My Author’s Brand

One thing I should try and make clear to you, the reader, is what my author’s brand is about.

First and foremost, I want to entertain you. I will happily give up everything else in order to entertain. If you don’t come away from the book with a sense of “That was fun!” and wanting to read the next book, I’ve failed. I am trying to entertain you, and if I don’t do that, you shouldn’t give me any more of your money. Since I want you to buy more of my books and tell your friends I’m an entertaining writer, I’m going to try to entertain you. I don’t try to have flippant smart-asses tossing off one-liners every three words, but I do try to slide a few in where appropriate.

The ‘flavor’ of science fiction I’m writing is a blend of Golden Age and modern ‘human wave’. People are at the center of what I write. Technology has a place at the table, but humans are in control, not robots or machinery.

Second, I want the characters to think. I want you to come away from the book thinking that everyone did what they did for rational reasons or at least motivations real people have. Nobody in my books is evil because it says so on their character card. The antagonists are pursuing their own best interests as best they see them. Sometimes the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Similarly, I try really hard to avoid violations of the Evil Overlord’s Principles. If it were possible to game the antagonist with a cheap shot, someone would already have done it. I want you to have the feeling that it took some real thought to plot this story – that all the characters all thought and worked for their chosen ends, and that the resolution reflects this.

Third, I want the ending to be something good that the characters have earned. I’m not going to promise that they all live to get there, but all that work and risk should earn them a better place than they started from according to what they value. I’m also not going to promise it’s the place they thought they were going in the first place. But if the work and risk wasn’t going to earn them a better place, why should they bother? Even if it’s just saving other people from a disaster, the characters should get something out of it. The ones who survive and persevere, anyway.

Fourth and finally, I’d like to think that I maybe gave you a little bit of a different way to think about things. I’m not looking to preach at you like a tenured professor, I just want to illustrate that there are different ways of looking at the same issue. I don’t think I’m going to change your mind. But maybe – just maybe – I can induce you to have a thoughtful conversation with someone who doesn’t agree with you. There’s far too little of that these days.


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