Ask the Author: Holly Black

“I’m answering questions from 3pm-4pm GMT on Wednesday, August 13th, as part of #GollanczFest, especially those about The Coldest Girl in Coldtown and Darkest Part of the Forest!” Holly Black

Answered Questions (52)

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Holly Black That would be extremely tragic, since they're all dead! :(
Holly Black I am so glad that my books helped you in any small way. I would love to do write that for you, but am not sure how to get it to you. I can't seem to attach things to messages here. If you have a twitter, can you tweet at me and I will attach it there?
Holly Black I can't tell you much about it, but yes.
Holly Black BoN was adult because the characters were adults in it, rather than young adults. I wanted to write about people in their late twenties and early thirties.
Holly Black I was actually thinking of Pioneer Valley Fencing in Easthampton where they do heavy weapons as well -- I had no idea they were doing ARMS in Amherst! That's right down the street from me.
Holly Black I am so glad you liked it! Yes, it is a duology although I have two books to write before I can give you the second book. I should be starting it this time next year. :)
Holly Black No one has an option on The Cruel Prince and no adaptation is currently being made, so no need for tears of blood. If there is ever an adaptation, though, we're both going to cross our fingers, hope for the best, and know that the book will still be fine and unchanged. :)
Holly Black It came out this past September and the third book will come out next September!
Holly Black I think about doing it a lot, but I haven't found the right project yet.
Holly Black I think my biggest tip is that once you've figured out how your world works, figure out how people in that world exploit the systems or resources you've made up. See if there are models in our human history you can use to add resonance and suggest things you might not have thought of. Remember how people really behave.
Holly Black Yes, we've planned out the whole series. We know the big turns of what's going to happen in the remaining two books we're writing. (The third one is written, just not out yet.)
Holly Black Yes! There's a new series, tentatively titled Folk of the Air. I am working on the first book, Cruel Prince, now.
Holly Black My answer is going to be a little bit less useful to you because, since I'm not my own publisher, I have deadlines that I can't extend.

I do a lot of revisions, both as a means of getting closer to the story I want to tell and also as a method of procrastination. I go over earlier chapters many times and later chapters many fewer times. But, basically, a book has as many revisions as it needs. Sometimes I have known what a story was and the revisions were about language and characterization. Sometimes I was changing my mind about who the villain might be four different times, resulting in four different drafts (I'm looking at you, Darkest Part of the Forest). Only you know when your book is fully cooked and you've got to revise it until it is.
Holly Black I do write almost anywhere and at any time (although its super hard to write when exhausted), but that's not luck, that's deadlines! I have playlists that I can listen to, which are helpful for getting me back into the headspace of the book, but other than that, its the writing itself which gets me back in. Once I write for a little while, the writing gets easier.
Holly Black The protagonist of The Iron Trial is Callum Hunt. The two other kids in his apprentice group are Tamara and Aaron, so he's stuck with them, although that's not always a bad thing.

I do think it's easier to co-write a book, because there's someone else to lean on.
Holly Black Thank you! I actually have some specific links to helpful research books on faeries on my site, here: http://blackholly.com/for-writers/res...

In addition, Katharine Brigg's Encyclopedia of Fairies is a great place to start, if there's one at your local library.
Holly Black It's not strength that drives a story, it's desire. A character that wants something, especially something specific, drives a story. Whether it's revenge, to get into a good college, the love of a specific individual, or to save the world, that desire is going to motivate the character to be a tiny, plot-generating machine.

As for overcoming obstacles in character development, I think it depends on the obstacle, but I recently read a blog post by Cat Valente, here: http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-...

She said "Take one (1) unformed character, be they protagonist, antagonist, comic relief, or BFF.

Give them something to want.
Give them something to hide.
Give them something to fear.
Give them something to obsess over.
Then hurt them."

I think that's pretty good advice.

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