Make Your Novel More Compelling by Using Emotion

Every event in your novel is just the news unless your main character has an opinion on it.

  • A volcano erupts and kills everyone in town… Okay.
  • Your main character’s beloved daughter was in the town when it erupted… Super Sad!
  • Your main character had taken out life insurance on his daughter right before she died in the eruption and now he can pay for his wife’s operation… Conflicting!
  • Your main character is actually a psychopath and sent his daughter to the town knowing it would erupt… Perfect!

Any event becomes 1000X more dramatic once your main character has an opinion on what is happening.

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Every Plot Point Must Test Your Character’s Beliefs

Writing a Novel?

Using plot points as a way to test and strengthen what your main character believes in will make their development more fulfilling.

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How Much Time You Need to Spend Promoting Your Novel

How many agents have you queried? One?

If it took you a year to write your first novel, then why wouldn’t you spend at least a year promoting it? The writing industry is extremely saturated, so finding an agent or publisher is all about persistence.

Kim Liao even suggests aiming for 100 rejection letters every year, because being persistent enough to get 100 rejections will also lead you on the path to getting an acceptance.

I haven’t found an agent for my first novel yet, but chipping away at that dream every day (47 rejections and counting!).

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Your Villain Is Just the Hero That Succumbed to Her Own Weakness

Having trouble writing your villain?

When I wrote my first novel, I focused so much on building up my main character that I seriously neglected my villain. Turns out my villain was as flat as a board and it seriously impacted my story (not in a good way). It wasn’t until I thought of my villain as the hero of his own story that I was able to make him come to life.

If you’re struggling with writing your villain, maybe this tip will help.

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Three Ways to Improve the Introduction of Your Story

If you’re looking to improve the first few chapters of your novel, here are three impactful ways that I’ve found make my introductions much more compelling.

Happy writing! 🙂

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Terry’s September Newsletter

september-2016(here’s the link to last month’s watercolor newsletter)

Here’s the link to my Facebook Page. I also post the videos on my blog here.

Here’s the link to The Simple Test That Will Tell You How Compelling Your First Chapter Is

That’s all this month. Happy Fall!

From Terry!

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The Simple Test That Will Tell You How Compelling Your First Chapter Is

deathIf you think the first chapter of your novel could use some improvement, there’s one simple test that can tell you how to make it better.

Kill the main character at the end of your first chapter.

This will tell you how compelling your first chapter is.

Write something like, “Jim slips off the bridge and falls to his death.”

Now your main character is finished. He can’t achieve any of his goals.

Next, list out all the consequences that come into effect since the main character can’t achieve their goals.

If the list is short and lacklustre, it’s a good sign that your first chapter has room for improvement.

The consequences matters because they give the reader an idea of what’s at stake. The larger the stake, the more compelled your reader will be to find out what happens next.

A great example is Katniss Everdeen from Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games.

Let’s kill her at the start of the novel and see what happens.

“The train to District 1 crashes and Katniss Everdeen dies.”

Now what consequences come into play if Katniss can’t accomplish her main goal?

Main Goal:

  • Take her sister’s place in The Hunger Games and survive.

Consequences:

  • Primrose will be taken to The Hunger Games instead and Primrose will surely die because she’s young and doesn’t possess any archery skills like Katniss.
  • Gale will be heartbroken now that his crush is dead.
  • Peeta will be heartbroken now that his crush is dead, plus he’s going to die himself in The Hunger Games without any purpose to live any more.
  • Katniss’ mother will likely have a heart attack because Katniss is dead, and now Primrose will be sent to The Hunger Games and die too.

The consequences of Katniss’ death are very high and the reader doesn’t want any of those things to happen. The reader eagerly turns each page to find out what happens next, because Katniss must accomplish her goal above all cost.

A great thing about this test is that you can keep killing your main character at the end of each chapter to see if the consequences are still high enough to keep the reader engaged.

As in The Hunger Games, each chapter proves to test Katniss’ ability to survive and raises the consequences even higher:

  • Katniss becomes a symbol of hope to all the Districts, she can’t die!
  • Katniss respects Rue’s death, she can’t die, because of the huge emotional pull Katniss’ action has on the reader now.
  • Katniss develops conflicting feelings about Gale and Peeta, the reader must know who she chooses.
  • etc.

A lot of emerging authors don’t realize that the consequences must be clear from the start. It’s why most first-time novels don’t make it. It’s why mine didn’t.

When I finished my first novel, The Moon King, I used the first few chapters to introduce the setting, characters, and the main character’s goal, but I didn’t spell out the consequences until later chapters.

The initial feedback I got was very telling. It was to the effect of, “The first half is boring and drudges along, but the second half is super exciting and I couldn’t stop reading.”

Now that I’ve learned about building up consequences right away using the “Kill the main character” test, I’m editing my first few chapters to be much more compelling.

If you think that your first chapter could use some improvement, simply kill the main character and list out the consequences that you’ve written about so far.

If there aren’t many, or they aren’t very high, then you may need to do a rewrite.

Here’s a simple template you can use to do the test on your chapters (it’s a downloadable word doc)
kill-the-mc-test

Happy writing!

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What if you came home and your crippling debt had materialized into a fat, balding man, surfing infomercials from your couch?

That’s what happens in the absurd novel I’m working on!

CHAPTER  1

Bert Blaxon fidgeted with his glasses, something he always did when he was getting yelled at. He was worried, as usual, about losing his job.

“Bert, come see me!” screeched Fernillipy from the other end of the office.

Bert jogged from his desk and down the hallway. This is it, he thought.

The walls of his boss’s office were painted in a suffocating shade of beige and perfectly fit with the tired mustard metal desk. The small window to the back hid behind a cracked set of purple venetian blinds, and for whatever reason, his boss had papered one wall in red and brown plaid wallpaper. The last time this office had been gloriously refurbished was six years ago, which also happened to be the same amount of time another glorious refurbishing was due. Every second an emergency interior designer wasn’t called in lay greater offense to any innocent pair of eyes unfortunate enough to witness the insides of this office. And very unfortunately, Bert’s eyes weren’t very innocent. They had been exposed to these horrendous surroundings more than any other office lackey.

