![]() “I still have a couple of these stored away, good for a laugh at what the kid-version of me wanted to write about. “Once I filled up one notebook, I started another,” he said. Klune always wanted to write, and when he was just six years old, he began carrying a notebook around wherever he went, filling it with stories and ideas for stories. Klune thinks the best answer is that ideas come from life-in events both grand and those much more mundane. Another novel was given life after he purchased a Roomba vacuum for his house, and he wondered what it’d be like if such machines were sentient (finely sensitive in perception or feeling). An upcoming book he’s written came to him after his dog did something endearingly ridiculous. Klune said there’s no universal answer–some ideas just pop into his head. With the amount of books he’s written, one has to wonder where the ideas come from. “I love the character of Gus dearly, and the book explores the topic of asexuality and how it pertains to romantic relationships,” he said. The book he usually says is his favorite is “How to be a Normal Person,” a queer, romantic comedy about an autistic man named Gus and an asexual stoner who delights and irritates him in equal measure. ![]() Klune said each book has a part of him in it, some bigger than others. ![]() “I signed with Macmillan and Tor in 2018, and they’ve released my novels since.”Īsked if any of his books are his favorite, he said the answer changes daily depending on his mood. “I’ve published more than 25 novels, novellas and short stories,” said Klune. With his first novel through an indie publisher in 2011, Klune has marked his 10 th anniversary publishing books.
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