Meet the Boss Man!

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INTRODUCTION TO THE HUMAN LEGION CREATOR:

 

Hello Space Cadets, I wanted to offer you a treat in honor of the recently passed holidays.  I’ve managed to snag an interview with the creator of the Human Legion Universe, Tim C. Taylor.  Other than being an amazing author, he’s also the man who’s giving me my first literary break!

 

Long before I was writing a spin-off series in his world, I was a fan of Tim’s science fiction masterpieces.  I stumbled into his universe after I had just been introduced to the Kindle by my neurologist, who was trying to get me to read again.  Because of my Traumatic Brain Injury, or TBI, I must exercise my grey matter or I’m at a heightened risk for dementia and other related issues.

 

I’d stopped reading because printed books gave me migraines after suffering my TBI.  Yes, even large print books.  My care-team struggled to find a solution; my doctor, my mom and my wife didn’t give up though.  Then my mom remembered that you could magnify the heck out of the print with the new Kindles.  I gave it a try, then I was off to the races reading again.  I’ll always remember 2014 fondly because of this rediscovery of my love for the written word.

 

I started with every free book I could find and then narrowed in on several genres.  It kept me occupied while languishing in the Veteran Affairs medical waiting rooms—where I spend too much of my life.  Books let me escape the depressing hospitals, and charge into other worlds.  After a ‘writing as therapy’ class, I gravitated towards science fiction and read everything I could afford.  I read so much that my family gave me Amazon gift cards that Christmas!!

 

Eager to spend my newfound digital currency, I went looking at the Hot New Releases in the science fiction, and found Marine Cadet by Tim C. Taylor.  I enjoyed it so much I became a dedicated fanboy, annoying my family with unsolicited book recommendations and looking for swag in his universe. [NOTE TO TIM: Still no swag in your world 😉]  To shut me up, my wife “jokingly” told me to find a support group.  I found Tim’s website instead.

 

With Tim’s website bookmarked, I took to the discussion boards. I spent hours there talking about his books and science fiction in general.  After some back and forth with Tim, Hans and I ended up making a Human Legion Wiki.  Hans is a prince among men and helped handle the technical end of the Wiki until his health failed and taught me a lot about science along the way.  The Wiki’s not the prettiest, or even current anymore now that book four and five are out, but it was a labor of love for two of Tim’s loyal fans.

 

As part of these discussions, we sent Tim suggestions for spin-off stories he might pursue and offered suggestions of where we thought the world could go.  Right around this time, I took the VA’s writing therapy class and decided to write my own book.  I knew Tim had a publishing house, so I wrote the first chapter and sent it to Tim seeking advice.  He was very encouraging, but told me Greyhart Press was shutting down so he could focus on his writing.

 

I didn’t give up, and I improved the first chapter.  I submitted it, officially, as a work for him to consider publishing under his new Human Legion Publications company.  Obviously, he liked it, because he counter-proposed that I write the spin-off series I’d suggested HE write! He told me I would have to write a synopsis and a chapter to show where I was going, but that he was prepared to be convinced.  After reading my proposal, we signed a contract.  The rest is history.

 

As a side note, to those of you who don’t know, the Brits still wear wigs when in court.  To honor my Boss Man, I wore one when I signed on the dotted line!  Now, this contract is close to fruition and books one and two of The Sleeping Legion are due out in a few weeks.  To help show the people reading this blog what the universe is like, I’ve decided to interview the big boss man himself!

 

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Interview:

 

1)      Where did the spark that lit the Human Legion flame come from? What was the inspiration for this universe?

The spark was Doctor Who; the fuel was beer, though probably not in the way you might expect. This was way back in 2002. Doctor Who was off the air, but the BBC were releasing the ongoing adventures of Paul McGann’s Eighth Doctor in the form of novels, releasing 73 books in total. There are some things in print that are difficult to do well on screen and I was hooked on the detail and the development of the characters in the book series.

