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Interview #1029: Mormon Artist: Interview with Brandon Sanderson, Entry #6

Nathan Morris

Your books don’t have overtly Mormon characters in them, but they do contain many recognizable Mormon elements—especially in book three of the Mistborn trilogy, The Hero of Ages . How do you feel that your faith has influenced your writing?

Brandon Sanderson

Being an author, the story is what is most important to me. Theme and message are really secondary. I don’t go into a book saying, “I’m going to write a book about this.” In other words, I don’t want to preach with my books. What I want to do is have compelling, realistic characters who care about different things. Some care about religion, others don’t. By writing compelling characters who care about issues, I realize that what the characters care about tends to be influenced by what I care about. As for my faith, it is what primarily influences me because it makes me interested in certain topics. For instance, religion does tend to be a theme in my books. Yet if you read Elantris , my first published work, the religious figure was the primary antagonist. People have asked me, “Brandon, you’re religious—why are you painting religion so poorly in this book?” And my answer for them is that I’m not painting religion poorly. The misuse of religion is one of the things that scares me the most in life. Someone who is taking faith and twisting it and manipulating it is doing one of the most purely evil things that someone can do, in my opinion.

With the Mistborn books, I wasn’t ever trying to be overtly LDS. Yet my values shape who I am and what I determine to be important. I then end up having characters who deal with these same things, and I think there are a lot of LDS things going on. But of course I think there are a lot of Buddhist things going on as well. I served my mission in Korea and have a lot of respect for the Buddhist religion. Because of that, I think some elements of Buddhism show up in my writing. Not because I set out to say, “Okay, I’m going to use Buddhism here,” but because it seems to happen when I’m developing a character who cares about something. That’s one of the tricks about being a writer.

One of my main goals is that any time I put a character in whose beliefs are different from mine, I want to make sure that I’m making them realistic, that I’m painting their ideas and philosophies as accurately as possible. I think it’s important for all authors to make their characters actually feel real and not just portray them as talking heads who are there to learn a lesson. Another author, Robert Jordan, once said that he loved it when his books made people ask questions, but that he didn’t want to give them the answers—he believed that they should come up with their own. That’s what I try to do, too.

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