.
A couple of years ago, I interviewed Kaja and Phil Foglio about Girl Genius, a long and complex narrative in graphic format which I admire greatly. Specifically, I was interested in how they manage to plot such a thing while maintaining its narrative clarity.
I'm quite pleased with how the interview came out. So I'm sharing it with you now.
Everything Happens for a Reason
A Conversation with Kaja and Phil Foglio
You two have been
working on Girl Genius for years. You
put up three full-page comics on the Web -- written, drawn, and inked in full color
– a week, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, week after week. So far you have
thirteen compilations of the comics. Each volume is between one hundred and one
hundred sixty pages. With at least another seven to go before the plot winds
up.
This tells me two
things. The first of which is that you believe that sleep is overrated. The
second is that you are industrial-level producers and consumers of plot. So I
thought I would like to interview you about plotting. Because plot is king: A
badly-written story with a great plot will be loved. A well-written story with
great plot will endure. It’s probably the most essential element of fiction. A
lot can be said about your work, all admiring, but today I’d like to talk just about
plotting.
So let me start by asking, when you began Girl Genius, did you know how it was going to end?
KAJA: No.
PHIL: No.
KAJA: Oh, I see what you mean! When we first decided we
should do a thing about a female mad scientist, we didn’t know how it was going
to end. When we started actually publishing it, we had an end.
How complex a sketch
was it? Was it just “We start here and then Agatha learns about her heritage,
and then some stuff happens, and at the end she marries the penguin and everybody’s
happy?”
KAJA: It was so really great.
You’ll see!
PHIL: We started out pretty much figuring out where we
wanted the story to go. We had a rough idea: Ohhh, it goes from here to here to
here and we wind up here. Then, once we had that rough skeleton, we started
filling in and it got a lot more detailed.
KAJA: We started working on Girl Genius in 1993. At that time Phil was finishing up Buck Godot, Zap Gun for Hire: Gallimaufry.
I was doing Magic: the Gathering
cards…
PHIL: As was I.
KAJA: …and I was sort of poking at the idea that I wanted to
do something with mad scientists. Because I love
mad scientists, as I love mad science. At a certain point Phil was saying, I
don’t know what to do next. I want to do adventures, but I don’t want to do
Buck Godot. Maybe we should do some more Phil and Dixie, I don’t know. And a
friend of ours, smart-ass that he was, said, You should do something totally
new that you haven’t done before.
We were like, What a weird idea!
So Phil went to a convention and came back with the title Girl Genius and a drawing of what he
said was me in a lab coat. Because he’s a darling. Once you have a picture of a
character, once you have a character you like, you start asking yourself
questions. Who is this person? What do they do, what do they make, what’s their
problem? Who, in this case, is her boyfriend, who are her parents, who’s this,
who’s that? It didn’t start taking good shape, until we said, You know, all
this clunky near-future stuff isn’t really comfortable. Let’s make it kind of
life among Victorians, golden age of science and adventure, H. Rider Haggard,
Mary Shelley, Jules Verne, H. P. Lovecraft, that kind of stuff. Because we love
that kind of stuff! Once you’ve got a mad scientist, you’ve got to have a
castle and once you have a castle, you might as well set it in the past.
Literally, the start of it was the fun. At one point I was
being a goofball and bothering Phil, saying, Oh! Oh! Oh! We have to have a
British spy. Because British spies are cool and that would be fun! And we do in
fact have a British spy.
It sort of accretes and builds on itself. It’s gotten kind
of big. You try to keep it all in your head: Wait a minute, what did we say
about this? Let’s go back and check what we’ve already said about this before
we accidentally contradict ourselves or forget something cool.
I think we had an ending even before we moved it to what is
now widely known as Steampunk. Although we didn’t know that word back then.
That was a word that came from the Eighties, but I didn’t know it then.
