Sean O'Brien
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"Beltrunner: Aftermath" Publishing Journey Part VIII

1/14/2023

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Many science fiction and fantasy writers have created entire worlds or even universes in which their characters tell their stories. The list is quite long–J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth has become so ingrained in the fantasy consciousness that it’s hard to imagine a time in fantasy literature where there weren’t elves, hobbits, and orcs. More recently, J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter universe took the world by storm with its rich history and detail. In science fiction, creations like Star Wars and Star Trek have endured for decades and show no signs of fading away.

Less well-known series by countless writers that span multiple books flourish in all sub-genres of science fiction, both in print and on the silver and small screens. The idea of a consistent universe is not at all a new one.


But it’s new to me.


Beltrunner II: Aftermath is my first true sequel. While it’s true I’ve written a trilogy (The
Moth series) that was always a very long story told in three books. In the Moth series, I had the entire sweep of the story plotted out from beginning to end, so breaking it up into three novels was more just an organizational tool than anything else. Aftermath was written several years after Beltrunner was done–more importantly, I felt Beltrunner was done done. When I finished it, I very much thought Collier’s story (and Sancho’s, for that matter) had been told, and I started working a completely unrelated novel (Silent Manifest, which was published a few years ago). 


When I was convinced to revisit the Beltrunner
story, it took me a while to come up with a new story. I managed to do so, and wrote Aftermath. What became apparent rather quickly, though, was that Aftermath had some places where it was out of alignment with facts and lore established in Beltrunner. There were inconsistencies and areas where things didn’t seem to line up properly. My first task in this editing process, then, was to reexamine Beltrunner and fully understand the lore I myself had created so I could bring Aftermath into agreement with it.


You may be thinking, “how can you have forgotten your own lore?” Well, it’s easy. Because I moved on. I wrote a different book, and indeed am over 60,000 words into a draft of yet another unrelated one. Just because I wrote the bloody thing doesn’t mean I actually remember all the details.


Now that I am looking at Beltrunner, I am amazed at just how many throwaway lines I have in it that need to be codified into some kind of Beltrunner Bible. In an effort to make the story rich and give the feeling of a fully realized world (or universe), I made several off-the-cuff comments about this or that which now I have to align with Aftermath. Certainly, not everything needs to be revisited, but if I described an item as having such-and-such dimensions, I have to stick with those dimensions in the second book. Little details of lore end up mattering. Looking back, if I had known Beltrunner
was going to have a sequel (and if my publisher has his way, an entire series) I would have been more careful in crafting the world.

It’s as if I’m looking at some other writer (me, but a past version of myself) and trying to write some fanfiction while keeping the lore intact. I even had a daydream about building scale models of the spaceship my main character uses, Dulcinea, so I can more accurately describe it. I could design a wiki for the Beltrunner universe so I can keep everything straight. I might need a clothesline slung in my study so I can clip note cards in a timeline to keep things in order. 
It’s interesting work, no doubt, but I do find myself cursing my slightly younger self for being so haphazard with lore. 
What’s worse is that even Aftermath was written as if THAT was the end of the story, and already my publisher wants a third one. So I might have to do this all over again.
I suppose a wiser man would have learned from this, but hey…I’m just beginning to figure out how to do this “writing” thing.
Be seeing you!

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Speaking Professionally...

1/11/2023

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Very much enjoyed conducting a professional development session with my colleagues at school today.

I got to circulate around the room and listen to other people who've chosen the same profession as I have discuss some deep thoughts regarding pedagogy and methodology in order to improve the lives of young people. 

To put that another way, we talked about how to be better teachers, and that talk was not "fluffy" or "feel-good" stuff, nor was it full of buzzwords devoid of meaning but which look good on a Google Slides presentation. We talked about implementation of strategies designed to increase our effectiveness. We talked about specific and technical changes we could make to some of our practice to help students master material and skills.

There's this common and pernicious belief that teaching is something anyone could do--that it's not a highly developed skill with multiple aspects, but rather a kind of glorified babysitting job. 

These people with whom I work are not only passionate folks who have dedicated their professional lives to the betterment of others, but are also highly skilled, intelligent and thoughtful artisans who know what they're doing. Teaching is somewhere between art and science, existing in the nebulous interstice where talent and training combine. Not anyone can be a teacher, and not any teacher can be a great one. It takes some qualities inherent in a person, like patience and selflessness, but also requires training in pedagogy and methodology.

I am proud to call all my colleagues in teaching brothers and sisters. 

​Be seeing you!
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"Beltrunner: Aftermath" Publishing Journey Part VII

1/9/2023

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We all say we want people to be honest with us, but that's kind of a lie, isn't it?

See, when an artist submits her or his work for consideration--an artist has a gallery show, an actor has a play, a writer has a book--we all say to our audiences, "Now, tell me honestly--how was it?" But what we're really saying is, "tell me you like it and therefore like me and tell me everything wonderful about it and then maybe if you absolutely have to mention something that wasn't divinely perfect."

Okay, maybe I am exaggerating slightly, but not much. 

All this is prelude to mentioning that I have my first round of edits to Aftermath from the editor at EDGE Publishing. Turns out it is the same person who edited Silent Manifest, so we've worked together before. Of course, me being myself, I did not recognize her name and introduced myself. She gracefully mentioned we'd already worked together. So strike one on Your Humble Narrator.

The edits are direct and blunt, which is of course the best way to do them, but I have to confess an initial sting to reading them. Is that immature on my part? Of course. A mature person can still be immature from time to time. 

But the worst thing about the edits is that at least one of them--something that is, if not fundamental to both novels, at least very significant--is absolutely correct. I won't get into specifics in this post, but suffice to say the editor saw through the socio-emotional shell game I think I was playing and called the story out on it. 

How DARE she be so right and so direct? Doesn't she know she's supposed to fawn over the Mighty Author and bask in the radiant glory of my prose for forty days and nights before she has the TEMERITY to suggest it may fall short of perfection?

Lest you think I am a literary pushover who cannot or will not fight for his own point of view, there are other edits I do not think are justified: I'll explain my point of view secure in the knowledge that the editor is a professional and will listen.

It's refreshing to know, however, that I will be working with someone who is by no means afraid to point out weaknesses in my story--we both want to improve it to make it the best it can be. Perhaps, in some imagined future, I'll be able to submit manuscripts that are taken by publishers "as is," but for now, I am eager to see how I can improve Aftermath.

And it will only sting a little bit!

Be seeing you!
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    Author

    Hello to you. Glad to have you here. I'm going to write what I feel in this blog, and while I'm not going to go out of my way to offend you, neither am I going to hold back.

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