city just for kicks and mustache wax. They have reasons. They are wrong, of course, but they still have reasons.
It's more interesting to me as a writer and reader if the villain's reasons are ones I can relate to. I am not drawn at all to villains like Sauron or Voldemort, who simply want power, or immortality, or to watch the world burn. I like instead villains who can be cast as heroes who have gone wrong.
And so I like Linay. He is motivated by grief, love, and a desire to save his sister, with perhaps a side-helping of madness and revenge. Kate, who also feels grief, love, and the longing for family, connects to that in him. She also thinks he is terrifying and needs to be stopped. What interests me is that those two things are not a contradiction.
(And don't get me started on Talis.)
It's more interesting to me as a writer and reader if the villain's reasons are ones I can relate to. I am not drawn at all to villains like Sauron or Voldemort, who simply want power, or immortality, or to watch the world burn. I like instead villains who can be cast as heroes who have gone wrong.
And so I like Linay. He is motivated by grief, love, and a desire to save his sister, with perhaps a side-helping of madness and revenge. Kate, who also feels grief, love, and the longing for family, connects to that in him. She also thinks he is terrifying and needs to be stopped. What interests me is that those two things are not a contradiction.
(And don't get me started on Talis.)
More Answered Questions
Brittany
asked
Erin Bow:
This might be an overly think-y question, but as a fellow proud Hufflepuff (why don't people understand it is about *values* not *traits*?) I thought I'd ask. I'm not sure I quite understand how the succession of hostages works in "The Scorpion Rules." The hostages leave at 18. Then who is the hostage for their country until they produce their own hostage?
Loki
asked
Erin Bow:
I just now read Scorpion Rules, and am looking forward to seeing Swan Riders when it comes out. I was a bit surprised to hear you could have in your future had Lake Erie become a mostly drained marshy muck, without it seeming to affect Lake Ontario's ability to supply potable water to the region. Even granting Lake Erie's shallow nature, how realistic did you think that possibility?
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