The Morning Call (Sunday)

Paolini’s career took flight with dragons

Author has gone from self-publishing to topping bestseller list

- By Stefano Montali

In the months before Christophe­r Paolini wrote the book that made him a star in young adult fantasy, he built a hobbit hole.

He’d been homeschool­ed, and by the time he turned 15, he’d graduated from high school and read many of the classics — Leo Tolstoy, Alexandre Dumas and Jane Austen among them. So, in his family’s backyard near the banks of the Yellowston­e River in Paradise Valley, Montana, he dug a 10-foot hole and converted a massive satellite dish into a makeshift roof. Elaborate plans for a Viking-style mead hall danced through his head.

“It was about that point when I realized that I really needed to find something else to do,” Paolini, who is now 40, said in a recent interview. “Riding dragons and fighting monsters wasn’t a career opportunit­y,” he said, “so I tried writing.”

What came of his effort was “Eragon,” the story of a farm boy of the same name and his dragon, Saphira, and their perilous adventures across Alagaësia — a mythical land based on the mountainou­s environs of the Paolini family’s farmhouse. His family self-published the book, and for more than a year, he promoted it as he could, hand-selling copies outside bookstores and giving presentati­ons at schools.

Eventually, Carl Hiaasen, a bestsellin­g novelist, picked up a self-published copy at a grocery store while on a family trip to Montana. His stepson — who, according to Hiaasen, said “Eragon” was “better

than Harry Potter!” — finished the 500-page book in a day. Hiaasen passed the book to his editor at Random House Children’s Books, connecting Paolini to the New York publishing world.

When “Eragon” was republishe­d in 2003 by Knopf, Paolini’s career took flight, with over 1 million copies sold in the first six months.

By 2011, Paolini had followed it up with three more bestsellin­g books — “Eldest,” “Brisingr” and “Inheritanc­e” — that together make up “The Inheritanc­e Cycle,” a cornerston­e in the canon of any millennial fan of fantasy. The series — which follows Eragon and his friends as they fight to end the wicked reign of King Galbatorix — spawned a 2006 movie, an upcoming Disney+ series and even a re-creation of Alagaësia in Minecraft.

In 2018, Paolini temporaril­y assuaged fans’ hunger for dragons with “The Fork, the Witch, and the Worm,” a trio of short stories set in Alagaësia.

Then, he ventured into science fiction, publishing an unrelated two-part series — “To Sleep in a Sea of Stars” in 2020 and its prequel, “Fractal Noise,” in 2023.

Paolini’s latest book, “Murtagh” — published Nov. 7 and recently landing atop the young adult hardcover bestseller list — is a sequel to the “Inheritanc­e Cycle.” This time, Murtagh — Eragon’s half brother — takes center stage as he attempts to survive alongside his dragon, Thorn, in exile.

This interview with Paolini has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: What do you remember about the early days of writing “Eragon?” A:

Originally, Eragon was named Kevin, and the story was set in the real world. But I only finished around 10 pages. The problem with all of my early writing was that I’d get an idea and just start — I didn’t actually have a plot. But I was a pretty methodical kid, so I started reading about how to write. Fortunatel­y, my parents are observant, and these kinds of books magically began appearing in the house. And I read all of them. I originally saw “Eragon” as a practice novel, which is part of why it’s a very typical hero’s story. I knew that structure worked, and it gave me the safety net I needed.

Q: You’ve said that your family was on food stamps at one point. Surely self-publishing and marketing “Eragon” was expensive. As a teenager, you must have felt a lot of pressure. A:

There was enormous pressure, but nothing was

placed on me unwillingl­y. It was a joint decision that we were going to try to self-publish “Eragon” as part of the family business, and I was delighted that I could do something to help. If the book had taken another few months to start turning a profit, we were going to have to sell our house, move to a city and get any jobs we could. We bet everything on making a go of it. That’s why I was willing to do things that would have been uncomforta­ble otherwise, such as doing daily presentati­ons in black knee-high boots, pantaloons and a billowy swordsman shirt.

Q: You started “Eragon” at 15, and finished the series in your late 20s. How did it feel to get back into the mindset of a teenager to write “Murtagh?” A:

It helped that Murtagh is a more complicate­d character than Eragon. He’s more morally conflicted and has had a different, difficult life. But I could step back into Eragon’s shoes and all the other main characters in the world in a heartbeat because I spent so long with him. That world was not only 11 years of my life, but 11 formative years.

Q: Which books, outside of fantasy, influenced you?

What’s on your bookshelf now? A:

A lot of Mark Twain, which I found very relatable because “Huckleberr­y Finn” and “Tom Sawyer” were a lot more similar to my life than something set in the city. Today, I find it difficult to read fantasy. I’ve been in it for so long that I want something that’s different or strong in its flavor and execution. I just read “The Murderbot Diaries” by Martha Wells, which was fun. My editor recently gave me “Foster,” a novella by Claire Keegan, and I’ve been meaning to read Tolkien’s translatio­n of “Beowulf ” for ages.

 ?? ?? ‘MURTAGH’
By Christophe­r Paolini; Knopf Books for Young Readers; 704 pages, $29.99.
‘MURTAGH’ By Christophe­r Paolini; Knopf Books for Young Readers; 704 pages, $29.99.
 ?? JOSH REDLICH ?? Christophe­r Paolini returns to the world of “Eragon” in his latest novel, “Murtagh.”
JOSH REDLICH Christophe­r Paolini returns to the world of “Eragon” in his latest novel, “Murtagh.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States