 

At that time, I’d written software, music, RPG adventures, but writing stories had never occurred to me. One thing I did make was beer. October through March every year was brewing season and I would mash my own grains and produce ales to my own recipes. A big part of why I brewed (other than to sample the delights of the finished product) was to broaden my appreciation of ales by having a go at making my own.

 

The thought popped into my head that if I’d gotten so much satisfaction from making my own beer, I could deepen my love of science fiction literature in the same way by writing some stories. So I set about sketching a future history starting with first contact with aliens and leading up to the war you see in the Human Legion books. I spent about an hour sketching out these ideas. Fifteen years later, I’m still writing the books that are falling out of this plan.

 

2)      Tell us more about what led you to write Science Fiction. Do you have a background in technology?

I write science fiction for the same reason I read it: other forms of literature feel so dull in comparison. Actually, I also read and have written alternate history, historical fiction, and fantasy because all of them can deliver the sense of wonder at experiencing a world that is different from the world I see around me.

When I was at school I was mad keen on astrophysics and quantum mechanics and the like, far ahead of what I’ve ever been taught. I never took it any further, deciding to double major in computer science and business studies at university before a career in the software industry. So I guess that other than software matters, my interest in science technology is pure hobbyist.

 

3)      Can you give us some more insight into the origins of your characters? Are they based on people you know?

Only loosely. Marine Cadet, the first Human Legion novel, was actually my sixth novel, and I think I ran out of real people to base my characters on in the earlier books. That said, you can’t help but base characters on your real experiences, and so there are hints of real people hidden in there. I would say in the Human Legion books that Springer and Indiya are the most like me, and Brandt is an amalgam of various people I’ve worked with in my previous career.

The character of Arun McEwan went through more name changes than any other. He was called Ernst in an early version, and Brand and a host of other names. I used to work with a guy called Arun and things took off when I borrowed his name.

In general, rather than start with a real-world person and mold them into a character, I start with a character and accrete little details based on real people. I ask myself who has the most interesting story to tell and what is the most interesting perspective to tell it from. That’s the core I base my characters on.

 

4)      When you started this journey, did you imagine evolving into the wider universe it has become with spinoff series by other authors and follow-on novels by you?

I didn’t expect to involve other authors at all, that’s for sure! But I had always expected follow-on novels and short stories, and inviting other authors to contribute is an awesome way to expand the universe. It’s fascinating to see other creators at play in my universe. The Human Legion is the fourth series of novels in this universe so far, and I have published seven short stories as well. I love to read a richly detailed universe, and I guess that shows in my writing because I’m trying to do the same thing.

 

5)      What made you decide to skip FTL and artificial gravity in your world? With your science in general, how did you decide what tech to use and which to exclude?

When I sketched out ideas for the universe back in 2002, I challenged myself: what is different about the setting to my stories? Much of the answer has still to play out in my published work, but centers on answering the question of why we on Earth have not previously seen evidence of alien civilizations and why aliens would be interested in visiting Earth. The lack of FTL travel was part of that initial sketch too, and both questions fed off each other. If it takes huge amount of effort and time to go from one star system to another, how does trade happen? How do you project force over that kind of distance? Why would anyone bother to invade Earth when it’s so impossibly distant? These questions have answers.

The lack of artificial gravity came later, but as part of a theme of trying to inject a little realism into interstellar travel and a sense of the practical difficulties it would entail. I didn’t want the Star Trek feel where people walk around ships as if on luxury liners. Not for this series. I’ve written about artificial gravity before, and it’s a common trope that became commonplace in order to make it easier to film science fiction. I don’t see the need for authors to use artificial gravity, and doing away with it adds a little distinctiveness since my characters have a different experience of getting around starships.

6)      What is your writing process?  Do you plot it out or fly by the seat of your pants?

I outline my books in advance. I know roughly what happens in the plot and how the characters will develop. Very early on I will write key scenes and snatches of dialogue. Once underway writing a new book, I will start at the beginning and write to the end. I know in a lot of detail what I want to do in the next few chapters, but keep the rest of the book more loosely outlined so I can change the plan easily as I discover more about the characters, and as plot twists occur to me. By the time I’m halfway through, I’ve thought ahead about so many opportunities to develop plot and characters that the rest of the book is mostly sketched out.

