>Also, a friend of mine has refused to read comics for years. I convinced >her to read the first issue by appealling to her "Babylon 5" fandom, and >she's hooked. (In fact, she's debating whether to buy the trade >paperbacks, or hold out for the hardcovers.)
....there's gonna be hardcovers?
One other thing on Supreme Power...if you remember the original miniseries that Mark did, he had Hyperion undertaking a fairly massive endeavor to try and set the world to rights (as he saw it, at least, which put him at odds with others). Mark took kind of a plot oriented approach to getting him to that point.
Without tipping my hand too much...I wanted to try a different way of getting someone to a point like that. He's going to make some very bad decisions down the road, but I want that road to be absolutely plausible and understandable. If you know where Hyperion came from, and what he has gone though, you come away with full understanding of why he might do what he might do. I want readers to be able to go deeper inside Hyperion's mind than in any other book, to have an intimate familiarity with his background and how it will affect his actions.
Ironically, in so doing, I made a decision early on not to do any interior dialogue or monologue. You never hear his thoughts, ever. (The one sort-of exception I made was when he dives into the water looking for his folks, and you hear "mom? dad?" and it could be a thought or spoken.) In this way, you keep what he's really thinking a mystery...and that makes him a bit more ominous, I think. You don't really know how much he knows, or suspects, of what's going on around him, and how he's being used.
It's a challenging book to write, but I'm really quite happy with the result.
jms
(jmsatb5@aol.com) (all message content (c) 2003 by synthetic worlds, ltd., permission to reprint specifically denied to SFX Magazine and don't send me story ideas) |
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