I'm tagging Polenth Blake, over at Polenth's Nothing.
The deal is, I answer ten questions about a work in progress. I'm going to talk about Triple Junction, which is the first book proper in the series Martin's War. Those of you who have read Broken Slate know that's a prequel to this series.
1.What is the working title of your next book?
Triple Junction – it’s a geological term, traditionally meaning
a place where three divergent boundaries meet (like an ocean, a ridge, and a
continental plate); but more loosely now means any three boundaries. Generally
they’re unstable and lead to change. Here – obviously – I’m being all
metaphorical.
2.Where did the idea come from
for the book?
I’ve been working on this idea awhile. It’s my successful
slave revolt/successful revolution story.
The main impetus was C. L. R. James’ The Black Jacobins, which details
(wonderfully) the Haitian revolution. I’m writing a five-book far-future SF
series, which follows the events of a successful rebellion and revolution about
the contract labor on the planet Julian.
3.What genre does your book fall
under?
Definitely space opera.
4.What actors would you choose to
play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
I’m terrible at this.
Not only do I watch almost no TV and very few movies, but I can’t
remember faces or names. Someone talented, I guess. And since my main characters are mostly POC,
I’d want them not to be white-washed.
5.What is the one-sentence
synopsis of your book?
On a far-future settlement planet, Martin Eduardo battles an abusive contract labor system as he works toward revolution.
6.Will your book be
self-published or represented by an agency?
I'm working on this as we speak.
7.How long did/will it take you
to write the first draft of the manuscript?
The first draft, about two months. I write the first draft fast (always) and
then I revise extensively.
8.What other books would you
compare this story to within your genre?
That’s a
tough one. I’m heavily influenced by
Cherryh, and Tepper, by Eleanor Arnason, by Joanna Russ, by Suzy McKee Charnas,
by Kage Baker, by Octavia Butler, by Cecelia Holland; but I wouldn’t say this
book is exactly like any of theirs. I
certainly owe all of them plenty.
9.Who or what inspired you to
write this book?
As I said above, reading C. L. R. James, and then about
fifty other books I read because I had read that one – about slavery, and about
other sorts of forced labor. Douglas
Blackmon’s Slavery By Another Name was also a big influence. It’s why I have contract labor and not slaves
on Julian.
10.What else about the book might
pique the reader's interest?
Well, I’m also interested in cultures. I started out as an anthropologist, not an
English professor, and one of the reasons I write SF is so that I can write
about different cultures. I was interested in writing about the revolution on
Julian, but I was also interested in creating a workable, believable far-future
culture, one that is not 1970s suburban America culture (as so many SF
cultures, it seems to me, are). I’m
having a lot of fun with that.
2 comments:
If you are interested in forced labor you might be this of interest.
www.eurasiahistory.com/2013-2/
Thanks, Otto!
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