Hopping Hiatus Batman!

batman_and_robin_tv_showPerhaps I should explain…

I’m not feeling well, and I’m a little loopy.

I need to take a little time off. In April I’ll be going to my first writer’s conference. I expect to learn a lot and make some great connections. My laptop is dying, and I need to reorganize my files when I switch to a new one. I have several WIPs started but I haven’t finished anything longer than 5k in months.

I’m going on hiatus in April. No interviews, no SciFi Q of the day posts, no regular stuff. I’ll post here and there when I feel like it, but nothing that requires much effort. I’ll probably do some redesigning of the blog too. Although I won’t stop writing, I’ll let myself jump around to whatever I feel like doing, and not worry about word counts.

In the meantime, I have two hops up for grabs…

The Liebster

I was nominated for the Liebster Award by The Imaginator (go check out his blog!).  The award is given to up and coming blogs with less than 200 followers; the person nominated needs to answer eleven questions and nominate eleven other bloggers, ask them eleven questions in turn and then comment on their blogs to let them know they’ve been nominated. (Silly questions like “Are you afraid of kayaks?”)

The Next Big Thing

Jenny Lyn tagged me for this one.

What is a blog hop? Basically, it’s a way for readers to discover authors new to them.  I hope you’ll find new-to-you authors whose works you enjoy.  On this stop on the blog hop, you’ll find a bit of information on me and one of my books and links to four other authors you can explore!

In this blog hop, I and my fellow authors, in their respective blogs, have answered ten questions about our book or work-in–progress (giving you a sneak peek).  We’ve also included some behind-the-scenes information about how and why we write what we write–the characters, inspirations, plotting and other choices we make. I hope you enjoy it!

You can see Jenny’s NBT post here.

Anybody up for it?

Let me know in the comments or e-mail me at USNessie on Gmail  if you’d like to be tagged in either or both. The Liebster is for blogs with fewer than 200 followers. The Next Big Thing is for fiction writers. Both are fun little ways to do a little self-promo and tell a bit about yourself and your work, as well as networking with others. I’ll need to know by Tuesday March 19.

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Being Professional

…and first, a word from our sponsor…

ROW80Logocopy…no, wait… first an update for #ROW80. Give me a break, it’s 1 AM and I’m discombobulated.

THIS WEEK… not so hot. I’d call it barely acceptable. But that leads into the topic of this week’s update about Being Professional. Read on if you want details, or consider due diligence done if you’re just popping by for a ROW.

Better yet… grab an extra oar and dig in!

So, this week had a couple of very good days of writing, and several days of little to nothing. This week had a couple of busy days with kids and hubby, and a couple days when I hardly saw my children at all. This week had a few great insights into how I can present a large amount of new material to my class (I teach MS Excel and MS Access) but not nearly enough time grading papers. For church, it’s been hit or miss. Mostly miss.

About being professional… to whom do I owe an excuse? As for my students, that’s a very professional relationship, and although I like to joke with them and be friendly, I strive to keep the relationship academically professional. Since I’m rarely late on handing back homework, I simply said “I’m sorry, this week I have a backlog,” and left it at that. For writing, I might not make the deadline for an anthology to which I’d like to submit. Fortunately I don’t have to explain that to anyone but myself, although hubby is also aware of this deadline.

I’m on a committee at church. I like these people and the good work we do together, and I believe it is right and good that I actively contribute to my church’s works. However I’ve missed the last two meetings, and I will also miss an upcoming event that is a major yearly endeavor for my committee. Church is an odd combination of professional and family… there are things I want (and should) keep private. There are things that I share in a general way, although only certain people get the details. In this case, since the chair of my committee is also a friend, I felt it was appropriate to share more of my situation with her.

With my family, they get brutal honesty. My daughters get to know (in an age-appropriate way) about my medical issues as well as the issues that surround them. They know when Mommy needs to stay home and get extra rest. I don’t explain this to my professional connections; if I need to miss an event or meeting, I will summarize as “I’m sick” and leave it at that. Unfortunately, some people interpret this as “I’ve got that bug that’s going around” which isn’t true. Even worse, they might assume I’m outright lying. Anyone who deals with an invisible illness can understand my plight.

We’re constantly struggling to explain to our younger daughter (5) why her big sister (14) acts the way she does. Our teenager has special needs. I could devote an entire blog to her, but I don’t. I often share an anecdote here or there about her life (This weekend she googled Justin Bieber and called a phone number she found, thinking it was him) but the grittier details are kept private. Any parent knows that their child can go through certain struggles, which puts greater demands on the parents’ time and energy. For a child with special needs, this is a regular occurrence, and involves not just the parents but an entire village of people who are involved in the child’s life. Sometimes the scrutiny is turned on the parents, which can be one of the most frustrating and infuriating parenting experiences to be had.

There’s a delicate balance in being professional between being honest and over-sharing. Women don’t say “Excuse me while I powder my nose” anymore when they need to use the restroom, but other euphemisms exist. Like when I say “I’m not feeling well” or “I’m sick” instead of describing the nasty things my body is actually doing. One of my most-used phrases is “My daughter exploded” which is a silly-sounding way to say that she did something or experienced something that requires a sudden influx of adult attention.

I’m painfully aware that someday I will have a publisher and/or agent imposing deadlines and expectations on me. I need to be able to meet their expectations and fulfill the commitments I make. My best strategy is to not overload, and always plan to be done early just in case something comes up. Just as in a job application where you have to answer “Do you have any physical or mental disability that would prevent you from doing this job?” I need to be able to honestly say “I can do this.”

