Introduction: In Which an Old Dog Learns a New Trick
This is the first of fifteen posts
dealing with surprising things I learned in the course of writing a science
fiction series.
I write (and I'm published) in nearly every genre of fiction you
can imagine. Science fiction horror is my favorite genre to read, and I'd always
wanted to write in that genre. Though I'd written mild horror and many
speculative fiction titles, science fiction was new for me before I decided to
embark on what felt like an epic quest when I started the Arrow of Time
Chronicles. At that time, I'd been published author for more than 20 years, and
this old dog was about to learn quite a few new tricks.
A timeless universal truth:
A timeless universal
truth: No simple solutions, no easy answers, and nothing is ever
free…
Long before I actually had any specific
ideas about potential science fiction plotlines, I was talking to my son and
husband about wanting to write something like Star Trek and having my Clumsy Girl Zoë Rossdale (of
Clumsy Girl's Guide to Falling in Love and Clumsy Girl's Guide to Having a Baby) onboard the spaceship. My
son, especially, thought it was brilliant and encouraged me to make it happen.
Fast-forward
a few years and finally I'm getting ideas for a science fiction series. The premise I started with was a sci-fi saga set not too far
in the future when mankind has finally begun traveling the stars, mainly in
desperate and dire need of finding new homes for the population stranded on
Earth following the Great Catastrophe (basically, Climate Change reaching the
critical point). What if Humans built orbital habitations for their people not
only in their own planet and moon's lagrange points (you can do a search for
what these are if you need to) but also in the L-points of other planets and
moons all over the galaxy? In the course of constructing these space dwellings
suitable for Humans, what if one of the moons and planets they build above is
in a nuclear winter and there are actually survivors down on the planet below?
What if there are others originally from the planet who'd achieved space travel
before the war that destroyed their planet and these hostile Napoleonic aliens return
to their homeworld to find Humans "squatting" in their territory?
That catalyst is what led me to writing
this series, but another thing that compelled me was the idea of having
cultures (what I call the alien races populating my series) spread across the
galaxy that, genetically, are so similar, it begs a billion scientific, cosmological,
and theological questions.
The
horror angle I wanted to develop in this series turned much milder than I intended
in the form of phantom energy--an unconscious force of dark energy--dominating
and "expanding" like a space-eating tumor throughout the universe.
Eventually, its rapid destruction spreads everywhere and threatens all life in
the galaxy.
In case you're wondering, yes, my
Clumsy Girl Zoë's descendant, Astoria "Tori", is on board the Aero spaceship, klutzing it up in the
most endearing way!
Before I started writing my Arrow of
Time Chronicles, I believed science fiction had to be the most complicated
genre imaginable. Not only do you as an author have to create all types of
characters, but most of the time they're part of an alien race that hails from
a different part of the galaxy altogether. World building becomes *universe*
building. Gulp! And technology…wow, where do I even start? It's no wonder a lot
of sci-fi authors are scientists (Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, Fred Hoyle)
'cause, frankly, who else can really understand all these things? Intimidation
galore!
Of all genres, I think science fiction
also has the most opinionated authors. I tease a bit here, but seriously I
don't believe in placing too many regulations on writers. If an author can get
something to work in a story, then who cares about some long-standing rule that
says no, you cannot do that here? How
many other genres are you told from the get-go that, as a writer, you
absolutely should not dare to change something that's been as established the cardinal rule? Additionally, you're
also told that all your science and tech better be legit…despite that…{clearing
throat here} you're writing **fiction**.
While I was writing my Arrow of Time
Chronicles over about 2, 2 1/2 years, I found out in the process of learning
everything I could and in some ways teaching myself how to go about the process
of understanding the mechanics of writing in this genre that science fiction
was definitely the most complicated
genre imaginable. There was so much to absorb, so much to construct, so many
ways to go wrong and have it all fall apart.
After I was done writing my sci-fi
series, I felt a whole kaleidoscope of emotions about writing science fiction:
Triumph, relief, awe, sorrow, complete and utter exhaustion. And, my conclusion
was, yeah, science fiction is the most complicated genre imaginable--hands
down! There is simply no comparison. Even mysteries, police procedurals, and
action-adventures were a walk in the park compared to this genre. I learned so
much in the course of writing my sci-fi series. Before I ever started writing
Arrow of Time Chronicles, I read every book I could get my hands on about how
to write in this genre. Yet I was left with quite a few curve balls that I
couldn't have foreseen. I knew I had to overcome these things if I had any hope
of accomplishing this epic undertaking that promised to bring about my magnum
opus.
The posts in this long series coming to Alien Romances blog are
the basis for my writer's manual titled Writing the Overarching Series
(or How I Sent a Clumsy Girl into Outer Space),
which will be included in my 3D Fiction Fundamentals Collection. In the posts that follow in this series
over the next three months, I'll go over the surprises I had in the course of
writing my first science fiction series, including the following topics:
·
Of the Overarching Series and Its'
Connection to Speculative Fiction
- · Surprise #1: Of Not Having to Reinvent
the Wheel For Everything
·
Of Research and Developmental Tool
Requirements, Part 1: Surprise #2: Research
Overwhelm
·
Of Research and Developmental Tool
Requirements, Part 2: Surprise #3: Development
Tool Underwhelm
·
Surprise #4: Of Deliberately Limiting Story Potential Development
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 1: Story Arcs
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 2: Series Arcs
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 3: Establishing a Series Arc Early in the Writing Process
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 4: Establishing Story Arcs Early in the Writing Process
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 5: Surprise #5--Why Standalone Series Stories May Be
Impossible in the Sci-Fi Genre
·
Of Arcs
and Standalones, Part 6: Cliffhangers and Conclusions
·
Of Lessons Learned
·
Of Rewards Earned
·
In Which
a Clumsy Girl Goes into Outer Space
Happy writing!
Writing the Overarching Series (or How I Sent
a Clumsy Girl into Outer Space): 3D Fiction Fundamentals Collection by Karen S. Wiesner
(release date TBA)
https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/writing-reference-titles.html
http://www.writers-exchange.com/3d-fiction-fundamentals-series/
Karen Wiesner is an award-winning,
multi-genre author of over 140 titles and 16 series, including the romantic science fiction series,
ARROW OF TIME CHRONICLES
https://www.writers-exchange.com/arrow-of-time-chronicles/
https://karenwiesner.weebly.com/arrow-of-time-chronicles.html
http://www.facebook.com/KarenWiesnerAuthor