Recent entries

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14251 Copy

    Questioner

    Do you have a special way of coming up with your bad analogies?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Do I special way of coming up with bad analogies. Which are actually similes. So here's the thing-- So Steelheart, I wrote Steelheart in like 2008 or 2009, it was pretty early on, I had the idea-- I was touring for some book, I think-- I feel like it was Warbreaker or Mistborn 3, any way I was touring for one of these books and I get cut off in traffic, I get really mad at the person, and I imagine blowing up their car. I get horrified, like "If I had superpowers is this what I would do? Would I blow up cars of people who cut me off in traffic?" and I was like "OOh that's a story". So I went and wrote the prologue, like almost immediately, I think on that tour I wrote the prologue. I remember reading it at DragonCon that year, whenever year that was.

    Then I put the whole book aside and had to wait for like 5 years because I'm like "I'm working on The Wheel of Time I have no time to write this other side project." I was much better at that and not going crazy on side projects when I was doing that. When I finally got back to it I had this prologue-- The prologue was ten years before in-world time, like the character grew ten years between the prologue and chapter 1, so I was "Alright I need a voice for this character" and I started writing, doing my standard thing. I was having so much trouble coming up with a distinctive voice for David, the main character, and I accidentally wrote a bad metaphor. That happens a lot when you're writing-- you just come across something and it's a terrible analogy and you delete it, but here I said "Well what if I ran with that?" The fun thing is by coincidence that became a metaphor for his entire personality. He tries so hard, is very earnest, but sometimes he tries a little too hard, and looks beyond the mark, and stumbles a bit. And that is who he became as a character, and the bad metaphors are a great metaphor for that.

    Coming up with them now is really hard. Doing it on purpose is way harder than coming up with good metaphors. They are rough. Sometimes I'll sit-- Like the most time I spend staring at the screen when working on these books is coming up with one of David's metaphors.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14252 Copy

    Questioner

    Which book was the hardest to write?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Which book was the hardest to write. A Memory of Light, the last of The Wheel of Time books by a LARGE margin is the hardest book I've ever written because the last Wheel of Time book mixed with a lot of war scenes that--I don't have the history in warfare that Robert Jordan did so all this stuff I had to do, there was a lot of research and a lot of going back and forth with Alan Romanczuk with Team Jordan. It was by far the hardest.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14253 Copy

    Questioner

    If characters are reflections of their authors, which character do you feel reflects you the most?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Which character reflects me the most. I don't think there is one… I think each of my characters represent me in some way and each character is different from me in other ways. So I can't say which one represents me more or less. They're all a bit of me.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14254 Copy

    Questioner

    Are you still planning on doing Mistborn in Space, because that would be awesome.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Am I still planning on doing Mistborn in Space. Yes I am… Mistborn was originally pitched to my editor-- I pitched it as a trilogy of trilogies--I've obviously gone off track on that on that--but I was going to do an epic fantasy, a 1980's level kind of contemporary, and science fiction all in the same world. Alloy of Law, I really fell in love with that time period for some things I was doing and I was like "I'm going to write FOUR BOOKS HERE" So there's now 13 planned. Who knows if I'll add more and things like that.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14256 Copy

    Questioner

    Would you rather be a misting or a Twinborn, and then which power would you choose?

    Brandon Sanderson

    What powers would I have? ...I would probably pick Twinborn because "Hey extra power" right? I would probably have Wax's powers from Alloy of Law, those are the ones I find the most interesting. Which is why I started with them there. I think I will be able to do cool things with them. Others are cool as well but-- With all this metal around, jumping on it would be so much fun.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14257 Copy

