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ASK ME ANYTHING INTERVIEW TW
Welcome to the new Tom Wood Interview. This message is just to say that group member Bodo Punfdel and I have a list of several starting questions to kick things off.
Green Light. It's 24 hours before Tom Wood comes on to answer anything we ask him, but that doesn't mean you can't post your questions early. Like what I'm about to do with a three question burst to get the ball rolling.
1) Victor the Assassin's usual weapon of choice is the unique FN 57, that is popular with the USSS and Splinter Cell's Sam Fisher. For those who are new, or have only just started the series, what made you choose this pistol as Victor's go - to sidearm? And what would you say is the favorite firearm you've come across in writing and research of the series?
2) Apart from the Krav Maga training, have you ever had a chance to use/test fire weapons before? And for the more interesting and advanced methods of killing, whether it be utilizing a hangman's noose or targeting the inferior vena cava in "No Tomorrow", or the death by shower pulled off in The Darkest Day, how do you come up with new ways for Victor to murder someone?
3) The suits and tailoring of Victor and his targets is a minor highlight of the books. Quite a bit of detail is devoted to what men like the late Milan Rados and Robert Lesson wear.. How did you learn about the components of suits? Did you ever consider going into the tailoring business on Saville Row? And will you be treating us readers to further tailored splendor?
And that's all for now, until I come back and drown you again in a Tsunami of questions Tom Wood Think of something you want to ask Tom Wood. Whether he like Cold Play or James Blunt perhaps! But anyway, be creative and think of something you want to ask Mr Wood, or should I say Hinshelwood about.
The next questions are from my partner in crime, group member Bodo Punfdel who I credit for conceptualizing this AMA and being the driving force behind it.
4) Here comes mine: You once mentioned that you aim to make each book different from the others and therefore each book becomes more difficult to write. Could you elaborate a little on that?
5) Next one: What were you inspirations for the Consensus as he is depicted in the Final Hour? It reminded me a little of Ludlum's Matarese Circle and the modern version of Spectre.
7) Last for today: The Final Hour ties up a lot of threads from previous books and manages to weave it all in a cohesive and ever twisting narrative. How did you accomplish that?


Before writing the first book I'd never even heard of the FN 5.7, and that's part of the reason why I chose it. I thought if I hadn't come across it before then maybe readers wouldn't have either. Add to that it's unusual rifle-like round, expensive price tag, and large magazine, and I knew I had a special weapon for Victor.

The short answer is 10% personal experience, 40% research and 50% the product of a warped imagination.

As I've got older I've become something of a fan of suits, perhaps because I've never had a job that required me to wear one on a daily basis. That Victor almost always wears a suit is therefore me living vicariously. When I started out writing I couldn't have told you the difference between single and double breast, but over the years I've picked up a thing or two. I know far more about killing people than I do tailoring... but I'm working on it

By now I really should have worked out a formula and stick to it with each book, but I get bored far too easily to do that. So, I always aim to write the next book with a different hook to the last, in a different way stylistically and thematically. For example, after A Time to Die, which is mostly told from Victor's perspective, wherein we know who the bad guys are, what's at stake etc, I deliberately set out with The Final Hour to have lots of different perspectives, with ambiguity over who the bad guys are and what's at stake. The upside to this is pretty obvious, but the downside is that I have to go through an entirely new set of problems with each book. There is no formula to help me when I get stuck; there is no 'ah, this is the point where the villain is introduced' or 'insert set-piece at page 50'.

Yeah, the Consensus is inspired by the aforementioned organisations and as well as the desire to make such a group a little more believable. As Spectre found out, having all your top boys meeting around a big table isn't the best way to stay in the shadows. So, the Consensus is more like a collection of terrorist cells, with minimal contact with one another, but aligned in goals, which again will be a little more believable than hijacking nuclear weapons and holding the world to ransom.

Yes. She's a popular character and very easy for me to write. When I'm writing Victor I'm always thinking 'no, he wouldn't do that' or 'that's too funny; he wouldn't make that joke' and so on. Whereas with Raven I have no such restrictions. She's the classic anti-hero and Victor's more of a villain.

