Deleted Scenes and Story Arcs

I suspect I’m not the only writer to end up with more material than ever ends up in the finished book, and I’m not talking about routine editing, but whole chapters that get excised. It looks very much as if this is going to happen again with ‘Ghost Ship’, though in this case...it’s more a re-evaulation of the whole plot that renders the chapters I wrote no longer suited for the book. I never simply delete anything, though - often sentences or paragraphs can find their way back in again later on, either because I like the line, or to serve a plot point, or simply because I’m rewriting the chapter in a different way. 

In ‘Ghost Ship’, I got most of the way through Chapter Two when I realized that it just wasn’t working, was too talky. The solution - strip out two of the characters in the scene, make it a two-hander, and change the location so that they were doing something - previously it was four people meeting up at a bar. Of course, now the new chapter is out of the book as well, but that’s a plot re-evaluation, not uncommon - it happened with ‘Stars in the Sand’ and ‘Sacred Honor’, as well as with ‘Triple-Cross’, actually. Sometimes, I write a chapter - like it - but realize that it just doesn’t work. I had a bad case of that with ‘Stars in the Sand’, actually. 

There was a chapter in the book - some spoilers - that had Orlova sneaking out to conduct reconnaissance on City Hall late at night, when she ran into a woman being mistreated by a guard. It’s a good chapter, a strong one, but Orlova ended up acting a lot more ruthlessly than seemed to fit with her character, not without introducing a new character arc. There was already a lot going on in that book - which really was focused on Marshall and Cooper, anyway - and it was about four-fifths of the way in. So...the chapter went into the ‘Deleted Scenes’ file. I

’m straying from the topic a bit here, but it goes to the very nature of plotting; books need to be about something, and I’m not talking about the core plot, the storyline. There needs to be something deeper there, something to explore, and that is usually where the characters come in. For both Cooper and Marshall, in ‘Stars’, this was quite simply guilt - the survivor’s guilt that has been building up for both of them for the last few books. Marshall has given orders that have led to the death of members of his crew, and at the back of his mind he is questioning those decisions - and Cooper can’t understand why everyone else in his platoon has died, and he hasn’t. Compounded by his career-ending injury. Both of these arcs are reaching the end of their run (which will mean that I’ll need to think of something else, of course) and it informs their actions in this book quite strongly, especially in the final few chapters. 

 Character arcs are, I think, what makes a series really sing, and what ties all the different books together; it’s always something to bear in mind, especially when launching a series, I think, and as I start work on the Mercia books - about which I will be writing tomorrow - it is something that is foremost on my mind with character development. Though given that I am writing about real, albeit little-known people, there’s already something to work with because I know who the people are, and what they ended up doing. A very different art in some ways, yet in others, quite similar. 

 Spitfire Station is another case in point - the characters in this series are just beginning their arcs, and I’m still finding them as people in their own right. Sometimes it takes a book or two even to work out who you should be focusing on, where the key characters are - the most interesting ones, the ones I get most of a kick out of writing. Logan Winter is one of them...and while he originated in a very different series a while ago, he was adapted a bit to give me a lead for Spitfire that was very much a go-out-and-do-stuff person, rather than a sit-back-and-order. Kirk rather than Picard, even if the latter is probably a more realistic portrayal of a military commander. (If you can use that term with Star Trek, that is!) (And I still prefer Kirk anyway.) 

There, I only had in mind that Logan was to be one of the characters; another of the POVs flew off to do other things in a spin-off that might or might not happen (the book will happen, though, but I’m leaning heavily towards making it Spitfire Three) and the other was enough fun that she’s a POV in Ghost Ship. As for the third, well, I’m pulling a Worf, to continue my use of Trek analogies. Which I’d always rather planned, actually - I wanted to bring a couple of the characters who had left Alamo back in, and both Cunningham and Esposito make returns in this book, the latter as a ‘new cast member’, the former as a ‘special guest star’, if you like, though I have plans for both of them in later books. 

 One of the fun things about this series is that I don’t always know where it is going to go. Book Twelve - which is scheduled as a cross-over - only came into my head a few weeks ago, but it’s as if it has always been there. The following books have also changed in conception, still a little bit in fluxx, but I do know that they are not what I originally planned for them. That story arc has been postponed for a bit, because I’m had some ideas to use the state of play in other ways. I’ll say no more. Yet. Oh, go on then. The basic idea - without any spoilers - is to have three three-book story arcs running through, perhaps with a couple of singles to spread them out. I have pretty firm ideas for the first two, and some thoughts for the other one. I’m not sure whether Spitfire Station is going to be taking its own path or supporting the others, that remains to be seen, though there is scope for another cross-over book at some point later on, I think. 