 

7)      Have you ever participated in NaNoWriMo? Either way, what are your thoughts on it?  I ask this because we’re in the midst of NaNo Season!

I’ve never done NaNoWriMo because it’s never fit well my schedule. One year I will! The idea of writing fast without stopping to edit is a good one and similar to what I do anyway.

 

8)      Now that you’re about to wrap up the Human Legion Saga, please tell us more about the new series.  From the covers posted on your website it looks intriguing.

Revenge Squad is told from the perspective of NJ McCall, a former soldier of the Human Legion who was retired to the liberated frontier world of Klin-Tula and told he is now a colonist. That doesn’t work out too well for him and he falls in with an outfit called Revenge Squad. In the lawless areas of the planet, some semblance of peace is kept because if you mess with one of Revenge Squad’s policyholders, someone like NJ McCall will show up in your face and deliver some serious retribution.

 

I only started reading the author, Jim Butcher, about a year ago and was immediately hooked on the Dresden Files series. I thought I’d love to write a character like Harry Dresden. So I did. Revenge Squad and NJ McCall is the direct result.

There are differences from the Dresden Files to be sure, not least that NJ McCall accepts he need to buddy up and to be part of a team, unlike Dresden. Also, the Chicago PI Jim Butcher writes about doesn’t have the digital ghosts of his dead friends constantly in his head. But there’s a similar sense of a wisecracking main character always moving forward who daren’t stop and daren’t look behind, because if he does, all the darkness in his past would catch up and destroy him. I have a lot of fun writing NJ McCall, and for an author that’s a good sign.

I sprinkle the books with some dark humor, which is just as well because the world of Klin-Tula is a seriously troubled place, forever lurching from crisis to crisis. The people of the Human Legion have no experience of running their own affairs during peacetime. They don’t even have experience of soldiers being allowed to grow old. Klin-Tula has three million settlers from five major races and they have to figure all this out for themselves. Like I said, it’s not going well, and that leaves plenty of opportunities for Revenge Squad Inc. unfortunately it also leaves opportunities for far worse people.

 

Compared with the Human Legion books, Revenge Squad will be more self-contained ‘adventure of the week’ books, but there’s a lot of character development planned in, and as the series builds we learn more about the dark secrets behind Revenge Squad until finally… Well, let’s just say there are some world changing turnarounds on the way, but you’ll have to read a few books before you get to that point. Actually, come to think of it, I need to write them first too.

 

9)      Where do you plan on the universe going next? Will NJ McCall be it, or are there more series to be written?

I have a lot of ideas, but to be honest because I need to put food on the table, I have to gauge the financial success of the new Revenge Squad and The Sleeping Legion series first. There is a season 2 I’ve planned for Revenge Squad, and NJ McCall is definitely in that. I have a series that comes after the Human Legion and features several main characters from that series supporting new ones. I’ve already written Arun McEwan’s final scene! I’ve also just written a scene for the series set in the 2060s on Earth, and a decade ago I wrote two novels for a series set in a parallel dimension where we meet another set of descendants of the children given up to aliens in the 2080s. At one level, that last series is a science-fantasy rerun of the First World War (and there’s a good story reason why that is so). I always assumed I would release that a century after August 1914. The books were ready in 2014, but I was writing the Human Legion instead.

 

So, I have plenty of ideas about what might come next. And that’s only in the Human Legion universe.

 

10)  What authors would you consider your inspiration?  Also, who would you be most honored to be compared too?

Robert Heinlein, Alfred Bester, Andre Norton, Anne McCaffrey, Isaac Asimov, David Brin. That’s a starter for ten, but I also have to acknowledge the huge excitement I also had from reading 2000 A.D. back in the 70s and 80s (Pat Mills, John Wagner, Gerry Finley-Day), and also the fine writers and rules designers for RPGs, notably Tunnels & Trolls, Dungeons & Dragons, and Traveler.

