Ecco parte di una breve intervista a G.R.R. Martin e Gardner Dozois sull'antologia
Warriors; ho omesso solo le domande specifiche sul racconto martiniano, che trovate comunque
qui insieme a una recensione.
1. How did the Warriors anthology idea come together?
Gardner Dozois: It was George’s idea. We were sitting in the very crowded lobby in the main hotel at the Anaheim Worldcon, discussing the idea that we ought to edit an anthology together, and George said that one of the anthologies that he’d always wanted to do was an anthology of stories about warriors down through the ages. That sounded like a good idea to me, so we agreed that we’d work on it as a collaborative project, and, after hashing it out some more, that we’d like to do it as a cross-genre anthology, if we could find a publisher who would buy one. When we got home, we began working up dream lists of authors we’d like to get for the book—most of whom we got, as a matter of fact (we were in discussion with Tony Hillerman, a favorite of both of us, about doing a story for Warriors, and he had tentatively agreed, when he tragically died). The rest was just a lot of hard work, a LOT of emails exchanged, and a couple of years assembling the book and dealing with the sudden emergencies that are the lot of any editor. Nothing to it!
2. How is editing an anthology filled with the genre’s best writers different from your own execution as a writer? What do you get out of it?
Gardner Dozois: What I got out of it (other than the money, of course, and the opportunity to work closely with George, one of my oldest friends) was the chance to work with some of the sharpest minds and most talented authors working today. I got that when I used to edit ASIMOV'S too, of course, but in a way this was an even more broadening experience, since the cross-genre nature of the book meant that I had to deal with writers from a number of different fields, some of whose work I had previously been unfamiliar with, and which I got to familiarize myself with while working on the book.
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5. From the editor's point of view, why should people buy Warriors?
Gardner Dozois: People should buy Warriors because they'll be getting a lot of good stories. A LOT of them. First and foremost, that's why. It's a big book, but it's a lot of reading value for your money—no matter what genre an author was working in (and some of them tried working in genres other than the ones they built their reputations in), we insisted that they tell an exciting and engrossing STORY above all else, and we got that from everybody involved. There's a strong emphasis on good storytelling, strong plots, strong characters, in the book—I don't think any of the stories are going to bore you, no matter what kind of story they are. Which is another value of the book: the very wide range of variety you get. There are science fiction stories here, fantasy stories, mystery stories, romances, westerns, and historical stories with settings ranging from ancient Carthage to the days of the Vikings to World War II. It gives you a chance to explore other genres you might not be familiar with, find authors whose work you like. And we deliberately mixed the Table of Contents, so that you don't get two similar kinds of story in a row; there's no science fiction section or fantasy section, it's all swirled together throughout. In the words of Forrest Gump, "You never know what you're going to get." That keeps it exciting, and fresh, and unexpected.