World Building Wednesday: Background Noise

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Hey Space Cadets, hope everyone is doing awesome!  I’ve finished my short stories and am outlining my fourth novel in the Sleeping Legion Series today.  Should be a barrel full of laughs, if by barrel you mean massive body counts.  And if by laughs, you mean manically!  Operation Breakout was high action and Maternal Vengeance will kick it up a notch!  Speaking of high octane, the

 

ddshort story I’m co-writing with Corey D. Truax will be kick ass as well!  Can’t wait to be able to share it with you, but until then let’s rise above that noise and get on with it!

 

For today’s World Building Wednesday, we shall talk about background noise.  See what I did there in that last paragraph?  LOL!!  Okay, in all seriousness I wanted to talk about the use of background noise in your writing.  Nothing too long and drawn out, just a brief discussion.  I’m personally split on this one.  With the use of my Dragon to dictate I can’t have background noise, but I don’t write with just the Dragon.  I still write some scenes the ‘old fashion way,’ especially the more nuanced or complicated ones.  For these scenes, I pick my music to help me create a mood.

 

So, for generic scenes I’m struggling with I like to use playlists of ambient sounds to keep my mind actively engaged.  Nature sounds, campfires and the like.  I’ve also found a few science fiction based ambient noise sites to help get me in the mood for my genre fiction. Sometimes, if I’m feeling lonely I’ll listen to a coffee shop or library soundtrack for my ambient noise.  I will also listen to classical music and any other instrumental to keep the hamster spinning on his wheels.  One place where I found a collection of mood setting sites was on author Kim Chance‘s blog.  Check it out for some really helpful links.  And of course, there is YouTube.

 

When I just need intense emotions, I’ve been known to listen to music that gets the blood pumping.  Sweet beats, kick ass vocals, anything to set the stage for literary awesomeness.  Depending on the mood of the scene, I can listen to ballads, country, folk and anything else light.  When I want action and adventure, I’ll switch to rock-in-roll and heavy metal.  This works when writing the combat scenes, when you want the blood to boil and heads to roll.  Have you used any of these?  Do you have some good ambient noises to suggest?  Then throw a man a bone, leave a comment below!

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry! 

brown_bess

JR

 

–> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or are images owned by JR Handley.

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World Building Wednesday: Technology Creation

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Hey Space Cadets, I hope everyone is doing great and voted in my friends Clash of the Covers contest!  I’m still working on the Four Horsemen Anthology and hit a bit of a time snag.  Try not to shudder, but I had to do something disgusting and unpleasant…. I filed my taxes today.  I know, I cried too, there’s no shame in it!  As for the next novel in the Sleeping Legion Series, well I’ll start outlining that this month and writing it as well. I will keep you posted on the progress as I try to bump up my production speeds!  Pulp glory here I come!

 

Now, on to my World Building Wednesday topic!!  Onward I say!  Today we talk about how I figure out the technology of my futuristic worlds.  Let’s start with your restrictions, which is especially important if you’re writing in someone else’s sandbox.  In Boss Man’s universe there is no such thing as FTL because science doesn’t think it is viable at the moment.  That doesn’t mean it is impossible, but because of the perceived improbability of this method, he decided against using it.  Other limitations imposed on your technological development might come from your subgenre; is it space opera, military science fiction or hard science fiction.

 

A famous example of how this played out would be from Star Trek, where they got around the limitations of science as we know it by using warp drive.  This used Albert Einstein’s theory of special relativity.  He speculated that the speed of light in a vacuum will be the same from any frame of reference moving at a constant speed. I won’t go all technical (Translation, I don’t know all of it), but basically it showed that FLT wasn’t possible.  However, he speculated that you could instead bend space-time to traverse long distances in an expedited manner.  Then Mexican physicist, and SciFy Nerd, Miquel Alcubierre theorized it might actually possible, without violating the theories of his predecessors.  Way back in the dark ages of 1994!  I mean, they didn’t even have Facebook back then.  Or Myspace, for us old timers in attendance!  If you want to know more, click the links at the bottom of this post.

 

When I write science fiction in my own universe I plan on running with the theory Dr. Alcubierre gave us and traveling faster than light, if not in fact, then in deed.  So, now that you’ve considered your own limitations you need a starting point.  I tend to look at science and technology as we know it and then postulate where it might go in the distant future.  This is mostly guess work, lots of technical research and some good ole fashioned SWAG!  Not that kind of swag, but a scientific wild arse guess!  Okay, quasi scientific in my case but work with me here!  This does require you to know your world so you can have the end points, since the starting points would be today. 