I would most like to be compared with Peter F Hamilton, because he is the only science fiction author my wife enjoys reading. Plus, when he was guest of honor at DragonCon last year, he got to sit in the back of a car in the parade and wave at the good people of Atlanta. Like the Queen. To be honest, I’m not a massive fan of the royals, but I have to admit they are very good at waving to crowds, and I think that would be a cool thing to do professionally.

 

11)  In closing, what advice would you give to new authors and writers in general?

There’s a huge amount of good advice for writers already out there (amid the dross), so I will limit myself to a specific group of authors: those who wish to earn a living from writing novels, and for whom at least part of their strategy involves self-publishing.

Firstly, it’s important to cultivate the ability to switch in and out of an artistic/creator mentality, and a commercial one. I’ve known people facilitate this by working in different locations and wearing different clothes to help their minds to fit in the right persona. I don’t do that myself, but I try to separate out commercial and artistic work times, and when I’m thinking commercially I will deliberately use language such as ‘product line’ rather than ‘book series’.

It’s okay to spend time in a commercial mindset. It doesn’t invalidate your artistic side, nor does it mean you cannot go back to your artistic self what you’ve done with your business self for now.

Writing novels is extremely time-consuming. Marketing and promotion are also time-consuming. Of all the things you could do as a writer, you only get the time to do a tiny fraction of them. Being able to think from a distanced, commercial perspective can help enormously to steer you to do the things that will be most value to you.

For example, many successful self-published authors will talk of the idea of a Venn diagram of possible book projects. Which sub-genres and styles are popular? Which are you most able to sell? Which would you most enjoy writing? Which are you most skilled at writing? Look for the areas were all four sets intersect and pick your next book project from one of those points of intersection.

There are now many successful self-published authors in science fiction and beyond, and many share freely of the experiences in interviews, and in particular with podcasts. If you listen or read these interviews wearing your commercial head, you will see that certain patterns of behavior are very commonplace. For instance, successful self-publishers will acknowledge the role luck plays in their success, but they also did their best to engineer their own luck. I think it was Nick Webb who said in a podcast that success in publishing science fiction is like winning a lottery ticket. Well, he didn’t like those odds, so he bought thousands of lottery tickets.

My second piece of advice sounds obvious, but often gets forgotten amid all the detail about marketing and so forth. There’s a huge amount of competition in hot publishing areas such as science fiction right now. When I say a huge amount, I mean there’s never been anything like it in the history of publishing. The inevitable result is that readers are becoming more and more discerning. You have to write great books! And it doesn’t matter whether a reviewer in a magazine or newspaper thinks your books are good, or whether an award jury likes you, it’s the readers that matter. If you haven’t yet attracted a large enough fanbase to sustain you commercially to write whatever you want, look for the authors who consistently have bestsellers on Amazon and figure out why they are so popular by reading them. Then channel some of that into your own books while adding your own distinctive twist. If you read the bestsellers and scratch your head because you can’t understand why so many readers would buy these books, then you’re probably trying to write a book for the wrong audience.

Probably.

But maybe not!

Because the final word of advice is that publishing is a chaotic, messy, and changing business, and there are always a handful of people who break all the ‘rules’ and succeed anyway. That could be you. But to use that metaphor from earlier, if you disregard the advice from successful authors you still get to buy your lottery ticket, but in your case you only get the one set of numbers.

 

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 If this convinced you to find out more, look Tim up here:

Amazon, website, Facebook

 

I hope you all had a great time getting to know Tim!  Don’t be afraid to say hello here or on his own website.  He’s always quick to respond when he’s not grinding away on his books and dealing with my craziness.

 

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 cover art owned by Human Legion Publications under licensed use for JR Handley.

