Interview w/ Jack Skillingstead

Jack Skillingstead was kind enough to answer a few questions for me. You can read my review of his novel, Harbinger, here. Thanks again to Mr. Skillingstead for his time and patience. Here goes: First things first, can you tell us a little about yourself (a sort of mini bio)? I was born in a working class suburb of Seattle and grew up there, which I suppose formed my character in all the usual ways of environmental influences. My dad was a model builder for the Boeing company. He worked on the moon buggy for the later Apollo missions and built wind tunnel models for the piggy-back 747 / space shuttle. I remember him being quite excited about that project. My mother was a housewife and the big reader in the house. I remember being impressed, as a small child, that she was reading a science fiction story — the Post’s serialization of Asimov’s “Fantastic Voyage.” I learned to read by following along with my mother’s repeated out loud readings to me of favorite comic books. And I remember the exact moment the black marks in the word balloon became a recognizable word. The word was “said.” Bradbury claims to remember being born. I don’t remember that, but I remember my birth as a word-recognizer. That remains the most important educational step in my autodidactic life. As for formal education, mine proceeded along unremarkable lines. I have three brothers and one sister, all older. My own kids are grown. One is a student at Chapman University in California, the other is following a more erratic path in life — as have I. Currently I live in the city with fellow writer Nancy Kress, which makes life very pleasant. Who are some of your favorite authors and what are some of your favorite books? What are you currently reading? I especially love the stories and novels of Daryl Gregory. He’s a kindred spirit. Paolo Bacigulupi is doing incredible work, of course. The short stories of Ted Kosmatka are all knockouts, and Del Rey is doing his first novel, The Helix Game, next year. I’m very much looking forward to that one. Those are some of my contemporaries, in terms of publishing time lines, though I’m a little older than all of them. I’m also enamored with Kessel, Kress, Willis, Haldeman and numerous others. Going back, it’s Bradbury, Matheson, Beaumont, Ellison, Sturgeon and Zelazny. These are all writers I return to again and again. I’m talking about genre now, that’s leaving out mainstream and classic writers. Currently I’m reading Dying Inside by Robert Silverberg and Parallel Lives by Phyllis Rose, which is a study of Victorian-era marriages of literary types. What drew you into writing, and, specifically, what drew you to science fiction? From my earliest memory I’ve been attracted to science fiction, fantasy and horror. When I was younger — teenage through 20s — the emphasis was more on horror. Lovecraft, Ramsey Campbell, Dennis Etchison, Weird Tales era Bradbury, Richard Matheson’s short stories plus Hell House and of course I Am Legend. Stephen King. Peter Staub’s early novels, pre Ghost Story. This was also a time when I read a lot real-world horror — the fast and dirty novels of James Ellroy, for instance. Holy shit! Blood On The Moon. Suicide Hill. That stuff was disturbing. But to get back to your question, I can’t tell you what drew me and continues to draw me to science fiction. People simply have different filters. My filters catch anything that occurs off the straight and narrow path of the mainstream. As for writing my own stories, I always wanted to do that, though my approach was in more of an optimistic vein when I was a kid and thought I’d write Star Trek type stories. When I actually started producing fiction the quality was pretty wretched, and whatever hotspots occurred usually came out of the dark side of my psyche. So it has been ever since. John Clute said something very perceptive is his mini-review of my collection. He said, paraphrasing, sometimes the stories seemed like a form of therapy. I would only add that these therapy sessions, like real therapy, tended to yield the most interesting results the darker and less certain the outcome.Your novel, Harbinger, is placed in a rather interesting place within the spectrum of narratives about immortals. While fantasy has largely focused on vampires and other inhuman immortals, your novel takes a more science-fictional approach to the concept. What inspired you to write Harbinger? There is a science fiction cliché: The ordinary man in extraordinary circumstances. I wanted to see what happened to an ordinarily warped man in extraordinary circumstances — the man so warped and the circumstances so extraordinary that the reader, at times, wouldn’t even know if the circumstances were real. This is a little bit of a Phillip K. Dick approach, but I also wanted the book to be fun and adventurous. And of course it had to be tied in to me personally — you know, a “therapy” book. My first inspiration to write it at all was simply that I wanted to do a novel that I could sell. I’d already written several that hadn’t been successful. This felt like a do-or-die effort. It was time. Of course, the book got rejected all over the place, and I didn’t die as a result. And it did eventually find a publisher. You’re right about the current tendency to focus on vampires, but I don’t think Ellis Herrick is too far out of the spectrum of immortals in science fiction history. Zelazny wrote about science fiction based immortals all the time, as did other accomplished writers in decades past. Personally, I can’t get behind romanticizing the vampire, though I did like the first two Ann Rice books. Additionally, what do you think it is that draws us to immortals? Why are we fascinated by characters who can live forever and why do we keep coming

Video Found: Hibernation (Trailer)

I was browsing Vimeo yesterday and found this really interesting trailer for an independent film called Hibernation, which takes place in the future after global warming has, more or less, wrecked the seasons, forcing the government to create an annual hibernation program to protect each individual from the harsh winter weather. It’s an interesting concept and I think it has a lot of potential. I’m looking forward to seeing the final production when it is released (no idea when that is). Here’s the video (after the fold):‘HIBERNATION’ trailer from Simon Dunn on Vimeo.