Dec 16

Weaponry 1a: swords

Posted: under Contents.
Tags:  December 16th, 2008

Weaponry in Paksenarrion’s world has clear connections to late medieval/early Renaissance weaponry in our world’s history except for one obvious lack: there is no gunpowder. Hence no petards, no bombs, no cannon.

There are, however, blades of many styles, in abundance. Where did these come from, and what does it take to maintain them? (Some of you, in various re-creation societies, are now licking your chops…back off, this is not going to be a definitive treatise–and yes, I’ve read definitive treatises.)

We’re well into the age of steel here, so blades mean metal blades–and metal blades mean that somewhere there’s metal ore and someone with the knowledge and skill to convert ores into steel–steel that will take a point or an edge (or both, but not necessarily) and not fall to pieces the moment it’s hit by another sword.

Along with the iron ores, the swordmaker needs the ability to make a really hot fire, and then control it: this means a fuel source, and a forge in which to control the temperature. That forge needs to be made of something that won’t burn up at those temperatures, that will contain the fire and yet let the swordsmith move the metal around, pull it in and out. And the swordsmith needs an anvil and the tools with which to beat the fire-softened metal into shape, and a container of the right liquid in which to quench it. And a lot of skill.

So there’s a lot of work behind every sword, whether it’s the short stout gladius type used by the soldiers of the Duke’s Company, Halveric Company, and some others–or the longer slimmer rapier used by freelancers in the south, or the hand-and-a-half longsword used by nobles and captains in the north.

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Dec 14

Music…in and out of Paks’s world

Posted: under the writing life.
Tags: ,  December 14th, 2008

One of the constants across cultures is music:  people make music.   They play with rhythm and pitch and loudness–they sing individually and in chorus–they move to the music they make, and make it dance.

I’ve been hooked on music since early childhood.  I write to music–characters have theme music, entire books have music attached them  as I write them.   (Gird: Brahms’ GERMAN REQUIEM.  Luap: Zamfir’s best-known work for panpipes and orchestra.   Listen to both.  Tells you everything about the difference in their character.  Or it does to me.)

This past week, I’ve sung a good chunk of Handel’s MESSIAH with my church choir & friends, and the Austin Symphony.  My husband sang Vivaldi’s GLORIA tonight with his church choir & friends, and a small chamber orchestra.    The GLORIA is definitely a work that belongs in Paksenarrion’s world…but no one there speaks (or ever spoke) Latin, nor is the theology  correct there.  But the music…oh, yes.   Some of MESSIAH could also cross over, but not all of it.

So far, only classical music (in the broad sense) works for me when writing fantasy.   Everything else is too connected to this everyday world…the music I write to (at least when writing fantasy, and often otherwise) has to lift me out of the mundane.   For me this means harmony (dissonance only to resolve it), intricacy, and really gorgeous shadings.  Vivaldi’s GLORIA has all that.

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Dec 13

A little light reading…

Posted: under Contents, the writing life.
Tags: ,  December 13th, 2008

Paksenarrion’s fictional world has its roots in a World History class I took one summer in junior high (opening space to take Latin the following year).  Until then, I thought of history (“Social Studies” in our school) as a mass of facts to be memorized for a test.   The classes were boring, mostly spent reading aloud, one paragraph per student, the day’s reading assignment, or doing homework–the questions at the end of each chapter.  Aside from my mother’s historical novels (by Daphne du Maurier, Samuel Shellabarger, Kenneth Roberts) that I plowed through during vacation for something to read, I had no great opinion of history.

Our summer school teacher was the curriculum director for the district, newly hired, and he presented hist history in a very different way–more like a college class.  He expected us to read our assignments independently (the tests caught those who hadn’t) and spent the class periods in lecture and discussion.  Suddenly history had multiple dimensions–the stick figures of the “memorize facts” versions became real  people, with real problems and real ideas and real emotions.   Colors, sounds, smells, movement…and obvious relevance to the people around us, the world in the daily news, the results of all that history still alive and scheming/loving/fighting every day.

