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Archive for the ‘AASB’ Category

Atomic Inspiration

Posted by mgnann on February 19, 2010

Currently, I’m in the middle of a book titled Uranium, by Tom Zoellner. I can’t remember where I first heard about it, but after I did, I set out to the bookstore to pick it up. Unfortunately, they only had a hardback and the inside cover flap contained the wallet-punching: U.S. $26.95. With the price of books not being the issue here, let me just say I wasn’t able to pay that. So when I found it in the bargain bin at Borders for THREE DOLLARS, I snatched that bad boy up.

A little further than halfway, so far it has been a really interesting read. Since the 1200’s, the rock known as uranium has been at the center of a widening gyre of scientific breakthrough, technology inspired advancement in political power, and greed induced mining. Looking at this, it seems naturally allegorical to compare the way uranium wildly casts off particles in an effort to achieve rest (this instability being the source of radiation and the basic principle behind the atomic bomb) with the history of mankind attempting to harness uranium in order to achieve peace and wealth—yet invariably creating mostly destruction, corruption, and war.

Woah, sorry! I didn’t mean to get all back-cover book review on you. It is just a subject I really find interesting. How thematically rich is a story about an esoteric stone that contains the potential for life changing transmutations? That is modern day alchemy, folks.

Related is a book that I read within the past year, Tuxedo Park, by Jennet Conant. This book is about the private scientific labs of Alfred Loomis, where much of the research that went into creating the atomic bombs dropped on Japan were derived from. It covers much more than that, but what drew me to it was the advancements of technology that came during that time.

The history of science is a theme I’ve explored in many of my own stories. Another is the way war forces mankind to evolve. Most recently this occurs in As Above, So Below, and there are elements of duality in this next story, Traces, as well.

Some of my deepest inspiration comes from reading non-fiction like these two books. This passage in Uranium, where Zoellner quotes the wife of a scientist regarding the local Zuni Indians hired to do construction at Los Alamos, really gets my creative juices going:

“There they were, the oldest peoples of America, conservative, unchanged, barely touched by our industrial civilization, working on a project with an object so radical that it would be hailed as initiating a new age.”

To wrap it all up, there is just a ying and yang about this subject that really pushes my creative buttons. The connections between the past and the future contain an endless amount of possibilities; literary, scientifically, and politically. Even while I sit here finishing this blog post, I see Vice President Biden speaking about increasing spending to insure the U.S.’s aged nuclear arsenal remains ready and capable, with an ultimate goal of reducing these weapons around the world, and I am reminded of another quote contained in Zoellner’s work. This one is from Winston Churchill, whom the bomb detonated over Nagasaki and nicknamed Fat Man, was possibly named after:

“If you go on with this nuclear arms race, all you are going to do is make the rubble bounce.”

So have a good Friday, and remember, watch out for blinding flashes of light in the sky!

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New Projects

Posted by mgnann on February 2, 2010

In an effort to spend more of my life looking at at screens, I’ve got some new projects I’m going to be blogging about.

Since finishing the tentatively titled, As Above, So Below, I have mostly been working to identify and edit some of the things I know are flawed with it. The number one thing on that list is the magic system, which was a huge mess on my part. That happened because I didn’t know what I wanted it to be, so it wound up being a lot of different things. There were also a few scenes that needed to die, as well as some that I wanted to give life to. That stuff is done now. I’m awaiting some reader feedback and then I’ll probably do a thorough rewrite and evaluate again after that. I don’t think I will stop tweaking it until I figure out how to get published, but until then I want to give priority to a few other efforts.

One is this blog. I’ve added a portal page that is dedicated to As Above, So Below and put a bunch of cool stuff there. There are maps, excerpts, and encyclopedic pages for places and characters– all stuff that deals with the first book.

Second is the novella I’ve been puttering around with. Similarly to the way I did with AASB, I’m going to start posting my thoughts on finishing that up. Third and furthest out is the second book in the AASB trilogy, and another full length, unrelated novel that I am going to start brainstorming for. I am not sure which of these I am going to begin writing first, but I will be talking about them both here.

I hope that by expanding this blog to include other things, that I won’t hit the lulls that I did trying to make it focus solely on a single project.

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First Draft: Completed.

Posted by mgnann on August 17, 2009

“The first draft of anything is shit.” – Ernest Hemingway.