Sleeping Legion Update

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Hello Space Cadets, I’m trying not to float away as I write this!  It’s finally here!!  The big day, the day I get to tell you about the release date of my first novel, The Legion Awakes!!  It will be the first in a series of military science fiction novels set in Tim C. Taylor’s Human Legion Universe.  This debut novel will be released on December 19th, 2016 amid much celebrating in the Handley Household.  Hey, if it goes well I might just buy back that family castle!  😉

 

To let you glimpse what you’d be buying, I thought about a quote from the book.  I wanted to give you a feel for my bad assed main character, Senior Veteran Sergeant Lance Scipio’s training style.  I hope you enjoy it.

 

“… Lance decided to take the beast by the horns and address the assistant squad leader, Cadet Sergeant Fitzgerald Wyckoff, directly. “Cadet Sergeant Wyckoff, is it true that Cadet Hayley Mason led the mutiny by herself? Think carefully before you answer my questions.”

Cadet Wyckoff jumped to attention, though less rigidly than Cadet Mason had, with a self-assured cockiness that told Lance he often tried to charm his way out of trouble. “That’s correct, Sarge, right on the money.”

Wyckoff never saw it coming, so confident was he that his charisma would save him. Without missing a beat, Lance pulled the Flenser pistol out of the holster on his thigh and shot Fitzgerald in the head. This abrupt execution caused a rippled gasp around the room, as 1st Squad finally had one reaction that was unified. Apparently that’s what it takes to get everyone’s attention?

 

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Hopefully this has sparked your interest, because it has been a rollercoaster journey of self-discovery for me.  If you do decide to buy it, please be kind and leave an honest and heartfelt review.

 

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 cover art owned by Human Legion Publications under licensed use for JR Handley.

Revenge Squad: Advance to Contact — The Human Legion

Hello Space Cadets, just wanted to pass on the latest news from the Human Legion trenches!  All of our books are on schedule for a Kindle release!  The paperbacks to follow as quickly after as boss man can type!  Finally, check out his site and the bad assed cover design!!!

 

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. 

 

After War, the first book in the new Revenge Squad series is out on Kindle pre-order now, and I can tell you it feels very exciting, and not a little nervous, to have this finally out in the world. You can pre-order from Amazon now, and they will post the book onto your devices on…

via Revenge Squad: Advance to Contact — The Human Legion

A Call to Action: Beta Reading

Hello Space Cadets, I bring you some important news from the field!  The Sleeping Legion is rousing… As I type these words, REVENGE SQUAD: After War, the first book in the forthcoming Revenge Squad series by Tim C. Taylor is due to be launched in about a month.  Is he nervous?  You bet!  Excited?  Oh, yes!  And if you join the Legion you can be a part!  As a Legionary, you can read the recon team edition today.

 

Tim would be very grateful for any Legionary Bulletin members who can spare the time to look over the recon edition.  The novel has been edited and proof read, but Tim has two particular concerns:

After War features a hero who is also something of a grumpy old soldier.  He claims personal experience in two of those conditions, but he hasn’t been a soldier so he may have written something that doesn’t sound right to someone with that background.

Donna the Editor and Tim are both English.  This means they wear powdered wigs, commute to work on a red bus, and only take off their bowler hats when bathing.  In full disclosure, I will quote Tim’s perfectly British attempt to defend his countries honor.

“Despite scurrilous rumors spread by JR Handley, it most definitely does not mean we drink warm beer.  Damn you, rest of the world!  British beer is served at cellar temperature, I tell you.  As God intended!”

All joking aside, they both worry that they might fail to spot something that seems off to their North American and Australian readers.

 

How to download After War: Recon Edition

The book is available in Kindle and ePUB format (the latter for Nooks, iBooks, Kobos and other devices). To distribute them I use a service called BookFunnel. You should be able to get the book loaded wherever you want by clicking or tapping the button. If you have trouble getting this book, just tap the Help Me link at the top of the book download page and BookFunnel’s friendly support team will help you get your book.

 

What does the Book Recon Team do?

 

Recon Team volunteers help by scouting ahead for hazards and highlighting dangers in a draft of a forthcoming book.  If you read a passage and it makes you whistle, curse, or throw your book (and the device you’re reading it on) across the room because something isn’t right, then I would like you to tell us about it.