Even knowing that something will always come up.

If you’re an author, how do you communicate to your publisher or agent when some life-situation prevents you from finishing on time?

Posted in ROW80, Writing | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments

SciFi Q of the Day: Sparkly Rainbow Unicorns

Rainbow mist unicornSciFi Question of the Day: Your publisher insists on using this image as a cover photo, yet they have specified SciFi not Fantasy.
What do you write a story about?

(Credit to 35millipead on Flickr with a Creative Commons license.)

Facebook Answers:

Cameron Garriepy A young girl with the power to manipulate water…. who just happens to like rainbows and unicorns?

Cameron Garriepy I should clarify that she lives in our world, with all of its rules, and that the story is about the potential scientific and technological possibilities she represents.

Bernard Hildebrand The Sink Hole

Cameron Garriepy Not that I’m thinking about it, or anything….

Daren R. Dochterman On a dangerous mission to a rogue comet, astronauts begging seeing strange hallucinations.

Geri Bressler Any publisher looking to put sparkly unicorns on the cover of a sci-fi story should be beaten soundly and sent to bed with weak tea and no sugar.

AmyBeth Fredricksen No! Not… WEAK TEA!

Geri Bressler It’s harsh, I know, but there must be consequences when sparkly unicorns are involved!

Perry Willis A story about the aftermath of a global war with the unicorn being part of the remains of an amusement park carousel, or aftermath of alien invasion?

Oblio Leitch Wait, seriously? “Here’s a picture I want for the cover of a book. I don’t care what the story’s about.”

Stephonie K Williams The unicorn would by symbolic. IE: in MoL there’s a lot of unicorn symbolism. A family crest, a tapestry depicting one thing but actually telling a completely different story.

Glenn E. Smith A publishing company filled with editors and executives who have all been replaced by malfunctioning androids.

    •  

AmyBeth Fredricksen Oblio: not seriously. But I’m getting some really fun answers lol!

Google Plus Answers, Public Post:

  •   Charles Moore

    Unicorns are intelligent aliens sent to Earth in the 1100s or thereabouts to Destroy mankind before we invent gunpowder and start on the long road to self-destruction at the hands of nuclear mutual destruction.

    It would camp so damn hard.

      Brittany Constable

    Malfuncitoning holodeck.

      John Hauxwell

    Don’t have the problem. Imagine I’d be a bit miffed though.

    Good luck sorting!

      Brian Rush

    Exploring a cave on another planet and finding a number of human-cultural artifacts like that wonderful lifelike sculpture of a unicorn. Where did that come from? Who left it there? (And will they want to add the explorers to the collection in preserved form?)

      Mince Walsh

    In the future with “cut and splice” DNA pets, some people prefer Unicorns as pets, to ride etc. Some were created as ‘workhorses’ in harsh environments since DNA splicing is ever so much cheaper than using scarce metallic resources for building robots.

      Rich Garner

    A dream machine that allows a sleeper to actively merge thoughts and memories into a custom experience. But a long term side effect of using it is the eventual erasure of the line between conscience thought and imaginative thinking. A pair of dream doctors must track down all users of the prototype device in order to find a cure before they also succumb to their past usage.

      Samuel Falvo II

    The unicorn could be a statue sculpted from a very rare, and highly precious, metal alloy.  Recently, it was stolen from its museum, and all you know from sensor logs and ship manifests is that the perp retreated into an asteroid field, and is either hiding, or apparently settled into one of the asteroids.  This field is known to contain several Genesis Project-like terra-reformations of asteroids (as many asteroids are, in fact, dwarf planets), which narrows your search for the perp considerably, but there are still so manyasteroids to search through!  And the reduced gravity of a drawf planet makes moving such an otherwise heavy item very easy and very fast.

    Will you find the statue before it’s sold to the highest bidder on the black market, never to be seen again?  Or will you become the next target for a terra-former?

      Lason Strike

    Aliens on Earth seeking a new publisher.

      Joanna Staebler-Kimmel

    discovering an alien whose species is the origin of the unicorn myth, while mining on another planet.

    Google Plus Answers, Science Fiction Community:

    This unicorn is trying to beam back up to his ship but the powerful rainbow ray is preventing this.  Whoever put the green stuff on the rocks is responsible.  But why?

      Kevin Murray

    A quirky multi-millionaire hires genetic engineers to ‘assemble’ living replicas of his favorite mythological creatures.

    What was unexpected was the results of said tampering; perhaps the pure, innocent looking unicorns, through quirk of expressed genes, are violently aggressive, territorial, and breed like rats.

    A cross between science fiction and fantasy:  Researchers attempting to create teleportation technology instead create a rift into another Earth where their laws of science have little hold, but magic and such creatures are commonplace.  Enter evil corporation, which attempts to make money (lots of money) off this new world, strangling it and its ecology, which is much more fragile than it seems.

      Ergodic Mage

    Hunting Unicorns

    Google Plus Answers, Sci-Fi Community:

    A vr world which is so immersive that children lose the ability to interact. A race against time to break the programming which as you dig deeper seems to come from alien sources and finally reprogramming the ai into a dystopic vision where children have to cooperate to survive, all against the back drop of falling populations

    an invasion of shapeshifters from planet unicorn.

    Looks like a crazy event horizon scene to me. I’ve been wondering what’s in that black hole.

    So you get cover, genre and you’re supposed to write a book? That’s how is it going?

