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A Conversation With Richard Cox
by Claire E. White
Born in Odessa, Texas, in 1970, author
Richard Cox
spent much of his childhood in the Lone Star State.
His father was in the
oil business, so the family traveled quite a bit. When he was 11 years old
he starting writing short stories, although
he didn't tell anyone what he was doing. He didn't know anyone
who was a working writer and said it didn't occur to him until high
school that one might actually make a living writing fiction. So he
headed off to Texas A&M University, where he earned a Bachelor's Degree
in Business Administration. But he never stopped writing fiction in his spare time.
During college he began writing a novel called The Dead Men,
which was the forerunner to his first published novel,
Rift (Ballantine).
A fantasy football player, Richard met his agent through a recommendation
from a fellow online player. That agent eventually sold Rift to Ballantine.
The book had a two year delay in being published due to shakeups at Random House,
so while he was waiting for Rift to be released, he started work on his
next novel,
The God Particle (Del Rey), a gripping SF thriller which
explores the intersection between god, science and the universe.
Kirkus calls The God Particle (Del Rey), "A gripper of
a yarn, swatting around really big ideas."
Richard lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where he is part of
the web team at Hilti, Inc.
He writes in the evenings and on weekends. When he's not working or writing,
you might find him playing basketball or golf or reading.
He spoke with us about his road to the publication of his first novel,
and his interest in the ongoing debate between religion and science in today's society.
He also gives some great advice for aspiring writers.
What was the first fiction you ever wrote? What reaction did
it receive?
I wrote my first story in 1982, when I was eleven. It was called "World War III
and the Laser Interceptors" or something like that. I was beginning to learn a little
about the Cold War and the nuclear stockpiles in our country and the Soviet Union,
and in my story there was a system of satellites that the U.S. could use to shoot
lasers at Soviet intercontinental ballistic missiles. But when the nuclear war
started the lasers didn’t work, humans were mostly wiped out, and the survivors
were forced to colonize the moon. This world-altering drama played out over the course
of six handwritten pages. I showed it to a few of my friends, and they thought I was
crazy. What kind of kid, they asked, would write six pages of something that wasn’t
a school assignment?
What kinds of books did you like to read when you were
growing up?
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"I wrote [The God Particle], in part, to address the religion vs.
science debate. I think it’s
an interesting discussion, and one that’s far from being resolved. Unfortunately
there seems to be a gross misunderstanding of science among the general population,
about what the scientific method actually is, what a theory really is, that sort of
thing. Science and spirituality are not mutually exclusive."
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Believe it or not, I didn’t read much science fiction. Early on I read Phyllis A. Whitney --
one book I remember in particular is The Mystery of the Crimson Ghost -- and later
I progressed to Stephen King. Reading King was an eye opener for me; not only were
his stories addictively entertaining, they also introduced me to lives different than
those I was familiar with. For the first time I saw the world through the eyes of adults,
adults that in most cases were different than my parents. Many of his characters held
political views and religious beliefs that were foreign to me, and learning about
these ideas in the context of a novel made more of an impression than studying them
in school. I may be only one of King’s millions of Constant Readers, but it’s difficult
to overstate his influence on my writing and my teenage maturation.
I also read Dean Koontz, I read Tolkien, I read some horror pulp. I read Arthur C.
Clarke’s 2001 and 2010. Obviously I was drawn to speculative stories,
fantastical
stuff, as a kid. I wish I had read more serious fiction then, other than what I
was forced to read in school, but I didn’t. I think my own writing would have
matured faster had my reading tastes been more varied.
When did you first realize that you wanted to be a writer?
After that first story I was always working on something, but I didn’t think of writing
as a profession until my senior year of high school. Like every other kid at that age, I
realized I wouldn’t be doing homework and taking tests forever, that pretty soon I would
be working full time (I was already working part time at a restaurant). There weren’t
many jobs that sounded appealing to me, but I loved to write, so I figured that was my
calling.