When you started, when
you said, Okay, we’re drawing the first page… at that point you had a
roughed-out plot. Nowadays, I hear a lot from younger writers that they’re
really obsessed with story arcs, all of these steps in the Hero’s Journey...
PHIL: Oh, please.
Did you do any of that? Do you have any of that stuff in there?
PHIL: No. No.
KAJA: I’ll bet we do. I’ll bet we do. Because… I can’t
remember her name, so – sorry! – there’s a lady whom I meet at a lot of science
fiction conventions in California, she’s a teacher, and one of the things that
she wrote was something like, The
Heroine’s Journey. It’s all about female characters in fiction and the
female experience in stories. There’s nothing like that kind of book or TV
Tropes to remind you of what tropes every symbol you had totally were. I know
you say, It’s not like that. But it’s still uncomfortable. I read her book and
I was howling. Oh yeah, we did that! We did that too. And that one too. Oh-kay.
We didn’t mean to. But we kinda did that anyway.
I can’t speak for all writers, but going through TV Tropes
and saying, Oh, yeah, we did that thing that everybody else did… It does not
make one proud.
We’re not sitting down and mapping out the hero’s journey.
But stories do seem to flow a certain way.
You were talking about
keeping track of the details. I’ve got a series going that has four stories
published and another three written, and I found I had to start a bible to keep
track of all the details. So I know you must keep track of things like what
color a character’s eyes are. Do you keep track of plots that you’ve begun and
will return to later?
KAJA: Nooo.
PHIL: We once had a bible, because we had a license with Whiz
Kids and they required a bible. So we
sat down and put one together. This was when we didn’t have a lot of material
out, so it wasn’t that beastly to do. But it’s so out of date. It would really
be handy to put one together again, but we just haven’t had the time.
KAJA: Or the financial funding.
PHIL: But really I feel we’re always running to catch up and
always scrambling to catch up and always trying to catch up and not doing
things the way we “should.” I can see that shining ideal of how I would like to
be doing things but we are not doing
them that way. Mostly what we are relying on is my jumpiness over whether we’re
making any mistakes. Because I hate retcon and I would rather tap dance around a
mistake and fix it in-story than go back and change the story.
One thing I admire in
the story is how a character will disappear naturally from the plot and then
reappear much later. So Moloch is present when all the events are set into
motion and halfway through the whole “story arc,” he pops up again in prison
– which is a plausible place for him to
appear, given where we saw him last – and
becomes a player. Had you been planning that all along?
PHIL: Oh, yes.
KAJA: That one, yes. He was
scheduled to show back up in Castle Heterodyne.
PHIL: Yep.
Do you have many like that?
PHIL: We have a number of them. One of the things we try to
do… We have a rough idea of where the story is trying to go. But, this is something
that drove Kaja crazy. We were working on the story, like I said we started in
’93, and we started putting out a very tight story line. We were writing stuff
out…
KAJA: This was on the
typing-paper story boards that I taught him.
PHIL: Right. And around about ’99, I went, All right.
Enough. She said, What are you talking
about?
KAJA: This is all I have, I
don’t even watch television!
PHIL: I said, This story is
huge. It’s going to change.
KAJA: And it did.
PHIL: It did. The problem with
vague plotting is that when we actually started codifying things and putting
them down on paper, we knew that we were going to start making changes. It just
happens. It's a second draft. You build upon the ideas you've already laid down
and realize, especially since you know what's going to happen in another
hundred pages, that you have A Better Idea. You've got to allow yourself to use
a better idea when you get one.
This is all very well, but
changes ripple out, and a supposedly minor change can drastically alter the
plot down the line. I call it “whip,” because a tiny change on, say, page 21 of
the first volume, can warp and change entire aspects of the rest of the story,
“whipping” it into an entirely new alignment.