 

How do I stay abreast, well I follow several science blogs that break it down for you Barney Style.  I’ll work on collating it for you as soon as I can.  Another way I use is to pick the brain of my father-in-law, a trained biologist and my dad who’s a mechanic who understands machines.  Then I made friends with people way smarter than I, and let them prevent me from looking like an idiot.  Well, more of an idiot than normal!

 

To recap, basically I do some research to know the limitations I’m starting with and then I guess where things might go in the future.  But that’s how I do it, what is your process?

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry!  

brown_bess

JR

 

 

 –> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or are screen grabs taken by JR Handley for use under the Fair Use Doctrine.

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Faster-Than-Light (FTL) Travel

Interstellar Travel

Warp Drive

World Building Wednesday: Prioritizing

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Hey Space Cadets, how’s everyone doing today?  I’m good, I will finish Operation Breakout today and I’m super excited about it.  I’m already working on where book four will go, and I’ve some fun ideas.  We’ve tentatively titled book four Maternal Vengeance. For those of you who’ve read The Human Legion Series, you’ll see the culmination of a plot thread started by author Tim C. Taylor.  I’ve also submitted a short story to an anthology, as I’ve previously mentioned, and was invited to another anthology. I’ll tell you more about that as the details emerge, but I promise it’ll be soon.

 

Now, on to today’s World Building Wednesday topic, prioritizing your writing.  What do I mean by this?  Well, as creative people it’s easy to get distracted by the bright shiny idea. That next story, the next series can all pull you away from your work in progress and leave you starting millions of projects without finishing anything.  I try to resist this temptation, power through it, roll over it like it was the Maginot Line in the 1930’s!  Why?  Because I can’t send ideas and half-finished manuscripts to my editor and I certainly can’t publish them.

 

My solution, stolen from other authors who I’ve chatted with and writing podcasts I’ve listened too is simple.  Use your motivation for the next shiny thing to push you to finish your current work in progress.  Let the boredom with the current idea motivate you to be innovate and come up with ways to reinvigorate the story for your readers.  If it bores you, maybe it would bore them and you don’t want to lose your readers.

 

What about the rest of you out there in the Handley Trenches?  How do you prioritize your works in progress?  Do you write one project at a time, or are you one of those special souls who can write multiple projects simultaneously?  I would love to hear from you in the comments below, so don’t be afraid to sound off!

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry!  

brown_bess

JR

 

 –> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or are videos used by JR Handley for use under the Fair Use Doctrine.

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World Building Wednesday: Pulp Speed Writing

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Hey Space Cadets, how’s everyone doing today?  I’m doing great, making progress towards finishing Operation Breakout this week and getting into the production cue for my editorial team.  When I know when we have a release date, you can bet I’ll let you know so let’s move on to more exciting topics.  Like I’ve mentioned before, I’m a huge fan of The Dead Robots Society Podcast because it has been very helpful for me.  The proprietors of that fine establishment are willing to bend over backwards to help, all you’ve gotta do is ask.  Preferably in the Facebook Forum! Why do I mention this?  Because it gave me the topic for today’s post.

 

Okay, so for today’s World Building Wednesday we are talking about pulp writing.  My goal when I started writing was to write genre fiction. I have no allusions that my work is high literature, or that it will ever be taught in a classroom setting. I am an unknown unashamed pulp writer, and all I want to do is tell entertaining stories. As quickly as I can, as often as I can.

 

Author, and one of our generations current pulp writers, Dean Wesley Smith defines pulp writers through several criteria.  You have to writes at least 1 million words a year, those words are words which are published. Obviously, if you run your own social media or blog you will write way more. But the only million words to count are ones that’re stories you sell. Another criterion of his was you have to write every day, for the entire year. I tend to like and agree with his approach.

 

But how does somebody do that?  Write so quick, published so much?  I know the first thing you have to do is adopt the Michael Anderle model.  You have what he calls a minimally viable product, which you get to market as quickly as you can.  What is a minimally viable product?  For me, or at least as I apply it on my own work, this means that I accept that the story is King.  I can’t obsess over every word, every sentence, or every paragraph.  At the end of the day, the stories keying in the rest is just details.  This means that when I finish a book, while I love the characters and the setting, I have to put it out of my mind and move on to the next story.  Because let’s face it, there’s always another story, another adventure waiting to happen.