I knew that making your living as a writer was difficult, because I’d picked up a copy
of Writer’s Market hoping to find a place to sell one of my short stories. I never
did sell one, but I did learn from the "how to" articles in Writer’s Market that
it could take years to break through and sell a novel. So I went off to college to
earn a degree that would help me land a "real" job. I didn’t have a single
friend who wrote fiction, after all, and I certainly didn’t know anyone who made a
living as a fiction writer. In fact I didn’t tell anyone for the longest time about
my desire to be a writer. I didn’t grow up around a lot of artistic people. The
smart people I knew wanted to succeed in business, grow up to be the next Alex
P. Keaton. Or they wanted to be doctors. Or attorneys. My dad worked in the
oil business; he worked for the same company for nearly forty years, and here
I was, thinking that I’d rather make up stories and expect people to pay them
for me. It seemed like a silly idea, a pipe dream. But I couldn’t help myself.
In 1993 I began my first novel, and I didn’t finally sell one until nine years later,
in 2002.
What kept you going during those years when you were
trying to find an agent? What kept you from giving up?
Obsession. I wanted writing to be my career. It was the only thing I was passionate
about enough to sit down and do, day after day, whether or not someone paid me (besides
golf, but becoming a professional golfer seemed even less likely). I love reading, and
I love writing, and I wanted that to be my life. For a while I was a member of the
AOL Writers Club, and I would post short stories in the libraries there. I received
lots of positive feedback from other aspiring writers. I printed those reviews and
comments and kept them in a file, and in my darkest moments I would pull them out
and read them and convince myself I had some measure of talent, however small. It
was a lonely experience being a nobody from Texas, mailing letters and manuscripts
to agents in New York, having them all rejected and sent back to me. But after I
made the decision to write and sell a novel, I refused to give up until I had done it.
So this brings me to my original answer: obsession.
I'd like to talk about your latest novel, The God Particle.
What was your original inspiration for this story?
The God Particle emerged from my desire to write a story that contrasted science and
religion, and from research I found on the Internet. When my agent called to tell me
that an editor was interested in Rift (my first novel), he also mentioned that the
editor wanted to have a phone conversation with me. During the course of this conversation,
I might be asked if I would like to write another science thriller. So I decided to come
up with an idea for another book like that, since I wasn’t working on one at the time.
I used Google and Yahoo to look up interesting subjects like "God and consciousness" and
"science and brain and universe." During the research I stumbled across Leon Lederman’s
book, The God Particle: If the Universe is the Answer, What is the Question?
I learned
a little more than I already knew about physics, and I read about some of the prevailing
ideas in metaphysics, and I hammered out the basic outline of the story. These subjects
had always interested me in a general way, but the Internet research and subsequent
reading crystallized them into a story.
The story opens when auto exec Steve Keeley has one of
the worst business trips in history: while in Zurich, he finds out his
fiancé is cheating on him, he's thrown out of a third-story building
and he has brain surgery, which gives him some very interesting
abilities. A control freak, he has his entire future mapped out before
him. He's not really that likable when readers first meet him, but as
his experiences change him he becomes a much more sympathetic
character. How did you approach the character of Steve? What
was the greatest challenge in writing him?
I based Steve on a few people that I knew. One of these people was a driven guy who had
this grand, detailed idea of what the rest of his life was going to be like, and
that seemed a little absurd to me. There were other little details that I borrowed
from friends and acquaintances, and many things that I made up. Steve’s character
was designed to stand in contrast to Mike (the main physicist in the book),
so I wanted him to be more self-confident, more decisive about things. Mike weighs
his options, while Steve makes a decision and then drives full steam ahead. Steve
is successful with women, Mike is not. But eventually Steve’s confidence backfires
on him, and his well-structured life falls into disarray. I would say the greatest
challenge writing him was in the first chapter, where I tried to draw his character
well enough that the impending trauma would mean something to the reader.