    Questioner

    Do you find it hard working with multiple publishers and multiple houses?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Do I find it hard working with multiple publishers… and multiple houses as a writer? Uh, yes there are some hard parts to it. I do two tours a year instead of one, because I have two publishers now-- And that's rough. Every time one publisher asks for something the other one is like "Well we want that to" so I'm going to BEA, that's the Book Expo, and the other is like "Well you have to come to this thing for us". So it fills my time a lot more, which is hard. But at the same time it is also very nice because it gives me a little more credibility with both. That they both know that they kind of have to make me happy. That is pretty nice. And there is also the peace of mind that if for some reason one of things I was doing tanked I've always got another one. That was much more important to me early in my career, when I was doing the Alcatraz books with Scholastic and the epic fantasies with Tor.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14258 Copy

    Questioner

    If you had the choice of being an Epic and being evil or not, would you take that choice--

    Brandon Sanderson (Paraphrased)

    Would I make the choice to become an Epic? Well they ALL GO EVIL so NO. No no no no. I'd be a Mistborn, yes yes yes yes. *laughter* Epic? No no no no.  

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14259 Copy

    Questioner

    You talked earlier about your writing process when you were in college. What's it like now?

    Brandon Sanderson

    What's my writing process like now? So I'm a writer. That means I don't have to get up in the morning unless I have to come to some signing like this. I hope you guys appreciate the fact that I got up at 6:45 this morning. Normally I get up at noon. So I get up at noon, I write from noon to 5, I then go hangout with my family from 5 until 9 or so, and at about 9 o'clock I go back to work and I write from like 9 to 3. Or something like that. And then I goof-off and go to bed at about 4. It is a great life. Except when I'm on tour and they are like "Yeah you need to be up for a flight at 8 o'clock" and I'm like "AHHHHH! Curse you Brandon and you staying up late all the other nights!"

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14261 Copy

    Questioner

    What is the most interesting or awesome thing you found in your South American research for The Aztlanian?

    Brandon Sanderson

    What is the most awesome thing I've come up with in my research for The Aztlanian.  So the question, for those of you who read The Rithmatist, I'm working on a sequel doing a lot of research on South American and Central American cultures. The Aztecs all the way down to the Incas *audio obscured* city was just so cool reading about that. One of the big things that I discovered was that a lot of records indicate that Meso-American culture was way bigger than, way more populated than people are usually taught. It's just that they lost somewhere around 60%-- This enormous number to diseases that were brought over. Way more than I originally expected. And reading about some of this, like the early accounts of how many people there were, their civilizations. Later on when the explorers really started coming, talking about there being these ghost cities, of empty-- the people all left them because so many people died and things like this. That what happened was almost like a post-Apocalyptic-- Like when the invasion of the Aztecs, of Mexico, was happening they were basically invading a post-Apocalyptic society where everyone was already dead. They'd even lost their emperor, Montezuma the First had died from this stuff. It's very interesting, all these things reading about-- There is a ton to learn.

    Firefight Atlanta signing ()
    #14262 Copy

    Questioner

    So Kaladin, he has a lot of Christ-like qualities being the who protects those who can't protect themselves. When you were writing the character of Kaladin did you ever make a conscious decision to make him a Christ figure or--

    Brandon Sanderson

    The question is... Kaladin has some Christ-figure feel to him, was that intentional when I was writing the character. Actually it wasn't, there's nothing really intentional about that allusion.  But I can definitely see it. Being Christian myself a lot of what I find heroic is related to my faith. But I very rarely do conscious things like that, mostly-- This is for English majors, "I bet he got it from here" and things like that. So it was not intentional but I can totally see where you are making that connection.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14263 Copy

    Kurkistan

    Could a Feruchemist manipulate their identity such that they could make a metalmind that anyone could tap?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Ah... RAFO.

    Kurkistan

    Okay; could they manipulate their identity such that they could pull Breaths out of something that somebody else Awakened?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Ah... ahahah, Awakened, oh yeah... That one's going to be harder, but you're thinking along-- You're thinking with portals. *smiles* Do you know what that means.

    Kurkistan

    Yes, I know what it means--

    Brandon Sanderson

    You're starting to think with portals.