Still, I was fixated on science in those days, until it became necessary for me to “reconsider [my] educational objectives” as the notice telling me my grades the first year of college were below acceptable.   I had done reasonably well in only two courses, English and History.  I chose to major in History instead of Physics (sigh…)  and spent the rest of that college degree under the guidance of two excellent professors with somewhat different emphasis.

Katherine F. Drew, then chair of the history department at Rice, was a medievalist who had translated several legal codes (if you can find her Lombard Laws and The Burgundian Code, you’ll find familiar bits in the Code of Gird) and she insisted on the importance of everything–including economics.   I had studied some military history on my own (thanks to that Latin class and Caesar’s Gallic Wars) and thought economics both impenetrable and dull until she nudged us into making the connection between the finances and the strategy, the political structure and the ways goods and services were exchanged.

Floyd S. Lear, then professor emeritus, led us  into the background of the politics on the philosophical side (he taught both history classes and humanities classes) in both ancient and medieval history.  I have, and used in the Paks world books, his Treason in Roman and Germanic Law, a book that underlies my conception of gnome and dwarf societies in this fictional universe.  Both these professors demonstrated–and demanded–a high level of scholarship.  To put it bluntly, we learned to distinguish good sources from bad, one of the most valuable lessons anyone can learn.

As I was graduating from Rice, Dr. Drew said something that affected my life–she commented one day that when visiting the homes of former students, she was saddened when a bookcase held the college texts and no new evidence of continued learning.   I don’t  know how the others took it, but my response was to set up a long-term course of study–less demanding than college itself, since I’d have a day job, but intellectually challenging at the same level.   One subject to review, one new one, one new practical skill.

It’s been a lot of fun for the past forty years.  I’m still reading history books (and re-reading them), most recently Braudel’s big fat books on economics & history in the Renaissance.   But not just history–many other areas of nonfiction as well.   And as a background for writing fiction–especially fantasy–all this reading in history, cultural anthropology, and so on has proven invaluable.  So also the practical skills–hiking, camping, basic cooking, basic sewing,  riding and caring for horses, work with cattle,  butchering, building, emergency medical care, rural health care, gardening, using historical  tools like scythe and sickle–and so on.   All of it makes possible the kind of textured fiction I hope to write.   (It can also  result in large lumps of “I did all this research and you’re going to read it or else!”  I do try not to let my enthusiasm for the details to overwhelm the book. )

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Dec 12

Mistakes

Posted: under Contents.
Tags:  December 12th, 2008

Eagle-eyed readers have already pointed out mistakes on the Paksworld website.   If you happen to spot mistakes (where what I said on the website contradicts something in the books), please give a shout-out so I can fix it.

If it’s a mistake in the books…well, too late now.   Or mostly too late.  Correcting mistakes has to wait until the publisher thinks it’s worth doing…all the copies of that printing are sold and it’s going back again, or (more likely) a new edition.   Still, let me (or the publisher) know.

While we’re on the subject,  there are mistakes I didn’t make and can’t fix; if the covers come off or there’s a chapter of someone else’s book in the middle of mine–that’s something to write the publisher about.  You can complain to the bookstore (they will tell the publisher too) but direct contact from readers does help.

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Dec 11

New stuff

Posted: under Contents.
Tags: , , ,  December 11th, 2008

The blog now has a Links page that will let you hop directly to the Paksworld website (saves me having to put in the link in every post–since I forget.) It also has links to my main website, and to my LiveJournal. Both of those have information on other books, on writing in general, and many other things…this site is only for Paks-related stuff.

The website now has additional content–three of the front page links are now live with a little content behind them. There will be more, but this is a start. The FAQ is only partly done (time…it vanishes under my fingers as I type…and the books need to be done too…) but I’ll add to it from time to time.   The bio may go up tonight or tomorrow.  Fiction (books in print, forthcoming books, and Paks-related short fiction) are now on the site.

