I thought I might, for a change, use this week's post to talk about my writing. (That's a joke, son.*) The fact is that 've been talking about my current writing focus in a number of posts over the last several months - in connection with Chateau Clare and Passage to Jarpara. However, I thought I might as well pull all my thoughts together and set them down in one post. A manifesto, of sorts.
I should say at the top, that you should not expect to see any radical change in my style. What has been changing, over the last year or two, is the focus of my stories. This is largely due to that fact that I find that I want to write novels. Full stop. Not genre fiction. Rather, light fiction novels without the expectations of any particular genre. Just novels.
In the past, most of my novels could be described as either romances and/or adventure stories and marketed as either science fiction or fantast (or both), which is to say, genre fiction. What is changing is my emphasis on adventure. It's mostly gone. I consider an unpleasant situation in real life to be an adventure, but only when it is viewed as a pasted event. In stories, adventure is putting your poor characters into situations where there's a real danger of them getting killed. In my case, this often involved travel as well. I hate to travel, so it's also a "adventure" for me. Going forward, don't see myself crafting a story around extreme danger and travel. I won't absolutely rule out deadly danger, or travel, but it will not be an integral feature of my stories. In short, my days of writing adventure stories are likely over.
All my stories will continue to be set in the future, either on distant planets or far future Earth. In this respect they could be considered science fiction, or fantasy. I may list them in one of the fantasy categories, because fantasy outsells science fiction, but I will also list them on other categories as well. For example, The Girl on the Kerb has done very well as a espionage thriller. Lesson learned. Expand my potential readership.
I won't be listing them as SF because they don't fit the story mode of science fiction. Almost all of my SF stories feature societies that have an early 20th century vibe to them, since that is my favorite time period. Thus, even when I've set stories in the future, the stories are looking back, which makes them more akin to fantasy than to science fiction. That being the case, they're fantasy, low, mundane fantasy. But fantasy.
As for the setting, the future setting is just that - a setting, a backdrop, and a cheat that allows me to invent everything I want to, without having to do any research into the known past.
As I mentioned above, my stories have been, and will continue to be light fiction, with a bit of humor. I have nothing to say about humanity or the real world. My goal is to take myself, and my readers, to a different world for a while. Escapist literature. They will be as character focused as I can write them, with a first person narrator like every other novel of mine. They will likely feature a romance of some sort. I blame that on my early love of Edgar Rice Burroughs stories, which always had a romance element to them - John Carter & the incomparable Dejah Thoris, Tarzan and Jane.
They may well have a thread of mystery or little mysteries to solve, most of which will likely involve something science-fiction-y, since the worlds I set these stories on will either be a future Earth, or a world settled by Earth in the past. There may be some incidental danger. However the basic plot will be based on an unusual, but still commonplace, series of events, and the characters will be ordinary people facing this out-of-the-ordinary situation. That said, for the most part, they will be very much slice-of-mundane-life stories. Hopefully, the fact that they are set somewhere else, will add to their appeal. All of them going forward will be stand alone novels, though they may share a world or setting between them.
If you've read Chateau Clare, you've read a perfect example of my new (old) approach to novels. Both A Summer in Amber, and Some Day Days, where also very much in this mold, and so I feel that my current approach is more of a return to my original story telling concept, than a whole new approach. I think this approach offers me the flexibility to write a variety of stories. Indeed, I have several story ideas -Project 2026 & even Project 2027 - in mind. But at this point, they are still birds in the bush.
So to sum it up, Chateau Clare is the type of story I see myself writing in the future - a story with a bit of romance, a bit of mystery, maybe a little danger, all set in an early 20th century-era setting.
Stay tuned.
* Just in case you're not ancient and/or not an American, that's the tag line of an old cartoon character, a rooster named Foghorn Leghorn as in: This Clip However, from googling it, it seems that it was a phrase used widely prior to these cartoons.