 

What I’m asking volunteers to do is to read the Recon Edition as if you were reading any other book and make a note of anything that strikes you as wrong.  This could be characters acting in a way that doesn’t make sense, passages that are confusing or have spelling mistakes, sex scenes that make you cringe, combat scenes that don’t ring true, heathen Britishisms (that’s highly unlikely with me [JR Handley]), though Tim is confident that he will corrupted me at some point) or anything else that feels wrong.

 

We can’t promise to agree with or act on everything you tell us, but we do promise we’ll read and consider everything you bring to our attention.

 

How do I communicate what I’ve found?

 

This time we’re doing things a little differently, opening things up and turning it into a wider discussion.  If you have something you want to say, add a post to the BattleNet forum on humanlegion.com.  There’s a forum specifically for the Legion Awakes Recon Team, which you can find here.  Be aware that other members of the team may read and comment on what you say.

 

You will need to register for BattleNet first.  Instructions are in the forum itself.  It’s as quick and painless as I can make it, but should hopefully prevent endless posts telling us how we need more Viagra.  In fact, I’ve already managed to identify and ban some spambots trying to register, so it’s working so far.

 

To help us know which part of the book you’re referring to, it’s useful to do the following.

If you’re reading the Kindle edition, tell us the Kindle location (or give the chapter number if the comment is not specific to a line).

Please copy the first 3-4 words of the sentence (because the Kindle location is not enough by itself to know which line you’re referring to).

 

So if the opening paragraph started at Kindle location 80, and read something like this…

I always get the shakes before a drop. I’ve had the injections, of course, and hypnotic preparation, and it stands to reason that I can’t really be afraid.

 

…And you were of the opinion that injections and hypnosis didn’t sound futuristic enough and something really ought to be done to jazz them up, then you might put as your forum post:

 

Chapter1. Loc 80. [I’ve had the…] The med tech sounds too 1950s!

 

That’s all there is to it.  Remember that this is meant to be an enjoyable experience, so have fun and if there’s any danger of becoming onerous, then stop commenting.

 

BTW: if you can’t place that classic opening paragraph, there’s a short article on it here.

 

Recon Team Benefits

 

Many people have told me over the past few years how much they have enjoyed the sense of playing a part in creating a book.  We at Team Human Legion hope you do too.

 

Other than reading an advance copy before anyone else (and for free), and being able to chat about it directly with the author, there are a couple more little bonuses.

Everyone who comments will be named and thanked in the final edition.

Everyone who comments will join our pool of Redshirts.  The books in the Human Legion Universe get through a lot of characters, and most of them need names.  Where we can we’ll use names from our Redshirt list.  We might mangle your name a little if the story demands it, but you should recognize yourself.  Redshirts have a habit of not surviving for long, but despite the name not all Redshirts are doomed to a brief and bloody literary existence.  Who knows?  You might wind up doing duty as a romantic interest.  If you would rather not risk ending your literary alter-ego’s existence falling into a volcano or as a casualty when the pirates board your ship, then mention that in your BattleNet comment and you’ll be safely excluded from the Redshirts.

 

OK, I’m Sold. How do I get my book?

The book is available in Kindle and ePUB format (the latter for Nooks, iBooks, Kobos and other devices).

 

To distribute them I use a service called BookFunnel. You should be able to get the book loaded wherever you want by following the link on the next line. If you have trouble getting this book, just tap the Help Me link at the top of the book download page and BookFunnel’s friendly support team will help you get your book.

 

Here’s the link:  RECON EDITION: THE LEGION AWAKES

 

Thank you for your support. Now go read the book and have fun…

 

What next for Human Legion Books?

December 2016 will be a busy month.  All being well, we will release five books:

 

The Sleeping Legion

The Demons of Kor-Lir: carnage as a green Marine squad encounters a hidden foe. The eBook edition will initially be exclusively available to Legionaries.

