|
Neal Asher Interview
Psychologically disturbed android killing machines. A Beast that
harvests people to research its genetic dabbling across time by sending
them back to the primordial ages. A mysterious Japanese man still
living millennia after Hiroshima. A physicist that uses nanotechnology
to merge with a spacecraft. Welcome to the weird and wonderful world
of Neal Asher.
Neal
Asher was born in Billericay, Essex in 1961. He has been writing
since the age of sixteen and had numerous small press and short
story sales to his name before the big fish bit in 2000 and Pan
MacMillan bought the novel ‘Gridlinked’. Since then he has established
himself amongst the top of British SF talent with the novels ‘The
Skinner’, ‘The Line Of Polity’ and his most recent, ‘Cowl’.
SF Crowsnest caught up with Neal to ask a few questions.
SFCrowsnest: Hello Neal. What made you want to
be a writer?
Neal
Asher: When I was a school kid, I would one day be taking apart
an old television and finding out how thermionic valves work, the
next day painting a picture or making a model out of Tetrion wall-filler
and, the day after that, peering through my microscope at something
scraped off the window ledge or discovering that a particular mixture
of table salt and copper sulphate in solution violently dissolves
aluminium.
My interests were all over the place and unfocused.
So it wasn't surprising that, after a school teacher praised a story
I'd written in a creative writing class, writing was added to the
list. My varied interests continued after I left school, with the
addition of beer drinking, smoking and women. At some point in my
late teens or early twenties, I decided to focus on one thing and
not be a Jack of all trades and master of none. I chose writing,
SF & Fantasy because that was what I read. A good choice because
it incorporated all my other interests.
SFC: When and with what did you make your first
pro sale?
NA: Pro sale? My first sale was a short story called
'Another England' to BBR (Back Brain Recluse) in 1989. I'd been
writing for a long time before that, producing the inevitable 'fantasy
trilogy' and revising it endlessly. I then discovered the small
presses and started trying to write short stories for that market.
The BBR story can't really be called a professional
sale because then it was an A5 mag and the payment one free copy.
My first real professional sale was the novella (written doing the
rounds of a postal workshop) ‘Mindgames: Fool's Mate’. For that
I received a one-off payment of Ł1000. It was published in 1992
by Club 199. Then more short story sales followed along with sales
to the publisher Tanjen.
SFC: Before exploding onto the scene with 'Gridlinked'
in 2001, you spent a couple of decades working through the small
presses. Do you think your work is better for the long run-up?
NA: I think so. I've been writing for a long time
and that experience tells (I hope) and I did that without much expectation
of reward, absorbed the disappointments and just got on with it.
I think many writers who are taken on younger, when they've produced
only a little work, find it difficult to knuckle down to the next
book. I don't.
By the time MacMillan published me, I'd written seven
novels (unpublished). ‘Gridlinked’ and ‘The Skinner’ were sort of
done at 70 and 80 thousand words respectively. I'd was about 30,000
words into ‘The Line Of Polity’ (though I abandoned them when I
came to write it out properly) and I'd written a novella called
'Cowl At The Beginning' which became ‘Cowl’.

Those years climbing up the ladder also brought home
to me how lucky and privileged I was to be taken on by a large publisher.
If it seems easy, then you've less inclination to work hard at making
a success of it. Twenty plus years of rejections sit behind my attitude
to the business of writing.
SFC: You've recently become a full-time writer.
Is it strange having no other work to think about?
NA: It's surprising how quickly I got used to it.
What may have helped was that prior to MacMillan I was self-employed,
grafting for wages in the summer and writing in the winter. The
greatest difficulty has been keeping the weight off having gone
from a physical job to sitting in front of a PC all the time and
a tendency to sometimes go a little stir crazy.
SFC: How much planning do you do before you sit
down to write a story?
NA: Very little. With ‘The Line Of Polity’, I actually
went after a bursary (didn't get it). To do that I needed to send
in sample chapters and a synopsis. When I came to write the book
for MacMillan, I abandoned the synopsis and most of those first
chapters (the 30,000 words mentioned before). I did this because
I felt constrained and bored by knowing where the story went. For
me, writing is just as much a process of discovery as reading.
SFC: Roughly how long does it take for you to write
a novel?
NA: That's a difficult one to answer. I aim for 10,000
words a week. Some weeks I manage that. Others I don't. I'd guess
at about six months to the first draft, then I spend a month editing
(at one point, I actually read it backwards a paragraph at a time
-- you don't get involved in the story that way and pick up mistakes
easier).