I also wanted to portray his hallucinations as vividly as possible, which was difficult,
because much of what he experiences is not something he sees. He’s not sure how he
senses it. When you try to describe sensations that you’ve never felt, that perhaps
no one has, you risk coming across as cheesy or melodramatic. I tried hard to avoid
that.
Steve is surrounded by some pretty nasty people at work,
including a predatory and quite neurotic co-worker. And he works for
a large, soulless international corporation. Should we read anything
into your description of life at a big corporation?
Are you trying to get me fired from my day job? (laughs) You know, it’s fashionable
to pick on large corporations, and it’s easy to do when you read about some of the
conscienceless decisions made by asshole corporate executives. But corruption
exists in companies of all sizes, and really the culture of any company is largely
determined by the nature of the people who work there. At the beginning of
The God Particle Steve is somewhat soulless himself, so he’s a natural fit
for this particular company, and for the position he hopes to attain. The competition
is fierce at the highest levels of any field, and those who make it are often forced
to choose work over their family, free time, etc. This perfectly describes Steve’s
situation.
Regarding Steve’s neurotic co-worker, I think we’ve all known someone who is the star
in their very own daily soap opera. That’s all I have to say about that.
Mike McNair is the head physicist and director of the North
Texas Superconducting Super Collider. He's an interesting
character, a scientist who loves to ponder the big questions,
including philosophical questions. How did you create him? How
much do you have in common with Mike?
Mike shares my wonder of the universe. He wants to understand how things work, and he sees
logic as the most likely route to the truth. In that sense Mike and I are very similar.
And because logic works so well in his career, Mike wants to apply it to other areas of
his life, like his by-the-numbers approach to approach women. This is something that
struck me as very funny when I was developing his character, because Mike is a brilliant
guy, a nice guy, and yet he’s mystified by the courting process. He experiences the
emotions, the urges of a human, but he solves problems like a computer, and women
don’t want to be approached by a computer. So I had fun with this contrast in
his personal life, but ultimately the idea of combining emotional humanity and
machine-like logic is taken a step further when he encounters Steve.
Mike has a relationship with a beautiful news anchor named
Kelly Smith. What was the greatest challenge in creating Kelly?
Were there any traits you were specifically trying to avoid with her?
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"Write your ass off. Write all the time and don’t fall in love with your words or
scenes
and be ready to rewrite an entire work if you or someone else has a really good idea how
to make it better. Read whenever you’re not writing."
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Creating a believable female character and staying away from paper-thin stereotypes:
that was my biggest concern. Of course right away she is familiar -- the gorgeous TV
personality -- so how would I differentiate her from the expectations of the reader?
By giving her depth, I hoped, by depicting her road from self-doubting student
to self-confident professional. I wanted her to play an active role in the story,
and I wanted her to be strong, but I also wanted her to be a real person with real
pain and flaws. I read a lot of novels where the female protagonist is either there
for the male protagonist to conquer, or she’s a larger-than-life beauty queen with
a Mensa-level IQ, a woman who’s tough as nails but deep inside harbors a heart of
gold. I don’t enjoy that sort of simplicity, and I don’t think many readers do. At
the very least I hope the characters in The God Particle are more well-rounded than
those in my first novel, and I hope to improve even more in book number 3.
There is a debate among readers about whether or not
romance should be included in either hard SF novels or in mystery
novels. What are your thoughts about romance in techno-thrillers?
What went into your decision to focus on the love lives of the
characters?
I’m not a big fan of genres and labels because of this very sort of thing. I
just write stories, and I pick subjects that are interesting to me. When
I began working on Rift I was very interested in high concept stories, and
once it sold all signs pointed to me writing a similar follow-up. But within that
framework I wanted to explore the real lives of real people, and that includes
romance, sex, parental relationships, office politics, obsession, etc. I didn’t
consciously focus on one aspect more than any other while writing The God Particle.
I just pushed my characters’ lives out of balance and then helped them right the ship.
Mike (an agnostic) and Kelly (a Unitarian) met on a plane.
The two exchange a very interesting series of emails in which they
discuss religion versus science. What, if any, concerns did you have
about diving into the religion vs. science debate?