It was... tricky. The book was ever-changing, right up until the very end, much to the dismay of my publishers, and myself. There's no magic here, just elbow grease. I kept editing, polishing and rearranging until all of the pieces worked together. Oh, and having a colour-coded spreadsheet helps!

I..."
Great answers! Here comes the next lot;)

1) Victor is a bad man who has made it his mission in life to profit from the pain and suffering of much worse men and women who inhabit the shadow realm along with him. How would you describe the process of conceptualizing the antagonists of the Victor stories? And what would you say is the better kind of antagonist? The kind which is irredeemable and off their rocker? Or the sort which has some humanity left





Name five influences, novels, films and TV which could be said to be the primary influences that make up Victor




Creating antagonist's can be a real struggle given Victor is our 'hero'. They're generally worse than he is, but not always. Sometimes the line between them is very narrow. I remember when I was working on Reed in The Killer/The Hunter; I wanted him to be essentially the same character as Victor, just working for the opposition. I would say that all villains benefit from a little humanity. Even characters like Rados and Kasakov, who are monstrous, have more to them than simply their villainy.

I think what makes a perfect anti-hero is the same thing that makes the perfect hero, and that is being flawed. As you have pointed out, the hero is tortured by doing the occasional bad whereas Victor is tortured by doing the occasional good. That is his flaw. To be the perfect assassin he needs to be utterly emotionless and lacking in humanity, but try as he might, he can't quite suppress that humanity entirely.

Fantastic answer! Sums Victor up perfectly!

I have a theory that what we classify as personality disorders are in fact deliberate and necessary from an evolutionary perspective. They are the natural warriors, if you will, who are necessary for the tribe's survival, to meet threats head on for the good of all. Victor would put himself in that category. To him morality is a social construct born out of the need to survive. He can be manipulative, but as you say he doesn't display the other traits; is has incredible self control, rarely angers etc. So, no. He's not a sociopath by that definition.

I'm a thriller novelist, not a romance writer, so I have no plans to tell a traditional love story and I don't think my readers would want that. But, he's a man, so there is the occasional romantic involvement. Yes, his association with Rebecca did lead him astray, but surely someone like Victor would only make that mistake once...

There are so many of them it's hard to answer in a way that covers them all. However, I tend to write them as a series of actions and reactions. I'll give you an example from The Enemy. When Victor is preparing to shoot Kasakov and is ambushed by the American mercenary outfit I didn't plan it out, I had the characters act and react in turn. So, when Victor realises he's not alone I asked. myself 'right, so what does he do now?' and I worked out he's going to miss on purpose and act like he doesn't know they're there in order to lure them out. Then, the mercenaries react to this, and Victor reacts to them and so on and so on. Victor's working out what to do at the same time I'm working it out. When he realises he has enemies in front and behind and he's thinking how the hell he's going to get out of it, I'm thinking the same thing! The moment Victor realises what to do--go back to the guy he's shot and steal his headset--is the moment I realised that's what he needs to do next.

Cool!




Star Wars, The Brotherhood of the Rose, The Shield, The Mechanic, and The Day of the Jackal

I wouldn't necessarily agree that Victor has minimal personality, but I think the key to keeping him, or any other character, fresh, is to put them in different situations and to ensure they don't always act as expected.

That's because I almost try not to get 'the feel' right. In my own reading experience most authors go overboard describing a place, either because they've been there and want to share every single detail they've experienced, else hey haven't been and are overcompensating. Either way, the setting is just that. The characters and the story are the important part and I make sure not to forget that. Less is more

It's really not a useful skill when one isn't at constant threat. As for when I realised it... I guess I forget I'm like this, but am often reminded. Recently, after the London Bridge attack I said to someone 'From now on we should probably try and walk facing traffic when in central London to keep an eye on oncoming vehicles' and they looked at me like I was crazy.

I've been adding those kind of references in since book two, so it's just habit now. I guess it's part reward to readers and partly because it wouldn't make sense for each book to exist in a vacuum. As for the second question: an end should be an end. There needs to be closure. That said, not every single thread needs to be closed. I think that approaches is too unnatural and too neat. As long as the main storyline ends properly then that's enough. I hate cliffhangers
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