Today we welcome David Walton, whose science fiction thriller Living Memory was just released on October 18th (here’s my review). This is the seventh novel of David’s we’ve reviewed and in the past he’s been gracious enough to sit down with us (so to speak) to answer some questions about his books and his writing in general.
This time, we’re not doing any of the talking. Instead, David has gifted us with an essay about how Living Memory, at least in part, grew out of how his early love of dinosaurs clashed with his Creationist upbringing. Given that I’m surrounded as I write this by more than a few realistic models of of those magnificent creatures, it should come as no surprise that David had me at “dinosaurs.” But “intelligent dinosaurs?” Shut the door, unplug the electronics, and tell me a story!
One lucky commenter will win a copy of Living Memory.
Every kid loves dinosaurs. What’s not to love about a tyrannosaur with jaws your dad could sit inside, titanosaurs that make elephants look like chihuahuas, or a mosasaur that could swallow a hippo for an evening snack? They’re bigger than life, true fantasy monsters that used to stomp their way through your backyard.
Eventually, though, you grow old enough to recognize the tragedy. Because no matter how many times you rewatch Jurassic Park, you know that you’ll never see a stegosaurus at the zoo. Those magnificent creatures are gone forever.
In my own childhood, the sense of tragedy hit young. I was the sort of kid who learned a hundred dinosaur names from books I borrowed from the library and went about regaling my parents’ friends with statistics about their size or whether they’d lived in the Triassic, Jurassic, or Cretaceous periods. That is, until my mom took me aside and explained that those eras had never existed. The dinosaurs, if they were real at all, had lived side by side with humans, rode on Noah’s Ark, and gone extinct sometime in the thousands of years since.
My young dinosaur-loving heart was crushed, as was my trust in the reliability of scientists and the power of curiosity. It wasn’t until much later, when I actually read On The Origin of Species for myself and realized most of the creationists around me didn’t understand what evolution was, never mind have a plausible alternate theory, that I dove into the library’s collection of books again and came out convinced. Like the dinosaurs of Crichton’s novels, my enthusiasm for all things Mesozoic exploded into life again.
Living Memory, in many ways, comes out of that experience. Samira is a paleontologist who grew up as an Ethiopian orphan adopted by white missionary parents. She doesn’t really fit in anywhere or have a place that really feels like home. Despite that, she’s carved out a place for herself, excelled in her profession, and is stubborn enough not to let others push her around instead of doing the right thing.
The idea for her story was based just a tiny bit on paleontologist Mary Schweitzer, whose creationist upbringing was blown away when she audited a college class by Jack Horner and realized that the evidence revealed by rigorous, hard science didn’t match her faith in a God who is not a deceiver. Unlike Mary, Samira is an atheist, but her family are Christians, which at least initially makes for some uncomfortable family dynamics.
For me, though, the book is all about the dinosaurs. Samira and her team make the discovery of the age: a species of intelligent dinosaurs that buried their dead, knew the asteroid was coming, and tried to survive it. Little evidence of these dinosaurs remain, but through flashbacks sprinkled through the book, you experience the completely different path their biology prompted their technology to take (chemistry and genetics instead of iron and bronze) and the tragic, Pompeii-like experience of their final weeks on Earth.
You also discover the implications of that technology in our modern day and the lengths to which the governments of the world will go to obtain it. As the trilogy progresses, you’ll see that it’s not only the dinosaurs who face the threat of imminent extinction. We might need to learn a few things from the dinosaurs if humanity is to survive.
(One final note for the fastidious among you: Yes, I do realize that a mosasaur is not a dinosaur. To both my six-year-old and forty-six-year-old sense of excitement, however, the mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and pterosaurs all belong in the same glorious category with the dinosaurs: Mesozoic monsters that really lived!)
One lucky commenter will win a copy of Living Memory.
Learn more about David at his website: The Science Fiction of David Walton.
I’m looking forward to reading the audio edition of this book!
I’m reliving Walton’s childhood with my 4-year-old son right now. We’ve been (re)reading chapters from our dinosaur encyclopedia every night. I still haven’t figured out how to break it to him that his dimetrodon plushie isn’t a dinosaur, but a synapsid. Living Memory sounds like a fun book!
I wonder if there is any other childhood obsession that stays into and throughout adulthood with the same frequency as love of dinosaurs (says the guy whose office is full of dinosaur models and other Dino paraphernalia)
I have already purchased the book and can’t wait to start reading it. I’m 33 and still love dinosaurs!
Thanks for this opportunity!
“Creationist upbringing”; I’m so sorry.
I’ve always loved dinosaurs and I’d love to read a scifi novel about them!
Jada, if you live in the USA, you win a copy of LIVING MEMORY!
Please contact me (Marion) with your US address and I’ll have the book sent right away. Happy reading!
I did see you already had a copy of the book,but who knows? Gift season is right around the corner.
GIVEAWAY EXTENDED!
Thanks to Noneofyourbusiness for alerting us that emails about giveaways are no longer going out. In fact, none of our email newsletters go out anymore because, after years of threatening it, Google’s Feedburner has finally stopped sending them back in August and we didn’t even notice. Now we’re looking into other methods of notification and are trying out a new one that you can sign up for here.
Meanwhile, we’re extending this giveaway since 1. Our readers didn’t get the notification and 2. Jada apparently already has the book. (Jada, if you still want a copy, we will send it to you! We’re just going to send a copy to someone else, too.) Thanks for reading, everyone!
I haven’t read the book yet, but Walton’s transition from a creationist view to scientific view is inspiring and worth applauding. I also always find it interesting to hear about authors’ backgrounds that have directly influenced some of their protagonists and settings.
Yagiz, if you live in the USA, you win a copy of LIVING MEMORY!
Please contact me (Marion) with your US address and I’ll have the book sent right away. Happy reading!
Yey! Thank you so much.
I’ll contact you shortly.