Last year I didn’t know very much about Diana Gabaldon and neither did the Decatur Book Festival organizers. They scheduled her in a room that seated 75 people. Fans sat on the floor and on the stage and stood in the back of the room, and about 100 more – including me — wound up standing in line afterwards just to have her sign their books.
So this time she was in one of the festival’s biggest spaces, at the Decatur County court house, and it was packed.
Like all the other authors I heard during the festival, Gabaldon (pronounced with the emphasis on the first syllable) was funny and immensely entertaining. She shared this limerick:
In days of old, when knights were bold
And condoms weren’t invented
They wrapped old socks
Around their cocks
And babies were prevented.
She promised there will be an eighth book in the Outlander series, and a seventh Lord John book. (Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade was released September 1). She also envisions a book about the apothecary, who, like Claire, is a time traveler, and she also intends to collaborate on a graphic novel.
Gabaldon, who works on multiple projects without any outlines, described three categories of characters in her books.
Onions – She understands their core and learns more about them as she pulls off the layers
Mushrooms – They pop up fully formed and walk off with the scene
Hard nuts – Inevitable characters (Claire’s child) or historic figures that she has to crack open.
Gabaldon, a college professor in human anatomy and physiology, had already had a writing career – dissertations, academic papers, grant applications – when she decided to write fiction. Why historic fiction? “I know how to research and if I can’t make it up I can steal it,” she calculated.
A German interviewer once asked Gabaldon why a man in a kilt appeals. Punchy from an extended book tour, she quipped, “You could be up against the wall with him in a minute.”
Like Terry Brooks (see my earlier post), Gabaldon’s books have been optioned for movies. How to choose? Her agent said, “It’s like having your choice of rapist.” Gabaldon does at least ask that her agent screen the prospects to find those who have at least read and understand the book.”
I liked her description of the 2006 Quill Awards, when her A Breath of Snow and Ashes won for science fiction/fantasy/horror over Stephen King’s The Cell and George R.R. Martin’s A Feast of Crows. She described Martin as looking like “an enraged Ewok.”
Gabaldon signed our one first of Outlander – pricing available shortly. We also have Voyager and Dragonfly in Amber available at ABE.