I wrote this novel, in part, to address the religion vs. science debate. I think it’s
an interesting discussion, and one that’s far from being resolved. Unfortunately
there seems to be a gross misunderstanding of science among the general population,
about what the scientific method actually is, what a theory really is, that sort of
thing. Science and spirituality are not mutually exclusive. You can believe in God and
still respect the discoveries of science, or you can be a champion of science and
respect the spiritual beliefs of others. None of us have the ultimate answers, even
though many people believe they do.
The most intriguing aspect of this subject is how different the two areas of thought
really are. Having faith, as far as I understand it, is the idea of accepting something
as truth without supporting evidence. And when that evidence does come -- in the form of
visions, appearances, or emotions -- it cannot be independently verified or repeated.
I do not mean to imply that these religious experiences don’t happen, or are
somehow false -- only that they can’t be empirically proven. But that’s just what
science is: proving ideas. With the scientific method, you observe a phenomenon,
you guess why it might be happening, you make predictions about future occurrences of
the phenomenon, and then run tests to see if your predictions come true. It’s a
painstaking process that has produced a remarkable and comprehensive understanding
of the world around us. It’s a method that seeks to eliminate man’s propensity to
exaggerate, make false assumptions and assign importance to events that are
statistically insignificant. We humans love drama, after all. We like to tell
stories about strange or coincidental events that happen to us on a regular basis.
For instance, when I drive to work in the morning, I often feel like the traffic lights
are conspiring against me. I always complain to my cubicle neighbor when I hit every red
light, but I never tell him when all the signals are green. I know if I documented my
morning commute every day, I would dispel the idea that the traffic lights are conspiring
against me. But where is the fun in that? What would I have to complain about?
Science doesn’t exist to disprove the existence of God. In fact, it has nothing to say
about a supreme being because there is no way to empirically test God’s influence on our
lives. In some ways there is no debate between science and religion. The two areas of
thought are based on different ideas and serve different purposes. But I don’t see why
they can’t coexist.
Particle physics and the idea of the elusive Higgs boson are
not easy concepts to explain to someone with a non-scientific
background, yet these concepts are explained very clearly in the
book. How did you approach writing about the hard science
elements of the book?
First of all, I stole great analogies from people who know much more about physics
than me. That helped. And then I tried to relate the science (as I understood it) to
real world examples, like when Mike explained photons to Kelly on the plane. People
walk around seeing things every day, but they probably don’t think much about the
process of seeing. They maybe don’t realize that everything you ever see is in
the past, because you have to wait for photons to bounce off things and travel to your eyes.
What does it mean to be in the present, what does "now" mean when everything you ever
sense from your environment has already happened? Questions like that awe me, and I
hoped readers might find them interesting as well. I hoped that if the ideas were
interesting, and related in some way to everyday life, they would be easier to
digest.
Can you give us a sneak peek into your next book?
Sure. Book 3 is about a group of friends who revisit their Texas hometown to lay to rest
a secret from their past that seems to have returned. And once together, they have
difficulty agreeing on what actually happened when they were kids, because none of
them remember it in quite the same way. The book is much longer than either of my
first two novels, and there are six main point-of-view characters, and the story
occurs over several different time periods between 1964 and the present day. It’s
quite different than Rift and The God Particle, but I hope it also
represents a step
forward for me as a writer.
I'd like to talk about your writing process. Will you take us
through a typical writing day for you?
I write in the evenings because I have an Internet-related day job. I usually make
it home around five-thirty, and after a work out and dinner, I write for about three
hours. I'll also write half a day over the course of the weekend. I use a computer,
and I average a little less than a thousand words a day. Sometimes when I'm nearing
the end of a book, I'll take a few days off from work so I can get more hours in,
which really helps because I’m able to stay in the story for many more hours at a
time. And I always write to music. I generally listen to heavy electronic music while
I'm writing, epic stuff, or psy trance, or even classical music, depending on the
mood I'm trying to create. Listening to music really enhances my creativity for some
reason. Often I sit on the couch in my living room, the lights off, the music loud.
