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Embracing the Zahn Side
Author Timothy Zahn interviewed on creating alien characters and
races, his returning to the Star Wars universe, and his new young-adult
Dragonback series ... that's fantasy you know, if the title wasn't
a bit of a giveaway.
How long has it been
since your last Star Wars book? How does it feel to be back in that
galaxy long ago and far, far away?
THE
HAND OF THRAWN duology was published in 1997 and 1998, so it’s been
almost six years. I have done a few Star Wars short stories in that
time, though, so it isn’t like I’ve been out of the galaxy far,
far away entirely.
You mentioned THE HAND
OF THRAWN. That series, along with its predecessor, THE THRAWN TRILOGY,
remains hugely popular with fans. What is it that sets your Star
Wars books apart?
TZ: That’s a question you’d have to ask the fans,
because I really can’t tell you. As an author, I simply do my best
to create a story with an interesting plot, characters the reader
will care about, lots of action, and maybe a few twists along the
way. At that point, all I can do is hope that what I’ve done will
connect with the readers. So far, I’ve been very fortunate.
Your new novel, SURVIVOR'S
QUEST, is also concerned with Admiral Thrawn—or, rather, with the
consequences of certain actions taken by him. How does this book
fit into the Star Wars timeline? Is it a direct sequel to your two
previous series or only tangentially related?
All of my Star Wars books have sort of melded into
a single series, dealing with the same characters and some of the
same events . . . or, as you say, the consequences of those events.
Once the OUTBOUND FLIGHT book is finished, the books will form a
loose septet spanning roughly fifty years of Star Wars history.
Tell us a little about
OUTBOUND FLIGHT and the part it plays in the novel.
OUTBOUND FLIGHT was a project to send an expedition
to another galaxy in the days before the Clone Wars, a project pushed
strongly by Jedi Master Jorus C'baoth. On its way through the Unknown
Regions, it was attacked and destroyed by the young Chiss commander
Mitth’raw’nuruodo, better known to us as Thrawn.
In SURVIVOR’S QUEST, the Chiss have discovered
the remains of OUTBOUND FLIGHT a considerable distance from where
it was destroyed, and invite Luke and Mara Jade Skywalker to accompany
them on the official voyage to examine the wreckage. Also along
are representatives of an alien species who wants to pay their last
respects, a group of stormtroopers from Thrawn’s Empire of the Hand,
and a New Republic ambassador with some private ghosts of his own.
Luke and Mara are still
basically newlyweds as the novel opens. They both have doubts to
work through—not about their love for each other, but about their
own pasts, and the still-mysterious past of the Jedi order. Can
you talk a little bit about this element of the novel?
Though Mara has fully joined the New Republic,
there are still parts of her past Imperial service that hold a draw
for her, particularly the order and discipline the Empire offered,
and she discovers she still has to work through some of those feelings.
Luke, for his part, is still struggling with questions
about his role as “the” Jedi Master of the New Republic, as well
as how some of the rules and traditions of the old Jedi order relate
to the new Jedi Order he’s trying to build.
In writing SURVIVOR'S
QUEST, you're limited in what can happen to Luke and Mara by future
events already set down by other writers in books like The New Jedi
Order series. Did you find that constraint to be a troublesome one?
How do you keep up the suspense when readers already know what's
going to happen to your characters in the future?
I didn’t find that a particular problem, since
I suspect most readers already know I’m not going to kill Luke or
Mara, or even lop off a limb or two. However, even though the Skywalkers
may be safe, there are still quite a few secondary characters who
the readers will hopefully also come to root for. And their fates
are in no way guaranteed.
What is the relationship
of the Empire of the Hand to the Empire of Palpatine?
The Empire of the Hand is Thrawn’s legacy, his
version of the Empire of Palpatine that he brought to the Unknown
Regions. Since Thrawn didn’t have Palpatine’s megalomania and xenophobia,
there are some interesting differences between the two institutions.
Tell us about Fel, who
commands a squad of stormtroopers from the Empire of the Hand. Will
we be seeing more of him in the future?
Chak Fel is one of the sons of the legendary Baron
Fel, created by Mike Stackpole and shamelessly borrowed by me every
chance I get. As to whether we’ll be seeing more of him, I guess
that’ll depend on whether or not he lives through the book!
In addition to the novel,
you've written an eBook novella, FOOL'S BARGAIN, set before the
action of SURVIVOR'S QUEST begins. Is this a prelude to the novel,
or a stand-alone adventure?
It’s sort of a prelude, telling the back-story
of one of the stormtroopers in the book, an alien, and how he first
came to join up.
Is there any formula you
follow to create your alien characters and races?
Not really. I usually check the various Star Wars
alien listings first to see if I can use an existing species. If
I can, great; if not, I make up my own. As to specific characters,
I create them pretty much as I do human characters: give ’em a job
to do in the book, and let them do it. Of course, I also try to
come up with a few interesting non-human characteristics to give
them, as well.
