What are you currently working on? Steampunk, Dieselpunk, Gaslight Mystery/Romance, NeoVictorian, Paranormal, alternative history?

Are you creating a world only flavored with Victorian mores and manners, or working closely with Victorian history, but subverting it?


Tags: are, what, writing, you

Views: 366

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

What I'm working on, and what I plan to work on.

Steampunk, alternate reality/world, Splatterpunk, Mechpunk, Mythospunk (just coined it, relating to Lovecraft), Greasepunk (another one, dirty and grimy world).

And I will be subverting whereever I can

 

I'm writing a Crimean War story, where the cavalry is led by steam-driven mecha. It's the Charge of the Light Brigade, with robots.  There's a strong paranormal aspect, as it's three interlacing stories: a monster-hunting priest and his 16 year old protégé racing ahead of the Army to foil the plans of a rogue occultist; a young Hussar captain traveling to the front; and an American reporting traveling with Samuel Colt in the first airship crossing of the Pacific, which is a secret gun-running operation to the Russians.

The whole thing is a pastiche on the boys-own-adventure / ripping yarn tales cranked out in the turn of the century.  It's called "Mechanicals" and the first draft is due... Tuesday.

Back to work!

Working on a story/novel where the Crimean War and other historical conflicts never occurred, a world that is free of such hardships, for more then one hundred years. This allowed steam technology to grow by leaps on bounds, so much so that the world has become choked with machinery. The people are obsessed with physically altering themselves to the point where there are hundreds of thousands of bio-mechanical people wandering the planet (SteamSphere). An unknown evil has taken over their world and the only hope is a daydreamer named Xeno Gilder, his girlfriend Antoinette, his Scientist friend Melville Yesod, and his dog Micky.

I'm currently completing the third book in my "Falcon Lord" steampunk-fantasy series. I've also written "Machine of God," a Leonardo da Vinci historical fantasy which I describe as "machinepunk." I would hope my novels are excellent since I've been writing (read: working my a** off)  for 30 years! :) I'd love to know what everyone thinks. http://lightmasters.net

I'm working on (albeit, slowly) on a paranormal Steampunk adventure with erotic elements. I got all the way to ch 11, and then found a flaw in my plot, so I'm in the process of re-structuring. Ugh.    

I've had this happen before. Often it helps to go back to the outline stage, and make sure that's working. Then I usually write a treatment, get feedback from a professional colleague to make sure the treatment is working, THEN flesh out the novel. It's always easier to fix things in earlier stages of the writing. btw... my next writing instruction video will be on Classic Story Structure. You'll want to check it out: http://lightmasters.net Cheers

Yes, I did go back to my original outline. My problem is that I'm introducing a new plot element into the original story. Something that will give the overall plot more depth (I hope), and it conflicted with some things I already had down and now, have to remove. I'm just glad I found this during my first draft. :)      

Yeap, re-writing... that's what it's all about. :)

well after some time I thought it'd be nice to come and post an update on my current novel, the Planetary Romance/Space Opera Steampunk novel.

 

So far, space travel in 1899/1900 has proven to be a challenge to write, I have to adapt all the research to the 19th century technology and overall view of the world, research takes about half of my work time but I thik it's turning out well, being an Industrial Designer really helps to visualize the Spaceships, the setting and the technology.

Right now the novel is +330 pages long, it was expanded from 3 acts to 4 acts, the current act I'm writing is the begining of the third (chapter 15), overall Im quite happy but there is still a long way to go.

I'm very much in the same position as you, Carlos.  What I thought would be around a 100,000 word novel is currently at 95,000 words and I'm judging I'm around a third of the way through what was my initial broad outline.  

I'm telling myself it will shorten through the re-write.... on the otherhand, I'm probably looking at a rewrite of over 200,000 words.

well I'm sitting at 167,448 words ATM, halfway trough.. at this point I think I could find a way to publish two books instead of one, (as every part is somewhat a complete story).

I'm accostumed to write the first draft as complete as posible, doing edition and necessary retcons along the way, in order to aim for few re-writings and a smooth editing process. While it is the slower way to work, it allows for different posibilities (like early promotion/editing, and-or serial publishing).

t this point I think I could find a way to publish two books instead of one, (as every part is somewhat a complete story).

Well that's a bonus.  Did you aim for that, or did it just fall that way?  

I've been looking for a way I could do that myself, but my approach tends to be more organic.  I always start out with a plan, but that's always the first casualty.

RSS

SWAG Support Fund

Visit us on:

TWITTER                          TUMBLR

FACEBOOK                      WORDPRESS

GOOGLE+                        GOODREADS

Latest Activity

Gwen Ellery commented on Paul Marlowe's blog post Literary Award Shortlist for "Ether Frolics"
"Ah, that makes sense. A pity! Do you have an excerpt on your site?"
5 hours ago
Milton Davis and Gwen Ellery are now friends
10 hours ago
Gavin Wilson replied to Gavin Wilson's discussion Wattpad: a new approach to writing and reading.
"A 'read' registers every time a new user clicks on a chapter. If someone comes back to read it again it won't register as they've already seen it.  Wattpad Feature books, but only if the author is willing to leave them up…"
16 hours ago
S.C. Barrus replied to Gavin Wilson's discussion Wattpad: a new approach to writing and reading.
"Hi Gavin, I use Wattpad, and I have to say that I've had a very positive experience so far. I have one question about reads. What constitutes a read? Does a person just need to visit the first page of a chapter for the number to…"
17 hours ago
S.C. Barrus replied to Maeve Alpin's discussion Interview on Steamed - Dawn Donatis-Steampunk stained-glass artist
"Wonderful interview. Those boxes are beautiful."
17 hours ago
S.C. Barrus replied to Kevin Steil's discussion The Steampunk Museum Needs You!
"Hello Kevin, The Museum sounds like a great project, and once my novel is released, I'd be happy to add it to the museum. What kind of writing work do you need done? I can donate a little time. In regards to you asking about interviews, I…"
17 hours ago
S.C. Barrus posted a blog post

Indie Author Turning Heads with Upcoming Novel & Kickstarter Campaign

The world of publishing is actively changing around us. The internet is abuzz with authors favoring self-publishing their works over taking the traditional route to publication. The latest author to follow this emerging trend is debut indie author S.C. Barrus with his upcoming novel,Discovering Aberration.Discovering Aberration is a new take on the popular steampunk genre, which take place in an alternate Victorian-era setting where steam and clockwork technology have taken hold. “Discovering…See More
17 hours ago
Philippa Jane Ballantine and Lori Holuta are now friends
19 hours ago

MEMBERS' BOOK COVERS

Small Press, Indie & Anthology Covers


Badge

Loading…

© 2013   Created by Lia Keyes.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service