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Survey Form for Biolog of Robert J. Sawyer
Copyright © 1994 by Robert J. Sawyer
All Rights Reserved.
This isn't the actual "Jay Kay Klein's Biolog" that
appeared of me in the Mid-December 1994 issue of Analog.
Rather, this is the text of the survey form I filled out in
April 1994 for Jay to help him prepare that Biolog.
The text below refers to Hobson's Choice that's the
title under which the novel that was later published in book form
as The Terminal Experiment was serialized in
Analog.
Name / Born; raised / Past Places of Residence:
Robert J. Sawyer ("Rob") was born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada,
April 29, 1960. He grew up in Toronto, and now lives just north
of that city with Carolyn Clink, his wife of ten years. Rob and
Carolyn met in their high-school SF club, of which Rob was
co-founder.
Education / Areas of Study:
Rob has an unusual educational background for a hard-SF writer.
He has a Bachelor of Applied Arts degree in Radio and Television
Arts from Toronto's Ryerson Polytechnic University.
This perhaps-odd choice of major came about during Rob's last
year of high school. From age five, he had never wavered in his
career ambition: to be a paleontologist. Those who've read his
popular Quintaglio trilogy (Far-Seer,
Fossil Hunter, and
Foreigner, all published by Ace), which
tells of the intellectual coming of age of a race of intelligent
dinosaurs, or his most recent novel, the just-published [November
1994] End of an Era,
a time-travel story about a journey
back to the closing days of the Cretaceous, can see that he
maintains an interest in paleontology still. From an early age,
Rob also thought he'd like to write SF, but figured it would
always have to be merely as a hobby.
Well, in his final year of high school, a great truth dawned on
him: there are only two dozen people in the entire world who
make their living studying dinosaurs. Meanwhile, there are a
couple of hundred who make their living writing SF. Although
becoming an SF writer had always seemed the impractical goal, it
turned out in fact to be more practical and to have a
higher chance of success than setting out to become a dinosaur
hunter.
And so Rob decided to pursue his writing career. But, ever the
practicalist, he figured it was best to still learn a trade, as
well and so he studied broadcasting, with an emphasis on
scriptwriting. He occasionally does broadcasting for CBC Radio
including writing and narrating five one-hour documentaries
about the SF genre. He also studied psychology at Ryerson
Polytechnic; his March 1994 novel
Foreigner, which put an
alien into Freudian psychoanalysis, came directly out of that
experience.
Full-time/Part-time writer:
Rob has been a full-time writer since 1983. In fact, he's only
had two regular jobs since finishing school. He worked for a
while at Bakka, Canada's oldest SF specialty bookstore, and he
spent a year back at Ryerson Polytechnic as an
instructor/demonstrator. However, it wasn't until 1990 that Rob
became a full-time SF writer; throughout the 1980s he wrote about
computers and high technology for Canadian magazines and
newspapers, and did writing for high-tech companies and
government offices. All the while, he was writing SF stories,
and selling them at the blistering rate of about one a year.
His first SF sale was to the Strasenburgh Planetarium in
Rochester, New York, which adapted one of his short stories as
part of a dramatic starshow trilogy that ran during the summer of
1980.
Rob's first SF publication appeared in, of all places, The
Village Voice: The Weekly Newspaper of New York, January 14,
1981, and his first appearance in a regular SF magazine was in
the March 1987 Amazing Stories. His current serial,
Hobson's Choice, marks his first appearance in
Analog, a magazine that has been a part of his life as a
reader for twenty-one years now.
Genres other than SF:
Although all of Rob's work to date has been published as SF, much
of it, including Hobson's Choice, crosses over into the
mystery field. His first novel, Golden Fleece (which
Orson Scott Card chose as the best SF novel of 1990 in his review
column in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction) was a
murder mystery set aboard a Bussard ramjet starship, and one of
his short stories ("Just Like Old Times" from the DAW anthology
Dinosaur Fantastic, edited by Mike Resnick) was a finalist
for the Crime Writers of Canada's Arthur Ellis Award. He's also
got a short story coming up in the anthology Sherlock Holmes
in Orbit (DAW, early 1995).
Hobbies / Interests / SF fan:
Rob's hobbies include fossil collecting, stargazing, and trivia
(he's a past team captain for a pub trivia league; his team was
called "The Clavins," after the barroom know-it-all on
Cheers). He's past moderator of the Ontario Science
Fiction Club (1981-82), and co-chaired four SF conventions in the
Toronto area in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
New Books / Forthcoming:
Rob's next book will be Starplex, forthcoming from Ace.
It deals with cutting-edge cosmology, dark matter, and alien
life.
Writing and other awards:
Rob's Golden Fleece won Canada's Aurora Award for Best SF
Novel of 1990/91, and Far-Seer won the
CompuServe SF Forum's Homer Award for Best SF Novel of 1992.
On writing SF:
So how does a guy with an arts degree end up writing hard SF?
Through being a voracious reader of science books (both popular
and technical) and magazines. He finds the weekly magazine
Science News invaluable for keeping current. In fact,
research is one of the things Rob enjoys most about being a
writer. He's currently immersing himself in the Human Genome
Project, dark matter, the causes of aging, and paleoanthropology
all of which will find their way into books he's currently
working on. A generalist in a world of specialists, Rob loves to
mix areas of study that aren't normally combined, and he finds
his stories ideas coming out of that mix.
In constructing a story, Rob likes to bring together disparate
elements (such as artificial intelligence and theology in
Hobson's Choice, or astronomy and paleontology in
Far-Seer). But he's not ready to
begin writing until he's found the core philosophical question
underlying the material he wants to play with. The book has
to be about something significant and relevant not just
mental exercise.
On Canadian SF:
Rob belongs to a very, very small subset of SF writers: he is
one of precisely three people who were born in Canada, still live
there, and regularly write English-language SF at novel length
(the other two are Phyllis Gotlieb, born in Toronto in 1926, and
Terence M. Green, born in Toronto in 1947). Rob does see
Canadian influences in his work, and they go deeper than just the
fact that all his Earthbound stories are set in his home and
native land. Canada is much more a collective, rather than
individualist, nation than is the United States. Out-and-out
heroes and villains are rare in Sawyer's work. Characters in his
books are more likely to get caught up in the sweep of events, as
Peter Hobson in Hobson's Choice does, than to take charge
and set the world right single-handedly.
On SF as social commentary:
Rob believes SF is a potent force for social commentary (anybody
who doesn't read his books about the Quintaglio aliens as
parables about humanity is missing the whole point, he says).
But he firmly believes that the test should not be whether or not
SF has successfully predicted certain things. SF is much more
important when, by highlighting potential problems, it ends up
steering society away from the things it is predicting.
Orwell's 1984 was an important novel because it helped
make sure that the real 1984 was nothing at all like the world it
predicted; without that SF book sounding the warning, things
would have ended up a lot worse than they did.
Rob is particularly fascinated by the clash between the two most
potent forces in shaping human society science and religion.
He explored that conflict in the Quintaglio trilogy, and does so
again here in Hobson's Choice.
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