Not two seconds of visual offense had passed and Bert’s boss, Fernillipy, was already barking her insults at him. She was always looking for any minute reason to get rid of Bert, and today she had found one. Her lips flapped so fast that her spit nearly formed the words she spewed at his face. Needless to say, Fernillipy had the personality of a steaming pile of sludge.

Fernillipy herself was an offensive sight. Her black, scraggly hair had likely never seen a comb and was currently featured on the front page of Rat’s Nest Magazine. Her most upsetting feature was that she was always frowning. So often that it looked as if someone had permanently wrapped an elastic around her eyes, nose and mouth.

Bert had often wondered how Fernillipy, with her incompetence the size of a manatee, had even been hired in the first place. He supposed that all the other applicants had taken one look at the lack of opportunity of the position and promptly fled. The only thing Fernillipy wasn’t incompetent in was micromanagement. Regrettably for Bert, he was the only one she managed and she took full advantage of her only skill, even going so far as to keep a microscope on her desk as a constant reminder. She had been so successful at micromanaging Bert that he hadn’t been able to learn any greater skills than relying on Fernillipy for every decision. Because of this, he had no hope for ever finding another job. Who would want somebody from Superdump’s Marketing department who had been there for nearly six years and not gained a single skill?

“Bert, you gangly, needle-nosed chimp.” She held up the 50 page slide deck that Bert had stayed up till 3:00 AM to finish. “You spelled Footnote wrong in the footnote on page 4. You’re about as competent as a fistful of worms in a cheese soufflé.”

Bert parted his chapped lips. He wanted to retort. Badly. But, his nerves weren’t strong enough to deal with her wrath. They were hardly as strong as a two-pound chicken. Instead he resorted to just thinking about his retort. I didn’t even write that footnote! Bert screamed at Fernillipy within his mind. I pasted it from another presentation that YOU wrote. Even though his thoughts were confident, they had hardly any effect on his nerves, which were currently in a ring with a two-pound chicken (and losing mind you). Instead, Bert diverted his gaze from the elastic-wrapped, scrunch-face of his boss and caught a glimpse of his reflection from the glass plate of the microscope on her desk. A sorry-looking face with unkempt brown hair and green eyes looked back at him. I’m not a needle-nosed chimp, he thought and went back to fidgeting with his glasses, adjusting them around his ears.

“Don’t look away from me when I’m talking to you, you feeble, pie-faced telephone pole,” Fernillipy barked so loudly, Bert had to dodge the hurling insult of spit, and his glasses fell off.

Now Bert couldn’t see much, which made his need to fidget even worse. She’s going to fire me. His hands naturally went for the next closest thing, his red tie. In seconds he had fidgeted away the weak knot. The whole thing unravelled and fell to the floor. Unsure of what to do next, Bert’s hands went all jazz for a moment, before they found the buckle of his belt.

“Out of my office, and reprint the whole deck, or pack your things!”

Bert scooped up his accessories from the floor, snatched the 50 page deck, and fled like a turtle without its shell.

Rounding the office hallway, Bert tripped over something and planted his nose face first into the floor.

“Sorree,” said Clumsy in a cutesy voice.

Bert rolled over onto his back and looked up at Clumsy, who retracted her foot. She blew a big, pink bubble while she twirled one of her pigtails with a finger. She wore her usual extra large pink sweater, which hung loosely on her thin frame all the way down to her knee-high green socks. The bubble burst and she used her tongue to scrape the gum off her nose and back into her mouth.

“You do enjoy yourself,” replied Bert, sitting up and collecting the papers of his presentation.

“Yup!” replied Clumsy and she turned and skipped down the office hallway.

“Who let her in here?” yelled Bert, looking around to see if anyone else had noticed, but everyone was too busy businessing to pay any attention. Bert stood up, pushed his glasses to the top of his nose and tucked the presentation under his arm. He retreated to his brown cubicle in the corner of the office.

“How was the daily beating?” Nate Quimbleton’s tall frame dwarfed Bert’s. He slung his hand over the partition of Bert’s cubicle and took a sip of his coffee. The mug said, “Mondays, Baby”.

“Not bad this time. At least I didn’t fidget the buttons off my shirt like yesterday.”

“Bert, I tell ya, you’ve gotta take kick boxing classes or something, get your nerves in order. You’re never gonna climb the corporate ladder getting pushed around like that.”

“How’s your own climb going?” said Bert, entirely uninterested and looking at his nails. One of them was developing a bad case of hang and Bert made a mental note to sort it out later.

Nate slackened his posture. “Heh, I’ve only been here five months, unlike you.”

“Well, I’m not going anywhere unless I can appease Fernillipy.”

“That’s impossible. You know that. You’ve been living on the edge of her wrath since you started here.”

“Yeah, but pleasing her is the only way I’ve been able to keep my job. One big slip up and she’ll fire me. She’s been looking for excuses.”

“Why not just quit? There’s not a boss in the world as bad as her.”

Bert sighed to himself and imagined quitting, but the ambiguity of Unemployment really unsettled him.

“I can’t. Crippling Debt would ruin me. I need this job to keep him at bay.”

Nate stared blankly at Bert for a moment. “I dunno, Berty boy, Every day I see you sigh all over the place. Isn’t there something you’re better at doing?”

“I grow thyme in my apartment.”

Bert visualized the thirteen varieties of thyme he grew in mason jar pots in his apartment window. Every night he tended tenderly to them. He was trying to develop a thyme for tea.

“Strange.” Nate took a sip of his mug.

“Kay Nate, sorry, but I gotta get to work, Fernillipy’s presentation is tomorrow.”

“Why aren’t you presenting? You practically wrote the whole thing!”

Bert stared at the slide deck in his hands. Superdump Trash Growth Strategy read the first page. Combat Tactics from Slumping Sales. He flipped through the pages till a blaring red circle screamed at him from the footnote on the bottom of page 4. “Yeah, except for a few footnotes…”

“Tough,” said Nate, unconsciously picking his nose.

