SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion

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Annihilation
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Group Reads Discussions 2014
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"Annihilation" Q&A with Jeff VanderMeer *Spoilers*
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I wonder if it's to keep them separate. By not knowing each others name they might stay more professional, more detached from each other.

I'm interested in the climactic scene where the Biologist describes/encounters the Crawler. To me the scene seemed almost psychedelic or mystical.
Could you tell us a little about how you went about writing that scene? Was it especially challenging? Did you start with a definite idea of exactly what she was seeing and/or what was happening to her, or did you try to only think of it in a kind of abstract way?

How did your idea for the Tower and Crawler start?
How did you develop the idea into its final form?
How did you know when you were finished developing the idea?
I'm always fascinated when writers take a common idea (a cave with a monster) and develop it into something unique and gripping. I'd love a window into that thought process.

The biologist in the story seems detached from the other team members and her husband. She comes across as an objective observer in both her professional life and her personal life. She seems to exhibit warmth toward her husband only in the conclusion when he is no longer accessible. Is this detachment something intentional and did it factor into the decision to identify characters by their professions rather than their names?
Thanks

Here I will say that enjoyed the book very much. It did a wonderful job of turning on that part of me that loves to analyze things.

For me, one of the most poignant parts of the story was when the surveyor demanded to know the biologist’s name. The biologist saw no point in telling her, but if she had, perhaps their confrontation might have ended differently.



I am writing a novel about a giant psychotic floating bear terrorizing a mid-Collapse city in an unnamed part of the U.S. I think of it as a Chekov play in the round with Godzilla and Mothra fighting in the background.

I wonder if it's to keep them separate. By not knowing each others nam..."
Yes--it's noted in the novel that this is a gambit by Southern Reach because they notice when the expeditions go in without names and are conditioned to think of each other in terms of function, Area X finds it harder to "hack" them. Really, those conversations about tower-tunnel are the first signs of Area X's influence on the expedition. Thanks for the question.

I'm interested in the climactic scene where the Biologist describes/encounters the Crawler. To me the scene seemed almost psychedelic or mystical.
Could you t..."
If you think of Area X as being very good at mimicry, and reflecting back at you things from your own mind, and the tunnel as being the purest distillation of whatever's in Area X, then perhaps that gives you an answer? I do have a good idea of what's actually down there, and I don't pull any punches in the third book. But here it was clear to me what the biologist would and wouldn't see.

The biologist in the story seems detached from the other team members and her husband. She comes across as an objective observer in both her professional life and her personal life. She seem..."
I think reading the journal of her husband makes a difference in her perception of the situation. But she's also a mimic, just like Area X--she's more at home in the natural world and just kind of faking it in the wider world. For someone like that, any marriage would be difficult. Especially because her husband doesn't quite understand her.


I do have one quibble: as a biologist, the narrator should know the difference between venomous and poisonous snakes; she makes this mistake twice. I suspect this is an author error, but it took me out of the story, especially near the beginning. If it was intentional, then kudos for dropping a hint that the narrator may not be who she tells us she is. If not, then is there a chance of correcting this in future editions?


I enjoyed the book, and am now nearly finished with the whole trilogy. My apologies if this question is inappropriate for the thread, as it also concerns "Authority" and "Acceptance." Did you have the whole narrative structure of trilogy in mind when you wrote "Annihilation?" In particular, the points of view that you use throughout the three books impact the reading experience in significant ways (especially in "Acceptance"). I suppose the experiences I'm having are similar to what you intended, but when starting the series did you have the shifts in POV in mind, or did it develop as you wrote and revised the second and third books?
It makes me wonder what it would have been like to read all three as one volume, rather than one in the spring, one in the summer, and one in the fall.

Sorry I haven't posted much here--my computer died a couple of days ago.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Our usual Q&A format applies - please submit questions for Jeff VanderMeer to this thread and he'll pop by to answer them sometime during the course of the month when he has the time.
Please do not to spoiler the rest of the series. Not everyone participating in this Q&A will have read it yet. If you'd like to ask about any books other than Annihilation, please do so without any spoilers or use spoiler tags, otherwise we'll be forced to remove your questions or comments.
Ask away!