SH: For me, writing is finding a balance between that sort of transcendental story and my own power of writing — not letting myself overwrite them too much, and not letting them overrun me.
SM: Yeah. See, I find that difficult — because, to me, you create a character, and you define them, and you make them who they are. And you get them into a shape where they are final. Their story isn‘t, but they are who they are — and they do feel very real. You can‘t change who they are to make the story go easier.
So sometimes things happen in the story because my character, being who he is, can‘t do anything different. I‘ve written him so tightly into who he is that I cannot change his course of action now, without feeling like:
SH: So how much did you know about Jacob and his future when you were writing
SM: Jacob was an afterthought. He wasn‘t supposed to exist in the original story. When I wrote the second half of
There was no way that was ever coming out of his mouth — he couldn‘t do it. And that goes back to what we were talking about with characters. You know, he had been keeping the truth about himself secret for so long, and it was something he was so… unhappy about, and devastated about. He would never have been able to tell her.
And so I thought:
That‘s when I discovered that there was a little reservation of Quileute Indians on the coastline. I was interested in them before I even knew I was going to work them into the story. I thought:
This is a very small tribe, and it‘s really not very well known, and their language is different from anyone else‘s. And they have these great legends — even one that‘s similar to the Noah‘s Ark story; the Quileutes tied their canoes to the tops of the tallest trees so they weren‘t swept away by the big flood — that I thought were really interesting.
And they have the wolf legend. The story goes that they descended from wolves — a magician changed the first Quileute from a wolf into a man, that‘s how they began — and when I was reading the legend I thought:
SH: That‘s so cool, that kind of serendipity that happens in storytelling.
SM: It felt like,
And Jacob was not an ounce of work. He just came to life and was exactly what I needed him to be, and I just enjoyed him as a person. But his appearance in chapter 6 was really it — that was all he was in the story. And then my agent loved this Jacob, and she‘s never gotten over that.
She was one hundred percent Team Jacob all the time.
What a world it would be if we knew that all these little legends around us are absolutely real!
SH: [Laughs] And, you know, I am, too. I love Jacob.
SM: Oh, I love Jacob, too. So when my agent said: ?I want some more of him,? I thought:
So when I started the sequel, I knew there were going to be werewolves in it. Because it just seemed like all these stories that are pure fantasy, that are myths, are coming true for Bella.
And then there‘s Jacob. Here‘s this world that he just thinks is a silly superstition. Then I thought:
And so I knew that the sequel I had already started on would be about finding out that they were werewolves. And it wasn‘t
Because the story had originally skipped beyond high school fairly quickly. But my editor said:
?Well, I‘d like to keep the story in high school, because we are marketing the first book this way.
And I just feel like there‘s so much that must have happened that we miss if we just skip to Bella being a grown-up.? And I said: ?Well, you know, I could always make my characters talk more — that‘s not a problem. Let‘s go back and have this kind of stuff happen earlier.? So I had a chance to develop it.
By the time I got to
SH: I have to go back to the point that Jacob exists because Edward couldn‘t say, ?I am a vampire.? So Edward is what created the necessity for Jacob. Just as Edward‘s existence, and nearness as a vampire, made Jacob into a werewolf. I just think it‘s interesting that those two characters, who are sometimes friends and sometimes…
SM: Not.
I think that, in reality, it‘s never one boy — there‘s never this moment when you know.
There‘s a choice there, and sometimes it‘s hard.