I finished writing my first draft about a couple of weeks ago. Looking back at it, I would have to say I don’t completely agree with my favorite author up there–I don’t think it is all shit, but I do believe there is a lot cluttering the real story. Reading back over it can be painful at points. About 10 pages will probably disappear by just deleting unnecessary adverbs, another 20 will go when I edit out all the overly descriptive, leisurely construed, exercising-the-typing-fingers sentences with confusing structures that contain little information, and lots of commas.

Thanks go to my proofreaders for putting up with that.

The hardest part was definitely keeping up with the information that I created. Not just plot, but each character’s history, what is happening, what needs to be said, what has been said, and what needs to be hinted at but saved for later. It is hard keeping up with all of them. The easiest part for me was the dialogue. I think I successfully found each character’s voice and did a good job with conversations between them. I should write a story that is nothing but dialogue.

That makes me think of a Hemingway story right there. If you never have, you should read Hills Like White Elephants.

Another thing I think I did well was world-building. This is certainly a result of working on this project for a number of years, giving me plenty of time to create a rich history. This book only delves into a small part of the overall history and culture of the Taros/Eskra world. I do have a short outline for a second and third book that continues to reveal the rest of the world’s story, but that will come much later.

What I don’t think I did well was create a clear, interesting magic system. The magic system I have in mind is not what I communicated on the page. I tried, but it came out funky and clunky. That will be the most major source of revamping when I write the second draft of this book.

Now I need to let some people read what I have and give me some feedback. My mind has been in the Taros/Eskra world too long for me to see things clearly anymore. So I’m going to put it down. I have two other stories I want to work on. While my readers go over my first draft I am going to work on these other ideas. I’ll probably post some stuff here about those as well, shaping this blog into more of a complete writer’s blog instead of centering around one single idea.

There is still a lot of work to be done (I have no ideas for a title, I’m terrible at titles) but I feel a huge weight taken off my shoulders for finally getting the first draft written. It’s taken years, but I feel like they were years well spent. A lot of people say they want to write a book, but they never finish–if they ever start. I’m really proud of what I have done, even if it does still need a good bit of polish and shine.

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For Blogging’s Sake!

Posted by mgnann on June 18, 2009

I haven’t been doing a lot of blogging because I have been actually writing. Also, I have a hard time deciding what to say here. So this is a random collection of thoughts as I wrote today.

  • I both love and hate describing settings. Stopping myself from trying to write a whole page describing a doorway and the room behind it is hard. Sometimes I have a heck of a time deciding what is descriptive and what is superfluous. Most of the the time when I’m reading a book, unless the author just lets me picture the scene myself, I can’t get what they are saying anyway, but for some reason when I’m writing I want to describe every single detail.
  • The two characters I am working on right now are in the biggest city they have ever set foot in. A common scene, you know it. Small town farm children find themselves swept into the greatest city in their realm and they are blown away by the vastness of it’s sprawling horizons. I feel like I’ve seen this in hundreds of movies and read it in lot’s of books, but it is a bitch for me to write. Do I describe the layout of the roads? Does Reader need to know that? Do they care? I have maps I’ve sketched out, I could show you.
  • I’ve been  looking for other authors who blog about the progress of their work, but haven’t found anything I really enjoy reading. Most of it is more about their life as a writer. Maybe I don’t like people. Maybe this type of blog is not engaging.
  • Siblings in the city. Cerra is getting caught up in her plot. This is a really fun part. It took me a while to figure out how to write it, but I like what is going down now. Concentrating on one character at a time is easier, write all their stuff and then sort out what goes where.
  • I think I have about 50k new words left to write. Then some splicing and I should be done. End of June is looking good.
  • Cerra and Alyandra chapters are fun. Theirs is probably my second favorite plot line, with Kabladan’s being first. They are also some of the easiest characters to write. One is a main character, the girl Cerra from Paxon. The other is a noble member in Taris. I’ve been really excited to have the two of them meet for a while, their personalities were made for each other.
  • Have trouble writing about this sect of minor charaters that play a important background role called Sha’shin. (Means assassin, okay?) They have one of the longest histories of all the peoples in the book and drive a major plot element, but for some reason I cannot get them to pop, sizzle, smolder. The seem very flat, even though I have given them multiple devices to work with (What are those mystical tattoos? Why are their eyes yellow?) The elements are there, but the Sha’shin will be a major player in any revised drafts.
  • Trying not to rush things is hard. I know there will still need to be a re-read and a final editing before I call this thing completed, but my epic first draft is almost complete and, goddamn it, I am glad.

