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Paper Mage - Character Name Pronunciations
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Xiao Yen - X
- generally pronounced "sh", i - generally pronounced
"ee", so it's Sheeou Yen
Bei Xi, Master
Wei. Mei-Mei - ei - generally pronounced with a
long "a" sound, like in Way, so it's Bay Shee,
Master Way
Fu Be Be - e
- generally pronounced 'eh', so it's Foo Beh Beh
Gan Ou - a
as in 'ah', ou as in 'ou' (ouch), so it's Gahn
Ou
Jrh Bei - jrh
- generally pronounced like the 's' in measure, so it's Zhr
Bay
Udo - long u,
long o, uudoo
Vakhtang - VAHK-tahng
Tuo Nu - t
like the 'ts' in cats, long u, long o, run together, so it's Tsuuoo
New
Zhang Gua Lao
- z like the 's' in measure, ua
is run together, like in guava, ao like in 'ou'
(ouch)
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Paper Mage - Novel Notes
PAPER MAGE started as a short story,
back in 1991, before I started traveling. I was inspired by a number of
things, the description of a paper folder from "Folding Universe"
by Peter Engle, and how something unpredictable and tiny can set an ordered
system to chaos from "The Turbulent Mirror" by John Briggs &
F. David Peat. It was unwieldy as a short story, involving going from
China all the way across the Silk Road to the Byzantium Empire and back.
When I returned from my big travels,
I tried rewriting the story, but it was still too long and awkward. I
knew that it was good, that there was something in this story that needed
telling. I used it as my submission story to Clarion West. Once at Clarion,
the other students encouraged me to expand the story into a novel. I wrote
a novel outline based on the story as an exercise. I only used some of
this original outline in the final novel.
I had never considered myself a
novelist. But through Clarion, I built the writing muscles to think about
it. I finished Clarion in fall of 1997. In January of 1998 I started doing
serious research for the novel. I did research for six months while I
wrote and rewrote the outline. It took me about six months to write the
first draft, then I took another four months to rewrite it. (I sometimes
joke that I'm not a writer, but a rewriter.) After some of my friends
read the novel and gave me critiques, I rewrote the novel and sent it
to an editor. That editor asked for another rewrite, which I turned around
in about six months. That was the version of the novel that I sold. Of
course, my editor asked for more rewrites.
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