KAJA: Klaus was supposed to die. All this stuff about Gil
having to run the empire was in the first draft. That happened in the first
issue! Then Gil was going to go, Well, I’m supposed to be an evil overlord but
I’m the hero, you know. Which was so stereotypical. But we were having fun with
stereotypes. This is why we put in the TV tropes so well. Because half the time
we’re laughing out heads off. If we’ve got a mad scientist then he’s got to
have messy hair! So he’s got messy hair, y’know?
I notice that
periodically there’s a major surprise in the plot. Sometimes you can see it
coming. I don’t think anyone who’s read the series has any serious doubts that
Higgs has a revelation in the offing. Do
you have these surprises carefully spaced?
PHIL: We try not to.
KAJA: They happen whenever they happen.
PHIL: They do. You try to write good characters and then
figure out what they would do as the story goes along. For instance, the
biggest surprise there – spoiler! – Lars, the guy in the circus who Agatha was
hanging out with? He wasn’t supposed to die!
KAJA: He was actually supposed to be sort of an asshole, to
go, Oh wow, you’re a spark, screw you. I thought you were cute but now, no. He
was supposed to dump her hard, to just ditch it. But it didn’t work with the
way the character wound up. He wouldn’t do that.
PHIL: To the point where he sacrifices himself for her.
KAJA: Then when he dies, this just feels right.
(From audience): So
are you saying that you just flesh out your characters and give them their
heads and let them decide what will happen?
PHIL: Absolutely.
KAJA: Absolutely. I will not say, “Absolutely right, my
characters are people.” They’re not real people.
(From audience): So
the people you make up create the surprises?
PHIL: Yes.
KAJA: I can only speak for myself but gut feeling plays such
an important part in this. If this feels wrong, we cannot do it this way, we’ve
got to think about it some more. There have been one or two times… Most of the
time, when we’ve run a short story it’s because Hey, we’re going to Australia
and it would be really nice if somebody else did this for a while. But one
time, I remember, I said: We’ve got to talk about this more. We have got to
talk about this more. Oh, my god, she’s a queen! Or whatever. But there is this
kind of urgency, like no, no, no, we can’t do this the way we were planning to
do this, it’s wrong.
PHIL: Yep. That’s the working part.
KAJA: Or else we’ll screw it up and They, the great They
will notice.
How much are you in
control, how much is the story in control, how much are the characters in
control?
PHIL: We are always in control. That’s the great thing about
the world, that we can always throw something in. We can change circumstances.
A fine example of that is we had this big huge momentum going, then Klaus walks
in and stops time! That kind of
screwed everybody up. It left some stuff hanging. It allowed us to jump cut and
move everything forward two and a half years. Because there was a lot happening
in those two and a half years but you know what? It was boring! Yes, they could
run around and chase each other for two and a half years. Or we could –
KAJA: Agatha wouldn’t have been there, because we’re
following that character.
PHIL: Right.
KAJA: And you know we do actually get a lot of questions:
What about that character that we haven’t seen for a while? What’s the circus
doing? Well, you know what? It’s not the circus’s story. It’s Agatha’s story.
Do you ever have a
moment when you go: What now? I’m knee-deep in the plot and my mind is a blank.
KAJA: Yep!
PHIL: Yes. But we have the structure, where we know where
the story winds up. Every now and then the choreography is like: How did we get
here again?
KAJA: Or we know where the story winds up but in the
meanwhile they’re over here and they’re doing this thing and... (Shrugs.) That’s
when we do some laundry and—
PHIL: – and talk about it.
KAJA: That’s where we got that spider. There’s this spider
that showed up because we were folding laundry and we were laughing our heads
off about some stupid joke and it just kept on going and finally you said, “Let
me write this down.” While I folded the rest of the laundry.
PHIL: Art makes life better.
KAJA: But we did get a good spider out of it.
Your secondary
characters, I’ve noticed, could easily step forward and be the heroes of their
own stories. Is that deliberate?
PHIL: Yes. Everybody’s the hero of their own story. Kaja
said something once: An easy way to make your hero cool is to make all of the
people around them cool as well. And yet they are subordinate to her or are her
friends.
