Sir Ian Rankin

Sir Ian Rankin is a best-selling Scottish crime writer who created a series of books based around a fictional Scottish Detective named John Rebus. The fictional detective was born in the late 1940s in Fife and joined the army before joining the police. His antagonist, the ruthless Morris Gerald Cafferty, is an Edinburgh organised crime gang boss. The two characters meet in several of Ian’s novels.

Transcript
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How do you create a ‘baddy’ and how do they emerge in your imagination?
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How do you approach writing characters who behave in morally questionable ways?
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Do you want readers to identify with your baddies? If so, do you use any strategies to help them identify with these characters?
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Do you worry about the likeability of your villains and how do you approach their likeability?
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Do you rationalise villainous behaviour? If so, how?
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To what extent do you think readers form a relationship with your characters?
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Do you explicitly create villains so that readers will have a degree of empathy with them?
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Do you consider how your characters might impact the reader and whether they offer the opportunity for self-expansion (in the reader)? What about if they are villains?
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Have you faced the situation where readers get offended/outraged by your characters, and does this ever affect the way you subsequently write?
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What techniques do you use to transport readers into the world you create?
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Have you ever created an amoral world (i.e. a world which is entirely morally deviant, as opposed to a world where just some of the characters are morally deviant)? If so, did you have any strategies for helping readers imagine such a world?