Guy Gavriel Kay: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Guy Gavriel Kay''' ([[7 November]] [[1954]]) is a Canadian author who moved to [[Oxford]] in [[1974]] to assist [[Christopher Tolkien]] on publishing ''[[The Silmarillion]]''.
'''Guy Gavriel Kay''' ([[7 November]] [[1954]]) is a Canadian author who moved to [[Oxford]] in [[1974]] to assist [[Christopher Tolkien]] on publishing ''[[The Silmarillion]]''. Since then, Kay went on to become a multiple award-winning fantasy author.<ref name=FBC/>


==Inspiration==
==Inspiration==
When asked how [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] influenced his work, Kay responded:
When asked how [[J.R.R. Tolkien]] influenced his work, Kay responded:
{{quote|The influences are complex and might be unexpected. Take too long to answer properly. I'll say this, the main effect of my year working on The Silmarillion was to reduce the level of awe and the sense of a vast shadow (if I may put it that way, speaking of this!) lying over High Fantasy. Because I saw the flase starts, the errors, the drafts and redrafts, I emerged, quite young, with a sense that The Lord of the Rings and his other work had not simply sprung full-grown from the high brow of easy genius, but that long, diligent work might produce something. I was desensitized, in a way, to intimidation.|From an interview with Kay for a website.<ref>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://web.archive.org/web/19991004002337/http://www.eventhorizon.com/sfzine/chats/transcripts/040899.html|articlename=Transcript of Chat with Guy Gavriel Kay|dated=8 April 1999|website=Eventhorizon.com (archived)|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>}}
{{quote|The influences are complex and might be unexpected. Take too long to answer properly. I'll say this, the main effect of my year working on The Silmarillion was to reduce the level of awe and the sense of a vast shadow (if I may put it that way, speaking of this!) lying over High Fantasy. Because I saw the flase starts, the errors, the drafts and redrafts, I emerged, quite young, with a sense that The Lord of the Rings and his other work had not simply sprung full-grown from the high brow of easy genius, but that long, diligent work might produce something. I was desensitized, in a way, to intimidation.|From an interview with Kay for a website.<ref>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://web.archive.org/web/19991004002337/http://www.eventhorizon.com/sfzine/chats/transcripts/040899.html|articlename=Transcript of Chat with Guy Gavriel Kay|dated=8 April 1999|website=Eventhorizon.com (archived)|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>}}


When asked by another website how Tolkien affected his work, Kay responded:
When asked by another website how Tolkien affected his work, Kay responded:
{{quote|I think, looking back, that the exposure to JRRT's drafts, notes, false starts, dead ends helped to make me less awed and intimidated, later, when I started my own large fantasy. At the time I began Fionavar most of the 'serious' writers exploring fantasy were working AWAY from the epic form, as if surrendering it. That was the period when, for example, 'urban fantasy' was being shaped. My experience with The Silmarillion and the papers helped me to avoid that need to 'go somewhere else' in fiction. Later, I did move elsewhere to a degree, but it was because I was testing my own boundaries as a writer, not because I was abandoning the form.|From an interview with Kay on Wotmania.com<ref>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20050827211542/http://wotmania.com/fantasymessageboard.asp|articlename=Other Fantasy: Guy Gavriel Kay (unavailable)|dated=19 August 2005|website=[http://web.archive.org/web/20050827211542/http://wotmania.com/ Wotmania.com (archived)]|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>}}
{{quote|I think, looking back, that the exposure to JRRT's drafts, notes, false starts, dead ends helped to make me less awed and intimidated, later, when I started my own large fantasy. At the time I began Fionavar most of the 'serious' writers exploring fantasy were working AWAY from the epic form, as if surrendering it. That was the period when, for example, 'urban fantasy' was being shaped. My experience with The Silmarillion and the papers helped me to avoid that need to 'go somewhere else' in fiction. Later, I did move elsewhere to a degree, but it was because I was testing my own boundaries as a writer, not because I was abandoning the form.|From an interview with Kay on Wotmania.com<ref>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20050827211542/http://wotmania.com/fantasymessageboard.asp|articlename=Other Fantasy: Guy Gavriel Kay (unavailable)|dated=19 August 2005|website=[http://web.archive.org/web/20050827211542/http://wotmania.com/ Wotmania.com (archived)]|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>}}


Kay has further commented that "''Tolkien is a master class in harnessing myth and legend to narrative and theme''."<ref>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://www.fantasybookcafe.com/2013/03/interview-with-guy-gavriel-kay/|articlename=Interview with Guy Gavriel Kay|dated=21 March 2013|website=[http://www.fantasybookcafe.com Fantasybookcafe.com]|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>   
Kay has further commented that "''Tolkien is a master class in harnessing myth and legend to narrative and theme''."<ref name=FBC>{{webcite|author=|articleurl=http://www.fantasybookcafe.com/2013/03/interview-with-guy-gavriel-kay/|articlename=Interview with Guy Gavriel Kay|dated=21 March 2013|website=[http://www.fantasybookcafe.com Fantasybookcafe.com]|accessed=23 March 2013}}</ref>   


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.brightweavings.com/ Official website]
* [http://www.brightweavings.com/ Official website]
*{{WP|Guy Gavriel Kay}}


{{references}}
{{references}}

Revision as of 16:46, 23 March 2013

Guy Gavriel Kay (7 November 1954) is a Canadian author who moved to Oxford in 1974 to assist Christopher Tolkien on publishing The Silmarillion. Since then, Kay went on to become a multiple award-winning fantasy author.[1]

Inspiration

When asked how J.R.R. Tolkien influenced his work, Kay responded:

"The influences are complex and might be unexpected. Take too long to answer properly. I'll say this, the main effect of my year working on The Silmarillion was to reduce the level of awe and the sense of a vast shadow (if I may put it that way, speaking of this!) lying over High Fantasy. Because I saw the flase starts, the errors, the drafts and redrafts, I emerged, quite young, with a sense that The Lord of the Rings and his other work had not simply sprung full-grown from the high brow of easy genius, but that long, diligent work might produce something. I was desensitized, in a way, to intimidation."
― From an interview with Kay for a website.[2]

When asked by another website how Tolkien affected his work, Kay responded:

"I think, looking back, that the exposure to JRRT's drafts, notes, false starts, dead ends helped to make me less awed and intimidated, later, when I started my own large fantasy. At the time I began Fionavar most of the 'serious' writers exploring fantasy were working AWAY from the epic form, as if surrendering it. That was the period when, for example, 'urban fantasy' was being shaped. My experience with The Silmarillion and the papers helped me to avoid that need to 'go somewhere else' in fiction. Later, I did move elsewhere to a degree, but it was because I was testing my own boundaries as a writer, not because I was abandoning the form."
― From an interview with Kay on Wotmania.com[3]

Kay has further commented that "Tolkien is a master class in harnessing myth and legend to narrative and theme."[1]

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Interview with Guy Gavriel Kay" dated 21 March 2013, Fantasybookcafe.com (accessed 23 March 2013)
  2. "Transcript of Chat with Guy Gavriel Kay" dated 8 April 1999, Eventhorizon.com (archived) (accessed 23 March 2013)
  3. "Other Fantasy: Guy Gavriel Kay (unavailable)" dated 19 August 2005, Wotmania.com (archived) (accessed 23 March 2013)