It may seem a little unorthodox, but I can really lose myself in the story that way.
How do you approach the editing phase of writing? Do you
let anyone else
read your work in progress?
I love editing. The first draft can be fun to write, but filling up those pages day after
day becomes pretty grueling. When I go back to the story, however, the process of honing
the prose, of tying loose story elements together, of finding the story you were trying
to write in the first place -- that is very rewarding for me. I rediscover my own work when
I rewrite, and what comes out of that process is always far better than the original
work.
The earliest version I pass out for feedback is the second draft. I don't like to share
my work in progress. In the past I did, but I learned that the best feedback comes
when a beta reader can experience the story in the way it was intended. Reading chapters
as they are written turns the novel into a serial work, and the final product will always
be markedly different from the way I initially wrote it. Occasionally I share sections
of a book that do not give away the central plot, if I want to know if a certain description
or style of writing is working, but other than that I keep the story to myself until I’ve
done at least one revision on it.
Have you ever suffered writer's block? How do you
overcome it?
I don’t know if I’ve suffered block for more than a day or two, and then only because I’m
not sure how I want to write a certain scene. I usually just sit in front of the computer
and force myself to write junk until something good comes out. After I finish a novel
I will lose interest in writing for a little while, especially when I’ve worked very hard
in the weeks leading up to the end. But that’s not real writer’s block -- that’s just
laziness.
What is your advice to aspiring writers?
Write your ass off. Write all the time and don’t fall in love with your words or scenes
and be ready to rewrite an entire work if you or someone else has a really good idea how
to make it better. Read whenever you’re not writing. Read things that are similar to
what you like to write, and read lots of other stuff, too. Read serious fiction. Read
classic literature. Don’t limit yourself to the books you want to emulate, because you’ll
probably just write lesser-quality clones of them.
During the submission process, approach agents that represent work similar to what you
write. You can learn who these agents are by using a reference like the Guide to
Literary Agents, or by reading author acknowledgments, or by doing Internet research.
It can also be helpful to attend literary conferences, because you have the opportunity
to meet agents and editors there.
Most of all, if you really want to become a published author, you either have to be very
lucky, very talented, or very persistent. Only one of those three is something you can
directly control. Make the most of what you have.
What are your pet peeves in life?
I have little patience for people who are rude or obnoxious or loud. I don’t like repetitive
tasks. I’m not a fan of films that use special effects or earsplitting action in the place
of a good story. I don’t like it when a golfer lies about his handicap, and I don’t like
it when people whine about their pet peeves.
What are your favorite ways to relax and have fun?
I’m an avid golfer. I would play every day if I could. I love movies, both at the theater
and on my home entertainment system. I play basketball every week. I like to travel. And
of course I’m never without a good book to read.
Who were your heroes (fictional or real) when you were
growing up? What, to you, makes a real-life hero in today's world?
I didn’t have a lot of heroes as a young child -- other than my dad. He started out with
nothing and made a nice life for himself and his family, and I wanted to be just like
him. My dad isn’t much of a reader, but I might not be published without him, because
he taught me how to work hard and never give up.
In my late teens Stephen King became a hero for me, because he also started with
nothing, he wrote stories with supernatural elements in them (not the most admired genre),
and still became one of the most popular and beloved authors in the world. King’s fantastical
story elements drew me to him, but his serious fiction made me realize just how talented
he was. His was the biggest influence on my decision to become a writer.
What's the best advice anyone has ever given you?
That’s a tough one. I guess it would be something my dad said to me once. He said that even
though there are a lot of lucky people in the world, you can’t sit around and hope that
luck might shine on you one day. If you want to ensure success, you have to make your
own luck. Maybe that sounds like a cliché, or simple common sense, but it’s still true.
And it made a big impression on me.
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**You can read our review of The God Particle
here.
**You can read an excerpt of The God Particle
here.
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