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Finding Genius Podcast

The Fascinating World of Science Fiction Yoon Ha Lee - Revenant Gun – An Overview of the Many Elements that Make Up the Intriguing Worlds That Science Fiction Novels Inhabit

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 3 September 2018

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Noted science fiction writer, Yoon Ha Lee, author of Revenant Gun and other works, delivers an interesting analysis of the science fiction world in which he thrives. Yoon Ha received a B.A. in mathematics from Cornell University as well as an M.A. in math education from Stanford University. His work in fiction has appeared in publications such as The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction; the popular online sci-fi magazine, Tor.com; and Clarkesworld Magazine, as well as many anthologies.


Yoon Ha was inspired to become a writer by his very passionate 3rd grade teacher who challenged students to be creative. Learning about the craft of writing at such an early age pushed Yoon Ha to try his hand at it, and by the end of middle school he had completed his first novel. And while Yoon Ha recounts that this first effort was not very good, he continued to work at his craft and wrote several more through his high school years. Yoon Ha discusses his work and the technical merits of writing that he sought to improve as he was cutting his teeth in those early years as a burgeoning young writer. From improving his prose to world building, Yoon Ha sought to enhance his work in every way possible. He details how characterization is an important aspect of novel writing, as readers like to relate to the characters personally, through the characters' eyes. And he explains that while world building is important, perhaps the building of characters is the most important task of writing novels.


Yoon Ha discusses his first successful novel, Ninefox Gambit, and the reasons he feels the novel worked, and why it was commercially successful. Yoon Ha describes the unusual world that he built in that novel and the physics elements, as well as the cat and mouse dynamic, all of which he felt contributed to the popular interest in the book. The sci-fi author outlines his road to commercial success in the publishing world and he acknowledges that the many years he spent improving his craft helped get him there. As he built a significant following for his creative short stories through the years, his publisher sought to take his work to the obvious next level—marketable books. Yoon Ha speaks about his own personal reading lists and how the reading and study of a broad range of disparate topics helps to expand his own mind and ultimately expand his creativity. From military to math, Yoon Ha found that literally any subject matter could help to broaden his mind as a reader, which of course helped to improve his craft. He talks about some notable authors such as J. R. R. Tolkien, Lloyd Alexander, David Eddings and others, and recounts how their work impacted him as a young reader, and how his experience growing up as a Korean-American affected his perception and connection to some works. And as the work he was devouring as a young reader was largely from a western perspective, Yoon Ha thought to bring an East Asian influence to the sci-fi genre.


As the publishing field expands, Yoon Ha states that diversity is increasing, which allows more types of stories to be told, which in turn allows a larger audience to see themselves represented. The popular author describes some of the relative differences he sees between Korean culture and classically typical American culture, and the symbolic elements of both. Wrapping up, Yoon Ha provides an overview of the elements of his latest work, the novel, Revenant Gun. And he talks about his website (yoonhalee.com) and the many samples that interested readers can browse there for free.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Almost Here, Around the Corner of Future Technology Podcasts with Richard Jacobs.

0:07.0

Future Technologies is to transform our lives for better or worse or the focus of this podcast.

0:13.0

Almost here means these technologies are now here and starting to be used.

0:17.0

Or just around the corner, for Bitcoin to artificial intelligence,

0:21.0

3D printing, blockchain, virtual reality, and more.

0:25.0

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Future Tech Podcast.

0:30.0

My guest today is science fiction author you and

0:33.3

Hali and we're talking about the machinery of

0:36.1

Empire series and Revenant Gun the newest book there and in

0:39.8

general the inspiration for you to create these books and a bunch more questions.

0:45.0

So you and how you doing?

0:46.0

Doing well, thank you.

0:48.0

Yeah.

0:49.0

So, you know, before you get to tell me a little bit about your background, you know,

0:52.0

what have you always been a writer, what got you get started? Tell me a little bit about your background. You know, have you always been a writer? What got you into it? You know, tell me a little bit about yourself. I actually got into writing because my third grade teacher really wanted to push creative writing and he did this by dressing up as a

1:05.2

superhero called Story Man so he would come in once a week in the spandex outfit from

1:10.7

God knows where and he just was about writing and up until that point I thought that books just sort of magically fell into the library out of the sky. I had no concept that books were made by people and when I learned that

1:24.7

human beings wrote books I said to myself well I'm a human being so I could write a book too

1:30.4

and I decided I wanted to be a writer.

1:33.0

There you go, yeah, that's cool.

1:35.0

So you decided it's at a pretty early age, it sounds like.

1:38.0

Yeah.

...

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