Bert flipped through the rest of the deck. The last page had a personalized note to him, also in red ink.

Dear Bert,

Tomorow is your 6 year aniversary with Superdump. Congradulations. I have no idea how an incompatent lacky like you has slipped throu the cracks this long, and I’ve regretted hiring you since the moment I hired you. However, after I present your completily rubish Trash Growth Strategy to the board tomorrow, I can guarentee you they will be the opposite of impressed. Better start looking for some referinces, because I certenly won’t be giving you one. It’ll be a relief to know I’ll finally have grounds to get rid of you. Consider this heads up a faver.

Sincerely,

Fernillipy

“That sucks,” said Nate.

***

Bert hung his coat next to the door and waved to Crippling Debt, which was flipping away at the TV and reading the newspaper.

Bert’s bachelor pad was the prettiest thing four walls could muster – a kitchenette, a retractable bed-sofa, a milk crate desk, and a hand-me-down love seat from his mother, which Crippling Debt was currently occupying. The window, which looked as if it has been forced into the wall, faced the beautifully glistening Lake Ontario. However, another apartment building had been built a mere twelve feet away, and obstructed any beautifully glistening views. The thirteen mason jars sat on its sill. Bert had packed them tightly with his own concoction of potting soil, nitrogen, foam balls, eggshells, and mint tea bags. The whole hobby had only cost him eighty-seven dollars, which he had saved from picking up loose change on the his way to work every day.

Bert opened the fridge to grab a slice of pizza from yesterday’s takeout, but came back empty handed.

“Sorry,” muttered Crippling Debt.

Bert looked up at his Crippling Debt. The large, balding man was wearing a soiled, but expensive suede, purple suit. Crippling Debt leaned forward to take a long, drawn out sip from the extra large take-out cup of soda that he was balancing on his enormous stomach. His face was stained with pizza sauce. Bert rolled his eyes and let out a sigh as big as a potato. This day just can’t get any worse, so I might as well get it over with. Bert pulled out the bed from the sofa chair and promptly went to it. “Mind turning out the lights?”

“No problem,” replied Crippling Dead as he flipped the newspaper to see the next headline of the Business section. It read, Superdump’s Trash Rubbish.  “Hey, your work is sucking.”

“I know, trash just isn’t as easy to sell as it used to be.”

“Don’t you have some growth strategy thing to present tomorrow?”

“Yeah… Fernillipy’s presenting it.”  said Bert.

“Well, maybe you should talk to her about presenting it yourself tomorrow?”

“I don’t want to talk to her tomorrow, or ever again. I just want to go to sleep and never wake up. Now, night.” He pulled up his comforter.

Crippling Debt looked to the window. “Aren’t you going to tend to your thyme?”

Bert didn’t reply. Crippling Debt shrugged. An infomercial about ten-payment 1,000 thread-count ankle socks had just come on.

Bert had long ago lost his control over Crippling Debt and sighed the size of a radish. He rolled over to face the window and counted the bricks of the adjacent building while thinking about how much he hated Fernillipy. Both topics were equally boring, plus his neighbour was doing tai chi in the nude, and so he entered Dreamland in twenty seconds flat.

Now, I must interrupt the story to tell you something. Wait, who am I, you ask? Just the little voice in the back of your mind that’s reading this story to you, don’t worry too much about it, I don’t have any alternate agendas.

What I must tell you is that this is one of those stories where the main character awakes at the end and realizes that all his adventures have just been a dream. I thought I’d tell you this upfront so you’re not completely underwhelmed at the end by any obvious clichés. So let’s just hash that out now and get it over with.

Now, the reason why Bert can’t just wake up any time soon is that he’s actually stuck in his dream, mostly because he forgot to dream about an exit door to the real world. Of course there are many ways to exit a dream, but dreaming of an exit door is the easiest way. In fact, since dreams are made up of pure imagination, nearly anything can happen. That is, anything but the Queen of England showing up. She’s so tired of appearing in people’s dreams to do that little hand wave of hers, that’s she’s negotiated a cease and desist. It’s now impossible to dream about her, however that works. Other than that, the world is your oyster, or as they same in Dreamland, Your dream is an elephant. No one’s really sure why that’s the saying, but it’s managed to stick.

Okay, let’s get back to Bert. Besides failing to dream up an exit door, the main problem with Bert is that his thoughts are so dull that his Imagination got fed up and squeezed itself out of his mind to go on a permanent vacation on Mars. Because of this, all Bert ever dreams about are a desk and a chair, which he sits at until his body decides to wake up. He just sits quietly through everything and waits.

It was 3:00am in the real world and Bert could be found lying peacefully in bed. The covers were pulled exactly up to his chin and each of his hands were placed daintily at his sides. Tucked in bed beside Bert lay a tattered old stuffed goat. Bert’s mother had placed the stuffed animal in Bert’s crib and since then the two had been inseparable. Everybody has that one belonging they carry with them from childhood—a favourite blanket, a plaster handprint, or a first soccer trophy. For Bert, it was his stuffed goat.

The knocker at the door sounded and Crippling Debt stepped over Bert to sign for the twin earlobe massagers he had ordered. He took the package and in his haste to open it, left the door unlocked.

Meanwhile, in Dreamland, Bert was patiently waiting at the desk he had imagined and began biting at a hangnail on one of his fingers. Even though he had no inclination of wanting to be at, or go to work ever again, he was dressed in his usual business attire – light blue dress shirt, tired gray dress pants, black leather belt, faded red tie. This was how Bert dressed most mornings, so it was also the easiest way to dream about how he was currently dressed. Bert took a break from biting at his hangnail to push his glasses to the top of his nose. Even in his dreams he couldn’t see very well, which was a tad ironic considering he wasn’t dreaming about anything to see. He was staring at nothing but a lot of black space. As soon as Bert began biting his hangnail again, something new happened.

His desk quivered.