 

 

Is this approach for everyone?  No, probably not, but writing, like life, is an individual journey.  I’ll save you the sappiness, and acknowledge that we walk that journey with friends and family, but in the end, we stand alone.  We are responsible for our actions, and ours alone. It’s a harsh reality that I learned in the Army, one that has followed me into my civilian life.  I think it was the sort of mentality which allowed our ancestors to face the unknown and wander into the sunset.  Maybe I’m wrong, only time will tell.  What about you, are you a pulp writer too?

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry! 

brown_bess

 JR

 

 –> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section.

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Pulp Resources:

World Building Wednesday: Fan Appreciation

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Hey Space Cadets, how’re you doing?  Things are moving along here, as soon as I write and post this review I’ll be deep into the weeds with the final battle of Operation Breakout.  It’s pretty amazing, if I say so myself.  It’ll only get better after my editing team works their magic.  I’m sitting at 62k words going into the final push, though it will grow from here.

 

Oh, and there’s this love note to my editors.  This one’s for you Corey!  And you too Thomas!

 

The GREAT EDITOR is my literary salvation; I shall not want.  He maketh me to lie down in grammatical pastures: he leadeth me beside the still waters of proper punctuation.  He restoreth my mistyped prose: he leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name’s on the book too.  Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of editorial death, I will fear no adverb: for thou art with me; thy red pen of doom and thy manual of style they comfort me.  Thou preparest a glorious final draft before me in the presence of mine critics: thou anointest my head with oil that my one star reviews can’t touch me; my cup of creativity runneth over.  Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me, worming their way into the hearts of mine reviewers for all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the benevolent editor forever.

 

Now, onward to today’s topic!  Today I wanted to address a topic that is important to any author seeking to write long term.  If you want a long-lasting career, you really do have to be humble and remember that none of it happens without the fans.  Your readers become an extension of your digital family, your friends and sometimes your best PR Flunkies!  I’m still relatively new, so for now I will show my gratitude by continuing to put out the best product I can.  As my back catalog grows, I hope to be able to fit in some freebies.  Maybe a short story or two given away on the mailing list, or the blog. I’m still learning, so what do you suggest?  As either a reader or a writer, how do you reward your loyal fans?  Hopefully you found this to be a worthwhile discussion topic, and I look forward to reading your thoughts on the matter.

 

I would also like to take a special moment to thank my readers in the UK for putting my novel so high on their charts.  Seriously, thank you.  Right now, both of my novels are in the Top 10 in the Colonization and Space Marine categories of the Science Fiction charts!  Wow, it STILL feels like a dream!  And book three is seriously so close to completion that I almost don’t feel like a fraud claiming I’m an author!

 

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Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry! 

brown_bess

 JR

 

–> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or are fan art given to JR Handley for use on his blog.

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World Building Wednesday: Working With Nuance Dragon

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Hey Space Cadets, how’re you all doing today?  I’m doing great, not as consistent on my walks as I would like but the constantly changing temperature and rainy weather is playing heck on my sinuses.  I also made the excuse to myself that I needed to write because I’m behind on my book three goal but that strikes me as missing the forest for the trees.  I did manage to walk a mile today, which is progress.  I was tired, but I managed it in 29 minutes.  A far cry from my Army days but I’ll get better again.

 

I’ve slowed down on Operation Breakout, but I’ve re-committed to using my Nuance Dragon program to write it.  In the end, it will pay dividends for me even if it slows me down just a little bit.  Ultimately, you have to evolve your writing style to suit your needs.  I injured my hand in my infantry days and it’s been bothering me, which has slowed down my typing.  I’ve also changed how I write my novels over the course of two novels, a novella and a short story.  My writing style has grown and my process has evolved, but my inability to get it on the page quickly wasn’t keeping up.  This has forced me to adapt my approach to my new reality, ergo the Dragon text-to-speech approach. 

 

As I struggled to find a way to make it work for me, I consulted the Dragon Nuance Support Center for help.  I realized that part of the problem was that my older version of Dragon wasn’t interfacing as effectively with Windows 10 and the newest Microsoft Word. Because I have faith that I’ll make the Dragon work for me, I plopped down the $150 and bought the latest version. I didn’t have to pay full price, because they gave me a 50% discount for having the older version. The newer copy arrived on Monday, and I’ve been using it since.  I like that it doesn’t have the same issue with my Word document freezing that my older version had.  I’ve only used the latest version on a few blog posts so far, but I’m impressed.

