Welcome to
Star Wars Lightsabre. Were
excited and thrilled to have as our guest the writer of the X-wing series Aaron Allston.
Q Aaron,
welcome to Star Wars - Lightsabre.
A - Glad
to be here.
Q What are your major influences as a
writer?
A
Well, there are lots of influences. I mean, since there are writers
in my family for the two generations before mine, and others further back, one influence
is probably genetic.
If you mean literary influences, that's sort of a tricky question. When I was a kid, good
writers didn't make me want to write -- they made me want to *read*. When I did begin
writing, I tended to emulate several florid fantasy and science fiction writers whom I
adored then but find nearly unreadable today. I won't mention their names, I don't intend
to disparage them -- they were writers who were good for kids, who got kids interested in
reading and kept them that way. They're just not to my taste now.
Other writers, ones I enjoyed as an adolescent and still enjoy today, in no particular
order, include Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Alexandre Dumas, Homer, Robert A. Heinlein,
Mark Twain, and many others.
Q - Which of the four films stands out as
your personal favourite, and why?
A
THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK. As lovable as A NEW HOPE
was, EMPIRE added depth to what were essentially quite shallow characters
and began putting them through hell in a very interesting fashion.
We saw the consequences of characters' pasts catching up to them, with Han's difficulties
with Jabba finally becoming more than an inconvenience. We saw Luke exhibit traits --
recklessness, lack of resoluteness in or understanding of his training -- that looked like
the seeds of the Tragic Flaw of the Tragic Hero, and that made us really worry about his
fate. We had the revelation about Vader being Luke's father, which opened a whole can of
emotional whoop-ass. I left A NEW HOPE feeling as though I'd seen a
marvellously updated 1940s Republic serial; I left EMPIRE feeling as
though I'd seen one chapter of an unfolding epic.
Q - Tell us something of your
career. How did you begin as a writer and how
did you end up taking this career path?
A - Actually,
I never anticipated that it *would* be a career path, though that was something I hoped
for.
I started writing creatively in grade school -- poems, short stories, most of them
oriented toward fantasy and horror. By the time I was in high school I'd had a couple of
stories published in school literary magazines, had written one novel (which has never
seen, and will never see, the light of day), and was pretty sure that I was always going
to write, that it was an infection I was never going to be cured of.
But I was also pretty realistic and had done some research on the publishing industry. I
was not hopeful that I'd be able to make my living as a writer. So I finished high school
with an eye toward
studying journalism and law in college -- two professions that those high school tests
said were among my aptitudes.
But I dropped out of college after my first semester, for financial reasons -- I did
intend to go back once I got my feet back under me. I went to work for an Austin, TX game
manufacturer, Steve Jackson Games, and found a new outlet for writing, in
the field of role-playing games.
Things started to snowball from there -- I wrote game supplements for my employer, then
went freelance and began writing them for a bunch of different companies. Finally, one of
those companies launched a new game line and decided to support it with a series of
novels, and the editor of the line, who was familiar with my work and believed I could
write fiction as well, tapped me to write the first novel in the series.
This is pretty much backwards of the path most people take when getting their first novel
into print, so I can't tell new writers to do it the way I did it -- "Wait around
until a publisher comes to you and asks you for a novel." Usually that doesn't work.
And I *did* have to hustle and work in the usual fashion to get my second and subsequent
novels accepted.
Anyway, after that I gradually began writing fewer game supplements and more novels. These
days, I write five or six novels for every game project of any length. And I never did
manage to go back to college.
Maybe when I hit retirement age...
Q How did it feel
continuing the X-wing stories, so established in novel and comics form by Mike Stackpole? Was it a major challenge or just another job?
A- It
was a challenge, definitely, but it wasn't as big as the challenge of ramping up to be
able to write about the Star Wars universe in general. I had to do so much research so
fast that I really didn't have time to be spooked by the challenge.
The big question with my taking over the X-Wing series was whether or not I could please Mike
Stackpole's fans. And the answer turned out to be yes and no. Some of them loved
the differences I brought to the series, others hated them. I've had people write to tell
me that our
styles were so similar that they didn't realize until much later that another writer had
taken over; others wrote to tell me that my style was so different from Mike's that I
ought to be working in another genre, or serving up fries at McDonald's. So I just had to
shrug and get back to doing the best job I knew how, and hoping everything turned out well
in the end.
Which it did. These days, Mike has his fans, and I have my fans, and we share a large
common pool of fans in between.
Q - In your opinion, what makes for a good
book?
A
A book, a novel anyway, is a sort of vicarious experience, so my
feeling that it's a good book when the experience is one worth having. If the reader comes
out of it feeling that he's better off for having read it, it's probably a good one.
If I can turn pseudo-analytical for a moment, science fiction is all about exploring the
effects on people of the introduction of changes to technology or to society; fantasy is
all about the interaction of people with symbols, such as monsters and phenomena, that
represent human interests, needs, and fears. The common element between the two is
humanity, and the Star Wars universe is at an interesting halfway point between science
fiction and fantasy. What I'm getting at is that the most important thing with a novel is
finding the humanity of the story.
