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Are there any particular languages you know or are interested in learning someday?
What's your favorite period in history?
Idril, nice to meet you! I've been studying Latin at a leisurely pace for nearly half my life, and it's surprising how much you don't learn in that time. I'd love to learn Anglo-Saxon, because the Anglo-Saxons and their language are both awesome ("When Alfred could no longer hold off the enemy battle line, [...] he finally commanded the Christian troops to advance against the enemy army, acting manfully, like a wild boar").
Goodness, I have a lot of favourite periods in history. I'm a huge fan of everything from about 1 AD to 1660 A, with particular attention to the Reformation and the early medieval period--commonly (and erroneously) known as the "Dark Ages".
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Have you ever read any Saki? He writes more satirical humour, but I really enjoy his style as well.
Lady Elanor, I did read one Saki short story once, and it was about--I've spoiler-tagged it in case you don't want to be scarred for life--a hyena
eating a child. So, er, I never looked for any more of his stuff. Still, I might be persuaded...?
Jonathan, you saw the 39 Steps movie? Which one? If it's the latest BBC production, I haven't seen it, but fans of the book weren't impressed. If it was the Alfred Hitchcock classic, that's a fun movie but doesn't resemble the book all that much either! The movie was released a few years before Buchan died, and he and his wife went to see it. She got all indignant about the changes they made, but Buchan was cool with it, which was very typical of him. Still, it wound up not being quite the manly Christian tale of daring that I love. But it's a good movie, and it's a crying shame Hitchcock never got his chance to make
Greenmantle--he wanted to.
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When did you decide to be a writer?
After I finished the first draft of my first book as a young teen and realised that I was addicted to storytelling. And there are days I wish I wasn't...I find non-fiction much easier to turn out. But fiction is my first love.
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Have you read any good Christian books about art and storytelling?
YES. I can highly recommend ND Wilson's
Notes From the Tilt-A-Whirl. JRR Tolkien's essay "On Fairy Stories" and his poem "
Mythopoeia" are both essential.
On art generally, my favourite book is a rather obscure little gem by Francis Nigel Lee,
The Central Significance of Culture, which you can get
off The Book Depository (free shipping anywhere in the world).
Sir Philip Sidney's essay "The Defence of Poesy" (
which I summarised and critiqued here) is another excellent, classic text on Christian storytelling.
I'm not thinking of any others off the top of my head. Generally I just like to read great Christian fiction (Spenser, Bunyan, Austen, Lewis...) and learn what I can from their example. I've also read the occasional writer's book (James Scott Bell is good) and right now I'm reading through Clayton Hamilton's 1914
Manual of the Art of Fiction, but I usually disagree with a bunch of the stuff said in such books. I'm opinionated...