 I’d better stop now before I tell you too much! That, and I probably should get back to work...

A Few Bits And Pieces

Well, I'm getting ready to start work on 'Ghost Ship' tomorrow, having decided just a few moments ago that the outline I had didn't quite work – so I'll be going without one for a while, this time, amusingly enough. This has happened a few times. Sometimes it helps just to start work, get down the first few chapters – which I have got down pretty well – and then outline the rest from there. I usually re-outline four or five times over the course of a book anyway, as the characters spin off in weird and wonderful directions. I'm looking forward to getting back to Spitfire Station again, as well; it's been longer than I had originally planned, but at least I'm going to get a second one done this year, and I was beginning to wonder if I'd manage it. Lots of stuff to fit into this one, it's a big deal with the ongoing arc of the setting as well as anything else. Loose threads from several Alamo books to tie up in this one, especially from Fermi's War, if you can remember that far back! A couple of old characters making a return in this one, as well. Lots of bits and pieces here this time. I've started the preparation for the Mercian Trilogy – and it is really beginning to dawn on me that I'm going to have to outline this one more than normally. Which could be a problem in that for me, over-outlining usually means that the novel never actually gets written. What is more accurate to say is that I'm going to need more involved notes than I usually make, maybe try and throw up a Power Matrix or something like that. Needless to say, I'll be giving more details as I go. I've commissioned the cover art – Keith Draws, of course...and that always helps me work.

Something New...

It all started with Robert E. Howard. No, that’s not quite right, I think it actually started with a thin little book - title long since forgotten - that I read in school, one that basically was a rather short synopsis of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History of the English People. I wish I could remember what it was called, but it fired me up with an interest in Anglo-Saxon history that has never really waned, and over time I’ve done bits and pieces of reading on the subject. It was only when I seriously considered becoming a writer that I thought of taking it further.

Which brings me back to Howard. One of my favorite Howard characters is Cormac Mac Art, a rogue of the Dark Ages who lives around the time of Uther Pendragon, though he fights with and alongside Viking raiders; historically a little problematic, but I’ve always enjoyed Tigers of the Sea. This pushed me still further into doing something with this period, and I’ve been wanting to delve into historical fiction for quite a while, and I have a window coming up early next year in which I can write a trilogy, so…

The final step came while I was reading ‘Offa and the Mercian Wars’, one of the better Pen and Sword books; it pointed me towards a time a century earlier than Offa, when King Penda was overwhelmed against impossible odds at the Battle of Winwaed, and there was a three-year struggle against the Northumbrians to free the lands of Mercia from vassalage. The primary source material on the period basically boils down to a couple of sides of A4, but that isn’t a problem - I just have to fill in the blanks, and the bits and pieces we have got make for a very exciting story.

The 7th century is a pretty interesting period, and until very recently not well explored in fiction, though a few bits and pieces are starting to come out of late. This is a time before the Vikings, and after the Saxons have conquered most of Britain, only a few Celt and Pict kingdoms surviving on the fringes of things, the lands in a perpetual state of conflict as warbands roam the lands, still travelling on the fading Roman roads, the ruins of a now-lost civilization crumbling around them as they struggle to build a new one. Lots of opportunities for action and adventure here!

A Song of Ice and Fire is probably one of my primary inspirations here, actually; this strikes me very much as that sort of story. There’s an awful lot going on in this period - two royal families fighting for the overlordship of Britain, the conflict between the Catholic and Celtic branches of Christianity, while the Pagan gods still continue to be worshipped in the land. (Penda was known as the last Pagan English King…) The Anglo-Saxons continuing to conquer the land, cementing their hold while the Britons in Wales and the Celts in Scotland try and hold on. It’s a clash of cultures, and those are always interesting to write about, and there are some rather nice twists in this one already in what passes for the historical record. You can expect quite a few posts on this subject in the near future. 

The plan at the moment is to write the next three Alamo-verse books first, before starting work on this series; Spitfire Station: Ghost Ship is next on the list for launch, and I’ll be getting cracking on that early next week. After that, Battlecruiser Alamo: The First Duty, then Battlecruiser Alamo: Book Ten, the name of which I am still desperately trying to work out. That should mean releases in November, December and January, with any luck, with the next Alamo roughly scheduled for the end of March in my current plan. While I work on Alamo for three months, I’ll be digging into the books to prepare for the Mercian Series - right now, in my head, it is three books, but there is a chance that could expand out a little later on, and I’m certainly not ruling out the potential for spin-offs, as well.