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How Southern California's desert inspired sci-fi novel `Those Beyond the Wall'

- By Diya Chacko

Author Micaiah Johnson grew up “all over the high desert,” she says, from Lucerne Valley to downtown Victorvill­e. Those years gave her a sense of our planet being as hostile as it is beautiful.

“In the desert, we always knew nature could kill you,” she said. “Water was always an issue. We felt the droughts before other areas did. Living in Barstow during the time we could set our water on fire made us understand how much your environmen­t can turn on you.”

The desert became the inspiratio­n for Johnson's new novel, “Those Beyond the Wall,” out from Del Rey Books. While the story is set in the same multiverse as her previous book, “The Space Between Worlds,” Johnson zooms in on one particular universe for this chapter.

At the heart of the novel is the conflict between the moneyed, walled-off Wiley City — so rich it has its own atmosphere — and Ashtown, a harsh, sunburned desert slum where an emperor rules with an iron fist. Events are narrated by Scales, a citizen of Ashtown who deeply loves her adopted home despite its hardships. Employed as a “runner,” she does the emperor's bidding, from keeping the peace to secret missions into Wiley City.

One day, an Ashtown woman suffers a gruesome, inexplicab­le death in front of Scales; the same fate has befallen a handful of Wiley citizens. Tasked with finding the cause, Scales must wrestle with her own family history and worldview as her hunt unearths a danger that threatens both Wiley City and Ashtown.

In “Those Beyond the Wall,” Johnson examines authority, class and the strength of a community formed by hardship. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Q

“Those Beyond the Wall” continues the story of “The Space Between Worlds” multiverse. How did you decide what to write next?

A

When I sold the first book, I was asked repeatedly, “Could this be a series?” At first I was, like, “Absolutely not. This is a standalone.” Immediatel­y after it came out, however, thoughts started creeping in — what about this side character? What about that story?

I have this saying: I write half the book, and readers write the other half with their interpreta­tions. Once “The Space Between Worlds” was in the hands of readers, they began to have questions about these threads that I put in there but couldn't explore because the book was getting long. So it became this perfect storm of me being curious about my own world again, at the same time an editor was like, “Hey, do you like money and food?” (Laughs.) And so writing “Those Beyond the Wall” worked out really well.

Q

You finished “The Space Between Worlds” before the pandemic. How did writing “Those Beyond the Wall” during the pandemic shape the story?

A

When I conceived of the second book, I was at an anti-racism protest in Nashville. We were outdoors and masked, but we were there. And that really hit home, the importance of community in creating all things that matter. Whether it is a book or changes in the world, it has to be this communal thing. Because if you write or try to make change for your own aggrandize­ment, it's kind of a failed premise

from the start, right? Everything should be done as a gift, with care.

In writing this book during the pandemic, I was much more aware of the longing to give something back to a community. I was much more aware of wanting care to be the place from which I begin and end. That's something that I've always felt, but the pandemic made it so explicit. I think the pandemic clarified priorities for a lot of us, and for me, that was mine.

What kind of research did you do?

The plot of “The Space Between Worlds” involved a lot of string theory. I read authors like Michio Kaku and Brian Greene, science books that had nothing to do with my degree. Writing “Those Beyond the Wall” felt much more organic, because the well was already there from my academic studies.

My Ph.D. focuses on critical race studies and posthumani­sm. As a theoretica­l concept, posthumani­sm does involve AI and robots, but it also involves global climate studies. So

 ?? COURTESY OF RORY VETECK ?? Micaiah Johnson examines authority, class and community in a harsh environmen­t in her second novel, “Those Beyond the Wall.”
COURTESY OF RORY VETECK Micaiah Johnson examines authority, class and community in a harsh environmen­t in her second novel, “Those Beyond the Wall.”

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