Meet James McNaughton, author of ''STAR SAILORS,'' an international cli-fi novel
weighs in at 0.62 kg !
And just to whet your appetite for what's in the book, here's an interview  link to his publisher's website: 
Many of the people in New Zealand and overseas online who were at the launch for ''Star Sailors'' were from the disaster management, resilience and risk avoidence community, keen to see a dramatization of local risks around climate change. 
The novel actually got to #4 on the NZ fiction bestseller list on the back of the launch, according to the publisher. Here's hoping for an international readership , too.
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| James McNaughton (Grant Maiden Photography) | 
FIRST QUESTION:  Your new novel, ''
Star Sailors,'' 
is set in a version of Wellington in the near future where climate change has 
severely changed people’s lives. Your first novel, ''New Hokkaido,'' was also set in a reimagined Wellington in 
the 1980s, one in which imagines the Japanese occupied New Zealand in WWII – can 
you talk about the attraction of turning Wellington on a fantastical slant like 
you’ve done in two books now? What is it about speculative fiction that 
motivates you as a writer?
JAMES: With New Hokkaido I wanted to try something I 
hadn’t done before: a page-turner. My previous attempts at long fiction were 
reflexive, digressive and plotless, so this was a big departure for me. It was 
fun to go forth and tell a love/detective story, but I felt the genre 
conventions a little restricting. What I like about speculative fiction is that 
it offers dramatic possibilities and ways into issues that straight literary 
fiction isn’t allowed.
One of the 
problems with climate change as a future global catastrophe is that it’s all 
rather dry and abstract. For a lot of people in first-world countries climate 
change and inequality have become bothersome background noise that only sharpen 
into a sense of guilt and hopelessness when attention is paid to them. To travel 
into the near future transforms vague forecasts of catastrophe into something 
concrete. Risk becomes reality. Star 
Sailors shows the disastrous possible effects of climate change and 
inequality on a day-to-day basis. But the prerequisite for any novel to 
effectively tackle issues is that it be entertaining. Star Sailors is character-driven. It’s 
humorous. It’s cinematic. It has momentum. It was written in the golden era of 
the TV mini-series. 
Star 
Sailors is not a dystopia. I’ve attempted to create 
a plausible geo-political 2045 in which emission reductions have not occurred. 
Given the current political climate in the US, for example, this is plausible. 
To imagine NZ as a haven for international elites doesn’t feel like speculation 
but highly likely. (Since I started writing the novel, which imagines an elite 
gated community in the Wairarapa, rich Americans have bought land there.) The 
future I’ve depicted in which ‘business as usual’ prevails is distressing, but 
power is never given up willingly and the science is clear that if we keep doing 
what we’re doing now in terms of emissions and deforestation we are bound for 
global disaster within decades. 
There is a 
perception that climate change is just about drought and waves beating at the 
doorstep. My view is that rising sea levels, worsening weather shocks and the 
spread of pests and of disease will greatly exacerbate existing problems around 
fresh water, food security, migration and inequality, resulting in unprecedented 
social unrest. A wheat crop failure in North America due to climate change, for 
example, can affect the price of bread in Eastern Europe. Everything is linked. 
There are a 
couple of fantastical elements in the novel. One is the arrival of a 
brain-damaged alien humanoid to New Hokitika (Hokitika has been moved to higher 
ground and become a rain holiday destination for Australians). The helpless 
humanoid becomes the property of the news arm of a transnational and a puppet 
for their commercial interests. 
Another element 
is the idea of the super-elderly class. Out-of-control-unsustainable technology 
has been described as the Frankenstein child of science, with technology’s grand 
prize the end of illness and death altogether. But is vastly increased life-span 
really the boon it’s made out to be? With the elite class of super-elderly in Star Sailors I’ve showed what extended 
age might mean to society in terms of entrenched ideology and power. And how 
creepy ancient baby-boomers might be.
QUESTION: You’ve described Star 
Sailors as ''cli-fi'' (aka climate change fiction). In writing it did you research 
predictions of climate change disaster or was it fairly easy to come up with 
your own?
