SciFiNow - 06.2020

(Romina) #1

070 | W W W.SCI FI N OW.CO.U K


BOOK CLUB
Interview

YOU HAVE


CHOSEN WISELY


Can you tell us more about your
upcoming novel, Chosen Ones?
Chosen Ones is about a group of people who
saved the world when they were teenagers.
They took down the ‘Dark One’, a being
of great evil who wreaked havoc across
North America.
Now, ten years later, they’re the most
famous people ever to have existed, famous
for something that haunts every one of
them − especially the main character,
Sloane. But she finds out that just because
you take down evil once, doesn’t mean evil
disappears, and it doesn’t mean your story is
over. Basically, if you ever read or watched
a ‘chosen one’ story when you were younger
− which, if you like genre fiction, is pretty
much unavoidable! − this book is about
what comes next.

Why did you decide to move on from
young adult fiction to adult fiction for
this novel?
It was a creative move, really − I got the idea
for Chosen Ones. I grew up on Harry Potter,
and Dune, the Animorphs books, The Matrix,
Buffy − they’re all ‘chosen one’ stories. I
even wrote one myself, with Divergent. So
the question of what might come after −
not so much on a plot level, because some
of the stories I listed do continue − but
psychologically and emotionally kept tugging
at me. And that idea, at its core, is not a
coming of age story. It’s a ‘well, okay, I’ve
come of age... now what?’ story.

Chosen Ones takes an interesting
deviation in that it’s set in the
aftermath of a great battle between
good and evil, what made you decide
to take this route?
The ‘aftermath’ part was really the core
of the idea for me! But I think the reason
it appeals to me now, particularly, is that
I’m a little older. I know what it’s like to
spend your whole life preparing for one
thing, getting that thing, and then having
to sort out what comes next. We all do − I
mean, what is school, exactly, if not a long
preparation for getting a full-time job,
moving out of your parents’ house, maybe
getting married or having kids of your own?

when I was growing up − with the exception
of Buffy − that was always the role of the
woman. She’s there to be kissed, you know?
She’s there to be rescued, along with the
world. But the story doesn’t actually belong
to her.
Part of playing with tropes like this is
indulging them before you upend them. So
Sloane gets to be the love interest figure
before. And then she gets her own story.

We also liked how each chosen
one was very different and each
dealt with their ‘celebrity’ status
in a different way – how has your
experience been since the successes of
your Divergent novels?
Divergent was a whirlwind, and I didn’t
really know how to think about it at the time,
but I have some perspective over it now −
and that’s what’s on display in Chosen Ones.
Each one of these characters encounters fame
in a way that I connect to, even if it’s just in a
small way: Esther revels in it, Albie crumples
beneath it, Ines fears it but also makes use
of it, Matt experiences it as a burden and a
duty, and Sloane despises it. They show us
all the paths we might take, if we suddenly
found ourselves world famous. Maybe we
would hate it, maybe we would spend all our
time on the ’gram! Maybe it would make us
paranoid, maybe all three! I don’t know, but
it’s a good personality test, like tag yourself,
which Chosen One-fame-reaction are you?

There is very much an emphasis on
PTSD and coping after a horrific event
in the novel, why did you decide to
explore these themes?
I think those themes are kind of baked into
the idea. Regardless of the other things
Sloane went through, when you boil her
story down to its basic elements, what she’s
famous for is killing a man. An evil man,
sure, and one who needed to be stopped,
but still − her and her four friends
ultimately killed someone. Something
like that would have a real emotional and
psychological cost for a person. Even though
there are a lot of things I’m playing with and
delighting in with this book, I did want to
take that seriously.

And reaching that place is a pivotal moment.
You have to figure out where to go, what to
strive for. You have to deal with the choices
you’ve made and the person you are.
But there’s another story there, in that
aftermath. There’s plenty of adventure left,
for all of us. Thank god.

There are numerous snippets
throughout the novel that deviate
from straightforward prose with
newspaper articles and official memos
etc – can you tell us more about why
you decided to include these?
I started writing them because even though
I wanted to tell the story of what came after
the big battle, you still need to see what the
big battle was, and why it left our heroes
in the position they’re in ten years later.
The documents were a great way to do that
to give the most complete picture of what

happened. And throughout the rest of the
book, they do the same thing: they build a
more complex, more well-rounded world.
They were such a challenge − every single
interstitial required a lot of research! − but
the end result was more than worth it to me.
Plus, they were absurdly fun to write.

