Check out the latest in Speculative Fiction!
Issue #5 is here! Check out our Spotlight on The Tandem Region Times, plus an interview with its creator Nick Rayner. Also, take a gander at the latest craft essay, In the Name of a Hero.
Tandem Region Times is a rather unique form of horror, how did you go about constructing the feel of the writing for the site?
You start by saying “this needs to be as objective as possible.” When writing horror, it’s easy to start writing flowery prose and painting elaborate pictures. You need to suffocate that inclination. Once it’s gone, you can add some seasoning here and there, but always remembering that you’re describing this from the outside. When writing a news article, the idea is to get all the crucial information out right in the opening paragraph. Who, what, where, when, why. Read more here…
Your hero is poised to defeat the villain, save the kingdom, complete a quest or maybe he just wants to get through life. Maybe you’ve got your plot organized in an outline or you’re just going to start writing and explore where things go. But in order to flesh out your hero – and whatever other characters he or she encounters – you need to answer this question: what is your character’s name? Read more here…
Spotlight on The Tandem Region Times
What they are looking for: Strong, bizarre concepts. Tandem Region Times is an online horror-themed newspaper, so you need to write your story in a journalistic format, or as a review or a column or classifieds entry. If you have a very original concept and an image in your head, the narrative can be worked on. You almost tell the story backwards; you give the most important information at the start and work your way backward to the least important, but more colorful. Read more here…
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Check out Issue #3, we’ve got an interview with Gregory Maguire, a spotlight on Fantasy Scroll Magazine, and an article on constructing languages for your story!
Interview with Gregory Maguire
Why did you become a writer?
I had a great aversion to working in offices, as I grew up during the period hallowed by MAD MEN—boring drunken men in white shirts and ties, all with the same sort of impenetrable macho stiff-upper-lipped mien (at least it seemed so to a small kid). I decided by the time I was about 6 that I would rather make things than sell shoes or insurance and have to go to an office and be manly in that only-variety-of-manliness way available for me to examine. Read more here…
Spotlight on Fantasy Scroll Magazine
What they are looking for: I am looking for great stories more than anything else. Great stories, to me, are built around interesting plots and memorable, strong characters. Because we are talking about short fiction here, there’s not a lot of time to spend outside of the story, so I expect a manuscript to start strong and hook me early. If the story drags on I will lose interest. On the same token, if the ending is flat and leaves me unsatisfied, the story won’t work either. So, I am looking for a strong story through and through, where great characters do something that holds my interest. Read more here…
Language is an important part of world-building. The inhabitants of your world use language to communicate, exchange thoughts and ideas, archive and pass information from one another.
You must think about language in the beginning of your world-building, because the decisions you make about it, will influence a lot of your future work. Of course, this post is not a tutorial on how to create a language itself, given that the subject is extremely wide, but more as to guide you through the various options you have as you are creating your world. Read more here…
Aaron Prince wrote a fabulous article on how to create a good battle scene in fantasy writing, and I think a lot of us could learn from it. Check it out over on Mythic Scribes!
As you eagerly await the second round of content from us, check out this fascinating article in Popular Science about just how little the general population knows about robots. Essentially, sci-fi has been lying to us for years about the little robot’s ability to function and reason and now we expect robots to be able to fulfill those expectations when, in reality, robots are just like any other computer still: garbage in, garbage out.
Read Robots are Strong: The Sci-Fi myth of Robotic Competence here
I know you have all been waiting with bated breath to read the first round of content, and your wait is over! Check out our first three articles below, and remember, you can always Get Involved!
An Interview with Tamora Pierce
This is my World Now: Calming the World Building Terrors by Elizabeth Mae Lewis
Its almost time for the first round of content to go up on the site, and let me tell you, I’m excited. But to help tide us over until then, enjoy this TED talk about fantasy languages and world building…