    Kurkistan

    I'm thinking with portals, okay, thank you.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes. In other words you're wrapping your head around the way that the magic system is working, so.

    Argent

    That's so excellent.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14264 Copy

    Argent

    Are there power modifiers for Soulstamps like there are for AonDor?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes.

    Argent

    Yes... Does Shai know them-- Or any of them?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Um... Hehehehehe...

    Argent

    Not "has she used them", I'm not going to go there, but does she know any of them?

    Brandon Sanderson

    She knows more than she thinks she does.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14266 Copy

    Kurkistan

    So you've said that healing is like the Spiritual wants to heal and then it filters through the Cognitive, but how's that work with healing wounds to the soul like Hemalurgy or Shardblades? What do you refer to to heal the soul at that point?

    Brandon Sanderson

    You need to make a patch on the soul with Investiture.

    Kurkistan

    So how's the Investiture know where to go, what to look like?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Well your soul is an ideal. So if you can get it up there, there are ways to do-- to recreate that with um... See I'm getting into stuff for later books.

    Argent

    No, that's okay.

    Kurkistan

    So when Hemalurgy rips something off the soul, is that the ideal soul or some sub-soul?

    Brandon Sanderson

    That is off of your soul, and it can be healed; but what it's going to be doing is creating a patch of new soul. So it will not be your original soul. Does that make sense?

    Kurkistan

    Okay, that- well, not completely, but I think that's your intention.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes.

    Bystander

    If you do that, is that like Frankenstein's monster, or is it like a graft that's absorb--

    Brandon Sanderson

    Less horrifying- Less horrifying than Frankenstein's monster, but it is a graft that is like-- It is not your original soul.

    Bystander

    Yeah, but in modern medicine stuff like that is absorbed-

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah, in this you will always have a scar on your soul that something else has patched over.

    Kurkistan

    So Kaladin shouldn't just keep getting his arm chopped?

    Brandon Sanderson

    *ignoring/not-hearing Kurkistan just now* But that is what happens with most forms of Investiture in the first place.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14267 Copy

    Argent

    In terms of timeline-- So The Way of Kings and The Stormlight Archive takes place 1173-74 right now, how far ago, approximately, was the Recreance?

    Brandon Sanderson

    So you-- Let's see-- Heralds leave at what, 4500?

    Argent

    That's what it says.

    Brandon Sanderson

    So the Heralds leave at 4500 and we're at 11--

    Argent

    So we are at 5500 years after--

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah. So Recreance is more recent than late.

    Argent

    So... In the thousands--

    Brandon Sanderson

    I'm going to have to pull out the timeline.

    Argent

    But it's not like three hundred years ago.

    Brandon Sanderson

    It's not like three hundred years ago, but it's also not like 4000 years ago.

    Argent

    Okay, so from the middle--

    Brandon Sanderson

    The Hierocracy happened after and the Hierocracy was a couple hundred years ago. It's longer than that even, it's like five or six hundred years ago I think.

    Footnote: Argent makes a small math mistake here, Aharietiem ended 4,500 years before the events of the book, not 4,500 years before the start of the calendar the Alethi use.
    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14268 Copy

    Kurkistan

    You've said that the the laws of physics in the cosmere are ours except where they're messed with by the Spiritual... But are the laws of physics actually in the Physical Realm all the time, or are they in the Spiritual Realm doing their stuff on a Spiritual level that's trickling down to the Physical as a matter of course?

    Brandon Sanderson

    The three are more closely aligned than-- *Breaks off to focus on the books he's signing, the speaking was distracting him*

    Kurkistan

    So you were saying that physics-- laws of physics-- that the Realms are a lot more closely bound and the laws of physics are not just tied to one of them?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14270 Copy

    Kurkistan

    So for Soulcasting—-I talked a lot about those ideals that a lot of things are based on—-is that also like there's an ideal of stone that when you Soulcast stone if you don't do anything special, it just defaults as that?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes, there will be a default of all of them.

