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Sanderlee
29th Mar 2008, 14:50
Okay, folks. Time for me to submit something again.

I've been playing with this scene/mini-chapter for quite some time now (almost a year). It's on, well, the version number is 4.19 so you can imagine I've done a tad bit of editing. I think that the language is set--I like the rhythm and pacing and the dialogue works. But something in the scene is still nagging me.

So, here's the deal. I'm hoping for some constructive criticism from y'all. Tell me what works and, more importantly, what doesn't. I think this is almost done, but I've got no external feedback on it as yet so I need a reader's eye view.

Setting the stage:

1) The Easter March is a spray of worlds caught between two empires. The Sansterran Contract is a mercantile empire, very much along the Chesapeake Bay colonies mixed with the cyberpunk concept of the megacorps. Sansterrans practice indentured serviture and do NOT have a representative government. The Crucian Empire is a theocracy, very similar to late 16th century Spain. They follow the expansionist tenant of The Way, forcibly bringing their culture, religion, and laws to those worlds that fall under their thumb. There was once another power in the region, the alien T'chel ... but they're gone, sealed behind doorways (read: warp points, wormholes, etc.) for generations. Or, so everyone thinks.

2) The Easter March Coallition of Independents, (Mickeys) are an up and coming power in the region. Nominally a group of independent worlds clustered together for mutual defense from the predatory Sansterrans and Crucians, they're actually somewhat more sinister at the core. But, more on that later--suffice it to say once a world joins the coallition there's no way out.

3) The tech base I'm playing with is a modified version of that which I presented, briefly, in my earlier stories Almost Equal and Prologue: Scimitar Victorious. I'm still updating the tech bible as I get new ideas on how to make things more original ... and as I focus more on people and less on hardware.

4) Carova is the latest world to fall under the Mickey thumb. It's a marginally profitable world, lightly industrialized by the standards of space-faring civilizations. They pretend to have a representative form of government, and that pretense bites Carova's President in the butt as the people decide, for a change, that their votes really DO mean something. Carova also practices slavery.

The two scenes with the girl have been in and out of the story several times. I THINK they're necessary to demonstrate the depravity of Carova society, and to set up the "benevolence" of the Sansterran bond. But, like I said, I've taken them out too.

So, lemme know what y'all think.

Sanderlee.
(And yes, now y'all know my name too ... :D )

Edit - heh, forgot to upload the .pdf. Stupid me.

Sanderlee
4th Apr 2008, 12:55
Nothing?

Kageo
18th May 2009, 16:56
Deposed by Sanderlee
crit by Kageo/ShogunX

The méprise is a cool idea, cool name. Make sure to mention it again! :)

Crucians, Wayist beliefs, Mickeys. I am assuming that you do not expect your final readers to read info dump text before the story, so these (interesting) terms will need to be carefully worked in over the next pages/chapters so that they come to life. ( Had not read ahead at this point, just noting it....)
The word ‘Crucian’, does by itself denote religious ideology.


‘She carried a small tray with two glasses and a bottle.‘
Could do with a little decriptive detail here. A bottle of what? what year? or some other thing that means something. Star Trek uses alcohol as a way to name drop the ‘Romulans’ in, a powerful guy might have wine from his own vineyard, an xyz might have a designer bottle etc...

‘According to my security advisor, Petrov owns two of the news feeds
now.’
I get what this means, but think you should change the terminology to something appropriately grander. I can get a ‘news feed’ on my website for nothing (RSS or similar).
If corporations are to make an appearance in your story, you could say so here, or maybe even introduce their names. And why would he need a ‘security advisor’ to tell him this if the feeds are of any consequence?

Lankman makes me think of Gnaeus Pompeii. The version of which I know, is from Rome season 1 (tv series). Don’t know if that helps at all. I care about Lankman, a bit now. He is trying to save his kids....I don’t know if that was your intention.

‘But to a man used to ruling a world, a man like Pashi Lankman IV’
I do have a bit of a hard time thinking of Lankman as having no other options than this. Doesn’t he have any power or leverage?

In all - a good start. I care about Lankman enough to follow him into chapter 2; not all published novels do that.

Sanderlee
18th May 2009, 23:52
Thanks for the comments.

Actually, this scene is supposed to take place about a quarter of the way into the book, but that's still somewhat uncertain. It's part of a larger event which I'm modeling on the scene in Godfather II when Castro comes to power. Overall, this work is kind of stuck at the moment. I've got a batch of good scenes and a whole ship-load of concepts (not to mention 35k words worth of tech bible, world bible, and character studies) ... but the central plot just isn't gelling.

Alas.

Glad you care about Lankman, that's kind of the point even if he is, in the end, a second-tier character. Oh, and as to the power question - he HAD it, but he's basically lost it at this point. Some of his military is nominally loyal, the rest has been subordinated to the Mickeys. His government is in open revolt against him (the negative side-effect of leading a kleptocracy) as are a sizeable portion of the populace. If he'd kept control over more of the military, maybe ... but, unfortunately, the Mickeys have some terrible tools up their sleeves.

Kageo
6th Nov 2009, 14:17
Hi Sanderlee,
Are you still writing this story?

Sanderlee
7th Nov 2009, 03:52
Yes and no.
This scene has become part of a larger tale detailing the return of the T'chel to human space and the descent into chaos that brings to the Easter March. I've been fleshing out characters, re-drafting the tech bible (it's about sixty pages at this point, with most of the new additions being political, economic, people, and worlds) and getting voices for the characters.

There are three nested story-lines for this as yet unnamed story/book

1) The Four Musketeers story-line starring Four recent graduates of the Sansterran naval academy on Fjord. Three of them have entered into fifteen-year bonds/contracts with the Independent Command Authority Patrol Frigate Scimitar ... a sort of licensed privateer patrolling the semi-claimed space between the Sansterran Contract and the Crucian Empire. The fourth member, Danel Bowin, is an emancipated citizen of the Contract ... a status which causes him no small degree of problems on board his new ship.

2) The Carova tale, specifically the coming of the EMCI and their mysterious backers and the fall of House Lankman. Iyor Pestros, the ex-commander of the secret police and now leader of the opposition has made a devil's bargain with the EMCI for support in driving Lankman from power and expelling all other foreign interests (namely, Sansterrans like Tlar). Unfortunately, he doesn't KNOW it's a devil's bargain ... yet.

3) The Tale of the Eridanos, the freighter which has been chartered by the heir-apparent to the EMCI for the purpose of ushering the new era--an era which will see the EMCI dominant in the region and himself supplanting his irritatingly long-lived father as supreme ruler of the Easter March. Like Pestros and so many others, the heir (name is still in flux, alas) KNOWS he's made a bargain with the devil. But, better to rule at the hand of the devil than to be swatted by it.

I've got quite a bit of work done on the project ... but nothing coherent yet. Lots of bits and snippets and rough drafts. It's very much a long-term work in progress.