
The Gradual Interview
Moderator: Seareach
The only thing I ever sent, was really a thank you to him for Saltheart, who had a very specific and large affect on me when I was in middleschool, and he wrote back via email to tell ME thanks.


Avatar wrote:But then, the answers provided by your imagination are not only sometimes best, but have the added advantage of being unable to be wrong.
Anthony Buren: Is the Worm a part of the Earth or is the Earth simply built upon the Worm? More to the point can you command the Worm by drinking the Blood of the Earth? If so why wouldn't Linden or the Elohim simply command the Worm never to rouse?
I could tell you that the Worm is an inherent part of the Earth's creation--which it is. But I find it more useful to think of such things in symbolic terms. Consider the Worm as a symbol of Death. If you had the Power the Command, would you use it to command Death to simply "stop happening"? If you did, the outcome might surpass your worst nightmares. Disasters of astonishing magnitude result from messing with The Way Life Works. Witness the horrors that have arisen because individuals decided that the Laws of Life and Death shouldn't apply--"just this once." Damelon was wise to do everything in his power to keep people away from the EarthBlood.
(03/05/2008)
A number of interesting answers in today's GI, including another post from Mr. Worthington and SRD's response... but I found this one intriguing:
[Edit: PLEASE Spoiler any FR spoilers if you're going to discuss it here...-jay]
Spoiler
["Asked about the Theomach's motivations, SRD"]Sorry. No spoiler here. <grin> (Although I’m going to post this under “spoilers,” just to be on the safe side.) The Theomach is gone from the story, so it's at least theoretically safe to talk about him[/quote]
But there IS a spoiler of sorts: that the Theomach won't be reappearing in the last two books.
I'd guess that means that we won't be returning to the Isle (which isn't surprising). Does it also mean that Brinn/Theo/Guardian won't be showing up again? That was at least possible. Of course, it's also possible that SRD is being coy... the Theomach *himself* won't reappear but the Guardian might.
The rest of the reply, which is also interesting:
["SRD"]the point that seems most important to me is: the Theomach did NOT go back in time; certainly not to replace a specific Guardian. When Linden encounters him, he is occupying his natural place in his own history, as well as in the history of the Insequent, the Land, and the Earth. As for why: did I not mention often enough that the Insequent have an old and bitter grudge against the Elohim? Many of the Insequent are driven by a desire to prove themselves against the Elohim; to exceed by skill and knowledge what the Elohim get merely by existing. Simply defeating and replacing an Elohim is the greatest feat any Insequent has ever accomplished, no matter how static the role of the Guardian may appear in retrospect.[/quote]
But there IS a spoiler of sorts: that the Theomach won't be reappearing in the last two books.
I'd guess that means that we won't be returning to the Isle (which isn't surprising). Does it also mean that Brinn/Theo/Guardian won't be showing up again? That was at least possible. Of course, it's also possible that SRD is being coy... the Theomach *himself* won't reappear but the Guardian might.
The rest of the reply, which is also interesting:
["SRD"]the point that seems most important to me is: the Theomach did NOT go back in time; certainly not to replace a specific Guardian. When Linden encounters him, he is occupying his natural place in his own history, as well as in the history of the Insequent, the Land, and the Earth. As for why: did I not mention often enough that the Insequent have an old and bitter grudge against the Elohim? Many of the Insequent are driven by a desire to prove themselves against the Elohim; to exceed by skill and knowledge what the Elohim get merely by existing. Simply defeating and replacing an Elohim is the greatest feat any Insequent has ever accomplished, no matter how static the role of the Guardian may appear in retrospect.[/quote]
"History is a myth men have agreed upon." - Napoleon


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I LOVE this question and I equally love the answer.Nate in Atlanta: Stephen,
I've been reading the Thomas Covenant series since the early 80s, and have long been bugged by one issue: The main characters, Thomas and Linden, go for days, weeks -- months even! -- without changing their clothes.
Don't they start to stink? Or does The Land possess even greater powers than we know about?
Thanks,
Nate
Well, of *course* they start to stink. But this is obviously not a subject on which I've focused much narrative attention. Why? Because it takes up too much storytelling space. And because, well, where does it end? Do you want to know *every* time a character takes a leak, or is every *other* time enough?
However, my characters *do* either change or wash their clothes--when they can. (Not so much the people of the Land, I admit: we seldom hear that one of them has done something to get cleaned up.) I could cite examples; but I hardly think they're necessary.
(03/19/2008)
I'm just annoyed I didn't think to ask this myself.

"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"

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HAHAHAHAHA! That's awesome. Julie and Heatherly asked him a question about TC's underwear but I can't remember if it was when he was on the show as Higgins O'Higgins or as himself. 

Now if I could just find a way to wear live bees as jewelry all the time.....
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Monumental Guilt Beyond the Ken of Human Understanding: Does Lord Foul like sushi? Okay, has he ever possessed someone, ate sushi during the possession and decided that he in fact liked it? Are there any sushi chefs in the Land? Why not?
SRD, while in possession of the Chopsticks of Law, wrote:Lord Foul, being the DESPISER, *despises* sushi. There are no sushi chefs in the Land. In a distant region of the Earth, however, an obscure people worship sushi. Sushi chefs are the high priests of that religion. Sadly, they are too self-absorbed to have any effect on the outcome of larger events.
"History is a myth men have agreed upon." - Napoleon


- drew
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So, uh, what's the proper protocol, if you get an email from SRD instead of a response posted on his website?
The email asks not to reply, so do I just ignore it?
How do I show forth my gratitude?
The email asks not to reply, so do I just ignore it?
How do I show forth my gratitude?
I thought you were a ripe grape
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
a cabernet sauvignon
a bottle in the cellar
the kind you keep for a really long time
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I dunno. Reply back to the email and ask him.drew wrote:So, uh, what's the proper protocol, if you get an email from SRD instead of a response posted on his website?
The email asks not to reply, so do I just ignore it?
How do I show forth my gratitude?