    Kurkistan

    And that's the same exact thing as spren and why the Lord Ruler dies of old age and all that stuff?

    Brandon Sanderson

    That is-- Yes, that's the same sort of concept. Yes.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14273 Copy

    Argent

    At one point Syl turns into a hammer when Kaladin fights Szeth. Are there any actual advantages to a Shardhammer over a Shardblade or knife?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Very minimal. It has mostly to do with a-- How much thrust or swing or things you can get to it. The impact of blade or weapon against armor is not going to be-- The hammer could in some ways get more leverage. But it's not that the impact is going to do--

    Kurkistan

    So it didn't help against Szeth.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah.

    Argent

    It was like the flow of the fight was-- Syl turned--

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14274 Copy

    Argent

    Back in, I think, Words of Radiance I asked you-- Somebody asked the question that had to do with the number 10 on Roshar and I didn't get the question on the recording--which was horrible--but your answer talked about Honor's purposes. Is what you said, and you mentioned 10 of them and that is why the number 10 is so sacred. Could you say something so I have something on the record? So we know what you said about that?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Honor's purposes...

    Argent

    Or Shard's purposes... Like what is that all about?

    Brandon Sanderson

    That will become-- I said it vaguely on purpose.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14275 Copy

    Kurkistan

    Is there-- Can you explain the relationship between Spiritual DNA, Spiritual aspects, and the spiritweb, or are they all just terms for the same thing?

    Brandon Sanderson

    They are all similar terms for the similar stuff, yeah.

    Kurkistan

    Okay. So it's not like the core is Spiritual DNA then things as you spread out is all Spiritual aspect?

    Brandon Sanderson

    No.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14276 Copy

    Questioner

    I know at the end of Words of Radiance Syl shows she can turn into different forms, not just a sword. Why do they not... Or why do none of the other past Radiants really show that they have done that. Because normally in the flashbacks they are shown just being swords.

    Brandon Sanderson

    So the Shardblades came from spren seeing the Honorblades, which were created for mankind, and being like "I can do that". That is what they were imitating.

    Questioner

    So that's what they wanted...

    Brandon Sanderson

    No, that's how they see themselves and how they are seen. They can change into other things...

    Questioner

    They just never...

    Brandon Sanderson

    But when you let go of one it's going to become a sword again.

    Questioner

    Oh, I just meant in all the visions they were always portrayed as swords. Was that just for...

    Brandon Sanderson

    That's cultural, like this is... One thing that is interesting is you are going to see that the new Radiants don't have... I mean the Radiants you have seen almost all of them are after thousands of years of Radiants and Orders and you have certain things that you do.

    So the writing reason was I didn't want to give away...

    Questioner

    That's what I was going to ask.

    Brandon Sanderson

    There is a writing reason behind it. I didn't want to do that and give too much away. I already worried that having Syl shift shapes as often as she did through the first book was going to be a big clue to people and I wanted to hold off on giving away too much.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14277 Copy

    Questioner

    So the first one is Kaladin's backstory, the second is Shallan's backstory, who's next?

    Brandon Sanderson

    I actually haven't been able to decide yet. It's going to be one of the five for the first five books are Kaladin and Shallan and then Dalinar, Szeth, and Eshonai and I can't decide which one matches the next book best. And I'm going to have to write it...

    Argent

    What's the current list for the back five?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Current list for the back five... Jasnah, Lift, Ash, Renarin, and Taln.

    Footnote: Brandon eventually decided to go with Dalinar for Stormlight 3.
    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14278 Copy

    Questioner

    In your talk earlier about character arcs do you have a character who surprised you the most in how they ended up developing?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Spook from the Mistborn books, he was not in the original outline having the role he did in the third book. But when I finished the second book I was like "Ennnh he's grown into something that needs more exploration".

