Back again and better late than never with another field report from the LA Times Festival of Books. The magnanimity continued on the second and final day of LATFOB’s 20th anniversary. Well done, folks!
Here’s a few pearls of conversation from the author panels I attended:
“Families are like their own civilizations.”
“A lot of the times I’m writing I feel like an actor; I have to feel the emotions.”
“I had kids smoking, getting drunk, and my editor’s worried about the scene where they aren’t wearing their seatbelts.”
“A writer’s only responsibility is to tell the truth.”
“If I want to know how great I am I call my mother; if I want to know the truth, I call my brother.”
“I’m always taken aback when people [who know I’m a YA author] ask me when I’m going to write a ‘real’ book.”
“People have suggested that hackers and artists are exactly alike.”
“Quality relationships allow for the right amount of solitude and the right amount of connection.”
“The digital revolution has undercut our need for expertise and professionalism.”
“I’m on board with the digital revolution being frightening, but I’m not so nostalgic about what we’re leaving behind.”
“All these media outlets want to ‘pay’ for your writing by promising exposure; exposure is just a way people die out in the cold.”
“Technology is whatever has been invented since you were born.”
“Why can’t we have a platform that actually benefits the people who use it?”
“Every time I hear how I am as a writer I want to rebel against it.”
“Most of what happens to human beings is funny; humor in stories is integral, it’s not a condiment.”
WHO SAID THIS STUFF: Jandy Nelson, David Arnold, Carrie Arcos, Arnold, Robin Benway, Nelson, Vikram Chandra, Joshua Wolf Shenk, Scott Timberg, Chandra, Jacob Silverman, Chandra, Silverman, Amelia Gray, Jonathan Lethem