How did you first start writing Hole Punch and at what point
did you consider yourself to be an author?
In 2015 I was working in a pretty boring data entry job. I actually like boring data entry jobs as they give my brain time to do its own thing. I dreamt up lots of stories and I'd share those stories on social media. I got a very positive response from this, which encouraged me to write more. I'm very fortunate to have had such a boost to my self-confidence so early on. Also to have a book published a few years later.
Hole Punch contains lots of settings; from times of antiquity to the futuristic. You said you started writing Hole Punch as short stories. At what point did these stories begin to tie together into a larger narrative?
This first occurred during the editing process. I began to see it less as a short story collection and more as a pattern of stories which converge and diverge. In redrafting the book I started to colour code certain sections to signify their meaning. These became motifs and symbols which guided an ongoing narrative. The different settings simply provide plenty of variety for the reader.
So do you consider it to be less of an anthology and more of a novel?
It's rewarding to read it chronologically but it can be read at random. You can treat it is a bible, or you can treat it as a joke book. In some ways it is like a sculpture in that you can view it from many angles. I'm making it sound more confusing than it actually is, when it's actually very simple. It's definitely more of a novel than an anthology, at least in my head.
So what genre would you class Hole Punch as?
I'd say it's dystopia fiction. Even when dealing with modern times there is a dystopic bent to it. For instance the school system is dystopic. In its future settings it's plainly dystopic, as it involves mutants in laboratories, or colonial invasions. I make it sound very serious but there's a lot of laughs in there.
One of the repeat "motifs" in the book is of creatures or people that are ostracised. Is this based on personal experience?
On some level there is more sympathy towards these kinds of characters, but this is only natural. We've all had times when we've been helpless against forces that are larger than ourselves. I've tried not to have any particular bias against what I've satirised. It will attack religion on one page, and then the next page attack the scientific process. I've very rarely taken any moral high ground over anyone or anything, unless it is for comedy effect.
The illustrations in the book are quite abstract. At what point did you decide to illustrate Hole Punch?
I was planning to illustrate it early on. I wanted the illustrations to be abstract and to provide a challenge for the viewer. They ask the viewer to pick out different objects, people, places or entities that appear in the book.
Finally, do you see the title as a cheeky pun or more of a threat of something more sinister?
The title has various meanings. It's affectionate towards office stationary and the act of binding paper. It's also symbolic of an attack against something untouchable, like a void or an idea. You really need to read it to get a full sense of what the title means.
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