Bert pretended not to notice.

The desk quivered some more and began to shake violently.

Bert still pretended not to notice, which was hard, because he was shaking violently along with the desk.

Suddenly the desk stopped shaking, which was good. Bert was afraid he’d have to imagine a giant paperweight to keep the desk in place. With his Imagination in the Bahamas, he knew it would be an arduous task. A giant paperweight suddenly became very disappointed  about not being imagined. Plato took note.

“Hello?” A robotic voice with just a tinge of curiousity spoke.

“Hello,” said Bert unsure of who he was talking to, and too uninterested to look at the source of the voice.

“What are you doing?”

“Nothing. I don’t want to wake up and go to work tomorrow.”

“Well stop that.”

“Why?”

“It isn’t good. Now, who exactly are you?”

“Why do you care?” said Bert, still staring off into nothing.

“I need it for my records. I must keep proper documentation of everything.”

“Fair. I’m Bert… Bert Blaxon. I’m 37 years old and single, well that is, until my Crippling Debt moved in recently, but I haven’t gone on a proper date in over a year. I live at 34 Millwood Road, apartment 27 B. My phone number is four one six, two four one, zero two four one.”

Bert figured it would be best to just get all his personal information out there all at once, so whoever was attached to the voice wouldn’t bother asking any more questions.

“Nice to meet you Bert Blackson, your dream is an elephant.”

“It’s Blaxon,” corrected Bert, a little annoyed that he still had to talk with the voice. “And what about elephants?”

“Right… I said Blackson. And nothing about elephants.”

“So let’s not bring up elephants. They’re very hard to imagine. And you’re not saying my name correctly. It’s Blaxon, not Blackson.”

“They sound the same to me.”

“There’s an X of a difference.”

“How can you even tell I’m saying Blackson instead of Blaxon? And even so I don’t know how I just knew the difference.”

“Well,” Bert began, “there are these words appearing as we speak, sort of just in the middle of everything. They’re taking up quite a lot of space and I wish they would go away.”

“You can see them?”

“Not exactly, it’s just this odd feeling I have that everything I’m saying is being spewed out onto paper with ink. It’s a really odd and annoying thing.”

“Oh, well in any case, it’s nice to meet you, Bert.”

“Just to fill me in, where and what exactly are you?”

“Look down.”

Bert did so and realized that his desk was sitting atop a shiny tin body. That’s probably what all the shaking was about.

“Mind if I get up? It’s quite uncomfortable under here,” said the shiny tin body.

“Oh course not.”

Bert stood from his chair and stepped to the side, which was quite an odd sight, because Bert hadn’t actually imagined a room for the desk and chair to be sitting on. Instead, Bert, the desk, chair, and the tin body just floated in the black of space.

The tin body pushed the desk off it and stood up in the black of space itself.

“You’re more than just a tin body,” said Bert. “Looks as if you’ve got a few limbs and a face to you.”

“You’re quite observant, Bert Blaxon, for having an extreme lack of imagination.”

“Thanks, but I don’t remember imagining you. My Imagination is currently spending a lot of money in the Bahamas. My Crippling Debt loves it.”

“You didn’t imagine me—I forced my way in,” replied the shiny tin body.

I might as well mention that the shiny tin body (with its face and few limbs) belonged to a robot. Its limbs were actually two arms protruding from its sides, which looked like the tubing from an air conditioning vent. Its shiny square body had a few dials and gauges punched into it and it sat atop a stick with a wheel at the end. The robot’s face was its most notable feature. Besides being a flat cube itself, it had a grid of square, blue lights six times six – two squares of which were lit up at either side of its face as eyes, and six of which were lit up in a straight line near the bottom indicating its mouth.

“I suppose you’re wondering where I came from and why I’m here, Bert?” The robot’s mouth lights blinked as it spoke.

“Not particularly. I’m more wondering where this hangnail came from. I’m so careful with my nails.”

“Oh.”

“Well, should I be wondering where you came from?” asked Bert.

“Yes. You should.”

“I’ll think about it.”

“I’m not the most patient of programs,” said the robot, its mouth lights blinking. “So, I’ll just tell you. I’m from the Dream Corporation. Your dream has timed out, meaning you won’t awake from your human sleeping machine and I was sent here to investigate.”

“My what now? Human sleeping machine?”

“Yes, you might also call it a bed.”

“Makes sense,” said Bert biting his nail and sitting back down. “Now have your go, so this can all be over, I can’t imagine that there’s much to investigate here.” Bert motioned to the black void all around them and then folded his hands.

“You’re exactly right, there isn’t anything at all to investigate here. I can see why your dream timed out now.”

“Am I supposed to know what that means? How does a dream time out?”

“Dream Time Out,” the robot suddenly straightened up all stiff-like and its voice sounded even more robotic than it was before – double robotic, or doublebotic. “The state of occurrence when no activity has occurred within a dream and its owner ought to be waking up soon. However, due to a complete lack of imagination, no dream activity is being logged, nor has an exit route been imagined and the subject is locked inside its own dream.” The robot’s voice went back to normal robotic sounding, or normalbotic. “I’m a wikibot, for your information. My databanks have all the known knowledge of the Internet and beyond.”

“What could possibly be beyond the internet?”

The robot’s voice became doublebotic again. “Beyond the Internet, or otherwise known as the Beyondternet. A state of being where exists all knowledge from the real world – as collected from the Internet, and Dreamland –  as collected by the Dream Corporation.” The wikibot’s voice went back to normalbotic sounding again. “Boy, Bert, you sure aren’t very imaginative.”

“I know.”

“Well enough of this. Please follow me.”

“I’d rather not. I’m perfectly happy sitting here, waiting to never wake up again.”

“That’s the thing. Your dream timed out. You’ve caused a glitch in Dreamland and now you’re stuck here.”

“For how long?”

“Forever.”

Bert unfolded his hands and placed one on his chin. “You mean I’ll never have to go to work again?”

“You won’t be able to, since you’ll never wake up.”