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A Few Words on the Prologue

Posted by mgnann on April 7, 2009

I’ve got a new page up. Titled, Prologue, it’s pretty self explanatory, but I do want to give some insight on it.

Ideas for a prologue  have been bouncing around my head for a while now. The current first chapter has gone back and forth from being a prologue to it’s place now, Chapter 1. Who knows where it will end up. I wrote this one because I am doing a lot of work outlining the end, preparing to write the book’s conclusion. And I know, I know, I keep saying, “I’m writing the end!”,  but it is continually more work than I expect.

Because the end is very derivative of the actions that take place in this new prologue,  I needed to know what happened before the story.  So I gathered up the few notes I had about The Time Before and jotted a quick outline. Since Bayon Vothginga and the Flush have been plot devices  hosted in my mind for a long time, I had an idea about the events that I wanted to occur, but as always, once the writing starts, new ideas find their way in.

The story in the prologue takes place a few hundred years or so before the rest of the book ( I haven’t quite figured out the time line to my own story), and I’m a little conflicted about how much I like it. It rushes quite a bit. Seriously, the whole thing could be turned into a short story of it’s own. But once I started fleshing it out for my own purpose, I realized it was a really informative piece. As someone who hasn’t read the complete work, you can’t know how much information is dropped in that seven page prologue.

I think once the book is complete, readers will love going back to this prologue, whether it makes it past the final cut or not, because it is chock full of name drops, foreshadowing, and set up. In my omniscient view of the story, it’s a really fun read. I think it will become a serious gem for anyone who gets a look at it before the book comes out.

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Archetypical Characters

Posted by mgnann on March 23, 2009

Over the past few days I’ve been revising a section near the middle part of the book, three or four chapters in which the character’s personal goals become more wrapped up in the overarching storyline.

The setting is a small trade town that has been taken over by Kabladan’s armies in order to confiscate any trade goods that would be moving to the capital city, Taris. It is the first destination of our two main characters, the knight and the woman, the former who was beseeched by the latter to serve as a guide to get her there.

When I originally wrote this part I knew there were some scenes that did not quite flow the way I wanted them to. The town itself was kind of bland and the side characters popped in and out with no explanation as to who they were or where they came from. I’ve tightened much of that up, added some backstory that will help make these secondary characters more understandable, and interjected some color into a setting that was pretty much black and white.

Overall, I think these 3-4 chapters are  some of the most exciting and action packed sections yet written. So much begins to happen, secrets revealed, fight scenes, information about the invading armies.  My only hope now is that it isn’t too much information for the reader, but I don’t think it will be. Rather I expect these few chapters to be a crux of the book, a sort of turning point where the story begins to open up and show more of the world and it’s history.

Also, two new main characters are introduced for the first time. Which makes our company complete!

One more thing. If you look at the post so creatively entitled, The Book, which now is it’s own page, A Simulacrum, you can see a mention of the six characters I am working with. All are common archetypes found in literature; the warrior, the mysterious woman, the wanderer, etc. Intimate symbols like these are easily recognized by readers and grant them the ability to hitch a ride with a comfortable vehicle that will carry them through unfamiliar terrain.

I’m resisting the urge to turn this into a disquisition about archetypes and unconscious persona’s, so if you’re into that kind of thing and want to learn more about it, and how it relates to characters in literature, religion, myth, and legend, then I highly recommend Joseph Campbell’s The Hero with a Thousand Faces.

Coming up, I plan to do some posts devoted to each of my main characters. I’m not sure exactly what the content will be, perhaps narrative flashbacks by each, or excerpts that show them in action. Something that will set up their identity without spoiling the story. If anyone has any ideas or opinions on what they would like to hear about, drop me a comment.

Until then, adios!

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gnosistic memes

Posted by mgnann on October 7, 2008

Gnosis is a Greek word that translates as “knowledge”, but means something more like, “enlightenment”. Historically, Gnosticism as a belief system is debatable to date, depending on interpretations of when an abstract idea becomes tradition or school of thought.