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14279 Copy

    Questioner

    And are there parts-- Are the cosmere novels chronological so far? So when you eventually go back to Warbreaker the effects of Vasher being on Roshar...

    Brandon Sanderson

    Oh, no, they are not all going to be chronological. Most of them have been chronological so far, but we are getting to the point where they're stopping to be because like Way of Kings was before Alloy but now we've gone back and done Words of Radiance which is a jump backward and then we are going to be jumping to the next Alloy which is a jump forward. I'm pretty sure that's how it goes.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14280 Copy

    Questioner

    Was Androl, from Wheel of Time, your own creation?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes. When I went into the trilogy I actually asked them "Is there a character I can have to just do whatever I want with?" and they looked through for one Robert Jordan had left no notes on and they gave me Androl. I went crazy.

    Questioner

    I love his use of Gateways.

    Brandon Sanderson

    He was a little bit of a pressure valve, for me, being able to do the things I like to do in a novel, in The Wheel of Time, so I didn't then take over other characters too much. A bunch of me creeped into Perrin too but...

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14283 Copy

    Questioner

    Are there differences in pronunciation between the different worlds in the cosmere?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes.

    Questioner

    Do you have any record of that?

    Brandon Sanderson

    So, it depends on the culture and things like that, what it's going to be like. You can kind of bet in Mistborn it's going to be French, if it's from the Central Dominance. So they'll say "Kelsi-ay" and "De-MOH" but where Elend's from is a lot more Germanic so "EE-lend" "STRAHFF" and stuff like that. The other worlds are all going to have their different things. In Roshar you are going to get some of the "YAS-nah kHo-LIN" it's going to be a little more Semitic in its language family.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14284 Copy

    Argent

    Since Chicago came up, will Atlanta have a special name as well?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Atlanta will have a special name, it's now a theme of the books.

    Argent

    Because Peter said "Hotlanta" and people think he's joking, like he usually does.

    Brandon Sanderson

    I'm not going to ruin one of Peter's jokes if it indeed is a joke. But I haven't written the book yet so he hasn't read-- I mean I've written parts of it but he hasn't read anything of the book.

    Footnote: In Calamity it is revealed that Atlanta was renamed "Ildithia".
    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14285 Copy

    Questioner

    Why didn't you have Vin talk to Hoid? She sort of saw him and then just ran off.

    Brandon Sanderson

    I have not answered that question yet. But that means you can have one of these [RAFO cards].

    Argent

    That doesn't come up very often but we got it twice.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah, it's not that big of a thing.

    Argent

    You should take the hint.

    Brandon Sanderson

    You are going to have to wait a while to get that answer.

    Footnote: The answer to this question is revealed in the novella Mistborn: Secret History.
    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14286 Copy

    Questioner

    Now the Wit, does he have a spren, is he a Herald, is he one of the older people?

    Brandon Sanderson

    So, Wit is an immortal who travels between worlds. Who-- His magic is not from Roshar. He is in all the other books, if you look for him. So he's in Warbreaker, he's in all three Mistborn books, he's in-- yeah...

    *points to Argent and Kurkistan* These guys can point you to everything, they're from the fansite and they've found out about all kinds of things about him. But he is popping up everywhere.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14287 Copy

    Questioner

    You have like tons of spren, right? And the the ones like rotspren, and you have your characters and some point will be able to harness those spren and be completely evil with them?

    Brandon Sanderson

    And be completely evil with them? *pause* There are-- There is an order of Knights Radiant that has to do with the breaking down of matter into smaller pieces.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14289 Copy

    Questioner

    Do you have any sort of set pattern for when you are getting ready to do a rewrite on a novel?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes, I grit my teeth, bang my head against the wall, and try to do anything else except the rewrite.

    Questioner

    Yeah it's...

    Brandon Sanderson

    You must be like me then, I hate revising but deadlines are what make me do it. Setting them on my own, you just have to learn to do it. The number one thing I think held me back as a writer is my dislike of revision. And it wasn't until I learned to do it...