What can you tell us about
the next book in the series?
The next book will actually be the first chronologically
in my Star Wars septet: the story of OUTBOUND FLIGHT, which takes
place about fifty years before SURVIVOR’S QUEST. Interestingly enough,
because of the way the publication schedule fell out, there are
several mysteries and questions raised in SURVIVOR’S QUEST about
what happened to OUTBOUND FLIGHT that won’t be answered until that
book. But, hey—if prequels are good enough for George Lucas, they’re
certainly good enough for me!
Any other Star Wars projects
on the horizon?
I’m currently working on a two-part Clone Wars-era
story for the Star Wars Insider featuring Obi-Wan and Anakin. After
that, of course, there’s the OUTBOUND FLIGHT book. Aside from those,
there’s nothing else pending.
Fans of your Star Wars
work may be pleasantly surprised to learn that your talents aren't
restricted to Star Wars. Tell us about some of your other projects.
The second book of my six-book young-adult Dragonback
series, DRAGON AND SOLDIER, will be published this coming May or
June. (The first book, DRAGON AND THIEF, comes out in paperback
in March.) I also have a sort of modern-day SF/fantasy book called
THE GREEN AND THE GRAY, which is due out in September. My three
military SF Cobra books, which have been out of print for a while,
will also be published in September in an omnibus edition.
As a successful writer,
with a Hugo Award to your credit, you obviously don't need to write
Star Wars books. What keeps you coming back, and keeps the universe
and characters fresh?
What keeps Star Wars fresh is the same thing that
keeps any other writing project fresh: challenging stories to write,
interesting and likeable characters to create or revisit, and, of
course, a vast and intricate universe to play in. Since that first
awesome Star Destroyer overflight back in 1977, Star Wars has been
an important and enjoyable part of my life. I see no reason why
that should change any time soon.
The following material is being reprinted from
the Del Rey Internet Newsletter. To subscribe to this free, monthly
e-newsletter, visit http://www.delreybooks.com.
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OTHER CONTENT - March 2004
Jensen Intercepted Author Jane Jensen on her near-future thriller, Dante's Equation. With clever science, baffling Torah code, devious secret agents and just a little bit of romance, what more could you want from a book? (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Embracing the Zahn Side Author Timothy Zahn interviewed on creating alien characters and races, his returning to the Star Wars universe, and his new young-adult Dragonback series ... that's fantasy you know, if the title wasn't a bit of a giveaway. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
The Troubles of Time Travel Anne Groell, senior editor at the Bantam Spectra publishing imprint, ruminates on the time in every science fiction editor's life when one has to edit the dread 'Time Travel' novel. Yikes, move over, Terminator ... (COMMENT)
Finding Philcon Evelyn drops by Philcon 2003, and finds the answers to some thorny questions at the convention. Like why hasn't Lovecraft spawned a good movie yet, and just why do conventional SFF publishers miss so much of the good stuff? (CONVENTION REPORTS)
The Offworld Report March 04: Science Fiction and Fantasy Interviews with authors Spider Robinson, Jack McDevitt, Rob Grant, Gene Wolfe, Robert Holdstock, is Asimov's magazine really full of stories that make minors quake and parents faint, and Robert Silverberg take a sophisticated look at Sophocles of Athens in, err, that old razz mag Asimovs? (NEWS)
The Offworld Report March 04: Weird Science Is Europa corrosive, Black hole found ripping a star apart, a prescription for fixing NASA, the first robot Humvee (hello Mr Knight) and why the Pentagon is preparing for a war in space. (NEWS)
Re-thinking Re-imagining (or B.S. Galactica) Joseph Nanni on why re-imagining classic SFF television series is enough to shrivel the soul of any true fan. Hmmm. Battlestar Galactica anyone? (COMMENT)
A Problem with Fear Mark sits down for this latest SF movie and discovers a quirky science fiction film with some odd approaches, including a man-made 'fear storm'. (FILM REVIEWS)
Code 46 In this movie Mark finds a very odd piece of science fiction; it is a film with some very nice material that tries some interesting ideas, but ultimately Code 46 fails to capture the viewer. (FILM REVIEWS)
Six Lost Worlds: The Dramatic Adaptations of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Novel Mark imagines a place so isolated from the world that it was beyond the reach even of the forces of evolution ... where on one plateau deep in the Amazon rain forest there is a land that has withstood the ravages of time. Bring on those dinosaurs and prehistoric proto-humans. (FILM REVIEWS)
Open Letter to an Open Enemy Scots SFF author Ken MacLeod has written science fiction novels which make frequent passing reference to the Soviet Union, Lenin, Trotsky, and communism. But he does not regard Lenin as a mass murderer, any more than he regards Cromwell, Napoleon, Lincoln, Roosevelt or Churchill as mass murderers. Read why here ... (COMMENT)
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