Nov 202011

The more I write, the more respect I have for those authors I’ve always loved. I could never tell you why, but I’m going to try.

I think my respect stems from the amount of brainwork it takes to invent not just an entire universe, but one that is full, realistic, and captivating. A place where people live, where events fit together in a historical narrative that explains why the story being told is being told.

I need to give credit to my mom. Although things like the Transformers and Star Wars fascinated me from a young age, she started me on this road with a few really interesting books, many of which I can’t actually remember.

The earliest book I remember from this is ‘Robot Commando’, one of a series of choose your own adventure-type books that were kind of RPG-oriented. It was a story about the only person unaffected by a drug dispersed in the air on a planet being attacked by an enemy looking to conquer it, and him having to free his people. I still have this book. :)

Robot Commando

 

This led me to various comics (Transformers, X-Men mostly), and from there to various fantasy books, including the Dragonlance books.

Now I’ve never really been a D&D guy. We tried a bit in middle school, but the vice principal banned it because he thought it taught kids to live in sewers and be rapists or something. Anyway, the books were my first view of a story that wasn’t self-contained – one that took place on another world with its own history, peopled, customs, languages, everything. This was bigger than Star Wars in a way, because the world extended PAST what you saw in front of you.

I gobbled up as many of these as I could and then went looking for more, which lead me to David Eddings books. These weren’t huge stories in and of themselves, but contained backstories that were much bigger than the books themselves, with histories stretching back thousands and thousands of years. This series contained so much backstory, in fact, that the author wrote a whole book just detailing the world’s entire history through the eyes of one of the series’ major characters!

Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series

 

Since then, I found the three Lord of the Rings books and the Silmarillion, which were pretty good (I can hear bricks flying through my windows), although I found the backstory rather dense and overly mystic and war-filled.

My friend Stefan introduced me to the Wheel of Time series back in 1995 or so when we were volunteering at Toronto Brigantines, and I was captivated right away. I still have to read the last two books, but what a ridiculous series! The backstory is actually a little bit thin from what I remember, with periods of great detail connected by periods of crazy vagueness.

“Then why do you like this series?” you might ask – if the defined parts are rich enough, it just makes the holes that much more more mysterious! I firmly believe that you can’t be a fan of fiction, science- or otherwise, and not like a good mystery. Finding out the ‘why’ of something can be so satisfying!

About that time, I was also introduced to Warhammer 40,000. All I can say is woah. I know the mythos has been built upon for decades now, and it’s not really a book series per se, but the sheer amount of lore available is STAGGERING. This, coupled with much of the iconic imagery is what keeps drawing me back to this universe. There are detailed histories of entire galactic sectors, down to descriptions of the operation and construction of a hand flame thrower.

One example of the awesome art for 40k. It draws your imagination out & dances with it!

 

One of the differences between this story universe and most of the others I’ve been interested in is, I guess owing to it being game-based. With the exception of the main narrative of the Horus Heresy, a galaxy-wide civil war, most of the 40k story seems to be made up of shorts and other self-contained stories of various sizes. These alone wouldn’t be enough to keep my attention, but with this vast universe already developed and supporting them, everything is given a depth which they wouldn’t have on their own, and which they in fact end up adding to.

Lastly, but not leastly, I’ve been reading a comic book series lately (and looking for more volumes!) called Five Star Stories. The basic deal is something like a five-thousand year long story? Or something. On the surface, this series kind of flies in the face of what normally interests me. It’s all kind of bite-sized stories. On the other hand, the setting jumps around in time and place enough so that I’m always trying to reconcile the timeline in my mind, and constantly want to see what’s coming next.

There seems to be a connected narrative in the form of one of the major characters, who often seems to be in the center of the action, and there’s alot of mythology built around heroes, heroines, and machines that in just the previous volume were there in front of you, performing their legendary deeds.

The Knight of Gold.

 

So with all that in mind, what was the point of this post? Well, I keep getting asked what my book is about. I’m hesitant to ever say much – not because I don’t like you! but because nothing is solid yet, and who knows if it’ll ever see the light of day – but maybe a look at this will give you some insight into why it’s taken me 3 years to not write a single chapter yet. :)

 

A few of my other influcences over the years!

So this is it for this character. We’ve cleaned up a bunch of things that seemed off to me, including moving the head forward a bit and styling up the ‘ears’ a bit. We’ve fixed the front under-robe part to look more the part, less of a shirt.

Finally, we shortened the sleeves of the robe a bit, and beefed up the forelegs slightly. I think this made it look a bit more balanced. It was slightly top-heavy before. I’m pretty happy with it!

Not alot to say about this one.

We fleshed out the head a bit to fit in with my idea more, and tightened up the look of the clothing. The sloping shoulders are gone for a more ‘stylish’ look, and we’ve slimmed the sleeves a bit.

I wanted the robe to have a more dynamic feel to it as well. It looked a little limp before, kind of doctor-looking. Also gone is the kind of teeshirt and pants look for something a bit more professional looking.

Only two things spring to mind right now: The shirt/pants thing looks a bit too contemporary, and I kind of wanted the legs to have a chunkier, more robust feel to them. Maybe a couple small mods to the head.

Next post will be the final version! We got this one pretty close from the start, and it’s really helping me with my descriptive writing. :D

This next character is an archivist of sorts. Maybe not a specific character but a type of character.

This is a great first start, but there are a couple of issues that don’t mesh with what I had in my mind: The robe is a bit limp, the sleeves a tad too voluminous. The shoulders slope a bit too much, the ‘shirt’ isn’t quite right, and and the head is incorrect.

Maybe you can guess at my influence for some of this character’s look, but either way, let’s see what we can fix for the next revision :)

And she’s done!

Gonna get her coloured one day, but I’m thinking if I ever get this book published, these sketches will be official art. I like em that much.

She usually wears a cloak, but more for the image it gives her than for any practical concerns. She just looks more fearful this way. She can quickly detach and lose it if she needs more flexibility or less-obstructive movements. A cape can also have functional combat uses for someone who knows what they’re doing.

Next up – a minor character!

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