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Writer Liu Cixin predicts sci-fi books will grow in China(2)

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2016-04-27 09:14:26China Daily Feng Shuang ECNS App Download
Liu Cixin is recently named "writer of the year". (Photo provided to China Daily)
Liu Cixin is recently named "writer of the year". (Photo provided to China Daily)

Although he was born in Beijing, Liu's soldier-turned-miner father and schoolteacher mother moved the family to Yangquan, a small town in Shanxi province, when he was very young.

He grew up to become an engineer and was first posted at a State-run power plant.

British-born sci-fi master Arthur C. Clarke's works offered him his "first shock and enlightenment", and Liu began to write in his spare time in the late 1980s.

In 1999, Liu debuted as a writer after his short story was published in the Sci-fi World magazine. Then he published books and started winning prizes. He became a full-time author in 2014.

In April, Liu met with a small group of reporters in Beijing after he was named "writer of the year" by the China Writers Rich List, an annual celebration of the country's popular writers.

At the press interaction, Liu gave a wide variety of responses to questions, from comparing apocalypse in sci-fi writing to romance in literature, and why British physicist Stephen Hawking's plans of long-distance travel by a micro spacecraft has flaws in terms of energy.

Liu says while sci-fi is a niche category in China, it could contribute to mainstream literature.

At a symposium in southern China's Hainan University in April, literary critic Liu Fusheng said: "Liu's works have updated Chinese originality with revolutionary elements, by way of offering his solution to build a new understanding of ourselves and the changing world as well."

Liu Cixin says he sticks to his ideals while writing and he is willing to adjust to reader expectations.

"Only when I'm excited about an idea, do I start to write," he says.

The author has kept his personal life out of media spotlight, saying he occasionally watches movies.

He enjoys the quietness of Yangquan, where he still lives, but keeps track of developments in science and technology.

Liu Cixin is currently working on a new novel, but which he says may not surpass the popularity of the Three Body books. He is also writing the script for a film based on his trilogy.

Although he says Chinese filmmakers are largely unfamiliar with shooting sci-fi films, he doesn't mind being the "guinea pig".

"Frankly speaking, Hollywood big-name producers have never contacted me for a movie," he says.

"I can understand that because what they do is more of sci-fi with simple and single-lined themes, and mine is more complex, which may also increase the risks for their business model."

"But they are welcome to get in touch," he adds.

Liu Cixin is also willing to try space travel and "check on life" in outer space, if given a chance. "It has always been my dream."

  

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