Backstory: Santa Claus and the Quantum Librarian

A Q&A with S.A. McNaughton, Quantum Shorts finalist

Read the story: Santa Claus and the Quantum Librarian

Can you give a short introduction of yourself?

I’m a mom and a university graduate advisor, living in Ypsilanti, Michigan, USA. I used to write fiction as a child, but I had fallen out of the habit for several decades until picking it back up last year.

 

How did you come up with the idea for your story?

The Quantum Shorts website provided a lot of helpful resources, from which I learned about some of the most basic ideas of quantum physics. The “Quantum Theory: A to Z” section of the site was particularly useful for giving me an overview of some concepts to explore and story ideas to build. I wrote about 200 words of a romance between a physicist and a librarian before I was hit with writer’s block. Then the Santa Claus idea came to me, and that story took off.

 

What was your quantum inspiration?

Arthur C. Clarke said that “Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” As I was writing this story at Christmastime, the idea of Santa’s magic was at the front of my mind. Once I had the idea of Santa Claus’s quantum powers, I found an article called A Christmas Story about Quantum Teleportation (by Barry W. Fitzgerald, Patrick Emonts, and Jordi Tura) that was very helpful for developing the idea and understanding some of the concepts behind it. I read several other blog posts about “Quantum Santa” to get ideas for how my characters would work and interact with each other.

 

What was your writing process like?

I was fortunate to have a weeklong break over the Christmas and New Year holidays, which both inspired the content of my story and gave me the time to work on it.

 

What is your favourite science-inspired book?

A Wind in the Door by Madeleine L’Engle.

 

What does being a Quantum Shorts finalist mean to you?

I am so surprised and so pleased to know that my story resonated with the judges. I’ve never won anything for my writing, so this means a lot to me. I was pleased with this story, and I’m honoured to know that others were too.

 

Is there anything else you would like to tell us about you or your story?

I was a humanities student in college, but I work with graduate students in Science and Engineering now. This competition made me realise I’ve absorbed some of what my colleagues and students are talking about! It was rewarding to write this story if only to connect a bit with the concepts they’re studying and innovating in.