Archive for November, 2004

Two Great Neal Interviews

After 6 months or so of not appearing much online or in magazines, two great Neal Stephenson interviews happened within a short span. The first, a 12 question/answer session was published on the famous tech/geek web site Slashdot: “Neal Stephenson Responds With Wit and Humor” (posted Wednesday Oct 20, 2004). The other interview was published by Online, a web site run by UK’s Guardian Unlimited: “Neal Stephenson – the interview” (interview by Jim McClellan, posted Thursday November 4, 2004).


Both these interviews are great for Neal’s fans since they give us a little insight into his life and thinking. The Online interview focuses on the Baroque Cycle books and their themes while the Slashdot article fields 12 interesting questions that span book topics to Neal’s personal coding habits. Some questions in this interview were silly, but others took a serious tone and were actually highly informative. Of note was the lengthy answer Neal gave to the second question about commercial Sci-Fi writers getting less respect than other writers (both academic and in other fiction genres). His answer is verbose, but very important to read and understand. I also liked his mock battles with Willam Gibson � a very comical answer to question 4: “In a fight between you and William Gibson, who would win?”


So with two great interviews this year, hopefully this trend will continue!

Neal Stephenson Fan Blog goes live!

Neal Stephenson Fan Blog went live November 13th, 2004 around 7:30 in the evening MST. Up until then the Neal Stephenson Fan Page created in early 2004 was located at neal.fautrever.com and served in static html with some images that I didn’t necessarily have permission to use.

This new weblog is a lot nicer since it’s published through Wordpress, and served as PHP templates that the blog’s authors can fill with whatever content they wish. It’s easier to update and since it needed to be moved to the new nealfanpage domain, a few design changes were thrown in as well.

For example, I deleted the images partly since they were borrowed anyway and also because they didn’t really serve much purpose on the site. My mantra for images on web sites has always been: “use only images that are relevent to the web site and it’s purpose.”

Soon I’ll be posting real entries about Neal Stephenson and his work, so stay tuned.