“It is nearer the truth to say that Gnosticism expresses a specific religious experience, an experience that does not lend itself to the language of theology or philosophy, but which is instead closely affinitized to, and expresses itself through, the medium of myth. Indeed, one finds that most Gnostic scriptures take the forms of myths. The term “myth” should not here be taken to mean “stories that are not true”, but rather, that the truths embodied in these myths are of a different order from the dogmas of theology or the statements of philosophy.” [1]

…the truths embodied in these myths. While I do not subscribe to any religion, I think this phrase explains the worth I see in them. I wanted to carry over the same type of view into my own story. It is a myth and there are memes of thought within it that explain my views in much the same way a religious text could.

Gnosticism as a religion probably sprung up in conquered cities and lands as an attempt to reconcile contradictory ideas where the ruling religion was made dominant over the lesser, more local beliefs. Being an amalgamation of various schools of thought it allows for many interpretations, and as explained above, the scriptures written were intended to be vessels for eternal memes. It sheds the weight of theology and instead concentrates on the truths of higher realms and presences.

To look at this in a more secular light; even science is guided by intuition. Current quantum physics is now so far advanced that some of our theories cannot be tested with the available technology. But that doesn’t stop scientists who are confident that they are getting closer than ever to outlining a universal theory of everything. Science is on the brink of better understanding things such as the Big Bang, dark fields of matter, and hidden dimensions within string theory, mostly by using our skills of reason and logic and building upon rules that we can know and test.

I wanted to incorporate some of these patterns of reality into my own story. The magic system in my book is based along the lines of gnosis. Like any good religion, the story behind Gnosticism is chocked full of good themes, characters, plot lines and areas of contemplation. So I stole some of them and used them in the flexible way they are presented to tell a story.

Here is a very rough synopsis of Gnostic myth. If this doesn’t sound like the plot to a science fiction story then I don’t know what does:

The Highest God emanated into numerous lesser gods called Aeons, who were created in male/female pairs. Together, the Aeons made up the entire pleroma of the Divine First. But when one Aeon named Sophia emanated without her male counterpart, the Demiurge was born. The Demiurge then went on to create a world in his image, either ignorant of or in spite of the Monad. That world that was created is the physical world that we live in and know. Some of us humans have the ability to connect with the larger spiritual world through the internal knowledge we have left over from the original first move. These gifted ones are able to transcend the physical and have direct contact with the spiritual, resulting in a reconnection with the Monad and a state of enlightenment.

The Gnostics were fond of saying, “faith is for the many, knowledge is for the few”. What they didn’t mean was that knowledge was to be withheld from the populous (remember the uppermost definition of what gnosis meant to the Greeks), but that that most of the populous would never be capable of true transcendence.

Again, I carry this idea over into my own story and make this divine intuition my “magic”. It is not available to all, and purports to give an air of mystery and power granted by gods. Perfect fantasy stuff.

Later on I want to look at some of the similarities between Gnosticism and other religions. Also look at it within the realms of science and general quantum theories so as to give a little more insight on how these same memes of eternal truth cross over into other parts of our knowledge and understanding of the world. Perhaps be more specific as to how some of these themes cross over and take root in my own tale.

If you want a more thorough description on the Gnostic world view, I suggest you go here or just go here and keep reading.

[1] The Gnosis Archive

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the book

Posted by mgnann on September 25, 2008

“Which, if not victory, is yet revenge.”  – John Milton. Paradise Lost.

The story revolves around Stoker Kabladan, a man who brings a military campaign across the world. With him comes an esoteric power, harnessed by his own armies but spreading rampantly through the people and territory he conquers.

In Kabladan’s wake of ash and blood there are thousands who desire revenge. Our story follows five who will–by either chance or fate –come together and find themselves involved in something much more grand than their desire for bloody closure.

A soldier who values his religion and country above all else. A small town school teacher who is learning from her newly instilled power. A young brother and sister, who have had everything familiar taken from them. And a wanderer with too much understanding to ignore what is happening in his world.

These companions are not in a quest for glory, they only seek retribution. However in the end, they will have to question their creeds and motivations as they confront Kabladan’s intentions, and learn the truths of a time dangerously erased from history, forgotten to the populous, but about to be reborn.

Posted in AASB, Selections & Excerpts, Writing | 1 Comment »