“Excellent!” For the first time in this story, Bert sounded excited about something. “If I wake up, I’ll have to go to work. If I go to work, I’m likely to be fired. If I’m fired, Unemployment will move in, and I already have to deal with my Crippling Debt amongst others. It will simply be too much to handle.”

“Less than excellent for me though. I’ve been sent to fetch you so that some Dream Scientists can poke your brain and figure out what caused all this. Dreamland is already overrun with tourists from all the humans coming here every night. We can hardly take any more, and we can’t have any of you moving here permanently. Dreamland has very strict immigration policies.”

“Oh, what are they?” Bert perked up in excitement at the possibility about staying in Dreamland permanently.

“There aren’t any.”

“There are no policies?”

“Strictly none. That’s why we can’t have you staying.”

“Oh,” said Bert and he slumped back down to his usual terrible posture. “If you don’t mind, I’d rather just sit here. Brain poking doesn’t sound like a very fun activity, and I was having quite a lot of fun sitting here thinking of nothing.”

“I’m sorry, Bert, but I also have strict orders to bring you with me.”

“From who?”

“Myself. I want to make a good impression with my micro-managing boss.”

Bert scrunched his face to show his disapproval, supposing he had learned that move from Fernillipy. However, the wikibot didn’t pick up on it, because it wasn’t very good at reading human emotions. “Your face looks scrunched up,” it said.

“Exactly my intention.”

“Strange. I will log this in my databanks.” Suddenly the wikibot’s voice became doublebotic again. “On occasion, human males named Bert will scrunch up their faces with intention.”

“When they are feeling upset,” added Bert.

“Of course,” replied the wikibot. “Now, I haven’t any more time to waste. I need to recharge my batteries before I run out of juice.”

“Juice?”

“Yes, pineapple. It’s my favourite. Now, are you coming willfully?”

“No,” said Bert, noticing for the first time the juice box in the wikibot’s clamp hand. He wished he had some juice too, but knew it would take a lot of imagination to bring one into existence – a task which Bert found more unattractive than Fernillipy’s scrunch-face.

“Very well.” The wikibot’s features disappeared as the lights on its face dimmed. One moment later they lit up in sporadic red patterns, and noises much like that of an old dial-up internet connection came out of its box body.  Two moments later, Bert’s table began to shake again. Three moments later Bert’s dream was filled with high pitched garbling noises like that of four talkative five-month old babies. Six moments later, the narrator stopped counting moments.

Bert couldn’t help but look down this time as his table stopped shaking. At the end of Bert’s nose, and the bottom of his table, sprung up two things Bert had never seen before. He looked back to the wikibot, whose eyes and mouth reappeared as lights on its face panel. Even though the eyes were just dots, and the mouth, a straight line, Bert couldn’t help but see an expression of smugness. “What are they?” he asked as the two unsightly things jumped out from under the table and stood before Bert. Their pink skin drooped like a balloon filled with jelly and at the top of their globuous forms, sat a gigantic ball-shaped nose. Two sets of beady black eyes peered out at Bert from underneath two dollops of brown hair.

“They’re Bing Bongs,” replied the wikibot. “I just transported them in.”

“And what do they do?” asked Bert. He had a feeling the Bing Bongs wouldn’t be very good for his nerves. His nerves agreed. They were still recuperating from losing a two-pound chicken match.

One of the Bing Bongs binged its nose right into the side of Bert’s leg, while the other jumped up and bonged Bert in the side of the arm. Bert stood up in alarm.

“Just that,” said the wikibot.

“It’s quite alarming!” Bert tried to dodge the bing of one of the Bing Bongs, but the other managed to bong him in the stomach, causing him to fall over. “Stop it!” cried Bert and his nerves in unison. The two Bing Bongs replied with some garbled noises and bing bonged Bert again. “What are they saying?”

“I don’t know,” said the wikibot. It shrugged its shoulders. “Just sounds like garbled baby-talk to me.”

“Why are they doing this?”

“It’s what they do. They’ll force you to come with me.”

“I won’t.”

“You will.”

The two Bing Bongs then proceeded to bing and bong Bert relentlessly. However, being the consistency of jelly-filled balloons, it didn’t really hurt. Instead, it was just a largely unpleasant experience. Just unpleasant enough for Bert to start moving in the direction they were bing bonging him in.

“This way,” said the wikibot and it rolled off into the blackness of Bert’s dream.

Bert was forced to follow.

I’m still working on the next chapters, but if you’d like to read more, I’ll email you them when they’re done 🙂

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7 Fantasy & Sci-Fi Novels that will make you rethink the Moon

Considering the moon moons us every night, I haven’t come across many cool moon concepts in Sci-Fi and Fantasy. But, here’s a list of some awesome writers who’ve completely re-thunk the moon and made it into a totally rad concept.

1. Roverandom -1925
J. R. R. Tolkien

Roverandom

Imagine all the creatures from LOTR compressed into one place – that’s what it’s like on Tolkien’s moon. There  are wizards, dragons, goblins… the whole lot!

The only thing missing is a hobbit main character. Instead, the main character is a dog… then a toy dog… then a toy-sized dog… yip yip!

Some weird wizard dude gets mad at Rover for biting him and turns him into a toy dog (justly so! Toys can’t bite). Another wizard strolls by and decides to turn the toy dog into a toy-sized dog (justly so! All toys want to become real).

Rover is unhappy with his toy-sized dog self, but needs the original wizard to change him back. Obviously riding a seagull to the moon is the best place to look, so that’s what Rover does. Unfortunately the wizard is actually from Persia, but you know, he might have been from the moon.

If you’re a Tolkien fan, you’ll enjoy finding quips of LOTR in this super short book that he crafted for his son after he lost his toy dog.

“Tolkien *can* write a story with a happy ending! It’s a very charming tale, closer in style to “The Hobbit” than LOTR, but lighter and full of colloquialisms and word plays (many of which were lost on me!) that are rare in his other books. As he never prepared it to be published, there are a few loose ends and anomalies, but they are easily overlooked.”
X (Goodreads)

2. The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress -1966
Robert A. Heinlein

The Moon is a Harsh Mistress

Since nobody likes prisoners, it only makes sense that we ship them all to the moon. I’m thinking of putting forward a motion to rename the moon, Mooncatraz.

