That really is sort of where the imprinting idea came from, which existed in
So here‘s where
which is a full half of the novel — was a lot longer than I thought it would end up being. And the whole time I had to have tension building to the final confrontation… but I wanted to give the clue that this was not going to be a physical confrontation. This was a mental confrontation — and if one person loses, everybody dies.
SH: Yeah.
SM: There‘s no way to win this one with a physical fight. Everyone‘s going to lose if that happens. So it‘s a mental battle to survive, and it‘s all about figuring out the right way to word something. Figuring out the right proof to introduce at exactly the right time, so that you can force someone into conceding — just trapping them in their own words.
SH: Because in
SM: Exactly. And just with her cleverness and by using the right words, she‘s averting bloodshed and murder from legally happening right in front of her and ruining her life.
SH: When
SM: And in the end of
That‘s one of the reasons I like it. [Laughs]
Can you tell I like the lighter side of Shakespeare?
SH:
SM: Can you tell I like the lighter side of Shakespeare? I mean, I like the tragedies, too, and
SH: It works so well in
SM: Yeah.
SH: And then Edward leaves — and in
SM: Yeah.
SH: And she‘s with St. John, but you know Jane and Mr. Rochester need to be together.
And you don‘t know: Are they going to be together? And then there‘s that little bit of the mystical — when she hears him call her name. And she returns to him, and she saves him. And I love that in
SM: I have never thought of it in that context, and there is so much that works with that comparison. I mean, I‘m going to have to think about this some more later. Because, wow—
there is a lot. I have never written a book where I said: ?This one has a
You know, isn‘t it funny how books influence us? They become a part of who you are. I mean, how much of my childhood that I remember has actually happened to me, and how much of it is the events that were in
But Jane Eyre was this person that I felt like I knew. I think that there‘s a lot of Mr.
Rochester in Edward, and I think there‘s a lot of Jane in Edward. Because he would take himself away from a situation that‘s not right, just like she does! And then she‘s like Bella, coming home at the end. But, my goodness, how close that is. I thank you, Shannon Hale. You have enlightened me.
But, actually, the more you get into writing, I think you realize that there is no new story.
SH: [Laughs] Well, you‘re welcome.
SM: You know, I think… maybe readers who aren‘t writers might look at something like that — using inspiration from other books — as kind of a form of plagiarism. But, actually, the more you get into writing, I think you realize that there is no new story.
SH: Every story has been told, so you‘re just telling it in a new way. One big reason why it‘s so important to be well read when you‘re writing is because when you write, you can dialogue with everything else that‘s ever been written. The more you read, the more you get to converse with all these other great works. And that makes them more exciting.
SM: Right. I really do believe that, you know, there are no new stories — except maybe Scott Westerfeld. [Laughs] He‘s, like, the one person who always makes me think:
SH: I think the most common question any writer gets is: Where do you get your ideas from? And that‘s the impossible question to answer, because, like you said, they come from…
SM: A million places.
SH: Everything: everything you experienced or imagined or thought or smelled or read or…