    Galactic zoo.  Saving soon-to-be extinct animals from their own planets.

    Ummm…  I write the story, they provide the art.  *NOT* the other way around..  Because I swear to god if I have to write about unicorns…  I will pan it on this theme.  (smirking evilly)

    Howzabout a future hallucinogenic drug/pollen/contaminant affecting general populace/ship’s crew/domed city? Pick the combination of your choosing!

    Cyborg horses networked together in a fashion requiring a rather prominent antenna protruding from their foreheads.

    …I’m not a writer, but isn’t this is where one starts looking for a new publisher?
     :-/
    E

    xploring an alien planet, and this is what they find when an explorer beaks through ground.

      Dan Thompson

    I write a first contact novel where the undersea aliens misinterpret us as gods.

    I don’t know but the unicorn is robotic.

      Dan Martin  +Dan Thompson 

    Nice plot! When you say undersea aliens, do you mean alien to the surface world, or extra-terrestrial?

      

    the quick death of a Publisher?

      Javier Chiappa

    Captured by security cameras,the last picture of a live unicorn, hiding in the water chamber of the launch pad. Milliseconds later a G class Centaurus Rocket ignited it’s 5 engines and nobody saw it again.

    I meant extra-terrestrial, as in we settle down to start colonizing a world and discover a sentient stone-age society beneath the waves.  My reason for it (from the cover) was that the colors were so muddy and soft, and the light from above so volumetric and flickery, that I saw it as an underwater scene, with the light coming down from the surface.  I did not really recognize the unicorn at first.  It seemed to be a trick of the light more than any physical object.However, I will say that I’m currently editing an urban fantasy novel which is set in the near future (so a touch of SF), in which there are ready-made gateways to other worlds, including one with unicorns.  It turns that unicorn blood has magical healing properties, so after the initial capture of breeding stock, we’ve been breeding/raising them on the Earth-side where they are sentient but without magical powers.  Then, when sufficiently grown, they are transported back, and slaughtered for their blood.  It’s a very modern, technological exploitation of magic, but kept in the background where people don’t talk about it at polite parties.  They just share the good news that Maria’s cancer was cured by the “unicorn treatment”.  So, while this particular cover wouldn’t work for my novel, I could probably do something with that unicorn thread as more central.

      Steve Hardt

    The horn-like space parasite that infects its host (the horse) by rocketing down from its spaceship (offscreen above, emitting a visible engine glow downwards) and spearing its way through the forehead (horse is rearing from being speared in the forehead).

    Looks like Blade Runner 2.
    Far in the future, a exploratory vessel arrives on Europa to push past its icy crust and explore the now-confirmed ocean beneath it. Sonar reveals massive underground mountain ranges and networks of caves; an ancient race of horned (the horn serves as a second “mouth” by which to filter nutrients) amphibious creatures – vaguely equine like, but scaly – lives, undisturbed, deep within a raised landscape within those caves.  Having lived without the presence of another species for the whole of their existence, the appearance of humans leads to unexpected consequences.
    That’s a fascinating and very original concept! There’s a thousand directions you can go with it!My book is titled Beyond Centaurus. If you’re interested, you can read about it at https://plus.google.com/u/0/b/109264016555805037177/109264016555805037177/about

That is the + page I set up for it.

  Levent Taskan

Genetically engineered unicorns.

Google Plus Answers, Speculative Fiction Writers Community:

The story is about an equine race on another planet. Aliens make it scifi. 😉
  

It’s about a dying race of corporate book publishers that can only exist in a virtual world of fantastical marketplaces, where they rule with a iron fist, and dole out subsistence level wages to authors, even as their influence in the real world declines dramatically.
  

Two alien races have an epic battle on the surface of one of Jupiter’s moon’s. Both armies pull out leaving behind their dead armies and a lone surviving unicorn mount, who discovers a a grand underground civilization.

hen in doubt, add robots.

SciFi Q of the Day plus comment

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The Trajectory of Dreams: Guest Post by Nicole Wolverton

Nicole 01When you’re writing a mentally ill woman who isn’t above a little murder if it suits her purposes, there’s a chance people are going to think you’re a little nuts yourself. Let’s face it, there’s a very real compulsion to assume there are some biographical details hidden in a novel. Who didn’t believe, on some level, that Fight Club was real, some elaborate marketing scheme Chuck Palahniuk cooked up to advertise extreme MMA fighting or something? I won’t lie—I kept expecting Fight Club franchises to start springing up.

When you read THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS, I wonder where you might see me in the novel. I don’t have a mental disorder, nor am I interested in killing anyone. However, Lela White, the main character in the book, does like books.  She reads a lot, and she likes learning. I admit that those traits are mine. I read a lot, and I tend to stockpile information on the off-chance that someone drags me off to the set of Jeopardy. Because you never know when that’ll happen, right? Right?

There’s one other place you can find me in THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS: I have a big yellow cat. Of course, mine is named Mayor McCheese, not Nike, and the Mayor doesn’t blink at me in Morse Code. Well, that I know of, anyway. Believe me, if the Major suddenly starts to communicate, everyone is going to know about it. I’ll take him on The Today Show or Good Morning America. We’ll tour the morning show circuit, then all those nighttime entertainment shows. What would he say? I don’t know. But hopefully he wouldn’t tell me his name is really Nike and then try to convince me to break into anyone’s house to observe sleep patterns.