KAJA: What I said was that I hate that they make James Bond
cool by making everyone around him kind of useless. Especially in respect to
Bond girls. Now they’ve gotten better about that in recent years but it used to
be that Bond girls were all kind of… (Smiles) You know, if she’s really awesome
and she likes him, doesn’t that make him more awesome? It makes him a more
worthy hero. If everyone who thinks you’re awesome is kind of a dope…
PHIL: Sometimes having awesome secondary characters allows
you to use them to do things that should be done, even though your hero
wouldn’t or couldn’t do those things themselves.
KAJA: Or after a while everyone’s rolling their eyes because
it’s always the hero who’s doing all the cool stuff and isn’t she great and
isn’t she wonderful and isn’t she (cough!) Mary Sue? Oh my god, was I delighted
when I found that term! I laughed myself sick.
PHIL: Whereas we all know authors who produce stuff where,
gosh, everything the hero does is just wonderful and he’s the most perfect
person in the world. I just can’t write that
Periodically, you come
to a point where you’ve got to make a major decision. How do you choose which alternative?
How many alternatives do you throw out?
PHIL: (Sighs) It depends. Sometimes it can take days.
KAJA: If you’re sitting there looking at it from the
character’s point of view, they could do this, they could do that, or they
could do that. What makes the most sense? What would they do, and what would
happen as a result of that?
PHIL: Or sometimes you’re just: Man, there isn’t anything
that isn’t anticlimactic. Or this is something that should happen closer to the
end of the book.
KAJA: Sometimes you have to think of a good reason why
people who are supposedly clever would not
think of it or would not be able to do it. Sometimes, frankly, it comes down to
what’s funny. Or what would be the most horrible. If this happens, it would be
very convenient for all the characters. It would solve all their problems. Heh-heh-heh,
let’s not do that!
Do you ever have a
moment when you feel that you’ve lost control of the events?
KAJA: Every so often I will have a moment when I’m going, “I
have no idea what’s going on now.” And then we try to catch up. They’re talking
too much! Have someone attack! That attack that was going to happen in four
pages, you know what? (Thumps the table.) Now! So they didn’t get to sit around
talking and hashing things out as much as they would have liked.
I know that in a novel
the fun part is in early stretches when things are opening up and opening out
and showing more and more of the world. Then at some point you’ve got to close
it down and start answering questions in order to arrive at the ending you were
aiming at. So you’re currently thirteen volumes into the story. Are you into
the closing it down part now or are you still opening it out?
KAJA: You know, I think we’re into the closing it down part.
Except that there are places that they will be going that they haven’t been
yet. But it’s still kind of like, Okay we’ve laid out the problem. Now we’re
bringing it all together and here’s what’s happening.
PHIL: They will basically be going to places and finding key
things. So we’ll get to see a cool place and, oh by the way, there’s the thing.
KAJA: I don’t think we’re still opening up.
PHIL: Well, but we keep introducing new stuff.
KAJA: But we haven’t been to Paris yet. I think we’ll be
showing lots of new stuff while we wind things up. But it’s kind of winding
things up for these characters. Not for the whole world.
I don’t want to reveal too many horrible spoilers here. But
we’ve got Agatha out of the university, she’s met a lot of people, she’s got
this town… She now knows what she cares about and what she’s going to be
protecting. So now she has to go out figure out how she’s going to do that.
She’s got the characters she’s going to work with…
Your characters are
living on a continent that is at constant war during times of peace and yet
worse during times of war and where literally every time you go to the closet
there’s likely to be something in there that wants to kill you. Yet I have
noticed that there are not a lot of deaths in your plot.
KAJA: Not a lot of on screen deaths.
Not a lot of named
characters. Lars died, Moloch’s companion died… Not a lot more. Was this a
deliberate strategy?
