When you are off in another world, how do you come down from it and relate to, say, your children, your wife and your students?
Writing is hard. You spend a day at work writing and at the end of it I feel tired. But stepping out of my room and transitioning out of that is not as difficult as it was once. Because it’s time to be done and I’ve divided my life in such a way that when I pass out of the door, I’m transitioning out of the writing mind and into the family mind.
When I was younger, when I was just first married, these transitions were hard. But it was just a matter of practice. I feel that it’s important to have my family ground me in real-life experiences, otherwise, I won’t actually have anything to write about.
Fantasy is the genre of the imagination and it is only as imaginative as we have real-life experiences to explore. We take what we know and we expand upon it. People often say, “Write what you know.” For fantasy, that applies to taking your real life experience and asking the “what ifs” about it.
Really, I think fantasy is a genre about the now, the things that we’re worried about, the things we’re concerned about, the things we wish could change in our world—these could become manifest in our fantasy stories. I don’t think there’s a fantasy book out there that isn’t in some way an allegory for the author’s own life experience.
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