Now that you’re worrying for my sanity, I’m sure you’ll be dying to trust me with your manuscript—for this stop of THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS virtual tour, I’m giving away a two-chapter manuscript critique. Maybe the Mayor will sit with me to read it and offer suggestions of his own. I’m kidding! About the Mayor, not the giveaway. All you have to do to win is enter below!

Nicole 02Publishers Weekly calls THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS (Bitingduck Press, ISBN 9781938463440) a “skillful mainstream examination of a psychotic woman’s final descent into insanity.” The novel exposes the chaotic inner life of Lela White, a sleep lab technician and mentally ill insomniac who believes she has been tasked with protecting the safety of the revitalized U.S. space shuttle program. She breaks into the homes of astronauts to watch them sleep, and she is prepared to kill to keep those with sleep problems from the shuttle launch. Her delicate grasp on reality becomes more tenuous when annoying co-worker Trina Shook insists on moving into her house and visiting Russian cosmonaut Zory Korchagin inserts himself into Lela’s life. Korchagin’s increasing interest puts her carefully-constructed world at risk of an explosion as surely as he does his own upcoming launch. Lela’s tragic childhood unfolds throughout the novel, revealing the beginnings of her illness and long-buried secrets, and as Lela’s universe unravels, no one is safe. Buy a copy of THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS at your local independent bookshop, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or anywhere books are sold.

Goodreads | LibraryThing | Shelfari

Nicole headshotTHE AUTHOR: Nicole Wolverton fears many things, chief amongst them that something lurks in the dark. From ghosts to stalkers, her adult and young adult fiction plays on the mundane and not-so-mundane things that frighten us all. THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS is her debut novel. She is a freelance writer and editor and lives in the Philadelphia area with her husband, dog, and two cats.

MORE STOPS ON THE BOOK TOUR FOR THE TRAJECTORY OF DREAMS=MORE CHANCES TO WIN!

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A Story About Sex

ROW80LogocopyFirst, my ROW80 update, because it is a huge pet peeve of mine to click on someone’s link-up just to find a long rambling post about lettuce or something and the ROW80 update is an afterthought at the end, or worse, buried somewhere in the middle.

So, I’ll give my summary first, then if you feel like reading about sex, scroll right on down!

I was derailed not just once, but several times this week. There was supposed to be more writing happening since I have a project with a deadline. Fortunately, it’s one of those deadlines that, if missed, no one knows. If I submit my story on time, great! If not, no one cares but me. But instead, I had several days with no writing at all, and every time it was something very important that came up, and unfortunately writing time is usually the first thing that has to go.

Today is better. I didn’t let the derailment stop me forever. I might not make the deadline, but at least I’m writing again.

On the bright side, I have both my conference registration and plane tickets for the PPW Conference in April!

And now, the sex.

Why write a story about sex? The more prudish in society would say that sex should be banned from all storytelling, just like we never hear about how the characters in a story use the bathroom. It’s vulgar and unnecessary.

Yet the sexual revolution of the 1960’s did accomplish something, including allowing society to think of sex as not just titillation, but a natural, beautiful function that all humans share.

Most writers I’ve interviewed say that they don’t necessarily have rules about how steamy their sex scenes are. It is a good idea to write whatever is necessary for the characters and their relationship in any given story. However, if you know that your intended audience must be PG13, those scenes by necessity must be toned down. If you know your audience is expecting erotica (the call for submissions I’m answering specifies erotica) then the story needs to be pretty darn hot.

The BIG mistake is to think you can write the same story and simply apply the appropriate heat level. Have you ever seen a sanitized episode of Sex and the City? It simply doesn’t work. The characters’ sex lives are integral to the story’s plot and the character’s arc.

Say you’re writing a story about a young man’s rise to success as he inherits his grandfather’s failing business and turns it around. Or perhaps you’re telling the story of a man with a passion for walking the beach with a metal detector who one day finds something of great personal significance. Or you could tell a story about a boy who has his first sexual experience at a rather tender age, and then he shuns physical intimacy until well into adulthood.

These three stories could all be about the same person, taking place at the same time. Although both the business story and the beach combing story may include a mention of the man’s sex life (or lack thereof) it’s not integral to the plot and can be avoided altogether. However the story of a boy who experienced intercourse before he was emotionally mature enough definitely must include at least a couple of sex scenes.

FT final coverMy story In the Closet in the anthology Felt Tips tells about a woman who is expecting sex to be part of her anniversary celebration, but something intervenes. (The story also involves a voyeuristic AI, but I won’t get any more spoilerish than that!)

Precipice-Cover-FinalThe story isn’t about the woman’s job or her role as a mother or wife or daughter or best friend. The sex in the story is absolutely necessary to the plot. The story is about sex, it doesn’t simply include sex.

My story Abandon in the anthology Precipice does not include any steamy sex, but it does mention how the character feels about having her breasts handled by a tattoo artist. Although there is no sex scene in the story, the main character’s identity as a sexual being is explored.

coverWhen I wrote To the Earth and Back and Point of View, I knew my audience was adult, however the expectation was that the stories be family-safe. The magazine is called Get LF8d (read that as Get Elevated) and is put out by the Liftport group, who is working to further the technology necessary to build a space elevator. This is primarily a scientific magazine. A titillating story would be inappropriate.

Note: the first issue of the magazine is available as a free download.

So why write about sex? Human sexuality is necessary and basic to our self-identity. What better story could be told?

OK. Sometimes the sex is just for titillation. Especially in 80’s Rock!