 

I then started doing some active research on how to make the Dragon work better for me, not the “using it” part but the more practical applications of it.  I researched how to think the story out loud, and have my creativity become a verbal process instead of fingers clacking on the keyboard.  During this process, I ran across Scott Baker’s YouTube channel.  It has loads of great advice in there on how to practically use several of the Dragon’s features.  Additionally, I found the Dragon Riders – Authors Dictating group on Facebook which was jampacked with helpful posts and practical tips (Thank you Terry Mixon for showing me this group!).  If this sounds like something you’re interested in, be sure to check out both of these resources.

 

Finally, I recently found out that Scott Baker has a book coming out soon on how to work the Dragon into your creative process.  He’s been pretty helpful on the Dragon Riders group so I’ll be buying this when it comes out and I’ll let you know what I think.  Otherwise, I don’t want to take up too much of your time, so I’ll keep this post short and sweet.  Instead, I’ll leave you with some cool pictures of dragons!

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Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry! 

brown_bess

 JR

 

–> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or are images owned by JR Handley.

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World Building Wednesday: Personal Health

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Hey Space Cadets, I hope everyone is surviving the snow which has blanketed most of the United States.  For those of you not in the States, well we hope you survived too!  The Sleeping Legion Series books are doing well, and I’m continually amazed by that fact.  I’m halfway through writing book three and hope to have it to the editor by the end of the month.  I’m still excited about this project, and the next two afterwards so never fear I’ll disappear and leave you hanging!

 

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So for today’s World Building Wednesday I’ve decided to talk about something that acts as a companion to your writing plan.  Today I want to talk about our health, there is a proven medical correlation between physical health and mental agility.  I’m not going to lie, the Army over prescribed me cortisone shots while I was deployed to keep me the field.  They continued this as I transitioned into the VA (Veterans Administration) for my medical care.  The excess cortisone combined with decreased physical activity due to my injuries resulted in my gaining weight.  Lots of it.  While my body was wounded and no longer as active as I wanted it to be, my lifestyle choices didn’t keep up.  I kept drinking and eating like I was still running 5 miles a day, though given the delicious microbrews available these days, can you blame me?

 

A quick side tangent; unlike my misinformed Boss Man, I drink my beer in a cold frosty mug as God intended it to be drunk.  Those wacky Brits seem to think we should drink beer warm!  I mean, didn’t anyone go over to the island and tell them we had refrigeration?  Next, they’re going to tell me they still cook with fire, instead of on the stove.  Sigh, it’s a shame but I shall continue to persevere with my 5-Step Plan to educate him on the ways of the beer world.  Wish me luck!

 

Okay, rant over… and now we resume your regularly scheduled programing!  Since I started tracking my daily word counts, I noticed a trend.  On the mornings where I got an early start with a walk, my writing improved.  My neurologist tells me this is because blood flow, oxygen levels, as well as other medical sounding stuff that I didn’t even bother remembering.  Due to this insight, and the knowledge that I can’t keep writing if I let myself spiral into an early grave, I’ve decided that 2017 is the year of the healthier me.  I might never fit back into my Class A’s, but I can get down to a place where my doctors and wife aren’t worried.  I’m 5’9” and weigh in at 341 pounds, this can’t continue.  I promised I’d still be writing when my youngest son is older.  He has it in his head that he’ll write a book with me someday.  To do that, I have to turn this ship around.

 

And I shall, because my kids are worth it.  As writers, we tend to spend a lot of solitary time in front of our monitor clacking away on our keyboards.  This lifestyle of professional daydreaming can lend itself to inactivity and general unhealth.  Let us all endeavor to turn that around so that we might live longer and write more.

 

We can do it.  We HAVE to.

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry!   

brown_bess

JR

 

 –> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section, or are owned by JR Handley.

 

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World Building: Website Design

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Hey Space Cadets, how’s everyone today?  All’s going well in my neck of the of the woods.  Sorry this blog is going up late, had to deal with a slight family emergency.  Seems my erstwhile keeper locked her keys in her car on the way home from her sisters, several hours away.  Luckily the keys were in the car, one less expense!  As for The Sleeping Legion Series, I’m making adequate progress on book three.  Just shy of 40k words and with the wife home, and shedding the geographic single dadhood, I should be able to rock-n-roll.  Hopefully I can tame the Dragon, and make the dictation method work for me to speed up this spaceship!

