“The Encroacher” and other goings-on

September 16, 2010 in General Topics

So my novel The Tyrant Stratagem is out in the wild right now seeking an agent. Coming in at 87,000 words, the final draft was finished a few weeks back. I revised the tale about four times. With an outline in place for the other two volumes in the tale, I’m confident the piece will make someone happy, if only someone out there decides to get behind it. I’m shopping it around right now. To quote the executives in “There Will be Blood”: “We’ll make you rich.”

In belated news, let me direct you over to Variant Frequencies again, where you may or may not have been lately, to tell you that my tale “The Encroacher” had the distinction of being the last episode they’ve run (for now). I sincerely hope Rick and the gang get back into podcast fiction at some point. They have my deepest respect and appreciation for being some of the earliest people to run my work.

Let me also congratulate Norm Sherman and the team over at The Drabblecast for picking up a Parsec award for 2010. This is only about three years overdue.

An Update, and the free tale “Busy As…”

November 18, 2008 in General Topics

Been a busy week here, but with it has come some good achievements, as well as correspondence from long-lost buds, including Dave Thompson. Salud, buddy.

I’ve officially tied both ends together of the novel outline I’ve been working on, and I’m thrilled. Now, a quick pass through it again to box up any loose ends, and I can start in earnest on the fun part of this project.

I am so excited. I can’t wait to bring this piece to life. It spans a projected three serialized volumes, and I’ve mapped it from the beginning all the way through the very last scene. I’ve two novels sitting in a desk drawer, so the size of the project doesn’t intimidate me at all.

Hopefully, this will be the one that moves my work up a few notches on the ole’ public awareness scales. I’m really interested in seeing if I can make a snowball instead of the flurries I’ve done so far.

We’ll see.

The amusing thing is, the ideas for short stories keep coming. I had a crazy one hit me last night – just might have to carve out the time to make it live.

So today, allow me to bring you some more free fiction. As always, this is exclusive to the site, so if you happen to want rights to it, feel free to hit me up at my e-mail address. I love any feedback, as well.

Stay tuned.

Busy as…
Copyright 2008 Jonathan C. Gillespie

Every day at 4AM, Unit 68B-43 came back online from low-power mode and swam the six-hundred feet down the underwater passage and up the other side. Once on the surface, it made its way to the bank and ran a survey of the trees along the sides of what had once been the Potomac. The trees used to be normal cedars.

Measuring carefully the sizes of each tree, it trimmed with deurtanium incisors the largest present, sending hundred-foot titans along prescribed trajectories, filling the forest with crashes and thunder as they hit the ground. 68B-43 would then collect these trees and carry them back to its endless project. Its preferred path along the riverbank was worn several feet deep thanks to its daily passes.

Placing the trees where needed, 68B-43 took the last few hours of the day to survey its work, recharging its super-efficient solar cells in the process, and taking in hydrogen from the water with each stroke of its mighty webbed feet. Pausing atop the dam, it achieved something approaching pleasure at its progress, as it had been programmed.

Its optics picked up the swathe of water that spread to the horizon, held in check by its daily efforts. Behind its miles-deep masterpiece, the Potomac was little more than a creek, and the ocean could not be seen, making the plasteel and admanticrete buildings atop the plateaus of Manhattan appear so much taller.

68B-43 sent a message to the other units. Its hyperlake was now complete. It would settle into maintenance mode, forever restraining this new body of water, while man farmed the fertile soils of the new Atlantic mountains.

Bringing you up to speed again (+ rant)

July 16, 2008 in General Topics

Hey, it’s a long update!

I’ve been quiet for the past few weeks, but you can rest assured, there is plenty going on in my neck of the woods.

First, I’m finishing up yet the final drafts of yet another batch of stories. There’s three of them in this group, and if I had to break them down, I’d have to say I’m feeling somewhat ambivalent about them.

Heh — am I great at self-promotion or what? Actually, I’m glad I’m not better at it. There’s a fine line between self-promotion and self-centeredness as a writer, and sometimes I think too many people in the fiction industry have crossed too far to one side, if you know what I mean.

But as far as this batch of stories goes — they’re different.

First, some background: I’ve generally written fiction with a dark slant. “Spired”, for example, was a piece at its core about addiction. All that alien interloping and ten-kilometer rock climbing was just the framework for that character study. And the tale was decidedly dark.

However, I’ve undergone a voyage into the realm of hope, and with it have come different plot lines. I think the changing of my fiction style has coupled with my own embrace of Christianity.

There I go breaking my own rule: keep this site about my work, never about me. There are consequences any author uses their public site as a window into their personal thoughts. Simply put, I know some of you are screaming bloody murder right now. But just give me a few paragraphs, OK?

Thanks.

There are a host of arguments I could levy for you in favor of Christianity, from any perspective you’ d like — scientific to the philosophical. I’ve seen faith from both sides of the coin — atheism and belief — and anyone looking for an explanation why I’ve come to embrace this oft-maligned doctrine can dig me up at a con or drop me an e-mail.