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SciFi Q of the Day: Planetary Land-Grab

barsoomSciFi Question of the Day: If a political or corporate entity made it to Mars and established a foothold there, how much of a “land grab” should they or could they do? What happens when the next, unrelated group comes?

Facebook Answers:

  Perry Willis No country or company should be able to claim a planet. I would think what they could claim would be what they can develop or at worst bet to the visible horizon.  

  William J. Teegarden Depends on how big their guns are, and how many they’ve got!  

Google Plus Answers, Space Colonization Community:

 

As ever, I come at it from the perspective of trying to limit conflict.

That said, we are not trying to create a “Law of Space Treaty” that would work to that goal. The only treaties we have consist of draconian restrictions combined with a collective claim to the whole of space by the United Nations in the name of “all humanity”.

That certainly doesn’t bode well for keeping conflict to a minimum.

I think it is vital to create a liberal treaty that recognizes a zone of sovereignty around any permanently inhabited place without imposing an ideological driven socio-political systems upon them. The recognition of zones of sovereignty work to alleviate conflict while the imposition of ideology ensures it.

So start with a recognition of sovereignty that doesn’t impose ideology. This goes back to the Westphalian Peace that put forward three key principles:

1)The fundamental right of political self determination.
2)Equality before international law for the sovereign states.
3)A state can’t interfere in the internal affairs of other states.

I would also suggest a Declarative basis for the recognition of a sovereign state with the simple criteria of:
1) a defined territory
2) a permanent population
3) a government
4) a capacity to enter into relations with other states.

Now we come to defining that territory. Despite the ideological and active interference through much of the “Law of the Sea Treaty”, it does work for a starting point for discussing territorial rights when establishing sovereign states in space.

The focus is on the extension of territory and territorial influence into oceans and seas. This actually has a better fit with space stations so that:

1)Territorial Space is a 22 km radius sphere around the station.
2) Exclusive Economic Zones is a 370 km radius sphere.

For surface territorial limits, I would swap those so that:

1)Territory Area encompasses a 370 km radius circle
2)Exclusive Economic Zone is an additional 22 km beyond that.

Those are just transposing the numbers that were found agreeable to signatory states here on earth and is of course open to debate as to whether they should be greater or lesser. I would suggest simplifying and extending to 50km and 500km would be a good incentive and equitable… but a good argument could be made for 10km and 100km as being plenty for any colony just starting out and would make it more difficult to claim huge areas by placing a few guys in bare habitats every 1000 kilometres.

Google Plus Answers, Speculative Fiction Writers Community:

Lets assume that despite any agreements made here, that the corporation or government in question would basically cheat. They would grab more then they were meant to, they would fight others off their claimed turf etc. The deciding factor then would be a measure of their fire power up there, and there sway on the media down here. If they had high amounts of both, they could do whatever they liked.

They would claim as much territory as they could reasonably hold on to and protect. They would also not likely claim territory that was of little use to them, except to insure access to other resources.

There was a roleplaying game called Jovian Chronicles that had a good treatment of a Mars divided between two governments.

Even if it stayed peaceful, i.e. avoided the dreaded land war on Mars, there are plenty of other ways to wrest parcels of land away.  Think about the traditions of squatters rights, the homestead principle, eminent domain.  When our ray gun isn’t handy, we can always fall back on lawyers.

If the Martain colonist are not yet self-sufficient, and are in need of Earth-made supplies and personnel, I think that a land-grab by a government/corporation is entirely likely and reasonable.

When Martains become self sufficient, and no longer need the specialized goods from Earth, they will simply ignore Earth political structures and in turn create their own. A corporation could claim a tract of land at that point, but they couldn’t enforce their claim unless the locals allowed it.

Water rights

Google Plus Answers, SciFi Community:

he who occupies Barsoom, controls Barsoom.
what ever land they control, use is theirs. they don’t own the planet just cause are the first boots on the surface.

Not sure about mars, but i do believe there’s a law the united nations passed that prevents any nation from claiming land on the moon.

On mars it would be a mixed nationality crew…the most likely situation is that they choose to reject all earth nations to form their own.

I’ve heard that about the UN and the moon… I’d really like to find some reliable reference so I get the facts right if I include it in a story.

Treaty of Outer Space 1967, Article 2. Of course, that is just an international treaty, so like most, of only binds those who sign it, and sometimes countries back out. Then there’s the whole — what can the UN do about it? Or what if it’s a corp? Or non-signatory country?
As for land grabs, depends on what they’re doing and finding. Some handy mining to be done? Get while the gettings good!

They will form New Australia!

First off, any group of people in a local space could be considered a political or corporate entity. If they exist in a place where no other country or corp. has authority, they are the authority. This process will repeat until it would become to expensive to go to the next empty rock. But, as a historical comparison, I think Hawaii is a worthy study in how an independently run ‘nation’ could be annexed by another country.

I see the Mars colony starting as a scientific research post where families come along for the ride. Four generations later, the colony firmly has it’s own cultural identity. The scarcity of resources coupled with the harsh environment breeds a much higher than Earth normal level of fascism in the Martian government. In response to economic sanctions over the execution of Martian criminals and unemployable civilians, the the colony revolts and humanity’s first inter-planetary war begins … but no land grab, not on Mars.

Mars Trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson is an interesting perspective on this, even if it is just Sci-Fi.

Looking at it from a practical perspective, it’d depend on how hard it is to replicate, and how supply dependent they are. If they need regular supplies from Earth, you’ve got a jugular target. If they’re the only ones who know how to run the atmospheric control, you have to bargain with them.