PHIL: Not really. And more people will die. It’s just that
it hasn’t, uh, I think some of it is: Gosh! Kill him?
KAJA: We’re still using that one!
PHIL: We’re still using that one. Our excuse is that this is
an extraordinary group of people in an extraordinary place at an extraordinary
time. If you put just an ordinary bunch of people there, yeah, half of them
would be dead by nightfall. Yes, absolutely.
KAJA: Well, maybe. But again, what we’re doing is so goofy,
they’re more likely to just get a pie in the face. I think. That’s probably
just us going: You just got your foot caught in a bucket! Awwww.
(From audience): You
could use a calming pie.
KAJA: Well, that was a joke. That we did. And it’s over
there and we did it.
(From audience): It’s available
for use if you feel it’s appropriate.
PHIL: That’s certainly true.
KAJA: For instance, Moloch von Zinzer was definitely
scheduled to show up where he did in Castle Heterodyne. We have an example of
one who was not scheduled, Sergeant
Scorp of the Vespiary Squad. He was just a guy who was there when some stuff
went down. Later on we were writing a scene where it would be really handy to
have somebody who could tell the other characters, and therefore the readers, what
had happened – and here he was! So good to see you back, come on with us. We
were very pleased with ourselves.
(From audience): Do
you find that when you’re doing a serial you tend to repeat the three-act
structure?
KAJA: I think you would need to explain to me what a
three-act structure is. So the answer is, no, not deliberately.
PHIL: We do have certain arcs within the story that we try
to follow. Each page, it’s nice if it has a joke or something…
KAJA: Well, that’s you.
PHIL: That’s me!
KAJA: Whereas I’m going: No, it’s a thing, we’re trying to
tell a story, don’t worry about it. Just make a story.
PHIL: I figured this out a long time ago. Since we’re doing
this as a web comic, people hear about us all the time. “Oh, that sounds
interesting, I’ll check it out.” You don’t know what page they’re going to show
up on. So every single page, ideally, should have something – something
interesting, something funny, something titillating.
KAJA: Yeah, titillating. Let me tell you the story of how I
was so proud of myself for finally getting advertising postcards printed up. I
took them to the comics club in an elementary school and I was going to give
them to the kids. (We were advisors for the club at the time.) I realized that
if you went to Girl Genius for the first time as a new reader, the very first
thing you’d see was a big picture of Gil with no clothes on, with just a little
piece of cloth across his you-know. And maybe I didn’t want all these little
kids taking these postcards home and having their parents go, Okayyyy. I didn’t
give out any postcards that day.
PHIL: So anyway, each day I try and fix it so there’s a joke
or something. Each week has some sort of minor thing that starts on Monday and
ends on Friday. And ideally, if I can end Friday on a cliffhanger, I love that!
People are like: You’re a bad man. I know I’m a bad man. Then of course each
volume should have a self-contained arc within in.
KAJA: What I’m looking for is a cut-off page, where I can
say Done! we’re making a book now, I
try to find a place that feels right.
I’m sorry, I’m all wibbly-wobbly, like, “Oh, we write a
story and then we end it where it feels right, blah blah blah.” That’s really
helpful if you’re interested in our process.
PHIL: And then with a graphic novel it’s nice if each set of
three has a self-contained thread. Then when they get collected into omnibuses
– omnibi? – it’s nice if they’re a self-contained thing for that. And then of
course there’s the entire whole story. So it’s layers within layers within
layers within layers. It makes my head hurt.
KAJA: The challenge we set ourselves in this latest volume… The
idea we had was: Wouldn’t it be cool if we could write this – and do it well
and not feel like we were pandering or betraying what we were doing – wouldn’t
it be cool if we could build in a save point? Where we could say: Hey! If you
were looking at fourteen volumes of oh-my-god and would like to start reading
the story, here’s a nice place to start. Where you could pick up the story and
get an idea of who these people are and what they’re doing and then if you want
to go back and read everything that came before, great, it’s there. But here’s
a nice place to jump on.