JAMES: I’ve volunteered 
for the Red Cross Cred Crescent as an editor at various times, including 2004–06 
when my wife-to-be was a Red Cross delegate in South Asia and we were based in 
Delhi. Weather-based disasters were on the increase in the region and her job 
was to advocate for those at risk. When I accompanied her on a mission to the 
Maldives, I saw the vulnerabilities of low-lying communities to climate change. 
The Red Cross reports I edited clearly described climate change as the major 
ongoing risk in the Maldives and in the other areas in South Asia prone to 
flooding and storms. Climate Change wasn’t a bourgeoisie playground or 
opportunity for trolls, it was real and happening. In 2008, I volunteered for 
the Red Cross in Bogota, Columbia and edited Spanish to English translations for 
the South American centre for climate change, which collated and published 
reports from across the continent. I’ve followed developments ever since. 
I took my 
predictions for 2045 to a few experts and asked them a lot of questions. Those 
talks were very helpful.
 Q. Is 
there something in writing about the disasters of climate change that helps you 
mitigate your fears about climate change?
A.  No, not at all. 
The more I learned about climate change while researching the novel, the worse 
the situation looked. Discussing the subject with experts was especially grim. 
When I started writing in 2014, climate change denial was not uncommon in 
government. I thought the Paris Accord would make denial untenable for those in 
power, if nothing else, but depressingly that hasn’t happened. The process of 
writing hasn’t made me feel any less fearful, but a little less impotent. I’ve 
tried. 
Q. There have been a few 
stories in the wake of the recent US elections calling for artists to write 
about our current troubles. Do you feel you have a responsibility as an artist 
to write about environmental and political concerns?
A. Narrative is how 
we make sense of time and the world. Stories have power, and symbol, analogy and 
metaphor are powerful communicators. I felt that the best contribution I could 
make to raising awareness of climate change was to take the content out of 
unread reports and knowledge-sharing documents into a wider discourse through 
fiction about people facing the effects of climate change. The decision to write 
about these issues wasn’t born out of a sense responsibility exactly, more out 
of anger and exasperation if anything. 
I can understand 
readers avoiding social problem fiction. One of the most attractive things about 
art is its exemption from having to be practically useful. You’ve got a few free 
hours and don’t want to be lectured—particularly on a good cause. But at the 
same time, writing which ignores the pressing concerns of the day runs the risk 
of being irrelevant. It’s a balancing act for a writer. Great social problem 
novels don’t preach abstract issues, they’re about people facing those issues, 
like Huckleberry Finn, The Grapes of 
Wrath, and the work of Charles Dickens and Dostoyevsky. Social science 
fiction classics, such as Gulliver’s 
Travels, Brave New World, and Nineteen Eighty-Four, are less 
character-based, but work on an important level as entertainment. There’s no 
point preaching to the choir or preaching to the sleeping.
VS Naipaul said 
novels should be an investigation onto society, which for me describes what the 
great nineteenth-century writers did best. It’s probably fair to say that the 
novel has since moved to more individual concerns. It could well be time for 
some writers to change focus.  
Q. Climate change can be hard 
to talk about and get your head around. Is it hard to write about? 
A. Climate change 
is difficult to talk about, partly because it’s hard to visualise and then 
depressing if you persist. The inertia, denial and politicisation around it is 
wearying. To research and write a novel in which things have only changed for 
the worse thirty years from now was sometimes hard. But this horrible 
possibility inspired me to find a story. 
We need to be 
worried. Emissions could quite likely continue to increase in response to 
population growth and growing energy demands. War or social unrest will move 
climate change to the background. Tipping points may come sooner than predicted. 
The earth is a balanced system, and feedbacks (such as the effect of 
disappearing ice reducing solar reflection and increasing warming) are difficult 
to predict accurately. 
Problems are the 
beating heart of fiction, so from a writer’s point of view there’s plenty to 
work with around our slide into catastrophe. Star Sailors is a Comedy plot, in the 
way that War and Peace is a Comedy 
plot. It’s about people finding each other in a time of trouble—it’s about love. 
Climate change and inequality are Star 
Sailor’s Napoleon—its one hundred Napoleons tearing up the fabric of 
civilisation. 
Star Sailors is available for purchase now at 
the best bookshops and through online bookstore. p/b, 
$35.


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