Authors: Dorian Paul
A Conversation with Dorian Paul
Here are Reader Questions (
RQ
) for Dorian Paul (
DP
). If you want to join in the conversation, send your questions to
[email protected]
.
Reader's Question (RQ
): Where did the idea of a bioengineered form of TB come from?
Dorian Paul (DP):
Well, lots of attention is being paid to TB as a major problem in people with HIV/AIDS, especially in Africa, so the idea makes sense. TB is an old "new" disease and people are aware of it. Most of us remember hearing stories of the TB hospitals from the last century. Now that it's come back to haunt the world again is downright chilling. And by the way, bioengineering TB as a form of germ warfare is not outside the realm of possibility and most definitely inside the realm of scaring the heck out of us.
As an aside, on a trip to Los Alamos recently (where the top secret Manhattan project that gave us the Atomic bomb at the end World War II was conceived) an interesting detail popped out in a visit to a local historical museum. Robert Oppenheimer, the physicist who led the project, knew of the New Mexico mountains from the time he went there to recuperate from TB in the late 1920s. He was a big proponent for Los Alamos site due to its remote location, one he knew well. Of course, that's just an odd connection between a world-class scientist and TB, but you've got to admit that in the field of modern medicine, HIV/AIDS is one of our major adversaries and don't we wish it could be solved by something like the Manhattan project. TB goes hand-in-glove with the problem of opportunistic infections caused by HIV/AIDS and its resurgence in recent years is largely due to the explosion of HIV.
RQ
: Why did you pick a bioweapon that didn't cause mass casualties?
DP
: What do you find creepier? Knowing everybody is going to die or that only some people will . . . but you've no way of knowing if it's going to be you or one of your kids.
RQ
: Morocco seems like an unlikely setting for a sophisticated terror plot. Why choose Morocco, London, and Paris for the action rather than NYC?
DP
: Good question. For one thing Morocco is a known gateway for terrorists, as Aziz Bouchta tells David. And there's a lot more going on there than meets the eye according to those in the know. So, while the remoteness of the Atlas Mountains as a choice for a high-tech terror lab might seem unusual, you could also call it call inspired.
As far as London and Paris, they represent the 'old' world, the 'civilized' world. New York is the 'new' world and has already been attacked by terrorists on a huge scale. NYC images remain fresh in people's minds to this day. London and Paris can be imagined because of 9/11, but as a writer you can make them fresh in an equally horrifying way.
RQ
: Have you ever worked as a scientist?
DP
: Not in a lab as a PhD scientist, but as a career in medical and scientific writing with tons of visits to labs and interviews with scientists. The most technical of technical papers have passed my desk, been used in publications, and been double and triple referenced from peer-reviewed journals. Claire and Sandra's world were a living and breathing part of daily experience.
RQ
: Overall your view of the good guys includes the government. That goes a little countercultural these days. Was that a risk?
DP
: Depends on what you mean by risk. Yes, in terms of political correctness. No, in terms of personal knowledge. The world abounds with good people trying to do the right thing. That David and Claire found one another isn't all that surprising. That they had a hard time trusting one another is a sad fact of human nature.
RQ
: Claire and David each have enemies they have a lot in common with. Was that intentional?
DP
: Yes. We all have a
doppelgänger
or 'double' and what we see in David and Claire's enemies is just another form of them. Could Claire have been Dr. Black? Well, not in terms of putting her scientific knowledge to use to kill not cure, but in terms of her quest for knowledge, she and Dr. Black share the same passion to know and understand the reproductive cycle of TB. And they want to best each other.
David and Varat are really two sides of the same coin. There but for fortune, they might be interchangeable. David knows this and so does Varat. Their fight to the death is like suicide. When Claire realizes this about David, she really has trouble trusting him. Will she in the end? What do you think?
RQ
: Varat has no religious or ideological beef with Western culture, yet he's behind a terror plot of massive scale, not just the people his TB kills, but also inciting a war between the U.S. and Iran. Why did you choose a villain more interested in personal vengeance than global jihad?
DP
: Sure, there are folks intent on global jihad, and yes, they do want to wreak havoc in the world. Those people fit the mold of the classical terrorists we hear about every day. And we have to be aware of them and keep our wits about us.
But Varat's personal vengeance against those who did in his family and family name, the turning of that into a circuitous scheme where he plots the downfall of his own Persian heritage by using the Western powers against them, that's more like a one-off. Such a plan would have to have been nurtured over a lifetime. People hold a grudge, that's human nature. But Varat has a chip on his shoulder that makes UBL look like a piker. Unfortunately, personal vengeance can definitely trump ideology. Ask David. It makes Varat both an interesting and believable character.