The Legion Awakes: A Marine is awoken centuries after his time and has to turn around the worst squad in the regiment or die. Meanwhile, a civil war that will rip apart the galaxy is about to kick off…

Fortress Beta City: After Tranquility-4 is immolated in the civil war, the Hardit New Order reigns unchallenged under Supreme Commander Tawfiq… until a Human Legion task force under Colonel Nhlappo arrives to retrieve the Sleeping Legion. But there are more secrets buried under Tranquility’s soil than even Nhlappo and Tawfiq know…

 

Revenge Squad

After War: Retired onto a frontier planet and told he’s now a colonist, NJ McCall is lost in every sense when a filthy alien penetrates the perimeter of his farm. What happens next will change the world.

Hurt U Back: NJ McCall’s first assignment is to Port Zahir, and it does not start well. The Revenge Squad HQ is abandoned, its personnel assumed slaughtered. But NJ’s new family will not let him give up. Battling through dockside rivalries, revolutionary intrigue, police harassment, and an ex-fighter pilot turned bishop with an eye on his soul, NJ must face overwhelming odds if he is to deliver his revenge. The eBook edition will initially be exclusively available to Legionaries.

 

That should be plenty for one month.  We’re not idle though.  We will be back with more releases in 2017.  The next Sleeping Legion novel, Operation Breakout, is well underway.  The next Revenge Squad novel, Second Strike, has been outlined, and the opening scenes written of the final Human Legion novel, The Battle of Earth.  Deeper into 2017 will see more Sleeping Legion and Revenge Squad novels and exclusive content as part of the first Human Legion box set (which will be available on Kindle Unlimited, so anyone with a subscription can get it free).

 

Well, I’d say that’s about enough for one day!!  Hope it finds you well, especially going into the Thanksgiving Holidays!  But remember, when in doubt, drink more beer!

 

 

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 personally owned by the author of the Human Legion Universe.

Marine Monday: Legion-Leaks

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Hello Space Cadets, for today’s Marine Monday I wanted to take a moment to introduce you to the concept of Space Marines.  These definitions and rules of use come from a highly-classified document from the Human Legion Database given to me by a whistle blower.  Apparently, she believes that the garbage they call food qualifies as a violation of her rights.  The Rights of Sentient Creature’s Act of the 2nd Human Legion Council clearly protects the warfighters, and the garbage they’re fed should criminal.  As I sift through the Mega Terabytes of data, I’ll publish what I can squeak though the oversight software. 

 

For starters, the very term MARINE refers to both the soldiers and military organizations whose primary function is one or more of the following:

  • Close assault and boarding of space-faring vessels
  • Defense of space-faring vessels against close assault and boarding
  • Assault from space against the defended surface of a planet

 

The term is widely used to describe the relevant military forces of most political entities within the Trans-Species Union.  None have survived in the space beyond the Trans-Species Union territory, but presumably they call those forces Marines as well.  Since nobody has lived to tell us otherwise, you MUST presume that I am right! 

 

The original Earth term for the military meaning of marine (water-borne rather than space-borne military forces) is now referred to as ‘littoral marine’ or ‘seaborne marine’.  Referring to a member of such a unit as a ‘wet marine’ is a sure way to start a fight.  However, like any good soldier, I don’t mind knocking a few heads together so you’ll hear me using it.  Use it at your own risk, but you’ve been warned!  Again, the term Space Marine is never used by civilians or pansy Spacers.

 

The military term ‘marine’ is not capitalized in general use, although marine organizations will frequently capitalize when referring to themselves.  Since the accounts you are now reading are about the Human Legion, and its predecessor/rival, the Human Marine Corps, we capitalize as ‘Marine’ when referring to those organizations.  We, the authors of these leaked files, are ourselves Marines.  Whatever the grammatical niceties of proper nouns might demand, it is impossible for us to think of ourselves as anything other than Marines with an capital ‘M’.  To call us marines would be an insult.

 

 

And, we would argue, an insult to our ancestors, for we were not the first Marines by a long shot.