I don’t know if I’m really that wild about how we’ve done
it. Because really the most important thing is to tell a story that’s solid.
Before I could say whether I feel good about it, I’d have to go back and look
at it.
You’ve got a large
number of named characters in play currently…
PHIL: Yes. The cast list runs over twenty thousand words.
How many of them do
you have to account for by the end?
PHIL: Oh gosh! Not anywhere –
KAJA: Not a whole lot, actually. Most of the ones people
think are major characters – no. We’ve got a small group of main characters. We
did tend to give waitresses names, because they have names! In real life, these
people have names! So we throw out names all the time. A character will come
through and they’ll have a name, they’ll be a person, but that doesn’t mean
they’re super important to the plot. The A-list characters… it’s still bigger
than the traditional five man group but…
PHIL: I’d say there are about a dozen AA-list characters and
half a dozen more that people would really want to know what happens to them,
and then a few swaths of raygun-carriers.
KAJA: They tend not to be generic. They tend to have something
weird about them, and we tend to give them names.
PHIL: The thing we’re always pleased about is when people
talk about us and say, “There’s a hundred and fifty characters and I know who
all of them are!” Yes!
Here’s a question
which will probably make you flinch. I can guess, having been following this
story from the beginning, roughly where this is going to end. There are
repeated references to the impassible quality of the Atlantic Ocean. Nobody can
reach America. So…
PHIL: Well, I’ll say that you’re totally wrong.
KAJA: Not necessarily. Let’s hear.
So have you set yourself up for a sequel?
KAJA: Okay, I will fess up. Shall I fess up about America?
PHIL: Sure, go ahead.
KAJA: We didn’t feel like telling you what was going on
there. So we just made it: Oh! Nobody knows. We sure don’t. Oh, we throw stuff
back and forth. But we’re focusing on one part of the world. And it was kind of
fun to have nobody know.
PHIL: You can’t get there from here.
KAJA: Zeetha comes from there. Wherever that may be.
From Audience: Do you have a clear idea where Mechanicsburg
is on the planet?
KAJA: I do actually! I found it on the map. It really is a
town called Agatha.
PHIL: It’s in Romania. Transylvania.
KAJA: We were so disappointed to discover that the Iron Gate
is just a place where the river goes through. It’s not actually a big iron gate
on the river with two statues going like [imitates the statues of Isildur and
Anárion in The Lord of the Rings] as
we had kind of hoped.
PHIL: Romania is a land of disappointment.
KAJA: We need to actually get ourselves out there sometime
to poke around.
PHIL: Apparently people from Romania find our strip hilarious.
KAJA: “This is what we think Eastern Europe might be like.”
Sorry!
I’m sure you’re aware
that readers come to your work with certain expectations. For example, I can
fearlessly predict that at the end Krosp [Agatha’s cat] is alive. Because if he
died, people would come after you with pitchforks and torches.
KAJA: I really think that you can’t worry about people with
pitchforks and torches or you start writing the wrong story. I have seen too many
books, television shows, series, where the creators clearly started worrying
about that and it changed the way they wrote. That’s a real danger. I don’t
want to start going down that road. It’s one of the reasons I don’t read the
comments. Because I don’t want to start worrying if the readers will hate us if
we do this or that.
And I will fess up that the thing about the Americas is not
the first thing that we’ve thrown in there casually because it was funny and
then discovered that it was interesting to think about a lot, so that it grew
into something larger than just the off-hand thing that we popped in there.
PHIL: I like to think of it as stealing fantasy.
(From audience): I
find myself wondering what’s going on in Japan in your work.
KAJA: We haven’t given any thought to that. Clearly
something is, because there it is. But…
I have dominated this
conversation because I’m really interested in what you have to say. But I’m
going to turn it over to the audience now.
