Wolfy
asked
Jane Lindskold:
Hello, I want to, first and foremost, thank you. The worlds you've built have sheltered and encouraged my imagination since my early years of scifi readership. Now that that's out of the way: How do you so gracefully switch between such intricate worlds? Each of your series has its own feel and life to it, how do you transition out of one and into another when writing?
Jane Lindskold
You've made me smile! Thank you for sharing what my books have meant to you. To answer your question: How do I transition? Well, I rarely work on more than one project at a time. If I do, I make sure that I am in different phases-- writing the new material on one book, while doing edits on another. This keeps me immersed in the "right" world so that they won't become generic or intermingled. Another reason I think my works tend to feel grounded in their worlds is that I write from character point of view. I use omniscient narration in a very, very limited fashion. Even when tempted, I don't slip in cute jokes or references to current events that might throw a reader out of the alternate world.
(Apologies for the late reply! Notifications weren't reaching me until this week.)
(Apologies for the late reply! Notifications weren't reaching me until this week.)
More Answered Questions
Megalion
asked
Jane Lindskold:
With all my favorite series getting snapped up by Netflix, Hulu, Amazon want more, I'm hopeful that Firekeeper has been optioned. Would definitely make a great series with plenty of books for seasons! My question: have you sold the option or rights and if so to who? Thank you for answering my other question about Artemis.
Paola Garcia
asked
Jane Lindskold:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
If it were proposed to you, would you turn Artemis Awakening into a movie?
So spoilers for Artemis Awakening, don't read if you haven't finished. In the end, Artemis is coming to life. Is the planet sentient and can eventually communicate with everyone, or is it just Adara?
(hide spoiler)]
So spoilers for Artemis Awakening, don't read if you haven't finished. In the end, Artemis is coming to life. Is the planet sentient and can eventually communicate with everyone, or is it just Adara? (hide spoiler)]
Andrew
asked
Jane Lindskold:
Hi Jane I’m a David Weber fan and I’ve read the 2 books you published with him. I really like his treecats. I like the sound of Artemis Awakening, but it’s not being offered in Kindle form. As I live in Australia and books tend to be expensive compared to the US or other places. Is there a reason?
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