For example, readers, aspiring writers especially, sometimes ask me what themes I was
exploring with the Wraith Squadron novels. I tell them that all three explored the same
theme. They usually can't figure out what it was, so I tell them, and it's an answer they
usually haven't anticipated: Forgiveness. The Wraith novels look at forgiveness, what
happens to us if we deny it to others, what happens to us if we deny it to *ourselves*,
what it sometimes costs us to offer it. And that's the human center of those novels.
Q How would you like to
see the Star Wars books continue? With the
death of Chewbacca in Vector Prime theyve really thrown it open nothing is
safe. Would you continue with that?
A
I can find stories to tell in the Vong storyline, certainly, but
once the Vong stories are done I'd prefer to see the Star Wars universe go in different
directions. I'd like to see more novels invoke a sense of wonder through the exploration
of the galaxy and the workings of the Force. I'd also like to see later-era characters
patching up the gaps in their historical knowledge -- the Empire years serve as sort of a
firebreak between the NJO era and the prequel trilogy era, and it would
be interesting to see the post-NJO characters rediscovering the past,
digging up mysteries buried since Palpatine came to power.
Q Youve established your
skills in novels and other fields, but if you had the choice of what you were good at,
what would it be?
A - Well, I'd want to retain any writing
skills I have, regardless of any other changes. But if I were able to add a set of skills,
I'd like to have some musical aptitude. There are a number of musicians in my family and
among my friends, and I've always envied them.
Q You can bump off any
major sci-fi or fantasy character in any way you wish.
Who would it be and how?
A
Well, I'd only want to do this if I had a sense that, once killed,
he or she would *stay* dead. I mean, in the last twenty years we've seen several major
characters die only to be needlessly brought back again. Spock died in a wonderful,
appropriate, and heart-tugging manner in THE WRAITH OF KHAN. Then he was
brought back, unravelling all of that emotional build-up. Godzilla died spectacularly and
wrenchingly in GODZILLA VS. DESTROYAH... and then popped up without
explanation in GODZILLA 2000. Kirk bought it in GENERATIONS,
then, if I understand correctly, was revived in the novels in some way. And don't get me
started on comic-book superheroes. There's just no point to it if they don't stay dead.
That said, I'd want to pick a character who had some substantial symbolic meaning for his
or her audience, and that symbolism, and the effect on the audience of its loss, would be
the emotional heart of the event.
My *personal* interests would point me at someone like, say, the Shadow.
That's an event that could be cast in the light of a change in eras, at the border between
the first half of the 20th century and the second, a point in time when he discovers that
there's just no place for the way he does things but there's still one last thing for him
to do. But I suspect that there's not much of an audience for that story these days.
Ellen Ripley, maybe. She deserved a much better send-off than she got in ALIEN III,
and she sort of ducks my complaint about "staying dead" because it wasn't
actually *her* in ALIEN RESURRECTION. The original Ripley and the clone
Ripley have such different paths that it's not the same as with Spock's revival.
Q Do you have any new
Star Wars projects lined up? Indulge us
please!
A - Oh,
yes. I'll be doing two novels in the NEW JEDI ORDER series. I can't say
much about them at this time, but I *have* received explicit permission to answer the two
questions I'm getting most often about them: Yes, Wedge Antilles and the Wraiths will be
making an appearance in them.
I also hope to do some work for STAR WARS GAMER magazine -- I just have
to make the time to *do* it.
Q - What do you foresee in the
future for yourself outside of the Star Wars universe?
More fantasy?
A
More everything, I hope. My next novel to come into print will be SIDHE-DEVIL,
which is a sequel to my earlier pulp-heroes/urban fantasy/Celtic mythology novel DOC
SIDHE. Then I have two original-universe SF novels, sort of in the X-Wing
tradition; the first is called MONGOOSE AMONG COBRAS. Then the two NEW
JEDI ORDER novels.
After that -- more fantasy and science fiction. I have lots on my back burners. I also
want to do some mystery, some horror.
Q - What surprises are you
anticipating when Episode II arrives on Wednesday May 22nd 2002?
A
I'm actually trying to keep from anticipating anything. I don't
want to go into it with a set of expectations. That puts an unfair burden on the movie to
entertain me when I've already decided on the elements I want to see.
Q - It's been a great
interview, and thanks for being our guest on Star Wars - Lightsabre. Just one final question. An alien invasion fleet lands on Earth and within
hours the human race is entirely subjugated to their evil rule. You uncover a secret starship that could set you
and four others free. Do you: -
1.
Raise a peoples army and recapture control of the planet?
2.
Cram your three cats and dog in and blast off to safety?
3.
Something else?
A - I
raise a people's army and recapture control of the planet so that the human race is
entirely subjugated to *my* evil rule.

Aaron Allston Biography
Aaron Allston Bibliography |