    Questioner

    And just get it done...

    Brandon Sanderson

    ...and just get it done that I started writing books that would be publishable.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14290 Copy

    Questioner

    What you do with religions in your world, in your stories more generally. *audio obscured* Tokien, he says his books are fundamentally Catholic works, but he never mentions religion explicitly. It kind of just breathes religious air, is the way I describe it. So like you address religion in your books with the characters, sometimes positively sometimes negatively. How do you deal with that in your world and in your books, like with the air that they breathe kind of, to steal the metaphor?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah I just-- The characters are everything to the books. What they are passionate about becomes what the book is about. For me my job in writing is to explore different sides of issues through the eyes of different people. That said, who I am shapes what I am interested in and what ends up in the books. I think at the end of the day I think you could call my books fundamentally Mormon books, in the way that Tolkien's were fundamentally Catholic, because I can't separate myself from my religion. I am trying to explore the world through the eyes of people who see the world differently from the way I see it.

    Questioner

    So you would say you're-- Through your characters-- It comes out through how different people would approach it.

    Brandon Sanderson

    That's my goal.

    Questioner

    So how then, does Mormonism affect, like you said-- In what way would you say your books are fundamentally Mormon?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Well if the philosopher in me steps aside, and the writer in me just wrote what the writer is passionate about. If the trained English major says-- One of the biggest fundamental tenets of Mormonism is deification of normal people, right? Mormonism believes that we are gods in embryo and we are here to learn and have experience so we will be better in the afterlife, and growing and we'll eventually-- Joseph Smith taught "What Man is God once Was, and what God is Man may Become" maybe not "will be" but "may become" That's what he said. And so if you look at my books there's a whole bunch of deification going on, right? That's like fundamental to the cosmere is "What do people do with the power of the gods when they're given it?" And I would say that's totally my upbringing that made me fascinated about that. Does that make sense?

    Questioner

    Yeah, I never thought about that. Fantasy really lends itself to that.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes, it does. But I mean deification of a normal person is a very Christian tenet also, it's just one person did it, and it was a person who was God before, but it is still part of that whole thing which is part of why I think Christianity and Fantasy ended up kind of hand in hand.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14291 Copy

    Questioner

    Why can Rock see Syl?

    Brandon Sanderson

    *pause* Okay time to pause the record-- This doesn't go online, okay? *Audio paused*

    Questioner

    Thank you sir.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Maybe you already knew that.

    Argent

    Do you ever get annoyed with us?

    Brandon Sanderson

    No. I thought I talked about the--

    Questioner

    Sparkflickers?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah the-- So I mentioned both of them?

    Footnote: When Brandon asks if he "mentioned both of them" he is referring to the fact that both the Unkalaki and Herdazians have listener blood.
    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14293 Copy

    Questioner

    The thing that struck me is the concept of Stormlight *audio obscured* stand up *audio obscured* more powerful *audio obscured* stand up to it.

    Brandon Sanderson

    If you stand up to it?

    Questioner

    *audio obscured*

    Brandon Sanderson

    There is definitely a [view?] with the Parshendi, you need to go in and stand up to get what happens, yes.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14295 Copy

    Questioner

    Why do you do interludes? What possessed you to go that direction instead of just including it as another chapter?

    Brandon Sanderson

    I felt that one of the foibles of the large series epic fantasy genre is the tendency of authors to go afield down paths of side characters. It happened to Robert Jordan, it happened to George R.R. Martin. And so reading theirs I hoped to learn from them and say "I'm going to do this thing that gives me a pressure valve to tell these stories that are outside the main line but I'm not going to give myself enough room that I can just turn this into a full character, yet." That allows me to do goofy stuff around the world but have a form for it built into the book.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14296 Copy

    Questioner

    I was wondering when you first thought to put Nightblood in Words of Radiance?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Nightblood in Words of Radiance happened because... So I wrote the original draft of Way of Kings in 2002 and Vasher was Kaladin's swordmaster and I thought "This guy has a really interesting past, he's not natively from Roshar". So I went and wrote his backstory and that became the book Warbreaker. So he predates-- And then I came back and I re-wrote Way of Kings and I cut him out of it to save him for the later books. So when did I first think of it? Well 2003 probably? Was where that was happening.