Then I get people to read it, correct the mistakes
they pick up, make additions, subtractions... Maybe eight or nine
months. Roughly. Very roughly. ‘Cowl’ was 125,000 words and ‘The
Line Of Polity’ 175,000, so you can see there's some variation.
SFC: Your books have a great deal of new technology
and sciences in them, but you have no formal scientific training.
Does this lack of background help or hinder your research?
NA: My background was in engineering so I've that
body of knowledge to call on: mathematics, metallurgy, manufacturing,
toolmaking, programming computerised machine tools etc -- the nuts
& bolts end of our technical civilization. I read a lot of science
books and magazines and like to think some of it takes root between
my ears.
I've also the background of both my parents being
teachers - my mother a school teacher and my father a lecturer in
applied mathematics - and the greatest knowledge any teacher can
impart is how to think. Formal training may well have hindered me
by narrowing my focus. It could negate that eclecticism that writing
is all about. But I don't really know. I do know that receiving
such training I probably would not have become a writer. I would
now be peering down that microscope or delving into the guts of
computers or mixing exotic chemicals in a laboratory...
SFC: If we're to believe George W. Bush, man could
be treading on Martian soil in the not too distant future. Is space
exploration important, in your opinion?
NA: Yes it is important. It would hugely advance our
technology and as a consequence the quality of our lives. It would
give us new places to live, grander vistas for the human imagination,
a greater understanding of the universe, the possibility of the
human race surviving to the end of the universe (and maybe beyond
that).
But what's the alternative? Do we just sit on this
planet gazing into our navels until the sun goes out? If our only
reason for being is just being, then we've no right to set ourselves
any higher than any other animals on this planet.
SFC: Your fourth novel, 'Cowl', is out now. What
attracted you about writing a time travel book?
NA: I'm awed by the sheer scale of Earth's history.
To pick up a fossil on a beach and think that this was alive two
hundred million years ago. To try and grasp the epic time scales
involved: 170 million years of dinosaurs, 65 million years of mammals
and all that time is what? About an eighteenth of the time life
has existed on Earth? What does a million years mean? It's like
trying to grasp what a light year means. So try four and half billion
years.
I wanted to bring some essence of that into a book.
It's the sensawunda that drew me to SF in the first place. I've
found it before (concerning time travel) in the like of Silverberg's
‘Hawksbill Station’, but not in many other books. Most time travel
stories seem to be set within recent human history, the last piddling
few thousands of years.
SFC: Time travel is one of SF's more tricky sub-genres.
How did you come up with your time travel technology?
NA: The first step was to try and get round the 'if
I shoot my father before I'm born' paradox. I tried to put together
a theory relating time travel to energy usage, just like space travel.
(Simply put, you can't travel faster than light because that would
require infinite energy -- kind of cosmic brake). Somewhere I'd
read the idea that creating a paradox will shove you into a parallel
timeline. But if time travel is possible, travellers can travel
from all timelines, create paradoxes and shove themselves into other
timelines. You'd end up with infinite timelines and travellers -
we'd be up to our necks in the buggers.
My way around that was the probability slope. Along
the main timeline at the top of the slope time travel is possible.
Creating paradoxes shoves you down the slope into parallels where
it becomes less probable. To get back up to the main line requires
an increasing amount of energy. The greater the paradox you create,
the further down the slope you get pushed. At the bottom of the
slope, infinite energy is required to time travel.
I then incorporated the idea that time travel is
only possible throughout those ages when life was on Earth, that
certain kinds of energy are created by the complex molecular interchanges
involved. Gasp! I then disappeared in a puff of my own logic.
SFC: If you had one of Cowl's 'tors' attached to
your arm and could travel through time, what would you do? Would
you advise your former self?
NA: I'm quite satisfied with my life as it stands.
I might nip back a few weeks and advise my earlier self of the lottery
numbers. But then, would I have sufficient energy to labour up the
probability slope to return and enjoy the money? Perhaps I'd go
further back and tell my young self to put out that fag. It's the
'if only I knew then what I know now' syndrome. But regarding the
smoking: if I hadn't smoked, rather than lighting up a fag I might
have stepped off the kerb earlier in front of a bus.
SFC: Your most popular novels are those of future
action hero, Ian Cormac, who you introduced us to in 'Gridlinked'
and continued with more recently in 'Line Of Polity'. Is there a
limit to what you can write about him and the Polity?
