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Home » Why I Write About Elves: Terry Brooks (Transcript)

Why I Write About Elves: Terry Brooks (Transcript)

Here is full transcript of writer Terry Brooks’ talk titled “Why I Write About Elves” at TEDxRainier 2012 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

I want to start out by offering a small disclaimer. I have spent 35 years as a professional published author writing fiction and, in fact, writing about elves all 35 of those years. If this troubles you in any way, or in fact if elves should trouble you the way clowns do some people, now would be a really good time to step out into the lobby because that’s what this talk is about.

But if you’re still with me, then I’m going to talk a little bit about the fact that I expect to spend the next 35 years writing about elves also, and that I have a good reason for doing this. I’m hoping to offer some explanation to you today about not only why I’m compelled to do this, but why I think it’s valuable.

The Challenges of Writing Fantasy

Writing about elves is not something for the faint-hearted. You are viewed with skepticism and a certain amount of suspicion in many quarters when you announce that this is what you do. It is less of a problem these days because J.K. Rowling has made the world safe for fantasy writers like myself.

But in the early days when I was starting out and writing in my first three, four books that took about ten years for those, I was interviewed repeatedly and the same question came up over and over from almost every interviewer. And I could tell by the nature of the question what was coming and it went something like this: “Mr. Brooks, you’re a lawyer. Why don’t you write legal thrillers like John Grisham?”

The unspoken comment there was somehow what I was writing was diminishing me as a writer and that if I just wrote something important like legal thrillers, I could raise my status on the literary scale. Now who made this up and decided that legal thrillers were less fantasy than elves? I don’t know. But I’m here to tell you as a trial lawyer that it’s a short putt.

Childhood Influences

At any rate, yeah, I’m moving on with this and I’m not going to back away from it and I don’t want to write legal thrillers and I never have wanted to. I write exactly what I want to do. I could trace this back, as many writers can, to their childhood but I’m not going in that direction to offer up a sad tale of being raised a lonely boy in a cellar.

So instead I’m simply going to tell you that I was a lonely boy in my bedroom instead where I spent a lot of time reading, bookish kind of kid, and I read a lot of adventure stories because boys read adventure stories in those days and science fiction and all kinds of Boys’ Life and all kinds of stories that took me out of my boring life and into a much more interesting and exciting existence where I had a chance to explore the possibilities of what life could really be like if only I could be something more than what I was.

Imaginative Play

And when I wasn’t reading those books I had boxes full of these little plastic figures. I know you did too, some of you. And in between the reading experiences I would take those figures out and I would put them up and line them across my bedroom floor and I would march them from one wall to the other on quests and adventures and all kinds of experiences. I would recreate the stories I was reading frequently or I would extrapolate stories and offer those up as new experiences.

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Parental Concerns

And while this was going on I have this mental image I carry with me to this day of my parents sitting downstairs with their faces in their hands wondering if there was any hope at all that I would become a normal human being when I grew up or in fact even if I would ever grow up because I did this well into middle school. I’m not kidding, I did.

And my mother tried intervention and she was pretty good at it and she did it on a regular basis and it went something like this: “Terry, you have to go outside. You cannot stay in your room all day long. You have to get out of your room, you have to go outside and play with the other kids.”

Outdoor Adventures

I would do this and we would go outside and I would immediately organize the kids into some kind of role-playing experience where we would pretend to be knights so we would pretend to be this, that, and the other thing and soldiers and we would, you know, go out and for a couple days or however long we would enjoy these adventures together.

Me more than them, I think, but they were good about it. And mostly this worked out except I will give you one example of what happened all too frequently and that was that at one point we decided we would be knights of the round table or it was Ivanhoe, I can’t remember which, but we wanted a more authentic feel to things. So what we did was we took brooms and we cut off the bristle end of the broom and wrapped it in tape for a good grip and then we went down to the alleyways and pulled those big lids off of the old metal garbage cans, shield and lance.

Childhood Escapades

Then we would go to the opposite ends of the streets and get on our bikes and ride at each other. True. This particular endeavor lasted all of about five minutes until about the third time that the poles met the metal garbage can lids and could be heard reverberating three blocks away and faces began appearing in the windows and my mother got phone calls and came out and broke up the knights of the round table thoroughly and sent me to my room.