The new title block will be done in a couple of weeks–maybe sooner but it is the holiday season and at some point I have to stop and bake cookies for the choir party. And then for the other choir party. And then for presents. And…..

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Dec 11

Where’d you say that was?

Posted: under Contents.
Tags:  December 11th, 2008

The Paksenarrion universe has lots (and lots, and lots) of places in it, and readers new to that universe–not being introduced to it step by step, as Paks walked through her first years of travel–may feel overwhelmed.

So the “Places” page is now up at the website. It’s not complete (the stories aren’t complete–the map has to have blank places for new things to happen in) but it’s a beginning.

Meanwhile, the list of books already published is up on the Paksworld site with helpful information.

You may need to refresh/reload your browser as we make changes to the site.

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Dec 10

It’s never the same river…

Posted: under the writing life.
Tags:  December 10th, 2008

Writing in the same universe years later forces the writer to accept that things aren’t the same–can’t be the same–as they were when last working there. The writer’s not the same, the world into which the book comes isn’t the same, and the work may have continued to develop in the writer’s hindbrain even when the writer wasn’t technically “there.”

So returning to the familiar landscapes and characters of The Deed of Paksenarrion meant seeing the places, people, and story from a new (twenty-plus years older) viewpoint. Satisfying–because I’d been wanting to write in this world again for some years–and also scary, because I understood the challenges involved.

The first book is basically done, as is part of the second. Once more, this story-world grabbed my brain and held it captive while Story poured into it (and out my aching fingers!) That’s a great feeling, and this is the only fictional universe I’ve written in that provides it steadily, all the way through. My alpha-readers for this project, all familiar with the Paks books, said they found it true to the world, even though they’re now seeing characters and situations from new viewpoints.

So if you’re a fan of Paks and her world, this will feel like the same place–but seen from different angles than that of the young recruit, the mercenary soldier, the solitary adventurer and finally the paladin of Gird. Now the viewpoint characters are captains and kings, peers and courtiers, people whose lives were disrupted by the intrusion (however welcome) of a paladin. And yet the same deep logic underlies it all, as the bedrock the river flows over lasts longer than any individual drop of water that rushes over it.

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Dec 09

Fossils

Posted: under the writing life.
 December 9th, 2008

Fossils…bits left from earlier drafts…make a good draft look ridiculous.   For instance, I might start a sentence intending to put in a general noun–  “When a soldier yells for help–”  and then change my mind and decide to be more specific– “When  a Captain Strongarm yells for help–”    Notice the fossil “a” before “Captain Strongarm?”  Not good.  Happens in the best of families, but still not good.  I suspect that copy editors gloat over such mistakes, but nobody wants to give copy editors gloat points.

Fossils often survive the first few re-readings–especially if they’re small, a single article in the wrong place.   And sometimes they even make sense.  Not the right sense, but sense.   Hence the need to go over everything again.  And again.  And reading back to front as well as front to back, in hopes of finding the fossils among the pronouns lacking antecedents, the misspelled words, the flat-out-wrong words, the sentences that go on forever (notice someting about this one?) and all the other stumbling blocks between the first draft and what we all hope will be a clean, error-free printed page in the reader’s hands.

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Dec 09

Welcome

Posted: under Contents, Intro.
Tags:  December 9th, 2008

The new website for all the Paksenarrion-related books will soon be up.  Here’s what you can expect to find on it.

A list of all the books in the Paksenarrion fictional universe, with groups in the correct order and links to publishers and sources

Background material on places, characters, and societies.

Maps (as I draw them…this will take awhile since I’m also writing…)

Lists of names, referenced to the book that character appears in.

Artwork

Information on forthcoming books in this universe.

This blog will also have information on the progress of the books I’m working on.

More later….

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