RQ
: The science seems completely believable. Could something like this really happen?
DP
: Absolutely. Maybe it wouldn't be TB, perhaps another bacterium or virus, but bioengineering is capable of more every year. The same goes for nanotechnology, and Bucky Balls really do exist. The cancer research that gave Claire the idea of attaching a bactericidal agent to a vector has been tried, and these kinds of things are the hope of tomorrow for many of the diseases and conditions that plague man. Unfortunately, science can be turned against us. Just ask Dr. Frankenstein.
RQ
: You manage to get into the heads of David and Claire without making either seem typically male or female by giving them each male and female characteristics. Do most of your readers like or dislike this way of treating the hero/heroine?
DP
: Hard to say, but I like to think they appreciate it, especially in the opposite sex.
RQ
: Do you figure out the plot step by step or does it just magically come together?
DP
: Writing is a fascinating process and many different constructs can be used. Having a plot with threads that work together makes the writer and the reader interested, but sometimes things you never thought of suddenly give the story a whole new pastiche. Jeremy was a late addition to the story, but his death wound up infusing the actions and motivations of so many characters it's hard to believe he was never part of the original story. That was true for Roscoe's sister Amy too, but by having her, Claire came to see Roscoe in a whole new way. Maybe she even sort of loves him.
In the final analysis, storytelling is everything. That's what makes the characters come alive. No joy for the writer, no joy for the reader!
RQ
: Is one of the characters in the book you? Or do you have a favorite character?
DP
: Whoever the point-of-view character is becomes the favorite at that moment. That's true and necessary in order to uphold the pact the writer has with the reader – to produce a book worth the time it takes to read. Hope you enjoyed
Risking the World
.
Book Club Discussion Guide
1.
Children's relationships with their parents are an underlying theme in
Risking the World.
Discuss how the death of Claire's parents at an early age seems to influence her personal and professional relationships through her life, especially in Paris. And when she reflects back on her life in the explosion at the vaccine plant, do you think she underestimates the loss of her husband? How does David's relationship with his parents inform all of the adult relationships in his life?
2.
Trust is a big issue throughout the novel. It imbues not only the relationship between David and Claire, but also between David and Bobby, David and his parents, David and his subordinates like Ian. For Claire it includes Claire and Roscoe, Claire and Sandra & Francie, and Claire and Don. Do you think this is due to specific character traits of David and Claire, or do you think it comes from the situations in which they find themselves?
3.
If you were David, would you have trusted Bobby when you learned he went behind your back, or might you have given him a pass under the circumstances?
4.
With the threat of another Tivaz TB bioattack looming, a Thanksgiving meal is shared in London. We've all spent holidays where something ominous looms and yet we participate in the tradition. Do you think David and Claire and Bobby and Elizabeth were better able to cope with the stress of their ongoing situation because they celebrated, or were they foolish? What would you have done in their shoes?
5.
Is there any time you find Varat a sympathetic figure, and if so, when? How about Omar Messina?
6.
If you were Claire when David lashes out at her when she's about to go back to Morocco at the end of the book, would you have been able to forgive him?
7.
Death often brings regrets. Consider the type of regrets death brings in this novel and how they are similar or different. For example, David and Claire both have regrets when they believe the other one is dead. How are these regrets different than David's regrets over Varat's death or Claire's regrets over Messina's death? What about Claire's regrets over her relationship with Roscoe, or Varat's regrets over his relationship with David?
8.
A lot of characters take different kinds of risks in this novel. Claire risks her scientific career more than once, David goes behind Bobby and James' backs to investigate Persian warrior codes, Elizabeth takes a chance on Bobby, Bobby takes a chance on his brother, Don agrees to find a nanotechnology expert at a company he abhors, David's father gives him a second chance, and Roscoe risks his professional future for his sister. What drives people to take risks? What have your experiences in life shown you about the plusses and minuses of taking risks?
9.
How do the risks in this novel reflect on the global risks of terrorism and the impact on individuals
10.
Do you think David and Claire have a future together at the end of the book or will she be unable to trust him or any man? Did she make the right career choice in taking over Sandra's lab or is she at the mercy of her past losses again?
11.
If there were to be a sequel to this book, which characters would you most be interested in reading about again? Why?
Chapter Index
Part One: Allies in No Man's Land
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34