Dear Mr. Zerndt,
First of all, I really enjoyed reading your book. It was quite a
different experience for me given that I haven’t read a book about Korea.
Next, thanks a lot for accepting to do the interview.
Diving into the questions!
Jan @ RM: Korea is not a
country which has been talked about much when compared to other war ridden
countries like Syria or Sri Lanka. What really prompted you to base your story
on that country?
James : I taught English in South Korea back in 2002. A lot of
the book is based on experiences I had while working there.
Jan @ RM: The names of your
protagonists are rather simple. Any particular reasoning for this?
James : I was tired of reading books where the characters were given
names like Frog or Hand or Beatrix Whistle as if giving a character a bizarre
name makes them interesting. I wanted to create complex characters with simple
names. I wanted their actions to make them interesting.
Jan @ RM: The
characterisation at first seemed so similar to me, in sense they all had a
common “sad” element but as the story progressed I was able to understand
various dimensions to them. Did you really plan it that way or did it just
happen?
James : I planned very little with this book. As it started to
unfold, I started to see the parallels between Billie and Yun-ji. That aspect
of the story I intentionally manipulated, but many of the other threads in the
story just sort of fell in place as it evolved.
Jan @ RM: Abortion – A
thoroughly sensitive issue – Did you have second thoughts about writing about
it? Did you think it might backfire in spite of running a disclaimer?
James :I have no regrets in writing about this subject. I have great
compassion for those who go through it, and I wanted to express that through
the characters in the book. I never expected it to sell, and the disclaimer is
just there to warn people about the content.
Jan @ RM: We are from India; our audience isn’t really exposed to books
about Korea or abortion. Of course, the latter is a big taboo out here.
Would you hesitate to market your books in our country? Did you have a specific
audience in mind while writing this book?
James : I would not hesitate to market the book anywhere based on
the subject matter. If abortion is taboo, all the more reason people (men,
particularly) should try to understand those that undergo the procedure.
And, no, I didn’t have any specific audience in mind when writing
the book. I try not to think of those types of things when working on
something. It’s all about the story. Financially, this may not a very wise
thing to do, but I am rewarded in other ways.
Jan @ RM: How has the progression from writing short stories to a full
length novel been?
James :My first novel, The
Cloud Seeders, was a bit more difficult for me as it called for a lot of
world building. I’d never attempted anything like that before, so it was
tough. If you change one aspect in the first chapter, it has to be consistent
throughout the remainder of the book. A time-consuming and maddening thing at
times.
As for The Korean
Word For Butterfly, I wrote
the first draft of this novel about nine years ago. I wasn’t happy with it and
had pretty much given up on it. It was written from the POV of a character in
the book, Joe, that we hear very little from in the new version. But as soon as
I figured out that Moon and Yun-ji had to be in the book, the re-write went
fairly quickly.
Now some quick fun questions
· Coffee or Wine?
Coffee or whiskey.
· What’s the worst piece of advice that
you have been given?
“You’re too old to do that.”
· If you could steal one thing except
money without being caught...it would be...?
The President’s wedding ring. Just for kicks.
· Tap Dancing or Waltz?
Um, waltz. If I knew how.
· If you were to write a book about
yourself, what would you name it?
Arby’s.
Once again, thank you!
Thanks again for taking part in the tour and hosting James!
ReplyDeleteThe pleasure was all ours :D
ReplyDelete