I suppose the same international agreements concerning the moon would be precedent, though who knows!

If it became an issue the lawyers and lawmakers would become involved. If something has value then they would all want a slice.

A slice of planet… yummy

The most interesting part is the discussion of geosynchronous orbit slots, and this is current events not future speculation.

I would imagine that some sort of homesteader’s program would be possible, provided that they could create or exploit existing incentives to leave Earth.

In regards to the second question, isn’t the answer always violence?

Google Plus Answers, Science Fiction Community:

Personally, I think such an entity would be entitled to the land they could reasonably maintain with the force sent to claim it.  Half a dozen scientists, for example, could probably maintain a few hectares of land, while a larger exploratory group could maintain something the size of a small state.  Anything beyond that should remain unclaimed until such time as it can be explored/mapped/maintained.

Unless the company involved is Disney.  Because Disneyplanet willeventually happen.

If humans are involved the next event would be war.

I think corporate ownership of landmasses is a bad idea. Governments at least have to pretend they care and serve the citizens that live on the land. Corporations on the other hand wants to extract and exploit as much profit as possible without inciting outrage. The extreme distance between Earth and Mars allows corporations away from critical eyes to get away with a lot dubious decisions.

The moon can’t be owned by anyone, perhaps we need to check the status of Mars before answering this question.

+Gustavo Campanelli What will the UN do if China or Shell squats the moon? Nuke them?

The Moon status (as the Antartica one) are valid for all solar system if I recall correctly my international law studies, years away from now.

When the next goup arrives, it will be a question of the “Have’s” and “Have Not’s”, especially if corperate greed is involved on Mars.  Coorperations are rarely magnanimous and if they “own” a planet they will try to weed out what they deem is unacceptable.  I just hope that there are Martians underground who will reject earthlings and not make the mistake native Americans made when euopeans came over in massive numbers.  Hey, you asked the question.  Ha, ha!

Google Plus Answers, Public Post:

As much as they can hold and defend.

Nobody would recognize their claim.  If Mars had something to offer anyone a war would ensue.

There really are no rules which could be enforced from Earth. It would be like the messy colonization of North America all over again. Yes, that would involve wars.

If it was corporate, the country of origin would assume the whole thing was theirs, until they were called upon to defend or aid it.  Then there’d be so much arguing back here on Earth, it’d be a moot point.
you’re going old school conquistador here… the question is not how much land they can grab or keep. the question is how much land can they keep from taking away by others. and this means both warfare skills and Poison-Pill techniques…
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Interview with Kimberly Gould

kimmydon2shrunk

Oldest of three girls, raised in a small city surrounded by family, Kimberly was well acquainted with her imagination and started writing novellas in High School. She took a break while attending University, but returned to it soon after the birth of her daughter late in 2006. She has been married for 12 years, a mother for 5 and a published author for 1. She is looking forward to her future releases and new ideas.

Links:
Twitter – @kimmydonn
Facebook: http://facebook.com/Kimmydonn and http://facebook.com/cargonbooks/
Website: http://kimmydonn.com
Amazon listing:
http://www.amazon.com/Cargon-Honour-Privilege-Kimberly-Gould/dp/1937273008/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1339862022&sr=8-1&keywords=Cargon

Kimmydon Cargon_Book_Cover1.       What was your path to publication?

I submitted Cargon to over forty agencies and publishers before Jennifer Barry suggested this new company, Martin Sisters Publishing. She told me they had experience in publishing and were looking to set out on their own. I gave them a shot and I was their first release. 🙂

2.       Will Cargon be a trilogy?

Yes. I’ve started work on the third installment  And I think it will have a happy ending! (My original plotting, it wasn’t looking good).

3.       How much writing did you do before being published?

I used to write voraciously in high school and college. By the time I finished University, though, I was pretty burnt. Rather than start writing again on my own, I started in FanFiction. After 500 000 words using other people’s characters, I figured I was ready to take on my own.

4.       Have you always considered yourself to be a writer, or was there a time in your life when you decided that is what you were?

I was always a writer, though I never considered pursuing it as a career. Throughout school, anytime I was allowed to branch into fiction, I went wild. I wrote my first novella and novel in Grades 10 and 12. Well… I didn’t finish the novel, and when I reread it last…it’s scary. It’s going to stay safe in the binder. I am looking at writing as a career now, but as an associative career. I love my job as an environmental consultant, so even if I did break out tomorrow and got big 6 contracts, I’d probably still work with my boss in the summers. I might go down to only one or two days in the winters, though.

5.       Do you have a blog? How do you use it?

I don’t really. I had one for a while and never managed to hit on a theme. I thought I had one at the beginning of this year, but so far, I’ve only written one ‘fear’ post. I’m not doing a whole lot better. That said, my website does allow me to announce upcoming events, releases, conventions, etc. I use it like a blog, but don’t feel I need to update weekly like a blog. I probably should, but I just don’t find ME that interesting and therefore have trouble doing it. Like I said, I had an idea for a theme, but that hasn’t had better traction. I’m a fiction writer. I’d rather spend that twenty minutes working on a new chapter than writing a blog post.

6.       What social media do you use? Do you combine your personal and professional or keep them separate?

I used to be very active on Twitter, but I’ve fallen away. My facebook page is primarily personal, a way for keeping in touch with my family. I have an author fan page and a Cargon fan page where I post reviews and releases, but neither are widely followed. My email all comes into the same inbox, but I have a work address I try to use (and usually fail at) so yes, I combine.

