RH: What advice would you give to an aspiring writer?
JA: You learn to write by writing, and by reading and thinking about how writers have created their characters and invented their stories. If you are not a reader, don’t even think about being a writer. If you want to write, don’t say you want to do it someday, don’t wait until the spirit moves you: Sit down and do it every day, or at least on some kind of regular basis. But I would warn those who aspire to it that writing fiction is the hardest work I have ever done. Sometimes words don’t want to come. For me, the way to get past writer’s block, or whatever those periods are called, is to sit and put down one word after another. I may not even keep that work, though often I do. It doesn’t matter. I need to get something written. Inspiration happens when you are working at it. At other times I can be so completely immersed in the story that I don’t know where the time has gone, but when I get up, I’m drained. I have poured everything I have into the work—and sometimes I find myself finding ways to stall before I sit down to work the next time. But for all the effort, it’s what I want to do for the rest of my life.
Coming Spring 2011
The highly anticipated sixth book of
Jean M. Auel’s Earth’s Children
®
series,
The Land of Painted Caves
, is the
culmination fans have been waiting for!
Continuing the story of Ayla and Jondalar, Auel combines her brilliant narrative skills and appealing characters with a remarkable re-creation of the way life was lived more than 25,000 years ago.
The Land of Painted Caves
is an exquisite achievement by one of the world’s most beloved authors.
The Land of Painted Caves
A Novel
$30.00 hardcover
(Canada: $35.00)
978-0-517-58051-6
Available wherever books are sold
Also available as an eBook and a Large Print edition
J
EAN
M. A
UEL
is a firmly established literary presence whose first novel,
The Clan of the Cave Bear
, was heralded by the
New York Times Book Review
as “exciting, imaginative, and intuitively solid.” Her prodigious research, begun in 1977, has led her to prehistoric sites in Europe to add to her firsthand knowledge of such arts as flint knapping, the construction of snow caves, tanning hides, and gathering and preparing wild foods and medicinal plants and herbs. The remarkable Earth’s Children’s series continues with
The Valley of Horses, The Mammoth Hunters
, and
The Plains of Passage
. Mrs. Auel is now at work on her next novel in Oregon, where she lives with her husband.