 

Seaborne marines were critical in ancient Earth history.  In the Battle of Salamis (-480CE) Greek marines played a crucial role in defeating the much larger Persian forces, helping to set the cultural underpinning of what would later be called Western Civilization.

 

A ship-boarding technology called the corvus enabled Roman marines to win naval supremacy in the Mediterranean Sea (around -250CE), ultimately meaning the Romans defeated their arch rivals the Carthaginians to become the dominant regional superpower for many centuries.

 

The next major innovation in seaborne marine forces came two thousand years later with the development of a much larger self-contained, combined-arms marine army that could fight wars almost unaided.  This was the United States Marine Corps, the slower sibling of the US Army.

 

It is widely speculated by modern-era Marines that the military units formed from human slaves following the Vancouver Accord were inspired by the US Marine Corps.  Others regard this as wishful thinking, pointing out that while the Human Marine Corps might draw inspiration from the fighting spirit of their US ancestors, the segregation and racism inherent to their command structure more closely follows the army of the British East India Company in the early 1800s CE.

 

Whatever the truth of that argument, we the Marines of the Human Legion acknowledge the rich heritage of our military ancestors from Earth, and indeed those from other planets.  We recognize their example and transcend them, because the Human Legion is not based in the past.  We have a single mission: to fight for a better future. A future for us all.

 

Freedom can be won.

 

Well, if you’ve enjoyed my relating to you this leaked slice of classified lunacy, be sure to follow this blog and stayed 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

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.

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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.

Introducing the Human Legion Universe

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Hello Space Cadets, today is my inaugural Marine Monday where I slowly introduce you to the world in which I’ll be writing in.  I stole the concept from Corey over at QuintessentialEditor, who does is weekly Wasteland Wednesday where he sells up his post-apocalyptic world!  Grab some popcorn with him, cause you’ll love the show!  Now, back to your newly scheduled program! 

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In honor of my first Marine Monday, I wanted to introduce you to my favorite world!  I was such a fan that I was invited to write in it!  If you’ve read any of my posts, you’ll know that I’ve mentioned that my first set of novels will be written in the Human Legion Universe.  This is a series of novels written by author Tim C. Taylor centering around the lives of post-Earth humans. Their ancestors were given away as children, in return for protection from outside alien incursions. By giving up a million 5-year old humans, whose descendants would be trained into the fighting arm of their new overlords, Earth would become a White Knight client state.  This relationship made Earth off limits to other species in the Trans-Species Union.  If you are looking to understand these excellent works, I’d summarize them as Starship Troopers meets Soldiers, the 1998 cult classic starring Kurt Russell.  The characters are raised/brainwashed from young kids to be nothing but killers, super soldiers, members of the Human Marine Corps.  This book ranges from small-scale rebellion through to epic space battles… from teenage infatuation to the tragedy of doomed love… and everywhere with dark conspiracies that threaten the existence of humanity, the Human Legion’s fight for freedom has been a hit with science fiction readers worldwide. In its first year, the series earned hundreds of five-star reviews, sold 70,000 copies, and hit the #1 bestseller spots for military science fiction and space opera in the US and elsewhere.  Since then the fandom has only grown! Find out more on Tim’s site and give it a go.  I highly recommend it!

 

Don’t believe me, try it out!  If this sounds interesting, and it should because it is awesome, then go get a copy for yourself!  You won’t regret it!

 

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

brown_bess

JR

PS: Tim has a short story available for free right now!  Check out The Meandering Mayhem of Thogron Throatbiter and enjoy an awesome ride!

The Meandering Mayhem of Thogron Throatbiter (a short story) by [Taylor, Tim C.]

–> The first image is the wholly owned work of Tim C. Taylor and any use of said image must be with permission.  He’s a reasonable chap, ask and he might work with ya!!  😉

–> The second image was a screen capture from Tim’s Human Legion webpage, used with his permission.

–> The last image is from Google’s “labeled for re-use” section of the Creative Commons.