We loved the complexity of the strong
female lead character Sloane; she is
very independent but also part of a
co-dependant group of chosen ones.
What inspired you with this character?
We thought it was also great that
the protagonist wasn’t the so-called
‘leader’ of the group...
The way I see it, the ‘before’ story, the one
about the big battle, that’s not really Sloane’s
story. She’s an important figure there, but
she has more of the ‘love interest’ role. And
in the ‘chosen one’ stories I read or watched

We speak to Divergent author Veronica Roth about her first foray into adult fiction


with her upcoming novel, Chosen Ones...
WORDS RACHAEL HARPER

AT ITS CORE IT


IS NOT A COMING


OF AGE STORY
VERONICA ROTH

070-071_SFN_170 Author Interview.indd 70 17/03/2020 18:31

070 | W W W.SCI FI N OW.CO.U K


BOOK CLUB
Interview

YOU HAVE


CHOSEN WISELY


Can you tell us more about your
upcoming novel, Chosen Ones?
Chosen Ones is about a group of people who
saved the world when they were teenagers.
They took down the ‘Dark One’, a being
of great evil who wreaked havoc across
North America.
Now, ten years later, they’re the most
famous people ever to have existed, famous
for something that haunts every one of
them − especially the main character,
Sloane. But she finds out that just because
you take down evil once, doesn’t mean evil
disappears, and it doesn’t mean your story is
over. Basically, if you ever read or watched
a ‘chosen one’ story when you were younger
− which, if you like genre fiction, is pretty
much unavoidable! − this book is about
what comes next.


Why did you decide to move on from
young adult fiction to adult fiction for
this novel?
It was a creative move, really − I got the idea
for Chosen Ones. I grew up on Harry Potter,
and Dune, the Animorphs books, The Matrix,
Buffy − they’re all ‘chosen one’ stories. I
even wrote one myself, with Divergent. So
the question of what might come after −
not so much on a plot level, because some
of the stories I listed do continue − but
psychologically and emotionally kept tugging
at me. And that idea, at its core, is not a
coming of age story. It’s a ‘well, okay, I’ve
come of age... now what?’ story.


Chosen Ones takes an interesting
deviation in that it’s set in the
aftermath of a great battle between
good and evil, what made you decide
to take this route?
The ‘aftermath’ part was really the core
of the idea for me! But I think the reason
it appeals to me now, particularly, is that
I’m a little older. I know what it’s like to
spend your whole life preparing for one
thing, getting that thing, and then having
to sort out what comes next. We all do − I
mean, what is school, exactly, if not a long
preparation for getting a full-time job,
moving out of your parents’ house, maybe
getting married or having kids of your own?


when I was growing up − with the exception
of Buffy − that was always the role of the
woman. She’s there to be kissed, you know?
She’s there to be rescued, along with the
world. But the story doesn’t actually belong
to her.
Part of playing with tropes like this is
indulging them before you upend them. So
Sloane gets to be the love interest figure
before. And then she gets her own story.

We also liked how each chosen
one was very different and each
dealt with their ‘celebrity’ status
in a different way – how has your
experience been since the successes of
your Divergent novels?
Divergent was a whirlwind, and I didn’t
really know how to think about it at the time,
but I have some perspective over it now −
and that’s what’s on display in Chosen Ones.
Each one of these characters encounters fame
in a way that I connect to, even if it’s just in a
small way: Esther revels in it, Albie crumples
beneath it, Ines fears it but also makes use
of it, Matt experiences it as a burden and a
duty, and Sloane despises it. They show us
all the paths we might take, if we suddenly
found ourselves world famous. Maybe we
would hate it, maybe we would spend all our
time on the ’gram! Maybe it would make us
paranoid, maybe all three! I don’t know, but
it’s a good personality test, like tag yourself,
which Chosen One-fame-reaction are you?

There is very much an emphasis on
PTSD and coping after a horrific event
in the novel, why did you decide to
explore these themes?
I think those themes are kind of baked into
the idea. Regardless of the other things
Sloane went through, when you boil her
story down to its basic elements, what she’s
famous for is killing a man. An evil man,
sure, and one who needed to be stopped,
but still − her and her four friends
ultimately killed someone. Something
like that would have a real emotional and
psychological cost for a person. Even though
there are a lot of things I’m playing with and
delighting in with this book, I did want to
take that seriously.

And reaching that place is a pivotal moment.
You have to figure out where to go, what to
strive for. You have to deal with the choices
you’ve made and the person you are.
But there’s another story there, in that
aftermath. There’s plenty of adventure left,
for all of us. Thank god.

There are numerous snippets
throughout the novel that deviate
from straightforward prose with
newspaper articles and official memos
etc – can you tell us more about why
you decided to include these?
I started writing them because even though
I wanted to tell the story of what came after
the big battle, you still need to see what the
big battle was, and why it left our heroes
in the position they’re in ten years later.
The documents were a great way to do that
to give the most complete picture of what

happened. And throughout the rest of the
book, they do the same thing: they build a
more complex, more well-rounded world.
They were such a challenge − every single
interstitial required a lot of research! − but
the end result was more than worth it to me.
Plus, they were absurdly fun to write.

We loved the complexity of the strong
female lead character Sloane; she is
very independent but also part of a
co-dependant group of chosen ones.
What inspired you with this character?
We thought it was also great that
the protagonist wasn’t the so-called
‘leader’ of the group...
The way I see it, the ‘before’ story, the one
about the big battle, that’s not really Sloane’s
story. She’s an important figure there, but
she has more of the ‘love interest’ role. And
in the ‘chosen one’ stories I read or watched

We speak to Divergent author Veronica Roth about her first foray into adult fiction


with her upcoming novel, Chosen Ones...
WORDS RACHAEL HARPER

AT ITS CORE IT


IS NOT A COMING


OF AGE STORY
VERONICA ROTH
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