NOT using the
panel discussions of the most recent World Science Fiction Convention in Dublin,
Ireland in August 2019 (to which I be unable to go (until I retire from education)),
I would jump off, jump on, rail against, and shamelessly agree with the BRIEF
DESCRIPTION given in the pdf copy of the Program Guide. But not today. This explanation
is reserved for when I dash “off topic”, sometimes reviewing movies, sometimes
reviewing books, and other times taking up the spirit of a blog an old friend of
mine used to keep called THE RANTING ROOM…
Part II: http://faithandsciencefiction.blogspot.com/2020/02/slice-of-pie-creating-alien-aliens-part.html
Part II: http://faithandsciencefiction.blogspot.com/2020/02/slice-of-pie-creating-alien-aliens-part.html
I have created
three universes.
In the first, it’s
Humans alone. We genetically engineer ourselves to fit the varied environments
we encounter. The overarching conflict is between the Empire of Man and the
Confluence of Humanity. The first considers someone Human if they are 65% or more
“Original Human” DNA. If you’re less, you’re considered SubHuman. The second sees ANY genetic manipulation to be A-OK.
In the second, it’s
us and mobile plants. Humans have gone deep into space and encountered the
WheetAh, mobile plants reminiscent of a giant saguaro cactus crossed with a
pitcher plant. The conflict is as obvious as it is inevitable – we eat plants.
They eat rodents; hence the pejoratives each lays on the other. We call them
Weeds; they call us Weasels.
In the third, we
are junior members of the Unity of Sapients, some fifty extremely different intelligences
(I can’t say species – as in Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species –
as there are smart minerals, arthropods, collective, herd, and individual intelligences
in the Unity. We haven’t even been certified sapient. (definition: adjective – having
or showing great wisdom or sound judgment; Orig –1425–75; late Middle English
sapyent < Latin sapient- (stem of sapiēns, present participle of sapere to
be wise, literally: to taste, have taste), equivalent to sapi- verb stem +
-ent- -ent
So, I’ve written
stories in all three universes. How many in each have been published?
Confluence/Empire:
I’ve written seven; only one has been published.
WheetAh: Written
two; one published.
Unity: Written
seventeen, four published…which seems good, until I point out that the four
published stories didn’t contain aliens.
So, I CAN’T write
believable aliens.
Why not?
Writers who have
written believable aliens: David Brin, Julie Czerneda, Hal Clement, James
White, Alan Dean Foster, CJ Cherryh, Larry Niven, Octavia Butler, SL Viehl, and
others that escape me; clearly depict them. But HOW?
I’ve been doing
some superficial analysis and it seems that when Humans and aliens interact
closely and the alienness is narrowed down to one or two SPECIFIC differences;
the ones that somehow cause the problem; that’s when the aliens are acceptable.
For example, CJ Cherryh’s
atevi. Basically giant Humans with golden eyes and coal black skin,
bipedal, five digits, and sexually compatible with Humans (though not
reproductively compatible); have one difference: they have no concept of love.
In place of love, they have a profound sense of association. All large,
mammalian life forms on the Earth of the atevi have this same biological
urge – to associate under one strong leader. The single Human who interacts
with them, Bren Cameron, understands this and can speak their language fluently
– but he still makes mistakes when under pressure to assume that the atevi
“feel” about him as he does about them. This creates countless situations of
tension and have driven the story line for some TWENTY novels over a quarter of
a century of time. The reason I go back repeatedly is because I want to see
what happens next as the Human population grows and the atevi advance in
technology and eventually reach parity with Humans; and possibly visit Earth.
Another example is
James White’s famous Sector General novels. Twelve novels spanning over
thirty years of writing, they depict the life of a small group of Humans on a
massive space station away from the “main thoroughfares” of a vast interstellar
civilization as they interact with countless alien cultures and medical personnel.
Languages, medicine, morality, humor, and emotions are touchstones – and points
of conflict – for the series.
So – what have I
learned with my brief analysis?
1) Aliens and
Humans HAVE to interact closely; intimately. (I tried this with “May They
Rest” and it was quickly bounced by five magazines and my favorite, to which I’d
sold several stories…) In “A Complications of Sapients”, my character and an
alien, “cockroach” sapient interacted VERY intimately – and didn’t sell…
2) I need more
aliens than Humans. I did this in “Peanut Butter and Jellyfish”, podcast
from CAST OF WONDERS. It took place on a trimaran carrying cultural exchange
WheetAh. Humans need to be at a disadvantage. The aliens should be at an advantage.
3) It needs to
be a BROADLY threatening situation. I think I did this in “The Princess’s
Brain”, but I’ve got to go back ad reread it. I DID do this in “The Krasiman,
Monkey Boy, and the Frogfather”, but that didn’t sell, either.
So, I’m ready to
try something new. Cron plus the above…should give me an alien story that will
sell.
Resource: https://writepop.com/writing/writing-realistic-aliens/,
(I’ve used this one: ) https://www.amazon.com/Aliens-Alien-Societies-Extraterrestrial-Life-Forms-ebook/dp/B00B2B8FOO,
https://nypost.com/2018/02/24/heres-what-aliens-probably-look-like/,
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