NA: The simple answer has to be no. But I may get
fed up with writing the Polity books and want to do something else
(publisher permitting). Maybe more about the Umbrathane and Heliothane,
maybe some stand alone works set in some entirely different future
(or past) world. My original intention was four books concerning
Cormac, one for each Dragon sphere, but now there's Jain technology
to contend with...
SFC: 'Line Of Polity' saw Cormac move from the
small numbers conflict of 'Gridlinked' to a much larger, planet-wide
civil war. Did this change in scope have anything to do with current
events?
NA: Not current events, no. Events as they have always
been. 'Those who fail to learn the lesson of history are damned
to repeat it.' How often should that be repeated? Shock and awe,
Mr Rumsfeld? Ever heard of the Blitz? Aaargh, don't get me started!
SFC: Both in 'Cowl', where Polly and Tack are re-educated
as they go back in time, and the physicist Skellor's nanotechnology
mutations in 'Line Of Polity', characters end up as totally different
people at the end of the book. Do you think it's possible to reach
a stage where personality is as designable as everything else?
NA: Definitely. We do it with drugs, education and
indoctrination now. We're just not very good at it yet. Factor in
technologies to alter the brain, reprogram the mind, make additions.
I think it the case that anything that has been created it will
be possible for us to create and change. The sky is not the limit
- far too close.
SFC: Artificial Intelligences play a major role
in your Polity novels, taking a lot of the responsibility for running
governments and systems from politicians. Do you think we will ever
see a machine pass the Turing Test and perform the same function
in our world?
NA: We're not far off creating machines that can beat
the Turing Test now and there are human being about now who could
not. But what does that mean? As in my books, the test of intelligence/sentience
will change as we learn more. The goalposts will keep changing.
As to machines running governments, what would the requirements
be? I don't suppose the ability to lie and talk bollocks would be
all that difficult to program in.
SFC: Do you think people are right to be wary of
machines replacing us?
NA: I guess so, in view of the fact that we would
be creating the machines in the first place and they might take
on our nasty traits. I do, however, buy into the Banksian credo
that the machines are quite likely to be better than us. No glands.
SFC: I take it you're already writing your next
book. Can you tell us anything about it?
NA: Well, I've completed ‘Brass Man’, which follows
on from ‘The Line Of Polity’. That's due to come out next April.
I'm now in the process of editing ‘The Voyage Of The Sable Keech’
which follows ‘The Skinner’. The title ‘Brass Man’, for those who
have read ‘Gridlinked’, is probably a bit of a giveaway. As a far
as Sable is concerned I can say that Sniper's back, the Prador are
going for a bit of 'shock and awe' and a schizoid hive mind is on
the scene.
SFC: What books & authors have had the most
influence on your writing?
NA: My stock reply to that, which you'll find in the
acknowledgements of ‘The Skinner’, is that list of names stretching
from Aldiss to Zelazny. I've also stuck some top tens up here and
there: one on the Guardian website and one on Zone SF. The trouble
is that as soon as I start to list them I find there are many I've
missed. Best to just say many many writers and many many books -
not all fantasy and SF.
SFC: You mention in your biography that you began
writing fantasy. Do you ever plan returning to the genre?
NA: My plan is to some time return to that fantasy
I've written and rewrite it. When I've got the time... Other things
get in the way though. I know I've got to write more stories, novellas
and the next novel for MacMillan.
Only in the last couple of days someone has been after
me to produce some Polity novellas to publish in a collection. Maybe
I'll return to the fantasy when all the other wells run dry, which
I hope never happens.
SFC: With yourself, Alastair Reynolds, Richard
Morgan and Ken Macleod, among others, hitting their stride in the
hard-SF genre, British Science Fiction is looking good at the moment.
Is this a trend you see continuing?
NA: All I can say is that I hope so. Possibly it will,
simply because SF is coming more and more into the mainstream via
film and television. I know I certainly want to see more books from
the above mentioned writers.
SFC: Is there any advice you can give to upcoming
writers?
NA: A writer writes. He doesn't agonise about being
a writer. Learn your craft and don't stop reading. Don't spend all
your time on the great novel - try other markets. Never think you
have nothing more to learn. Concentrate on telling a story, not
on demonstrating how intellectually superior you are. The best writers
are invisible. I feel a 'How to' book coming on...
SFC: Thanks for your time.
Interview conducted by Tomas L. Martin
(c) SFCrowsnest, Tomas L. Martin 2004
all rights reserved
|