(From audience): If
you could ever make it possible, would you have a Japanese spark weaving his
way through the background?
KAJA: This is exactly what I’m talking about. Not wanting to
do fan requests. I will say that if it comes up and it hits us exactly right,
we would totally do that. But it can’t be like, Oh, somebody told us to so
we’re going to.
It’s like the Great Wall of Norway. It’s ancient now, but there’s
a map up on Café Press that hasn’t been updated for years, a map that our
colorist Cheyenne made, and it’s got stuff like the Great Wall of Norway.
People want to see it, but it’s just a detail on the map.
PHIL: The map doesn’t even have Sturmhalten on it.
KAJA: Because we had to figure out where it is! The fantasy
Transylvania landscape doesn’t quite match the real landscape. But it’s still
nice to make an effort.
(From audience): When
you come to a pressure point where there are multiple plot options, do you come
to a point where you have to start drawing one of the options, where now it’s
time to decide or die?
KAJA: Yep.
PHIL: All the time. Either that or say: You know what? This
is a fine time to switch scenes.
KAJA: Hey, what’s Gil doing?
PHIL: That gives us a few days.
KAJA: And if it gets really dire? Yep – short story time!
Actually, there was only one time when we really needed to take a break. But,
sure, there always comes a moment where you go, I cannot mess around with this
anymore, I have to pick something, life is short. Then you pick something and
you run with it. And you know what? It’s a great aid to writing to realize that
yes, life is short and nobody cares about the studio anyway and for pity’s
sake, just do something.
(From audience): Do
you ever reach a place where you decide to just leap into the dark? Something
will happen and you’ll figure out why afterward?
KAJA: We’ve always done that.
PHIL: Yes. All the time.
KAJA: It’s part of the game. You’ve got to hand-wave it
away.
PHIL: Both Kaja and I did theater and I did something like
ten years of improvisational comedy.
KAJA: Whereas I cannot watch that stuff.
PHIL: Well, I don’t watch
it, but I did it.
KAJA: It’s so self-indulgent.
PHIL: Unlike comics, of course. But, boy, it makes you think
fast!
KAJA: It’s good practice. It’s not dumb. I’m just being
awful because I’m awful.
PHIL: Sometimes you put something down and think: Why did we
do that?!
KAJA: That was really good absinthe!
PHIL: That was totally the wrong thing to do! There’s
nothing really big, but…
KAJA: There were a couple of small items where I wished we
had done things a little differently.
PHIL: And what we do then is we explain it. Oh, hey. We were
doing this and that.
KAJA: Here’s why that totally made sense and why we’re so
awesome.
We’ve got time for
exactly one more question.
(From audience): The first work of I ever saw of Phil’s was
in [a collection of Star Trek cartoons titled] Startoons, which had his convention reports. I noticed
that where you don’t expect to have a plot in such things, all of a sudden plot
elements appeared. For example, a rivalry with another artist, or the Secret
Masters of Fandom meeting behind the scenes to make sure that the convention
runs properly. Are you… I don’t know, addicted to plot? Do you inject plot
elements into everything? Could you do something without plot?
PHIL: One of the big things that separates humans from
animals is our desperation to find a pattern in otherwise random events.
KAJA: We are pattern-seeking animals.
PHIL: We see constellations in the stars. Sirius-ly?
KAJA: Draw me a bear!
PHIL: So, yes, we find it satisfying when random events are
shown to be part of a larger story. Even just hinting that it’s part of a larger
story. Even if you never get the resolution.
KAJA: Everything, if you tell it right, has a plot.
PHIL: You can hint at things, even if you never explain
them. People take comfort in knowing that there’s something going on..
KAJA: “Everything happens for a reason.” Yeah, sure it does.
MICHAEL SWANWICK
conducted this interview as a program item at MileHiCon in October, 2014. This interview originally appeared in the New York Review of Science Fiction and is copyright 2015 by Michael Swanwick.
*