In case you hadn't gotten the word yet, this morning Amazon
cleared my upload of
Ten Gentle Opportunities, and it's now in
the catalog, ready to buy for $2.99, or as part of your Kindle
Unlimited subscription. No DRM. Cover by the utterly amazing Blake
Henriksen. It's in a genre that barely exists anymore: Humorous SF
and fantasy, with a pinch of satire for those with ears to listen.
I tried to shop it to tradpub imprints for a couple of years after
I finished it in 2012. An editor at a major press told me that
Douglas Adams did SF humor so well that nobody else can ever hope
to compete.
Huh? That's like saying that Heinlein did hard SF so well that
nobody else should bother to try. Well, dammit, I'm competing. More
than one of my beta readers said the book kept them up all night,
and one called it "pee-your-pants funny." Me, I consider that a
win.
The book has an interesting history. I've been fooling with it
for almost fifty years.
Here's the story. Back in 1967, when I was 15, I got an idea:
What if there were a sort of partial or incomplete magician who
could change magical spells, but not create them? What sort of
mischief could he get into? I called him The Spellbender, and
started writing a story about him. I shared it with the writer girl
down the street, and we talked about collaborating on it. Nothing
came of that, because she and I had utterly incompatible
understandings of magic. She saw it as a sort of moody, ethereal,
hard-to-control spiritual discipline. I saw it as alternative
physics. (We had other issues as well; when I finally meet God I'm
going to ask him if He could please flash the human firmware and
get rid of puberty.)
Not much happened on the story. I had a short catalog of
gimmicks and little else. The Spellbender had a sidekick who was an
incompetent djinn named Shrovo. Not only could he not remember how
many wishes he gave people, he simply couldn't count, and so had
had his djinn license revoked for reckless and excessive
wishgranting. Sure, it sounds dumb. I was 15.
I eventually got bored with it and tossed it back in the trunk,
where it stayed until 1978. That year I read it over, dumped
Shrovo, and told another tale about the Spellbender, which I
presented at the Windy City Writers' Workshop, in front of
luminaries like George R. R. Martin and Gene Wolfe. Nobody liked
it. Back in the trunk it went.
Come 1983, I had become a close friend of Nancy Kress, and we
surprised one another by collaborating on a novelette that was
published in Omni and drew a surprising amount of
favorable buzz. If we could pull off "Borovsky's Hollow Woman,"
well, what else could we do? Nan suggested a contemporary
fantasy, and I was quick to sketch out still another take on the
spellbender concept, adding in the sort of universe-jumping gimmick
that Sprague de Camp and Fletcher Pratt had used to such good
effect in
the Harold Shea stories. A spellbender who had
gotten on the wrong side of a magician jumps universes to finds a
place to hide, and lands in a small-town advertising agency in our
near future. Nan was working for precisely such an agency at the
time, and told the story of a staff meeting at which someone was
talking emphatically about tangential opportunities, which Nan
heard as "ten gentle opportunities." I knew a great title when I
saw one, and grabbed it.
I also drew on a novelette I wrote in 1981, which centered on a
war in a robotic copier factory, and an AI named Simple Simon.
We tried. We really did. But as it turned out, Nan could move in
a hard SF world a great deal more nimbly than I was able to move in
a fantasy world. Shades of Lee Anne down the street. (Puberty, at
least, was no longer an issue.) After a few thousand words she
ceded me what we had and we decided to set it aside. Back in the
trunk it went, this time for almost 25 years.
The Cunning Blood came out in hardcover in 2005, and
garnered enough rave reviews (including one from Glenn Reynolds and
another from Tom Easton at Analog) to make me feel like I
should start something else. As was my habit, I went digging around
in my trunk for concepts. Three aborted novels came to hand: My
cyberpunk experiment, The Lotus Machine; a gimmicky hard
SF concept called Alas, Yorick; and Ten Gentle
Opportunities. The Lotus Machine went back in the
trunk almost immediately; by now I understand that, as cyber as I
might be, punk remains forever beyond my powers. I spent a fair
amount of time reading and meditating on the 14,000 words I had of
Alas, Yorick, but ultimately went with Ten Gentle
Opportunities. Why? I like humor and I'm intrigued by the
challenges of writing it. I had an ensemble of interesting
characters, and the very rich vein of "fish out of water" humor to
mine. And--gakkh--it was fun! Can't have that now; we're
serious SF writers...
Basically, I went with fun. And it was.
I wrote three or four chapters in 2006, then got distracted by
another concept that I've mentioned here, Old Catholics.
TGO didn't exactly go back in the trunk, but I didn't touch it
again until February 2011. That's when I took it to this new
writer's group I'd joined. I submitted the first thousand words or
so for critique and asked them if the concept was worth pursuing.
The answer was yes, and it was unanimous.
I took it to Walter Jon Williams' Taos Toolbox workshop that
summer, and got my momentum back. After that it was my main writing
project until I finished it in November 2012. I asked my nonfiction
agent to shop it, and some shopping got done, but there were no
nibbles. So several months ago I took it back and decided to
publish it myself.
Oh--and then we kicked into high gear with our move to Phoenix.
Writing of all sorts went on the back burner.
Which brings us to the current day. There's a lot to be done yet
here in the new house, but the end is at least in sight. We're far
enough along that I can afford to take a couple of days a week to
Just Write. Which brings me (again) to the question of what I do
now.
Truth is, I don't know. But I'll think of something.