 

Today I wanted to talk to you about the biggest part of my world building, the authors platform.  I’m not the most tech savvy guy out there, I’m practically a technological troglodyte.  When we decided to get a professional website, Team Handley picked what we could afford.  We were pre-revenue with the writing, but wanting to build everything up so we were prepared for launch day.  Ultimately, we went with WordPress because I already had a presence there and I didn’t want to lose that.  In the future, I’m not sure which hosting platform I would use but I love the friends I’ve made on WordPress so I think I’d keep that too, even if only the free part as a mirror to whatever follows.

 

After we set up our new website, we ran into struggle after struggle trying to figure it out.  When we realized that we would need help, we shopped around the best person for the job and found Matthew Wayne Selznick through my membership in The Listeners of the Dead Robot Society group on Facebook.  He first reached out with a few free tips, just one author helping another, until it became clear to me that he was the guy we would be hiring.  A few phone calls later, contracts were signed, initial deposits paid and our website was quickly assembled.  Seriously, in under two weeks we were ready to go.  Obviously making the site from scratch would take him longer but he was very forthright about everything.

 

If this strikes your fancy, if you’re interested in more, check out Matt’s websites!  Tomorrow’s post will be a follow on interview with Matt, so check back for more!

 

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry! 

brown_bess

JR

 

 –> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section or used with the full permission of the owner, MWS Media. 

 

 

World Building Wednesday: MAPS

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Hello Space Cadet, how’s it hanging?  Mine’s alright, but hey… don’t judge, it’s cold in here!  LOL!!  If this survives my mom’s brutal editing process you know she was a sailor’s wife for too long!  So a quick update on life in the trenches.  My first two books and the prequel novella are almost done in the final stages of pre-publication prep.  Formatting, last minute copy editing and all the other stuff I’d rather skip so I can just write more.  I will have an official publication schedule for you very soon, but until then… let the shenanigans continue!

 

Welcome to my World Building Wednesday Series!  Today I wanted to talk to you about one of my favorite visual aids, maps!  I was an Army infantryman, we prefer to keep it simple, so we used pictures whenever we could.  Why use words, when pictures are available?  Not quite Marine territory, we didn’t eat the crayons we colored with, but close.  The best kind of picture for the grunt about to go on patrol, maps!!  The scope of these maps can be as large or tight in scope as you and your story require.

 

There are several ways you can make your maps; hand drawn, built like a high school craft project, contracted from a cartographer or made with some sort of map building software.  I use Fractal Mapper v8 made by NBOS Software because it was what I could afford.  I like the end results, though the feel of it is limited.  Check out these pictures of maps we made with this program.

 

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Now, this program has a bit of a learning curve.  I actually couldn’t get it right, but my back end staff (aka MOM) managed to find some YouTube videos to help out.  It IS a good point of entry program because it’s affordable and it’s definitely a great starter program.  It has a companion program AstroSynthesis v3, but we’ve owned it for about two years and can’t get it to work for us. 

 

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These programs aren’t the only ones out there, the industry standard seems to be Campaign Cartographer 3, often simply referred to as CC3.  It’s a whole suite of companion programs made by ProFantasy which I’d love to have, but can’t afford.  It’s definitely something I’m eyeing.  I’ve done a search of their samples, and was impressed.  Check out the examples below!

 

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Finally, I’d like to share one of the maps made by a friend and fellow author; Cait Ashwood.  We met at our local NaNoWriMo group and hit it off.  We write in similar genres, since her fantasy novels are also enjoyed by the audience of science fiction junkies I covet.  This map is trademarked and owned by her, and used with her permission.  Hope you realize how good it could be, with only fifteen minutes of practice.  Definitely an easier learning curve than we had with the Fractal Mapper.  And hey, if you’re jonesing for some good fantasy stories meander over to her page and take a peek!

 

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Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry!

brown_bess

JR

 

–> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section, were created by Team Handley or are screen grabs taken by JR Handley for use under the Fair Use Doctrine. 

World Building Wednesday

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Hello Space Cadet, today I release into the multiverse my first World Building Wednesday where I talk about my process.  This isn’t the only way to build your world, or write a novel, this is just what works for me.  Keep in mind, I have to work around my TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) with my process.  These limitations force me to rely heavily on notes, outlines and a paper filing system where all the world building stuff is organized and collated.