7.       How important is plausible science when writing Science Fiction?

It is the biggest challenge for me. I am constantly running things past my techie husband. “Do you think this would make sense? Could you do this after three hundred years?” etc. If it’s not plausible, it quickly becomes fantasy. I love fantasy, so sometimes I just jump that way. For Cargon, though, I wanted it to be a very realistic future. Although we don’t know WHY there is no power and technology, we can understand that it happened and how long they’ve gone without it. I think it gives the story strength.

8.       How does your day job as an Environmental Consultant influence your writing?

It gives me lots of writing time! Sadly, my direct experiences in oil sands working with native plants are a little too specific for good fiction. That said, I do have one project in a folder about a tar sand monster. So, that would be a direct influence! Usually, though, it’s just a really flexible position that involves hours of travel time. Perfect for plotting and some writing.

Kimmydon Thickness-of-Blood-front-cover-192x3009.       Do you like experimenting with different genres?

Love it! I will never settle on one genre. My ideas come from all backgrounds, all types, all areas. I also like combining or falling between genres. Cargon is SciFi/Fantasy. It’s speculative, but with the dark age setting, it feels like an old-style fantasy, just without the magic. Thickness of Blood, my literary fiction, is contemporary historical. What do you call something set in the 70s?

10.   What is your favorite electronic or digital writing tool?

I like open office. What I really love is dropbox. If I’m stuck somewhere for a couple of hours I still have all my WIP and in open format, I can open them almost anywhere.

11.   What is your favorite non-electronic writing tool?

I always have a small notebook in my purse. The current one was a birthday present with a purple cover.

12.   What is the most persistent distraction from writing?

Flash games. Stupid flash games. I’ll find a new app for my phone and be obsessed for a while. Or a new tower defense will catch my eye on Kongregate and I’ll have to play it to oblivion. I stay away from Kongregate and try to ignore my husband when he talks about this great new game.

13.   What kind of promotion do you do for your books?

Tough one. I am trying to do High School and Junior High School readings. I had a couple early on that went really well and since then I’ve gotten in a bit of a glut. I have had the fortune of being invited to some local author book sales and readings. None of them made huge sales, but I got to talk to lots of people.

14.   What’s on your virtual shelf?

The Submission from D.F. Krieger and Lichgate from S.M. Boyce. There are some other erotic pieces on my Kobo as well.

15.   What’s on your real shelf?

I just got Gangstaland from Ansha Kotyk in the mail and my daughter and I are reading Water of Possibilities.

16.   What is your editing/rewrite process?

I write my first draft generally chronologically, I let that sit for a month or two, then go back for a first rewrite. After that, I start looking for beta or pre-readers with several rounds of edits between each (minimum three these days). After that I send it to my publisher. The third Cargon book is not coming chronologically. I’m just writing the scenes that are coming and trying to fill in the gaps after. I’m not sure how well it will work, but I’ve already hit several stumps trying to go in order.

17.   Do you use beta readers or a critique group?

I use beta-readers. I’ve never found a critique group that I have managed to hold onto for more than a few weeks. I think they don’t like me. 😦

18.   What kind of images do you share on Picspiration?

I love kids. If you got a picture with a little cutie in a diaper, it was probably mine. I look for interesting scenery, action sometimes. All sorts. Last time I went diving, I found a mass of pictures of seniors. That was fun. I’m not very consistent at all.

19.   Why are Canadians so nice when Canada is so cold?

Because we have to stick together to stay warm!

20.   Who shot first, Han or Greedo?

Han. Come on, Greedo was a chump.

KimmyDon Cargon Duty and Sacrifice FINAL front COVER 1-14-13Excerpt from Cargon: Duty and Sacrifice

After class, Eve was approached again, by the same Prince offering her a seat twice before. He was older than most in the class, probably nearly finished. She was worried. The Ernst wouldn’t be calling him away now. His family? His friends? Someone would be looking for him, calling him.

“So, Server girl. You have a suitor, and an innovative one. I can’t argue with his choice anyway. You are a tasty morsel. I am Prince Louis, and this has to be the worst class. I must wonder who would send you to a class like this?”

“Leave her be, Louis. Let’s eat,” a Princess called from the doorway. Eve kept her eyes down.

“I’m coming.” The Prince leaned into her face for a moment, his lips level with her eyes. Eve held her breath until he turned. She sank to her knees in relief. She had been so close to looking up, so close to retorting to his taunts. It had taken all of her ingrained, practised subservience to resist. She rose slowly and shakily.

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H. E. Double Hockey-Sticks

Space Elevator from Charles Radley

From Charles Radley at Liftport Group

Some months ago I had a conversation with Michael Laine and some of the other great minds at the Liftport Group about just how far from the equator a space elevator could be. I was surprised when I found out that, although the equator is an ideal, wavering many kilometers out the way is perfectly feasible.

“It will look like a hockey stick…” Michael explained. The ribbon dangling from anchoring mass out in geosynchronous orbit would still point directly at the equator, but if someone on the ground took hold of the end and simply pulled in in one direction or another, then the tail of the ribbon would just bend in that direction.

Like a hockey stick.

I’m been writing stories set on the moon, about 150 years in the future. You can find the first of these in Liftport’s new magazine, Get LF8D (Read that as “Get Elevated.” Free download!) To give myself flexibility as a writer, especially doing short stories, I decided that the moon would have several elevators (some newer than others) and about a dozen cities.

