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Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

I promised an update yesterday and here it is today. A day late but hopefully you won't feel short-changed.

First off, my thanks to A.C. Weston for supporting Transilience and for allowing me to wax on at length about the role of females in the novel. I encourage everyone to check out her Author page and her book, She is the End, which has cleared the eBook publishing milestone.

Now...

Why Mars? Why set my novel on the Red Planet?

I know right? Mars Mars Marsity Mars Mars

Lots of news about Mars. How we are going to go there. How we are going to get there. How we are going to live there. How we are going to science the shit out of it and make it the next hot spot travel destination. It makes sense to capitalize on the fervor, right??

Ah yes...if only I possessed that level of cleverness, or foresight, when I sat down to write Transilience. Because I fear my reasons are far more pedestrian than a keen insight into these sort of things.

Deep breath. Release slowly. And deliver the sad truth....

I chose to set Transilience on Mars because I knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that I could not convincingly set the novel in an existing city. It's been nearly a decade since I lived in a major metropolitan area. A decade!

I lived in Detroit. I am from Detroit. Well...that is to say, I grew up in the suburbs, went into the city for baseball and hockey games and then left. However, I did actually live in the city when I went to grad. school. I also lived in Ann Arbor, which is a pretty amazing city for a place that began life as a college town.

However, my time spent in these places specifically are now nothing more than memories. Places frozen in time. Perhaps they exist currently much in the same way as when I haunted their streets, but I can't say for certain. Doubt is never a good position from which to begin any undertaking.

To make an attempt to locate my novel in Detroit or any other place on Earth would require the heavy use of the Internet. But how much conviction, how much authenticity can one conjure from Google Maps and web searches? Where ever I chose to set Transilience would've about as much substance as those stage towns in Westerns. Looks good from the outside, just don't poke your head through the doorway. It'll destroy the illusion.

Chandler's LA, Dickens or Doyle's London, Ian Rankin and Alexander McCall Smith's Edinburgh, Capote's New York, Murakami's Tokyo. Larsson's Stockholm and so on and so forth. All of their novels feature a city that possess a vitality to it. A familiarity that is imparted to the reader by the experiences of the author and how the city has shaped their view of the world. You can't recreate that type of authenticity from a web browser.

That left me with the decision to create a city on my own. I used my imagination and my memories of the places in which I have lived. And viola! New London came into existence! It is an amalgam of all that I love about some of the greatest places on our little planet.

I chose Mars because I believe it is the next great frontier for human exploration and settlement. However, I also chose Mars because Lewis's Out of the Silent Planet and Burrough's John Carter of Mars series left an indelible print on my mind. And, I chose Mars because I first watched Total Recall at that age when things stick with you. The same goes for Mars Base Sara, the Mars Staging Grounds and the Mars Orbital Armory floating around the Red Planet (props if you know the references). I chose Mars because it is the birthplace of Spike Spiegel. I think those are all pretty good reasons.

If I haven't lost you yet, it might be because you're wondering why, if I did choose to place my city and all my characters on Mars, it isn't a bit more exotic. Good question...even if I didn't pose it as a question. 

I believe that in the expansion of one civilization or civilizations there has been a concerted effort to recreate the familiar. As the Greeks and, then, the Romans pushed the boundaries of the empires outward, they built cities that all contained stuff that made them very Greek, or Roman, right? Amphitheaters, baths, forums, architecture, aqueducts, and so forth. The familiar.

Once we colonize Mars, I see the same thing happening. I see a nascent city on Mars as a reflection of the people who founded it and populated it. It will contain the familiar. Because it doesn't matter how far into the future we will go, there will always be seedy bars, run down factories, and utilitarian architecture juxtaposed against the outward of expression of wealth and power.

Oh! And the ending wouldn't work very well on Earth. There's that too.

Cheers!

Kev

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    Kevin Bragg sent an update for Transilience

    I'm sitting here writing this update whilst listening to Yoko Kanno's Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex OST and reminded of two things. One, just how talented a composer she is. And two, how amazing of a series GITS is. I hope the big budget production isn't a let down.

    Onward....

    What a weekend Transilience has had! Ten preorders in the span of about 48 hours. I have a few people to thank and what a wonderful burden it is! So a hearty THANK YOU to Tim Merchant, Gareth Fernie, Joseph Asphahani, Mr R W H Bray, Amanda Orneck, Billy O'Keefe, Steven Davies and Tony Valdez.

    Transilience has also received some fantastic reviews. That complete strangers would write such kind things about something I have created is humbling. So please allow me to use this polite expression to the compliment received. Mr. Ryan, Mr. Cargnan, Mr. Sobin and Mr. Asphahani, Thank You!

    A quick aside: Mr. R W H Bray has written a book, himself, which is currently in the midst of a funding campaign of its own on a UK site called Unbound. Rich is a friend of mine and he really knows how to spin a yarn. His novel, In Cathedral's Shadow, is about love and loss and murder and the dark places of the mind and heart. All set in a small university town on the east coast of Scotland. You can check it out here.

    Back to my stuff. Check this space tomorrow where I offer an insight as to why I set Transilience on Mars.

    Until that moment, during that moment and after, if you haven't already, please consider supporting Transilience. And tell your friends about it! Your parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, coworkers, acquaintances, people whose lives you think will be enriched by good literature! 

    Publication date is listed as December 2016. What better way to get some early Christmas shopping done than to order Transilience? Wait! So we are clear, that's a rhetorical question unless you happen to agree with it. Then I say, "I know! Pure genius, right?!?"

    Let's keep the momentum going as the Sword and Laser contest deadline fast approaches. You know what they say about a rolling stone. It's probably set off by a tiny golden statue that looks like my grandpa, and will either crush under its enormous weight or seal you into a spider infested temple forever. So GO GO GO!!!

    Cheers!

    Kev

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      Kevin Bragg commented on an excerpt of Transilience
      Thanks for the comment, Peter. You're right, I could have chosen something stronger, but gin and tonic is one of my favorite drinks. It's the one aspect of myself I've interjected into the character. Although, he does like them a bit more than I do! :)
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        If you thought you could go the rest of your life reading books and not read a Science Fiction Noir Mystery... you're wrong. Transilience brings something to the table which is hard to define, but necessary.                
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