In 2075, Earth is all faminey, so the Earthlings force their Moonling captors to grow wheat in gigantic underground farms and ship it back to their planet. The Moonlings are all like, “Nay, we need to conserve what water we have to survive!” Then the main moon computer (whose name is Mike) goes “beep boop” and calculates that the prisoners will turn to cannibalism from resource depletion if they keep sending shipments to Earth. Luckily computers hate cannibalism and so Mike sides with the prisoners and starts a revolt against their Earthling captors.

I really can’t wait for this novel to become a film. I’ll get see the acronym TANSTAAFL plastered on movie posters everywhere!

“What I learned from this book:
1. History bends and melts over time.
2. The first AI we meet might not be intentional.
3. Throwing rocks can get serious over interplanetary distances.
4. There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.”
Dan (Goodreads)

3. Luna: New Moon -2015
Ian McDonald

New Moon (Luna, #1)

100 years into the future, humanity has colonized the moon. I can’t wait for this to happen, because I think a mooncation (moon vacation) would be super stellar!

Another cool thing in this novel is that everyone’s eyes are fitted with “chibs” (like Google Glass) that tell the user how much air/water/etc. they have left.

Imagine if we had this technology already? My screen would constantly say, “Less donuts. More kale.”

After reading this book, I started a money jar for myself with a label that says, Mooncation Fund. There’s also a tonne of crazy political drama (and a crazy amount of sex) in this book, so if you’re a Game of Thrones fan, definitely check it out.

“If you can imagine the Starks and Lannisters as two rival families with competing mining operations on the moon, I daresay the situation might look a lot like the plot of Luna: New Moon. I can’t remember the last time I read a sci-fi novel featuring a richer and more compelling premise.”
Mogsy (Bibliosanctum )

4. The First Men in the Moon -1901
H.G. Wells

The First Men in the Moon

Wells was my favourite author growing up. My brother would go to the public library every weekend and run for the Sci-Fi section to see if we could find any undiscovered Wells stories.

Perhaps this novel sparked my fascination with the moon. In Wells’ story, a scientist invents an anti-gravity material called, cavorite. Obviously the best use for such a thing is to make a little anti-gravity ship and go to the moon. And that’s exactly what another dude convinces the scientist to do.

Turns out there’s some crazy shit going down on the orbiting rock and the two are enslaved by some insect-dude farmers who were herding their cows (the cows are actually just big blobs of lard).

It’s a good thing we went to the moon already and discovered this was all false. Otherwise, I’d be having nightmares of lardcows and insect dudes every time I look up into the sky at night.

“Describe this book in a single word? Ridiculous. I have never read science fictions. I have read very few classics. And then I went and randomly picked up this classic sci-fi written in 1901. Well, I’m very glad I did so because The First Men In The Moon by Sir H.G Wells is as amazing as it is ridiculous.”
Veronica the Geek (Goodreads)

It’s also noteworthy to mention that there’s a film adaptation, First Men on the Moon (1964), which is worth a watch. It definitely gave me nightmares of gigantic caterpillars and weird crystal hive mind caves as a kid.

5. The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter -10th Century
Anonymous

Not a novel, but I had to include it in this list. Besides being a moon fan, I’m also an ancient tale fan, so bonus points as this is the oldest surviving Japanese prose narrative.

In ancient Japan they didn’t know that moon babies are born inside of bamboo stalks so a bamboo cutter is surprised when he cuts one open and finds a tiny girl. Luckily we know better now.

The cutter then raises the girl as his own and she grows into the most beautiful thing ever because bamboo juice is great for the skin. Her beauty attracts all the men who want to do things to her that they can only do once they’re married. But, bamboo girl will have none of it. Only a moon husband will do.

I can’t say much more without giving too much away, but I definitely recommend checking it out. Plus, it’s the story of how Mount Fuji got its name.

All in all, whoever crafted this story was on some kind of crazy trip. Moon people born in bamboo stalks on earth? That’s a stretch!

This is a super great story!
-Unkown Japanese Person (10th Century Japan)

6. Mutineers’ Moon -1991
David Weber

Mutineers' Moon (Dahak, #1)

This book answers a lot of questions that science hasn’t yet figured out.

What is the moon? A gigantic sentient spaceship of course!

Where did humans come from? 50,000 years ago, there was a mutiny in the moon space ship and a bunch of humans were like, “We’re going to live on earth.”

Are evil aliens coming to destroy us all? Yes, and the only way to save humanity is by faking the death of an astronaut!

See? Everything makes sense now.

I always knew there was more to the moon than its boring orbit thing. I mean, it does cause nice eclipses every once in a while, but being a gigantic, ancient spaceship is way cooler.

Without getting into the complexity of this novel (there’s a lot of different conflicts to keep up on. It’s more of a military sci-fi thing), let me just say that this is possibly the coolest concept I’ve come across for the moon.

“One of my all-time favorite series. I’ve likely re-read this book (in the omnibus “Empire from the Ashes” edition) more than any other in my collection.”
Ross Wilson (Goodreads)

7. Gardens of the Moon -1999
Steven Erikson

Gardens of the Moon (The Malazan Book of the Fallen, #1)

There’s not as much moon in this novel (or the 10-part series) as there is a gigantic floating rock with an impenetrable fortress inside of it, called Moon Spawn (there are other floating fortresses too, but this one is the most badass).

I mean, the moon is basically a big floating rock anyway, so Moon Spawn fits the description perfectly.

If I were going to try to rule the world, this is exactly what I would build. What makes Moon Spawn more terrifying is that thousands of humongous ravens live on it. Have you ever been out for an early morning for a jog when you turn a corner and a dozen crows are silently staring at you from dead tree? Now imagine that X 3,000!

