Category Archives: creativity

Steampunk

My friend Richard Harland is riding a wave of success with his YA steampunk, Worldshaker.

There is something very alluring about steampunk.

Long before I’d ever heard of the term, I was a fan of books from this era. I read Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer to my children. Dickens was a staple of my own childhood and Sir Author Connan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes was one of my comfort reads. Another of my favourites is the satirist, Saki. I read his Sredni Vashtar in my early twenties and never forgot it.

Jules Verne, HG Wells, Mary Shelley and Bram Stoker were all writing steampunk back before the term was coined. For movies which set out deliberately to mine this genre, think Wild Wild West, The League of Extraordinary gentlemen, the Prestige and Sherlock Holmes.

For a list of contemporary writers who have dabbled in this genre look here. I think Mervyn Peake’s Gormenghast could be added to this list. His setting and characters were very steampunk.

Here’s an article on ‘The Victoria Steam Exposition … a celebration of a growing subculture called steampunk — which unites Victorian era esthetics and futuristic inventions with modern literature and fashion.’

There is even a steampunk magazine, for those of us who can’t get enough of the genre.

So what is the allure of steampunk?

For those of you interested in writing steampunk, Richard has done a post about it here.

I could not resist this steampunk dalek!

Has steampunk caught you unawares? Have you been reading it, without realising that it was a subgenre, like me?

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Filed under creativity, Fantasy books, Fun Stuff, Genre, The Writing Fraternity

Writers lead exciting lives!

What I’m NOT doing today is lying on my back in a sunny field watching the clouds go by.

What I am doing is checking the page proofs for book one of King Rolen’s Kin.

I suppose I could be cleaning the stove …

No, honestly, I’m happy to spend the day checking the page proofs. There is something very satisfying about polishing your work and the closer the book comes to publication, the more satisfying (and scary) that is.

I had a nightmare the other night. I dreamed the book had come out and a reviewer gave it a scathing review. They said it was derivative. Then they pointed out all these things that were derivative and I was thinking how did I not see this? And feeling awful!

In the light of day I know the book is not derivative. Sure it is a traditional fantasy so it plays with themes that are familiar to all of us, but it is also quirky and fun because the characters are what drive the plot forward, which makes it a satisfying read. I hope.

I’m guessing every writer quakes in their boots when their book is about to be published.  Here’s hoping King Rolen’s Kin is a Keeper. What books do you consider Keepers?

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Filed under creativity, Fun Stuff, Nourish the Writer, Writing craft

Currently watching ….

Mad Men Series 3

First let me say, I always buy the whole series of a TV show and watch it in batches of 3 or 4 episodes at a time because I’m interested in the story arc and character development.

I keep watching this show because it is like a time capsule. As I sit there watching Betty, heavily pregnant, smoke and drink blissfully unaware of the damage she’s doing I think, what a nice piece of writing/directing.

Someone complained when the first season came out that there were no black people in it or, if there were, they had subservient roles. (A few  black people have turned up since). This isn’t a story about the emancipation of the blacks in the US in the 60s. It is a story about the advertising world of Madison Avenue and it would be anachronistic to show a black man working in advertising with Don Draper. (If someone can prove me wrong, I’m happy to be corrected).  The way women and blacks  are treated in the show is accurate for the time.

And that’s what I find fascinating. Betty and Don Draper could be my mother and father. Not that they drank, smoked and had affairs, but the limitations of their life choices were the same. My mother had three career options, teacher, nurse or secretary. And women were expected to stop work when they got married.  The clothes, the cars and the furniture are all from the period when I was a very small child. So, for me, this show is a trip down nostaglia lane.

Watching Salvatore try to hide he fact that he’s gay, watching copy writer Peggy battle to have her abilities recognised, watching head secretary Joan be passed over when she could run the place, watching house wife Betty’s quiet desperation as she describes herself as a pampered ‘house cat’ makes me very relieved that I don’t live in the 1960s.

But I do feel the show would be a little stronger, if it veered one step closer to social commentary. There is so much material to work with. What do you think?

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Filed under Characterisation, creativity, Fun Stuff, Story Arc, Writing craft

Comfort Reads and Movies

I’ve just spent the last week so sick I couldn’t think straight, couldn’t even read. So I retreated to the couch and switched on the TV to watch Lord of the Rings, the extended version. The nice thing about this is that I’ve seen it so many times it doesn’t matter if I doze off.

In fact my favourite part is the beginning, set in the Shire. I could watch this over and over. I indulge myself with daydreams about building a hobbit hole of my own and running away from it all to live a simpler life. Consoling myself with the thought that, if I did build a hobbit hole it would be environmentally friendly!

What are you comfort reads and movies?

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Filed under creativity, Nourish the Writer

Life gets in the way

by Hhen

Let me think, what would I rather be doing? Writing or working? That’s a tough one …

The last month has been full-on.  I went back to work, three days a week teaching. There are mountains of assignments for me to mark. We decided to sell our house after 20 years. There are mountains of belongings for me to sort, sell, give-away or keep.  The housework with a large family never stops. And, with a trilogy due out this year, there are three books for me to edit. I’m in the middle of the edits of the third book right now.

Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy teaching and I quite like the idea of moving. Getting rid of things is like a breath of fresh air. I don’t love housework,  I’m not that perverse.  I really love writing. Immersing myself in a story just sweeps me away. And it has been a real pleasure to work with my editor, Jonthan Oliver from Solaris.

Which brings me back to what I would really rather be doing and that is writing. Does anyone else find that life gets in the way of what they really want to do?

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Filed under creativity, Nourish the Writer