Piers Anthony, the prolific English-American author of speculative fiction and fantasy, captured the imaginations of readers with his inventive worlds, colorful characters, and imaginative storytelling. From his bestselling "Xanth" series to his acclaimed "Incarnations of Immortality" novels, Anthony's boundless creativity and irreverent humor continue to entertain and inspire readers of all ages, inviting them to embark on epic adventures and explore the limitless possibilities of the human imagination.
"It would be easier to write a novel without reader input, but I feel the fiction is richer for it."
"Princess Rose should indeed be a TV movie, assuming something doesn't go wrong. I don't know how good a movie it will be, because the way movie folk think is different from the way writers think, and I distrust what isn't done my way. This is what I call a healthy paranoia."
"I never do a full outline, and if I did, I would not feel bound to it, because the view from inside a scene can be different from the view outside it. But neither do I just start writing and see what happens; I am far more disciplined than that."
"One reason I don't suffer Writer's Block is that I don't wait on the muse, I summon it at need."
"I maintain an ongoing survey of Internet Publishing and self publishing, so that it is now possible for any writer with a book to get it published at nominal cost or free, and to have it on sale at booksellers like Amazon.com."
"SF is the literature of the theoretically possible, and F is the literature of the impossible."
"What I like least is dealing with publishers who simply don't want collaborations regardless of their merit."
"I hope to read a Harry Potter novel soon, to see what it's all about. I admit to being annoyed that many good light fantasy writers have had trouble getting published, in England and elsewhere, when it is obvious the readers were waiting for us all along."
"Normally I work out a general summary of what I mean to do, then start writing, and the details can be different from my anticipation. So there is considerable flow, but always within channels."
"I did not know at first that it would be a series; I discovered after the first novel that I had more to say about it, so I did another. And another, and then the readers demanded yet more."
"As for collaboration - I have done a lot, 26 books, and found publishers increasingly resistive to them. It's not that the books are bad; editors won't even read them."