 

First, let me show you how I organize my shiny new idea!  This is a broad outline of my organizational thought.  Each of these steps often leads me to rabbit trails that flavor my story.  And remember, anything can be a source for the idea.  Books you’ve read, movies you’ve seen, the news and conversations with friends.  People you’ve observed in public, conversations you’ve overheard.  The world is your creative muse, use it and abuse it.

 

  1. The shiny big new idea!
  2. What do I need to make the idea work?
    1. Characters (People)
    2. Settings (Places)
    3. Equipment and Gear (Things)
  3. Create the world that the story takes place.
    1. Notes on the history of the world.
    2. Maps where I draw the actual world
    3. Key cultural things such as, but not limited to, religion and political thought.
  4. Research anything you need to know for your story.
  5. Outline this shiny new idea.
  6. Write the shiny new idea!

 

So, to summarize the list above, I start with an idea or a character.  Then I flush this idea out a little bit at a time, with ideas based on what I need for the plot.  I keep going, until I have a kernel of a world.  I flush it out, again, with the stuff I need for the story.  This can include researching things, or just the random thoughts that pop up along this path to creation.

 

One big rule I have for myself is that I leave myself room to tell more stories in the future.  The best advice I ever received on writing was from a stranger at my local Starbucks.  I was sitting there plotting out the various parts of my universe and I had papers spread all around me.  He advised me to “Never paint yourself into a corner.”  This stranger gave me great advice, and I use it with my own world.  Just enough to make the story work, in case it leads to rabbit trails that become different stories.

 

Writing for Tim C. Taylor, however, means most of the larger world issues are already made for me.  This will be a fact for anyone writing in someone else’s sandbox.  That said, working with Tim has been great.  He gives me room to do a lot be creative tinkering, with a few rules I can’t break.  For example, I can’t use FTL (Faster Than Light Travel) when writing in the Human Legion Universe but the characters and plot is open to anything I can imagine.  Mainly, he is focused on historical consistency, not changing the cannon and ensuring I not frakk up the aliens he created.

 

I’ve talked with authors who write in other shared universes, to include a few who write in the Warhammer 40K world and it seems these are universal truths.  It can be a lot of fun, in the same way people enjoy writing fan fiction, but there are some constraints.  You get the benefit of a universe full of possibilities waiting for you.  As you read the books in said universe, those thoughts that tingled in the back of your mind can be addressed.  The what if’s, or what happened to Character X when the curtain fell.  That can be a thrilling proposition for a new author who is unsure of himself. It allows you to get your feet wet in the writing process, with some of the guesswork taken out.  Another benefit, especially for a new author, is writing in a shared world generally comes with a built-in audience. In this the universe creator benefits as well, by having you potentially attract new readers to his will or world.

 sleeping-legion-series-books

Now that we’ve covered the topic in broad strokes, let me drill down to show you how my Sleeping Legion series came to be. I was reading Tim’s book Renegade Legion and ideas kept flopping around in the back of my mind.  What about the Marines still in Beta City?  And maybe they could fix those training hulks floating around in space?  I wrote it all down on a list, and messaged it to Tim.  I asked him to write those stories too!  Wow, sort of arrogant fanboy, no?  At that point in time I was working on his Wiki so we were in contact with one another anyway.  Around this time period (2014) I had already started working on my own New Carthage Republic idea.  I mailed Tim’s publishing house the first chapter and summary, seeking representation.  We already had a working relationship, so why not?  He said no, told me it was a good idea but that he wasn’t open for business anymore.  Instead, he was focusing on his own writing and didn’t have time to run a publishing house anymore.

 

I kept writing, bummed, but still writing.  A week later he contacted me with a counter proposal.  Write in his world on those ideas of mine!  It wasn’t a done deal, but he was prepared to be convinced if I sent him a proposal.  I sent him the proposal for the novella’s we talked about.  He approved and a contract was signed!!!  I even wore a wig, in honor of his British sensibilities.  Somehow those novellas became novels, but that is the origin of the Sleeping Legion Series.

 

In the coming weeks I’ll elaborate more on the world building, from maps to tech and everything in between, so stay tuned!

 

Until next time, stay frosty and don’t forget to keep your powder dry!

brown_bess

JR

 

–> As usual, all images came from the Google’s “labeled for reuse” section.