Shugufa
asked
Michael Grant:
Hey Mr. Grant! My friend Tyler and I are major fans of your "Gone" book series! We both had a competition two years ago to finish the books in that series before each other. We have been anxious and hoping that eventually, the series will become a show or a series of movies that we may be able to watch. We really wanted to know where you got the idea to write these novels and how you came up with the characters??
Michael Grant
The possible TV series is still alive and well and supposedly making slow progress. But I honestly don't know anything but what they tell me.
The idea - like most ideas - just sort of popped into my head. It was a combination of the TV show LOST, the Stephen King novel THE STAND, and Disney movies. Why Disney movies? Because what's the thing that unites virtually all Disney movies? Dead parents, that's what.
Disney is notorious for eliminating unwanted parents. Aladdin is an orphan, Jasmine has lost her mother, Mermaid likewise, Nemo ditto. The old dude in Up? Dead wife. Bambi has a mother, so they shoot her. And I thought, hey, why play around? Why not simply eliminate ALL parents in one fell swoop? Take that, Disney!
The idea - like most ideas - just sort of popped into my head. It was a combination of the TV show LOST, the Stephen King novel THE STAND, and Disney movies. Why Disney movies? Because what's the thing that unites virtually all Disney movies? Dead parents, that's what.
Disney is notorious for eliminating unwanted parents. Aladdin is an orphan, Jasmine has lost her mother, Mermaid likewise, Nemo ditto. The old dude in Up? Dead wife. Bambi has a mother, so they shoot her. And I thought, hey, why play around? Why not simply eliminate ALL parents in one fell swoop? Take that, Disney!
More Answered Questions
Arpit Ranasaria
asked
Michael Grant:
*Spoilers on book 3* I am asking this question without having read anything after Lies. In Lies, you have a part where it shows the story through Connie Temple's perspective from the outside, Petey does his thing where he removes the barrier and they see the outside world, but the ending of the book appears to suggest that all of the visions orsay was receiving and what Petey saw was false. Was this a mistake?
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Oct 25, 2017 10:20AM · flag
Oct 25, 2017 10:21AM · flag