Questions for James Dashner Q: Where was the worst place you’ve
ever been lost or trapped? Did you use Thomas-like ingenuity to
figure out the problem?
A: Interesting you should ask that, because The Maze Runner
saved my life last Halloween! Ok, not really, but close. My son
and I went to a corn maze, and we got lost and stuck. It made me
realize how mean I am to my characters! I hadn’t been thinking
when we entered and I have to be honest, I wasn’t paying
attention. I didn’t think I’d get lost in a Halloween corn maze!
But as soon as we realized that we had no idea how to get out I
used the trick Thomas learned in the first book--turning right no
matter what--and sure enough, we got out. I have a lot more
respect for corn mazes now!
Q: The Maze Runner has been compared to other popular YA
series like The Hunger Games and The Uglies. What do you think of
those series? (And what do you think the draw is to
post-apocalyptic societies for YA readers?)
A: First, let me start by saying that I love both of those
series a lot! I think everyone is attracted to the idea of a
post-apocalyptic society because it’s fascinating to imagine what
the future could hold, and y to know that maybe, just maybe,
it could really happen. Although we hope not. Or do we?
Seriously, though, there’s so much that teens today have to
deal with. Life isn’t as simple as it used to be with media
everywhere at all times. And our country has been at war for a
huge part of most teenagers’ lives. It’s a reality that kids face
these days, and to see that life could go on could be almost
reassuring.
Q: How did you come up with the shuckin’ Gladers’ slang?
And have you ever accidentally used it in real life?
A: The slang had several purposes, but mainly it was to give
the Gladers' language a different flavor. To show how a community
can evolve. Not only is it in the future, but they've been
isolated as well.
And on a more realistic note, an unsupervised group of boys
would definitely be using language that could begin to take over
the story itself. I wanted it to be realistic, but not a glossary
of bad language. It would have become limiting for the book in
terms of readership and, well, I’m a parent!
Q: What made you decide on a solar flare as a catastrophe
(vs. all the other apocalyptic scenarios)?
A: I have to admit, I’m somewhat of an apocalypse buff. When I
first started working on The Maze Runner I read an article
somewhere about solar flares and I was fascinated. Not only were
they a unique idea back then, but it seems completely plausible.
Solar flares are natural occurrences, and the cycle for larger
flares is again approaching. We’ll be seeing larger flares that
really do affect things like communication and space travel. I
just took things a little farther.
I also didn't want it to be a nuclear holocaust because I
think that's overdone. And it doesn’t seem like we’ll need
something that violent anymore to cause our own end. We’ve done a
great job of making Mother Nature pretty angry!
Q: One thing that always bugged me: Why couldn’t the
Gladers climb up and run around on top of the walls? (At least
during the day.)
A: There's a part where Thomas asks Minho about that actually.
Minho answers that they've tried it and can't get up that far.
The maze has a lot of illusion and technology to make it seem
bigger than it is. And I wanted the reader to imagine a maze with
walls so high that you could never get to the top.
Q: I’ve heard that The Maze Runner might be made into a
movie. If it is, what would you like fans of the book to see up
there on the screen? Sometimes literary elements can be lost in
translation to film--what’s important for you to remain
unchanged?
A: I would love to see a movie made! My biggest hope would be
that they cast it well, write it well, and really transfer the
mystery of it to the big screen, not just the action. Not much to
ask, right?
Q: There are a lot of scenes in the first two books with
very graphic violence and death both against and initiated by
teenagers--why did you choose to make the brutality so prevalent
in a YA series?
A: There is a lot of violence, yes. Next question?
Really, though--I wanted to show what a brutal world it has
become, and what a desperate situation the Gladers’ are in, so
the reader can understand the stakes. If everything is safe, why
would the boys want to leave? I also wanted to blur the lines of
what is acceptable to survive in such an environment. We’ve been
interested in the idea of survival for as long as we’ve been
telling stories. And in modern culture, we’ve gone from Swiss
Family Robinson, to Lord of the Flies, to Lost...if there’s no
law anymore, who’s to say what’s right and wrong?
Q: You ended The Scorch Trials with a cliffhanger to rival
the ending of The Empire Strikes Back. What sorts of things can
your readers look forward to in The Death Cure?
A: I just turned in the third book, and I'm very proud of it
and excited about it. Every last question is resolved, you see
much more of the real world, and the ending is not what people
may expect but I'm confident they'll be satisfied with the
resolution. And lots of twists and action of course!