There’s an awesome battle in Gardens of the Moon against Moon Spawn. A bunch of mages are like, “We can overthrown this thing” and set it on fire. No big deal though, the fortress just floats away and continues to be totally awesome somewhere else (well, until it crashes into the sea and becomes a bunch of treasure-filled islands, which is also pretty rad).

Here’s a sweetass depiction of the battle. Notice the hoards of ravens?

(I tried to find the source of this image, but couldn’t. If you know it, please tell me!)

This is a series to get into if you like super high fantasy. The world building is completely next level (especially because the series is 10 books long). There’s even a whole 3,000+ page wiki dedicated to Erikson’s series.

“There’s a loooot of (incredible) characters, places, concepts, gods, demons – and what little exposition there is usually comes after the fact, but I’ve never been in a more vividly realised / immersive fantasy world.”
Sam Ashurst (Goodreads)

Special Mention:

In Cloud Atlas (2004, David Mitchell) advertisements are beamed onto the moon from a dystopian Korea.

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Six Amazingly Bizarre Sci-Fi & Fantasy Novels You’ve Never Heard Of

You’re proud of reading strange fiction.

When someone says, “I read this really weird book…” you immediately tune them out, because they’re peasants compared to what you’ve read.

WELL THINK AGAIN, PEASANT!

I bet your feet aren’t even wet in bizarre. If they were, you’d have already read everything on this list of godawful reviews of some of the godawfullestly bizarre books you can find.

6. Shadow and Claw
Gene Wolfe

Shadow & Claw (The Book of the New Sun #1-2)

The worst part about this novel is that it’s hard to follow along. The best part is that when you do, you’re thrown into an insanely fantastical world that’s constantly trying to kill you and for some reason, you just can’t leave.

The main dude grows up in a Torturer’s guild, where all he does all day long is learn better ways to torture people. Sadly, he falls in love with one of his torturees and helps her commit suicide (a no no, to other Torturers).

Now on the run from the Torturer’s guild, main dude starts to explore the world, and honestly, he should have stayed in his deep, damp, torturous dungeons, because the world is WAY worse.

Imagine you’re a cute, little, peaceful peasant.

“La la la, I’m going to walk to the next village to go to grandma’s!” you say and leave the gates of your village (by the way, the gates of your village are ten miles thick to keep all the baddies out)

Not two moments have passed and your carcass has been ripped to shreds by gigantic beastly monsters! Your soul ripped to shreds by strange flying cloths (yeah, flying, soul sucking cloths)! Your dignity ripped to shreds by your avenging family who eats your corpse as part of a strange ritual where they consume your memories. Worst of all, your ears are ripped to shreds because there are some bards engaging in an outdoor spectacle of song and dance watching this all happen, while a bomb goes off and destroys everything.

To add onto absurdity, there’s actually A LITERAL PLAY written write into the book! Like, story stops, play starts. And they have nothing to do with each other. It’s just whack.

And once you’re back in the story, you can’t even safely stay there for long, because at random points you’re transported to modern day earth, where you hang out with some missionaries missionarying to some Amazonial people.

This book is just all over the place, but in a strangely acceptable way that makes you want to engage in hours of research after you finish the novel just to figure out what it’s about.

5. Iris
William Barton and Michael Capobianco
Iris

Iris is about a group of astronauts who are all sexually interested in one another (so many love triangles, it turns into a love hexagon). Of course the best place to send a sex-crazed orgy is to investigate a disant moon, because that’s what super advanced civilization do. Screw scientists and screening tests.

The crazy sexagon (sex hexagon) manages to stop having sex long enough to actually do their exploration duty and check out the planet they were sent to investigate. Needless to say, some of the crew stays behind so they can have more sex. I’M NOT EVEN JOKING!

The crew quickly discover an ancient alien “ark” ship on the moon that they suspect was carrying some ancient alien animals after some ancient alien planet died. They accidentally turn on the ship (in more than a sexual way) and it imparts its memories into their sexy bods.

Actually, it turns out the vessel is still alive, after being abandoned on the moon for aeons. What’s more is that it douses the crew in its deliciously oozy oil, which is actually some strange form of communication. Things get even stranger when it turns out the ship wants to get in on all their sexy times, and we spend a good deal learning about robot ship sex (which doesn’t really make sense, because robots can’t reproduce, but the authors make it make sense).

It’s a tough read for sure, so be ready for a challenge! Just make sure to wear some gloves when you pick up this read, because things are going to get oozy and sticky real fast.

4. The Gameplayers of Zan
M.A. Foster
The Gameplayers of Zan (Ler, #2)

This novel is on a whole other level. Imagine taking George R. R. Martin and J. R. Tolkien and putting all their world-building energy into creating the daily nuances of a subculture of futuristic humans.

The novel is about the Ler, a race of genetically superior humans. They were created by humans, but they turned TOO different than expected. Plain old humans don’t like them, so they’re all pushed into a little forest community, where tourists go to watch their daily activities, and the government watches closely for fear that they’re plotting something.

These super humans who live in braids (makes sense once you read it), have INSANELY complex daily rituals and ways of interacting with each other. I’m talking like 100 pages purely describing how a certain connotation of a word effects the social interactions of different braids. It’s just INSANE how much detail goes into creating Ler culture. After finishing this book, you can apply for expedited advanced anthropology degree from Harvard University.

And of course, it turns out the Ler HAVE BEEN PLOTTING SOMETHING. Something huge, and they’ve been doing it undetected for hundreds of years through an ancient tradition of playing a game which is part of their INSANELY COMPLEX culture.

On top of this, you learn all about the complete mindfucks of the Lers’s capabilities. By will they can transport their minds into basically another dimension, or just decide to erase all their own memories and start over as a baby in the body of an adult (this happens by the way). Being a baby adult is just the most inconvenient thing ever, so don’t try it.

All in all, the Gameplayers of Zan is on an entirely different level than any other book you could ever read.

3. Diaspora
Greg Egan
Diaspora

Where do I even start with this one.