    Questioner

    Nightblood was our apartment's collective favorite character.

    Brandon Sanderson

    I have some other quote-unquote cons going on the fans so to speak that are going to be very cool when they happen.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14297 Copy

    Questioner

    What was the hardest part of finishing The Wheel of Time?

    Brandon Sanderson

    The hardest part, I would say, was the battle logistics.

    Questioner

    So A Memory of Light took a while?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah, A Memory of Light is all battle logistics, it was really hard. And the second half was really tough to get that all right. And just to work with the assistants and things like that.

    Firefight Chicago signing ()
    #14298 Copy

    Questioner

    I noticed in a lot of your cosmere books, like for example Elantris or Mistborn, they have something to do with some sort of subject matter or school or something. For example the Steelpush and Ironpulling in Mistborn is based on physics.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yes.

    Questioner

    If you push too hard it's based on...

    Brandon Sanderson

    Vector physics, yes.

    Questioner

    And then like Warbreaker is just like math, adding Breaths together. Did you intend that?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Not necessarily. I read a lot and I like science and I like philosophy and I like and things like this. And those spark most of my ideas. So yes in a term but I'm not like "Let's do this subject".

    I would say Warbreaker, the big part of Warbreaker is the idea of sympathetic magic. Which is the idea that like affects like, which is a very common type of magic throughout all cultures on the planet, on our planet. When people believe in magic they believe in sympathetic magic. A voodoo doll is sympathetic magic. And that's where the idea came from.

    Questioner

    So in Elantris, which is different and then--

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah that's basically fantasy programming, is where that one came from.

    Questioner

    And then there is The Stormlight Archive, which basically violates all the laws of physics by just saying everything comes from spren.

    Brandon Sanderson

    Well no they still have arguments on that, are spren attracted to these things or do they cause them.

    Questioner

    Yeah that's kind of weird...

    Brandon Sanderson

    Stormlight Archive was based on the fundamental forces, if you want go read on physics google fundamental forces.

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    Questioner

    How has the fantasy publishing industry changed with the global popularity of things like Game of Thrones?

    Brandon Sanderson

    It has changed, but really what we're seeing is what happened in the States in the seventies, the States and the UK following Tolkien, is now happening in a lot of countries that it hadn't happened in before. Which is cool. But it's not just Game of Thrones, it's the Lord of the Rings movies, it's Harry Potter. The last ten years are wakening fantasy. See the thing about fantasy is we don't find fantasy doing well in developing countries. It's kind of the thing where if you are going to be reading about knights and wizards, you are not going to be somebody who's struggling for your bread each day. You know what I mean?

    Questioner

    People in developing countries like more aspirational--

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah. So you see for instance as countries transition out of that you see a lot of fantasy and things. For instance it happened in Japan in the seventies. It happened in the US even earlier. It's happening now in Brazil and Taiwan. Those are two of the places where it is just appearing. India, it's just starting in India. Mainland China hasn't quite caught on yet but there's hints that it is going to happen. But it has been in Europe for quite a while.

    Questioner

    So do you have translations of your books in Portuguese?

    Brandon Sanderson

    Yeah, I'm in 26 languages, or something like that. But you can kind of use that as a map for the places that read -- you know. Like the only South American country is Brazil, I don't have any other distribution in South America. Not a single country in Africa, I don't believe, except South Africa, the UK editions. None of those. Japan, China, Korea? Yes. Europe? Almost everybody in Europe.