Stephenie
Meyer talks to Love It Like It Hate It. Elizabeth Eulberg
May 6th 2008
Stephenie Meyer, the highly-acclaimed American author of the New
York Times best-selling series Twilight, never imagined she would be an
author. Stephenie grew up in Scottsdale, Arizona, in a large family consisting
of three boys and three girls. Stephenie proudly points out in her unofficial
biography that she is in the "Jane Brady spot" as the middle of the three girls.
After high school, Stephenie attended Brigham Young University. She knew she
wanted to be an English major, but never dreamt that she would be an author, so
she focused on literature instead.
After completing her degree at BYU, she moved back to Arizona where she met and
married her husband of 12 years, Christian. Together they had three boys, and
Stephenie felt content in her life as mother and wife.
But as life would have it, Stephenie would soon be taken in another path. After
waking up from a dream, Stephenie felt inspired to write her first novel
Twilight. It was an instant success, which she followed up with New
Moon and Eclipse.
Stephenie soon found a new role added to her list of duties, and that was the
role of author. She knew that as successful as the Twilight series was,
she had more stories to tell than just stories about glistening vampires. While
driving from Arizona to Utah on the way back from a vacation, Stephenie toyed
with ideas in her head, and the one that stuck was the idea of having two people
in the same body being in love with the same man. From that idea, The Host
was born. The novel is Stephenie's first adventure into adult fiction, and is
set to release on May 6, 2008.
Elizabeth Eulberg, contributing writer, recently sat down with Stephenie to try
to get to know her and her newest novel, The Host, better.
What inspired the idea for The Host?
The kernel of thought that became The Host was inspired by absolute
boredom. I was driving from Phoenix to Salt Lake City through some of the most
dreary and repetitive desert in the world. It's a drive I've made many times,
and one of the ways I keep from going insane is by telling myself stories. I
have no idea what sparked the strange foundation of a body-snatching alien in
love with the host body's boyfriend over the host-body's protest. I was halfway
into the story before I realized it. Once I got started, though, the story
immediately demanded my attention. I could tell there was something compelling
in the idea of such a complicated triangle. I started writing the outline in a
notebook, and then fleshed it out as soon as I got to a computer. The Host
was supposed to be no more than a side project — something to keep me busy
between editing stints on Eclipse — but it turned into something I
couldn't step away from until it was done.
Did you approaching writing The Host, your first adult novel,
differently than your YA series?
Not at all. Like the Twilight saga (this is probably the only way
The Host is like the Twilight saga!), The Host is just a
story I had fun telling myself. My personal entertainment is always the key to
why a story gets finished. I never think about another audience besides myself
while I'm writing. That can wait for the editing stage.
You have referred to The Host as being a science fiction novel
for people who don't like science fiction. Can you explain why?
Reading The Host doesn't feel like reading science fiction; the world
is familiar, the body you (as the narrator) are moving around inside of is
familiar, the emotions on the faces of the people around you are familiar. It's
very much set in this world, with just a few key differences. If it weren't for
the fact that alien stories are by definition science fiction, I wouldn't
classify it in that genre.
There is a lot of internal dialogue between Wanderer (the narrator and
invading "soul") and Melanie (the human whose body Wanderer is now living inside).
Each character has her own distinct voice and internal struggle. Was it a
challenge to have the two characters, who essentially take up one body, stand on
their own?
Wanderer and Melanie were very distinct personalities to me from day one;
keeping them separate was never an issue. Melanie is the victim — she's the one
that we, as humans, should identify with; at the same time, she is not always
the more admirable character. She can be angry, violent, and ruthless. Wanderer
is the attacker, the thief. She is not like us, not even a member of our species;
however, she is someone that I, at least, wish I was more like. She's a better
person than Melanie in a lot of ways, and yet a weaker person. The differences
between the two main characters are the whole point of the story. If they
weren't so distinct, there would have been no reason to write it.
Did any of the characters surprise you while writing?
I am constantly surprised by my characters when I write — it's really one of my
favorite parts. When a character refuses to do what I had planned for him or her,
that's when I know that character is really alive. There were several characters
who caught me off guard with The Host. One in particular was slated for
a bit part as the wingman to the villain. Somehow, he knew he was more than that,
and I couldn't stop him from morphing into a main love interest.
Your Twilight series has had a lot of crossover appeal for
adult readers. Do you think The Host will also appeal to your younger
readers?
I've had a great deal of interest from my YA readers about the release of
The Host. I have no doubt that they will continue to make up a core part of
my readership. I love blurring the lines between the different genres and
categories, because in my head, a good book won't fit inside the lines. I hope
that The Host continues to do what the Twilight saga is doing:
showing that a good story doesn't belong to any one demographic.
How do you feel about the enormous success that you've had with the
Twilight series? How has it changed your life?
I am continually shocked by the success of my books. I never take it for granted,
and I do not count on it in my expectations of my future. It's a very enjoyable
thing, and I'll have fun with it while it lasts.
I've always considered myself first and foremost a mother, so being a writer
hasn't changed my life too much — except I do travel a lot more and have less
free time.
What adult authors do you read?
I've been reading books for adults my entire life. Growing up, I was an avid
reader — the thicker the book, the better. Pride and Prejudice, Gone with
the Wind, The Sword of Shannara, Jane Eyre, Rebecca, etc. I'm a huge fan of
Orson Scott Card and Jane Austen (I can't go through a year without re-reading
her stuff again).
What's next?
I'm currently finishing writing the fourth book in the Twilight saga,
Breaking Dawn, which will wrap up Bella and Edward's story. I plan to
then write Midnight Sun, which is Twilight told from Edward's
perspective. After that, I may write some sequels for The Host or pull
another outline from my files to play with. I won't stop writing; there are too
many stories I want to tell.