Author Nick Harkaway Asks Me Some Questions
The title is totally misleading, Nick actually asked all of his readers these questions but I am one of his readers so there. Why am I turning this into a blog post? Well because I look for anything that I can turn into a blog post because I'm a blogger and that's kind of what we do. Plus when Nick was giving people the choice of how to answer the questions, either in the comments, Facebook or email he made the mistake of saying "anything goes." When I was in college doing my senior thesis: A Phenomenological View of Internet Chat Rooms, my professor made the same mistake when asked if we had to write the paper in MLA or AP style. He said he didn't care, we could write it in any style we wanted. Then I asked if that meant we could write it in free verse poetry (because I almost had enough poetry classes to get a minor in writing) and he said yes. So I did (at least part of it because some stuff had to still be presented in a more factual way). So here I am responding to Nick's questions in a blog post. And because I still haven't done a review of Nicks amazingly awesome book I wanted to plug Nick to the handful of readers here and really encourage you to get his book.
The Questions:
1. Who are you? I don’t mean your name, I mean how do you see yourself? Work(ish): Social Media Anthropologist. Digital Phenomenologist. Communications strategist. Business model junkie. Life(ish): Husband of Jen. Father of 3. Gen X, indie rock, mountain biker. Blogger: New Comm Biz, Hyper Bored, Wall Notes, /tacanderson. 2. How did you find out about The Gone-Away World? I was in this amazing downtown Seattle bookstore, The Elliot Bay Book Company, and I saw The Gone-Away World. The cover (more later) caught my attention and because I'm a total geek I always do a search on my iPhone for the author to see what comes up. Literally whatever, reviews, blogs, Twitter accounts. The only time I'm discouraged by what I find is when I find nothing. I loved the fact that you had a blog and were on Twitter. You are my same age so I always feel a sense of resentment for authors my age because I (not so) secretly wish I was an author. Then I read some reviews and how your dad was this famous author (who I didn't know) and the interviews of you that read gave me this wonderful sense of what the British version of American Generation X was like. (Do Brits have the same generation labels we do?) By this point people were obviously annoyed with me that I was standing in the isle blocking their way reading my phone and not a book so I grabbed the book. 3. What else do you read? Way to many blogs (seriously I subscribe to over 400). Then a ton of business books. I could say that this is all occupational hazard but really I'm in the occupation I am because I enjoy what I do. Daniel Pink's book Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us , and John Hagel's The Power of Pull: How Small Moves, Smartly Made, Can Set Big Things in Motion are my two favorite right now. As far as real books (aka fiction) I love cyperpunk, steampunk and dystopian. Basically dark alternate reality/future. On my reading shelf (yes I read multiple books at the same time):- Seattle author Cherie Priest's Boneshaker (steampunk)
- Scott Westerfield's Leviathan (steampunk)
- I'm really excited to read Paolo Bacigalupi's the The Windup Girl but for some reason I feel compelled to read his collection of short stories, Pump Six first. His work was pitched to me as steampunk but I think he's kind of genre bending (much like you).