In the FAR FAR FAR FAR FAR future, nearly everybody lives in an internet-type virtual world. Information is freely and instantly available, so people find entertainment in jumping copies of their consciousness to other parts of the galaxy to watch stars explode from different satellites.

Out of the far reaches of the internet, sometimes artificial intelligences accidentally get born and the main character is one. She… he… whatever it is, has to learn the culture of this crazy future and try to fit in.

Oh, by the way, Earth is still around, and ancient humans still live on it, but they’ve put an embargo on their internet-galaxy-travelling brothers and sisters from coming to Earth, BECAUSE THEY HATE THEM. Unlucky for them is that the internet humans discover a supernova that will destroy Earth’s atmosphere, so now the internet humans are all like “duh, how do we tell dumb Earthlings they’ll die if they don’t want to communicate with them?”

Obviously the answer is to send the newly born AI’s mind into the wiring on an earth robot so it can try to warn the Earthlings.

Hardly any Earthlings believe the internet-human-AI-robot hybrid, which is unfortunate because they all die. All except one other Earthling who falls in love with the AI, who then transfers her consciousness to the internet.

Let me just say that THIS IS ONLY THE BEGINNING of the story. There’s a crazy amount of stuff that happens, that I can’t even begin to do justice to. For instance, at one point, the internet humans build a gigantic, bazillitrillion mile long hyper jump space travel device, and then find YET ANOTHER race of even more super-internet-human-robot hybrids (who hate internet-humans by the way, seriously, what gives?). And the ending of the novel is even more bizarre as our AI hero decides to go on a trek across the universe and find an ancient race of super-internet-human-robot-crabpeople-buddhistmonk-robot-internet hybrids. Everything in this novel is just plain whack.

Also, parts of this novel are HARDCORE SCIENCE FICTION, like solving mathematical problems science fiction, so be ready to dive super deep into quantum mechanics, because the author has a B.Sc.

Read it, you will definitely have a lot to think about by the end.

2. Stone
Adam Roberts

Stone

I can’t think of a more bizarre novel that could ever exist.

Taking place in the future, humanity has become perfect, yay! Turns out we solved all disease and death with little nanobots that live inside our bloodstream and repair everything. You can even communicate to these nanobots using your thoughts to tell them things like, “grow me wings so I can fly!” or “give me gigantic nostrils, so someone can stick their penis up them so I can have nose sex!” This…actually…happens… So much so, that nose sex becomes a fad ON AN ENTIRE PLANET, and people visit that planet and grow their noses just to have nose sex. Think about that for a moment. Nose sex, people. Nose. Sex.

So, the story begins with the only known criminal in the known universe. Since humanity is perfect and everyone has everything they could ever want, no one has any sort of motivation to do any harm to anyone else. Except our hero. He killed someone, and he quickly becomes famous throughout the universe as the only criminal ever.

Since “police” and “jails” are mere abstract concepts from a very distant past, humanity doesn’t really know what to do with him, so they do the best thing they can think of.

They “execute” him by taking out dude’s nanobots so he’ll die of natural causes (the lamest execution possible). Oh, but they also exhile him.

How? Well, they put him inside a plastic chamber…inside a meteor…inside a sun…inside a distant galaxy. He’s nothing to worry about now, right? WRONG! Dude escapes from his sun-Alcatraz prison by wrapping his body in foam and shooting it really really really really fast through the meteor. YES THIS IS WHAT HAPPENS. He escapes with foam. Don’t even ask. I don’t even know.

So now we have dude who’s wrapped in foam, just floating through space with killing on his mind. I wish I could tell you all about his crazy killing adventures through the galaxies, but let me just say, he does a lot of killing. Like billions of people killing.

The most memorable scene in the book (other than nose sex), is dude dismembering a body, only to be super annoyed that the dismembered parts of the body keep crawling back together. The nanobots inside just won’t let the dude die, so he eventually has to bury all the separate parts so the dude CAN’T crawl back together.

I don’t even want to talk about the rest, because even recalling parts of this book troubles me.

Just read it… you will not be disappointed. You will be disturbed, but not disappointed.

1. Beyond Redemption
Michael R. Fletcher

Beyond Redemption

Imagine a world where your beliefs become reality. Believe strongly enough over time that you’re a fish and you eventually become one. Believe you’re a fish TOO MUCH and your own fish insanity kills you.

Now imagine you aren’t a fish, but other people believe you’re a fish… yup, you still end up a fish, because belief defies reality.

This is Beyond Redemption… without the fish.

All the characters in this book ARE EXTREMELY INTERESTING. There’s a kleptomaniac who can steal anything without getting caught, because that’s what she is. There’s a swordsmen who makes other people believe he’s the best swordsman in the world, so he’s easily able to defeat anyone.

There’s also this grotesque, stout, bald woman who can manipulate fire, a priest who’s personality is literally splitting, a dude who literally turns into a handful of scorpions, and a scientist who’s really good at science, because he loves science.

The best character is probably a slaver. A dude who’s 1,000 pounds and CRAVES love and acceptance so hard that other people are forced to love him no matter what. To reinforce his beliefs, he lives off a steady diet of those who love him, cooking them into a stew. It’s just so messed up, it’s hard to take your eyes off the pages of this novel. An hour will flash by like a minute you’ll be so engaged.

The actual story revolves around an insane priest who’s trying to get a whole city to believe in a young boy god he’s imagined up. The whole city believes so hard that the god actually becomes real. He then manipulates this young boy god so that he’s the god of a god and can use the god to do anything he wishes, which obviously is world domination.

Meanwhile, a troop of lowlife crazies determines that they’re going to steal the god, because of money.

Needless to say, madness ensues and there’s a ridiculously climactic scene (probably my favourite of any novel) where all these crazies are in one place throwing their powers to shit. Not to mention, every time you put this novel down, you’ll feel the need to take a shower, as the setting is so utterly grimy and glorifyingly putrid.

But, this novel is every sort of amazing in its themes, and concepts, and characters, plus there’s the fact that everyone’s got a random German name.

This is definitely the most bizarre novel you will ever read.

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