I think the moon should have a couple of hockey sticks. Why? Well, it’s certainly not practical, but from a writer’s point of view it lets me tell the hockey-stick story (demonstrating some real science, always appreciated in good Science Fiction) and it would simply be awesome to tell stories about a place called H. E. Double Hockey Sticks.

Now, for the plausibility part. I’ve decided that the story requires two elevators on the moon, near each other, but not on the equator.

Why two? That’s easy… one dedicated up and the other dedicated down.

Why not on the equator? That’s more difficult.

Here are some possibilities.

  1. The moon’s equator actually is made of green cheese, making it a very poor place to build anything.
  2. The engineer’s horoscope indicated the off-equator location would be good feng-shui.
  3. Some con man painted a line in the lunar soil and put up a sign saying “This is the equator.”  The engineer’s boss decided to cut costs by not actually surveying to locate the equator for themselves, and instead decided to trust the big red line in the gravel.
  4. The site is close to a prime center for H3 mining, and it was more cost-effective to let the elevator bend a bit as opposed to shipping the goods across the surface to an equatorial elevator.
  5. After the first couple of elevators were built, the lunar government created some rather unreasonable laws regarding any structure or facility built on the equator, and the hockey-stick engineer got around all those laws by building away from the equator.

Now… I need to ask my friends another question. Or, you can answer it here if you know…

Up close on the ground, the elevator ribbon looks like it’s going up at an angle.

Far far away, it just looks like a straight line.

If the base of the hockey-sticks is one hundred kilometers from the equator, at what distance would a human looking at the ribbons say “Hey, that looks like a hockey stick!” ?

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End of February

ROW80LogocopyHmm… methinks this is going to be a boring update. I’m pretty much the same as last week: Yes, meeting my goals thanks to writing more short stories, but not working on novels right now.

I also need to spend some time doing some writerly-housework, such as changing some things on the blog and cleaning out the files on my laptop. But part of me rebels every time I start to do that, because I say “You should be writing!”

Well, gee, time to put on my big girl panties and decide how much time to spend on each and just get it done.

What writing-related tasks (besides actually writing/revising/outlining) do you need to make yourself do?

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SciFi Q of the Day: Lunar Chickens

Galiña_GDFL61SciFi Question of the Day: Given a nice, comfy, climate-controlled space on the moon, would chickens be able to fly? What about penguins? Any hope for penguins?

Facebook Answers:

  Iris Mansi and ostritches?  

  Pony Horton Assuming you’re in a pressurized atmosphere, and the air pressure is similar to that of Earth at sea level, then yes it’s possible a chicken could maintain flight in the moon’s 1/6 gravity.  Penguins, not likely.  

  Perry Willis What Pony said.  

  Perry Willis Rather watch Kangaroos jumping on the moon.  

  Katherine Fixer Noel By all that is holy, I thought turkeys could fly!  

  Pony Horton Oh the humanity!!!  The turkeys are hitting the ground like sacks of wet cement!  

  William J. Teegarden I got news for you urban types: turkeys fly just fine in the wild.  

  Pony Horton Them flyin’ kind are wild turkeys. The farmed kind who waddle around the barnyard getting fat for Thanksgiving don’t fly so good.  

  AmyBeth Fredricksen …but they do fry just fine…  

  Pony Horton It’s not ‘Flied Lice,’ it’s ‘Fried Rice!’  You plick!!!  

  Anthony Falvo http://www.tv.com/shows/wkrp-in-cincinnati/turkeys-away-18540/

WKRP in Cincinnati: Turkeys Away  www.tv.com  Watch WKRP in Cincinnati – Season 1, Episode 7 – Turkeys Away  

  Box O’ Munchkins I Remember that one!  

  Box O’ Munchkins Chickens tend to fly as is Falling with a parachute… some breeds (and I’ve only had the dual purpose or the egg laying breeds) can fly up high enough to roost for the night… (which they prefer) But they don’t really “fly”  

Google Plus Answers: Lunar Science Community

 

  William Mims  My chickens have been able to fly when given nice comfy spaces on Earth… sustained moments of ponderous lift, six to nine feet, with time to make 480° vector corrections before falling in an arc from zenith like a thrown brick… short swoops like an imbalanced discus, or a frisbee tethered to an invisible anchor.  

OK, so maybe it is just falling with style.I would imagine that second generation chickens on Luna would indeed be able to make larger flight arcs, and even more graceful course corrections… though they wouldn’t likely look any less silly in mid arc.  

Roosts could probably be higher, as much as two or three times higher than normal for the breed.Penguins I wouldn’t hold my breath in anticipation for… they would probably still be clumsier than a chicken jumping into the grand canyon…  

no grace in the style, falling with pathetic terror.  

  AmyBeth Inverness  LMVAO!Oh, the poor penguins… 

Google Plus Answers: Public Post  

  Usama Saqib  Wouldn’t artificial gravity prevent that from happening?  

  Brian Rush  Depends on how big the space is, I would imagine. Also on whether the birds are smart enough to figure it out (a dubious prospect with chickens). Penguins use a flight-like motion when swimming, so I don’t see why they couldn’t.  

  Paul Vincent  Chickens would be able to fly comfortably in lunar gravity. Penguins – not sure. Question there is: Would they try to fly?  

  Nathan V  I say no. They’d be able to sustain freefall for longer, but they wouldn’t be able to actually fly.  

  James Drury

I think they would Jump like the matrix

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