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As a writer, you should care about reluctant readers. You want these kids to feel like books are amazing and cool and that they're an escape.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I have friends who are science journalists, and I'm seeing stories of theirs or talking with them about ideas that they're pitching. Certain kinds of science are around me all the time, like climate change and biology.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm not proud of it, but I'm a great liar when I travel. I smile and lie, and things are smooth.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I suspect that young adults crave stories of broken futures because they themselves are uneasily aware that their world is falling apart.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The young adult category is particularly interesting to me in terms of science fiction and fantasy tropes.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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When I think about myself as a writer, for sure I am a science fiction writer. The tools of extrapolation, the tools of anticipating the future - those are science fictional questions.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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By nature I'm sort of an introvert.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Fiction is optimistic or unrealistic enough to demand that there should be a meaningful narrative.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The conclusion I came to was that even if I couldn't sell books, I still liked the process of writing.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm really interested in how conflicts arise and how they reach points of no return. I'm no pacifist. Sometimes force is necessary. But war is a choice.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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A wise human would have an understanding of the supply chain and how the pieces fit together. But it's against our nature to think about it.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Novelists want to be published and need a publisher to decide to print 20,000 copies. So you need to entertain on some level. I want to reach out and connect.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I focus a little more on pacing when I write books in the young adult category, and of course there's the great American fear of anything sexual, so that's somewhat backed off in YA.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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When we talk about dystopias, especially in young adult fiction, a lot of them are essentially science fictional futures. They aren't necessarily tied to the traditional concept of dystopia. And so in that space, my impression is that kids love reading about weird, wild, adventurous places, and dystopia fits that bill.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I think inherently, a little bit, I'm a bit of a pleaser, and I want people to like me and be nice, and to not ruffle feathers and just make everybody happy and stuff. It's a personality flaw.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Everyone in China knows The Topics. The television stations and newspapers run the same state-generated stories all across the country, and the Chinese form their opinions based on these somewhat controlled sources.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm less crazy and unhappy when I'm writing.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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As an author, you're really grateful for the people who are supporting you, but on some other level, that can be a dangerous echo chamber.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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As a kid, I always liked reading stories where I had a power-projection fantasy. I wanted to be inside of a story where I had power and influence, was going to rise to power, was going to somehow influence my society.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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People don't actually stay still, you know - when their area is a disaster, they go somewhere else, right? And that's just a natural human impulse.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I don't know why we choose to reach out to help another person, or why we decide that we can't, and withdraw and try to care only for ourselves, but I'm fascinated by that choice.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Economies are embedded inside ecosystems. Companies dependent on tourism, for example, are affected by low rainfall - there's less snow for skiers, and forest fires are more intense.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm interested in how we react when we're heavily pressed. When we're vulnerable and our survival is in question, how do we behave?
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I think there are narratives going on all the time that we think of as tangential - up until they turn out to be deciding factors in our lives.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Originally, 'The Windup Girl' started as a short story - a very gnarly, complicated short story set in Bangkok that didn't work very well.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Businesses that decide to be reality based and identify where they're vulnerable to climate impact, that start thinking about how to buffer against it, are going to be able to take advantage of shortages. When the water runs out, not everyone is in the same pickle.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I was interested in political failure here in the U.S. The way we're failing to work together to solve even our smallest problems, let alone the complex ones.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I think that we live in a highly specialized, technologically advanced society. Highly developed societies tend to have very remote understandings about what underlies our prosperity.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm particularly interested in black swan events: unprecedented surprises that destroy the conventional wisdom about how the world works.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The sources and research I use for my inspiration aren't your typical sci-fi subjects, but it's really driven by obsession and personal anxiety more than trying to take up the sword and do what's right.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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When somebody keeps telling you, 'This book is amazing,' you sort of have this pleasing instinct to say, 'Oh, let me make you happy again; let me do that trick again.'
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Maybe storytelling belongs in audio - a short story is the length of a commute. That can be a sacred spot where you have the ear of the reader without having to compete with other media like games or TV.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I started really thinking a lot about where does a country go when we stop being able to speak to each other, when a nation stops being able to solve problems because its ideological differences become so deep that it just becomes dysfunctional.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I think that, when I think about the future that 'The Water Knife' represents, it's one where there's a lack of oversight, planning and organization.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I don't put a very clear label on my work. If anything, I write science fiction - looking at a moment now, in the present, and then extrapolating outward to think about what the future might look like if this particular trend goes on, or if this particular trend is the most dominant. That's a science fictional tool.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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My conception of my ideal reader has expanded quite a lot as I've matured: Ultimately when I think of my ideal reader, it's someone who's not sitting down with the intention of automatically arguing with the book: somebody who's going to give me enough slack to tell my story.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I think the fact that we, as writers, don't engage with resource-level questions is a symptom of our society where we just don't know where our stuff comes from.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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All the definitions people want to put on you in terms of what kind of writer you are come with hidden meanings. If you're writing science fiction, you're writing rocket ships. If you write dystopian fiction, it's inequity where The Man must be fought.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I used to work for a newspaper that covered local resource issues, and my coworkers and friends were journalists. Their reporting work was always pretty grim.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I am interested in agricultural corporations and how they function. The idea that they own the genetics of our food supply is a really compelling thing to me.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Science fiction has these obsessions with certain sciences - large scale engineering, neuroscience.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The marketplace tells us that good, visceral storytelling has a place. But there are lots of questions about the format that stories take.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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We're all happier when we know less, because the details are frightening and haven't really improved much. The more you pay attention, the more horrifying the world is.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Mostly I sat down and said, 'I'm not going to write a boring story.' And that actually, surprisingly, solves most of your problems.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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When we live the 21st-century good life, almost every aspect of it is predicated on not looking at the implications of what we're up to. Happiness at this point has a lot to do with not looking, so you don't feel complicit in some vast and awful enterprise.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Teens want to read something that isn't a lie; we adults wish we could put our heads under the blankets and hide from the scary story we're writing for our kids.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The things that have really gotten confusing to me is how you balance the desires of your publishers to produce things on a schedule, and people are always sort of giving you ideas on what you should follow up with or how you should proceed next and things like that.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Sometimes when we label something dystopian fiction, I feel like we're trying very hard not to use the words 'science fiction,' because science fiction has those horrible connotations of rocket ships and bodacious babes.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I say I write extrapolations. I look at data points and ask what the world could look like.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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There are parents who are really angry that I decided to portray people who have come into the country illegally as decent human beings.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I'm definitely writing my fears. It's almost therapeutic to at least voice a terror, to say, 'I'm worried that Lake Powell looks low and Lake Mead looks even lower.'
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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The loneliest Chinese man I ever met lived halfway up the Three Gorges, in Sichuan Province.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I know people who have gone into career death spins, and that's something you're always aware of as a writer.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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As far as 'Windup Girl' becoming a hit - none of us expected that. 'Night Shade' was just hoping not to lose their shirts, and I had grown up hearing from everyone that science fiction didn't sell, so all of our expectations were very low.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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I didn't think of myself as writing 'cli-fi,' but I'll take the label. I'll take any label that makes someone think they might be interested in my stories.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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When I was writing 'The Windup Girl' and 'Ship Breaker,' I was writing those simultaneously, so I was an unpublished writer, not really having that full sense that these books would go out in the world, that they would be successful, that there would be an audience and that there would be fans of those stories.
~Paolo Bacigalupi


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Paolo Bacigalupi quotes

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