I won’t go into too much here, other than simply this: Christianity is medicine for a troubled world. It is a doctrine advocating universal peace, love and forgiveness — written in an age when men were all too swift with the sword. If one could measure merit of a work by enlightenment compared to its contemporary period, then the U.S. Constitution is a solid base-hit, but The Bible is an out-ot-the-park homer. And yet it is fashionable among certain circles to denigrate it. I find the slamming of faith the surest sign that man needs it.

And there we go again, I suppose, with the screams out there on the other side of this text. Seriously — I don’t want any of you whom happen to be atheists or agnostics thinking I pontificate and wax religious all the time. This is only the second time I’ve gotten this personal in the whole of my site’s existence, and should you meet me in person, relax — I’m not a fanatic. I despise fanaticism, on both sides of the coin, and I am also aware my personal thoughts are not something the outside world gives a damn about. But with all the negativity out there about religion, with the polar bears fighting Catholicism and the misinformed bearing ill-will that doesn’t have to be, I can’t stay mute. Let me just leave it for now by saying that the objections I find to Christianity are usually the result of two things: misunderstanding of its teachings, or misunderstanding of its metaphors.

Thanks for suffering through that little tangent — I promise as always to keep those to a minimum.

Back to the fiction. As I said, the three stories are very, very different from their forebears. That’s not to say they don’t have their own moments of darkness — one can’t have conflict without it — but I think people might have a wholly different feeling after reading these.

I’m ambivalent because I don’t know how that feeling will manifest — hopefully, not with people hanging up on the tales early. The plotlines themselves are risky. Consider:

1) “No Silence” — a deaf man living on a drifting, derading colony ship comes face to face with…
2) “Todd Elrin and the Forever Reset” — A different spin on time travel. Really.
3) (Currently Untitled Third Story) — A man with a terminal disease battles the forces of darkness.

I’ve tried desperately over the years to craft fiction that takes an existing idea and puts a unique spin on it. The problem is I’ve found editors are quick to dismiss a tale even if it exhibits a different take on a classic theme, simply because the backdrop plot device has such negative associations.

It’s like this: say one writes a tale about a psychic that frames vampires by implanting all those classic ideas in his victims’ heads of typical vampiric activities: tapping on the windows, neck bites, wolves and fog, etc. Now, I came up with that idea off the top of my head. I’ve never heard of anything like it. Let’s assume, even if it might not be, that we live in a world where that is a wholly unique idea.

Now let’s say you set that in modern-day Chicago. I will wager, based on my experience, that you only have a few paragraphs to convince the editor the tale isn’t another typical urban fantasy thriller, a la raves and staves and things that go clubbing in the night. Despite the central idea being unique, the story’s framework seems old and decrepit, so they might not enter the door to the rest of the story’s interior themes before shooting it down.

That’s the problem facing these three tales: Can I get the editors to look past what at first seems derivative frameworks? We’ll see.

As far as other things go, I continue to submit like mad to other markets. I think I’ll have to do some minor revision to make Something Wicked completely happy with “The Eighteenth Floor”, but they’ve been easy to work with so far. “Best in Class” is still on the pipe for December 2008 compliments of Murky Depths.

But the biggest piece of news is the continued work on the Super Secret Project. We’re rapidly nearing the point where the outline will be complete and I can finally dive into this thing. That’s going to involve little to no short fiction writing once I start, and a rigorous writing schedule, along with frequent bonus content I’ll be bringing along the way. I’ll be able to tell you more soon, but let me assure you — I think this is going to be what puts my work over the top, and marks the beginning of a truly global fan base.

Stay tuned.

Ye Olde Writing Update

September 23, 2007 in General Topics

I haven’t run through the raw numbers lately with everyone, so here they are:

Stories Accepted, Pending Publication: 1
Stories Now in Print/Online: 4
Stories Chasing Second Publication: 1
Honorable Mentions: 1
Stories Written This Year: 9
Total Stories On My Tracking Spreadsheet: 17

So I’m a little off my goal of ten for this year, but if I can nail seven credits this year (or a single pro sale– hey, I can dream) I’ll be happy.

Stay tuned!

All Lines in the Water

June 3, 2007 in General Topics

I’ve been watching way too much “Deadliest Catch” lately, and the comparisons between fishing and marketing fiction have become far too obvious. At this point, in true Northwestern fashion, all my pots are in the water, or rather will be by the end of the day, once I put “Spired” back in the wild.

Yes, it got rejected again, this time by Not One of Us. It’s all good. I thought I had the market pegged, but it wasn’t quite what they needed. They had nothing bad to say about the quality of the tale itself, which is much better than the last response the story got: “It just didn’t grab me”.

Every time I get a response like that, my toes threaten to eviscerate the soles of my feet. It’s much easier to fight grammatical nitpicks than subjectivity, for which there is little to do but simply try to write more engaging tales.

Other than that, it’s been a quiet week. The sixth revision of “The Lifeboat” (and the second revision to that market), got mixed comments over on Baen’s. I need to rewrite it once more, but people will only read this thing so many times.

I finished up the first draft of my latest piece, a fantasy-humor yarn of about 4,000 words. I’m midway through the second draft.

Stay tuned.