Monday, October 31, 2011

Re: "Can Steampunk Look Toward the Future?"

Information about a new documentary about the steampunk "subculture" (or "not") and a New York Comic Con panel discussion at this Tor Publishing blog page.

My answer?  It will have to look toward the future, just like all the rest of genre fiction, and non-genre fiction, too, for that matter.  Relevance requires that the elements of all fiction, including genre fiction, speak to the current consumers of those works and their lives, needs and desires at the current time.  That doesn't change no matter whether you're talking about Tolkien-esque fiction, the latest Terminator movie, or The Brady Bunch (see my Knews Not News post on why that works).  You have to reach your customers with the things that matter to them or they won't buy what you're selling.  But is that really about the future?

Sure it is, especially for adherents of the steampunk movement.  These are folks who take great interest in modding current technology to a visual standard that doesn't exist in most current design elements of consumer goods.  See, if product designers tap into that DIY/make-it-yours-alone element and allow for ready modification of their products, that's the Holy Grail of design:  the personally designed and adapted tool that practically guarantees satisfaction.  You don't have to dig goggles and airships to want that, do you?

Relating this to a work of fiction involves the same design considerations.  A book has to end at some point in order to be printed (electronically or physically), so the content is fixed.  The design, however, really doesn't have to be.  Offering the consumer a choice of differing elements that they can mix and match (fonts? cover art? page colors?) to "create" something more pleasing is an interesting possibility.  But how does the author/designer know what their consumers want?

Sounds like a job for social networking.  Ask your market.  Offer samples.  Pick your favorite, and release it, but be sure give your customers what they want.  That always makes for an interesting future, don't you think?

Monday, October 24, 2011

The Update for October 24, 2011

Okay, so far it's been an autumn of tremendous personal upheaval.  And back again.  And more upheaval.  On a personal level, I'll be glad to see the back end of this year heading away from us all.

Professionally, I've been in a sort of stasis for the past seven weeks (!).  I've done a little work on all four projects, but nothing you'd really call advancement and nothing too earth-shaking. 

That changes this week.  I'm planning to work a double shift on writing today, just as a way of getting back into the swing of things.  Maybe a double on Wednesday, too, but I won't know that for sure until tonight.  Today's work starts with a post to Knews Not News, the location for which you can find in the sidebar to the left of this post.

I have a couple of steampunk links to add, but I'll do those either after the KNN post today or later in the week.  Pretty nifty stuff.

It's very calming, the unspent day rolling out before me like rails leading home over grassy plains.  I think this is what I like most of all about writing:  heading in a direction I've planned and knowing that I'll get where I want to be.

I'll get going now.  Thanks for stopping in.