January 10, 2004

Gene Wolfe, Fantasy Maestro

Ultan's Library: A journal for the study of Gene Wolfe.

James B. Jordan interview: "I used to belong to a chain letter that included Gardner Dozois, Jack Dann, Chelsea Quinn Yarborough, Mike Bishop. And we would write long newsletters about our doings and then put them in a packet and they would be sent around. This was before they had computer bulletin boards and all that sort of stuff. And I could almost invariably identify the writer from the first paragraph or two. The writer was only overtly identified with the signature, because it was done in letter form. But the styles of the people who were writing were sufficiently different that I could very easily pick out most of them without difficulty. And I am a good imitator. I could write imitation Shakespeare that you would think was probably legitimate Shakespeare because there is a lot of Shakespeare for me to look at. I have sort of knack for doing that sort of thing."

Excerpt from Knight, Wolfe's new book (part of the Wizard Knight series).

"Under Hill" -- short story

"Castaway" -- short story

"Copperhead" -- short story

Wolfe on Lord of the Rings: "Philology led [Tolkien] to the study of the largely illiterate societies of Northern Europe between the fall of Rome and the beginning of the true Middle Ages (roughly AD 400 to 1000). There he found a quality -- let us call it Folk Law -- that has almost disappeared from his world and ours."

The influence of Borges on Wolfe's work.

Posted by DrMabuse at January 10, 2004 01:14 PM
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