Life is a waste of time
Time is a waste of life
So get wasted all of the time
And you'll have the time of your life
SRD wrote:LF is in hiding. Esmer doesn't even know where he is. This is consistent with the Despiser's new strategy as he has deployed it throughout the story so far. Doubtless he has read "Desecration Through Manipulation," a sort of self-help book for people who want to feel superior and do harm while remaining safe from the humiliating defeats they've suffered in the past.

"History is a myth men have agreed upon." - Napoleon


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Okay, did anyone pick up that the gift of tongues defended the Giants from the merewives? Even Pitchwife says, "Perhaps the merewives have no desire for Giants, as they have none for women."In the Gradual Interview, Donaldson wrote:2) Your speculations about Kastenessen's mortal lover are interesting. I can't say that I've ever thought about her in those terms. And I probably never will. I'm content with my original assumption that Giantish men are defended from the merewives by their gift of tongues. (It's often difficult to seduce someone who understands what you're *really* saying.)
I'm James Douglas, hose questions were mine; and I found the questions he didn't answer ***far*** more interesting that those he did... I posed several questions that relate to my theories on the Last Chronicles... Not only did he not want these questions answered, but he didn't want my questions *shown*. I find this interesting, and he is correct, even that is a none answer in a way.
I confess, when I asked him these questions, I really wasn't hoping for a direct answer; any kind of reply would satisfy me. The biggest things can be found in the smallest details. I understand completely his notion to not answer or display the rest of my questions, and respect it entirely.
I confess, when I asked him these questions, I really wasn't hoping for a direct answer; any kind of reply would satisfy me. The biggest things can be found in the smallest details. I understand completely his notion to not answer or display the rest of my questions, and respect it entirely.
I've never picked up on that either, WF.wayfriend wrote:Okay, did anyone pick up that the gift of tongues defended the Giants from the merewives? Even Pitchwife says, "Perhaps the merewives have no desire for Giants, as they have none for women."In the Gradual Interview, Donaldson wrote:2) Your speculations about Kastenessen's mortal lover are interesting. I can't say that I've ever thought about her in those terms. And I probably never will. I'm content with my original assumption that Giantish men are defended from the merewives by their gift of tongues. (It's often difficult to seduce someone who understands what you're *really* saying.)
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Posting the whole thing, but the thing about the Ravers caught my eye. It seems we have another clue about their origins.
There you have it: The Ravers were pirates!In the Gradual Interview was wrote:Dale Cebula: Mr Donaldson,
HUGE fun of your work...I started reading Covenant in about the 8th grade, and I'm 37 now! I have a few silly questions for you.
Do any regular people live (or ever lived) in the Lower Land? I know the Giants did before they were all slain, but are there any villages in this part of the world? The names of the regions suggest that no right thinking person would do so, but where the "Spoiled Plains" always spoiled?
Have any of the "regular" people in the Land ever done anything wicked or hateful? Kevin, Elena, etc made big errors, but they do not do things out of sin or greed or whatever. I believe this to be due to the connection to Earthpower, and also has something to do with this being a story about Covenant and Linden and not necessarily about the folk of the Land. Just curious.
Finally, can you think of a reason why Foul did not just "dive" into the earthpower prior to Berek forging the Staff of Law. It seems that the reason he did so prior to TWL is because the STaff was gone. Again, that would make for a silly story in the first trilogy, but anyway.
PS--I am a medieval history major and I have to take issue with some GI comments you made about the Middle Ages lacking progress. Or is that just my vanity?!?! LOL
- Please keep in mind that I'm working without a net (i.e. a story "bible") here. As I've said many times before, in general I only invent what I need. But with that proviso....
Starting from the "known" (the text), we can make some deductions based on, say, the history of the One Forest. The One Forest was decimated by *people*--an act which in sheer scale could be considered a desecration--and they had to come from SOMEwhere. Since they didn't intrude through Doom's Retreat (that happened later, and when it did, the Upper Land was already inhabited--if sparsely, perhaps), and since the various mountain ranges naturally discourage migration, it seems likely that these people arrived from the sea, or along the coasts. Therefore the Lower Land must once have been inhabited by humankind. (I think we can assume that the Spoiled Plains weren't "spoiled" until after LF established himself in Ridjeck Thome.) And these people must have been capable of considerable darkness or malice, since they eventually gave rise to the Ravers.
However, even back then the Sarangrave and Lifeswallower must have been toxic. The Defiles Course derives its poisons, at least in part, from the banes buried under Mount Thunder; and those banes--according to the text--were there from the Earth's very beginning. As a result, much of the Lower Land would have been comparatively unwelcoming. So it seems natural that people would slowly move toward the Upper Land, hacking and burning as they migrated.
Does that answer your question?
As for LF's use of Earthpower to bring himself back after his defeat in the first trilogy: why would he do such a thing if he didn't have to? Being the Despiser and all, he can't possibly *enjoy* things like Earthpower. (I like to picture him puking at the taste of aliantha.)
As "a medieval history major," you would certainly know more about the Middle Ages than I do. But surely they haven't been called "the dark ages" for nothing?
(04/23/2008)
Last edited by wayfriend on Mon May 05, 2008 8:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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The best show of gratitude you can make is to do as he requests and not respond.drew wrote:So, uh, what's the proper protocol, if you get an email from SRD instead of a response posted on his website?
The email asks not to reply, so do I just ignore it?
How do I show forth my gratitude?

"If you can't tell the difference, what difference does it make?"

"There is tic and toc in atomic" - Neil Peart