Steampunk and STELLARNET REBEL

I began making neo-Victorian jewelry several years ago but didn’t learn the term “steampunk” until 2007. My work was not inspired by the steampunk community but by my interest in Art Nouveau, Victorian history, movies such as “Time Machine,” “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,” “Time After Time,” and a youth spent on Disneyland’s Main Street.

I haven’t enjoyed much steampunk fiction, but I do enjoy the writers from the era upon which steampunk is, more or less, based: Dickens, Wilde, Gaskell, Thackeray, etc. They satirized society and class divisions. The Victorian Era was a time period in which there were massive social, political and scientific changes. Unions, women’s rights, industrialization, child labor laws, safe water and sewer systems, germ theory, Jell-o… just to name a few.

I have a science fiction novel coming out in January. Because I’m featured in two steampunk art books, and because I love the Wild West and the Victorian Era, I’m often asked if the book is steampunk.

To be honest, I have a difficult time relating to the steampunk community. Not because “steampunk at Hot Topic” is ruining anything for me but because of the talk about it being a lifestyle. That’s just too far removed from reality, for me. I’m not interested in pretending to be someone else or having an entire house that looks like Frankenstein’s laboratory. If steampunk is goggles, funny names, competitive biscuit dunking and brass, then I’m not steampunk.

My publisher is calling Stellarnet Rebel a “cyberpunk thriller.” I didn’t sit down thinking “I’m going to write a cyberpunk thriller.” I sat down to write the kind of story I wanted to read — one that seemed to be missing from a literary landscape dominated by steampunk, zombies, werewolves, vampires, and epic space operas resembling fantasy as much as science fiction.

Alex Steffen’s article, “Science Fiction, Futurism and the Failure of the Will to Imagine,” made me want to write about a future extrapolated from current technology and social trends.

The general definitions I’ve seen for “cyberpunk” include high tech and low life, hackers, AI, megacorporations, and the negative impacts of technology upon society. Stellarnet Rebel is set in the squalid confines of an extra-solar space colony where humanity connects via personal devices, walls, ceilings, tables, clothing, even bottles of whiskey. Computers, video games, virtual reality, hackers, the “Stellarnet” (interplanetary Internet) and rebellion all figure prominently.

There are aliens, though, and not all technology is viewed as a bad thing. Some people might call Stellarnet Rebel “post-cyberpunk.” In any case, it’s not steampunk, but maybe I’ll have to write something with corsets and airships, someday.

~ J. L. Hilton

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New book only 28 days away

Only 28 days until the release of STELLARNET REBEL and things are getting very exciting! The book now appears on my publisher’s “coming soon” page and is available for pre-order on Amazon and B&N. It’s also listed on Goodreads.

Read an excerpt of the book online here.

I’m planning a book release party at Tir na nOg Irish Pub on January 5, and some release day giveaways. More info to come.

Also, here’s a pic I made of Belloc, the “mysterious Glin with uncanny abilities and a tragic past.” The Glin have larger than human eyes with large irises, and no ears (they have ear slits, but hear better than humans because they sense sound vibrations with their entire bodies).

I’ll be at the Celtic Christmas event tonight, where I’ll have 10% off promo postcards for Stellarnet Rebel, and I’ll be selling my steampunk and spacepunk jewelry. Come by and say ‘lo!

~ J.L. Hilton

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Stellarnet Rebel coming soon

Stellarnet Rebel is now listed on the “coming soon” page of my publisher’s website. No pic of the cover yet. I imagine that will be posted in December. But you can see it, right here.

Advance review copies will be available in mid-December through NetGalley.com.

Official release is January 2, 2012, and I am currently working on the sequel.

– J. L. Hilton

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Aliens in our own backyard

This post originally appeared on the Contact Infinite Futures SF blog on October 25, 2011.

I did a lot of research while inventing alien races for my upcoming novel Stellarnet Rebel. But how does a SF writer research something that doesn’t exist? (Or has yet to be discovered.) Well, we have a wealth of weirdness right here on Earth.

Did you know that octopuses have three hearts and a copper-based “hemocyanin” (rather than an iron-based “hemoglobin”) blood oxygen transportation system? Some are real-life shifters—they can change the color and even the texture of their skin to resemble almost anything.

Or there’s the interesting female spotted hyenas, who appear to have the same genitalia as males. The only way to tell them apart is that the females are dominant, larger and more aggressive. Reminds me a little of that Star Trek: TNG episode “Angel One.”

Speaking of genitalia, most marsupials have two. Sort of. One, that’s split into two. And cetaceans, such as whales and dolphins, have a prehensile one. “Prehensile” means able to grab things. (I’m looking at you, Londo Mollari.)

An axolotl can regenerate lost limbs. Electric eels can produce a shock strong enough to kill a human. Sea cucumbers can liquefy their bodies at will, allowing them to pour themselves through small openings, then harden on the other side. These would all be cool alien abilities.

You don’t even need to look further than our fellow Homo Sapiens for “alien” traits. Genetic variation within our own species gives rise to individuals with incredible qualities, from super strength to electrical resistance to lightning fast mental computation.

What are some real-life animal abilities you’d like to see in a fictional alien species? What are some of your favorite SF alien traits?

~ J.L. Hilton

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Stellarnet Rebel cover

I received the cover art for my book Stellarnet Rebel, coming from Carina Press in January 2012.

I also received the official cover copy. This is what would be on the back cover if it was being inked onto dead tree pulp. I assume it’s also what will show up in the description of the book on Amazon, B&N, Carina Press, Audible, etc.

* * *

Welcome to Asteria, a corporate-owned, deep-space colony populated with refugees, criminals and obsessive online gamers. Genny O’Riordan has shifted in from Earth determined to find a story that will break her blog into the Stellarnet Top 100, and even better—expose the degradation of the colony’s denizens.

Duin is an alien—a Glin—a hero of a past revolution against the Glin royal family, yet branded a terrorist. Duin speaks every day in the Asteria market, hoping to spur humans to aid his home world, which has been overtaken by the evil, buglike Tikati.

When Genny and Duin meet, what begins with a blog post becomes a dangerous web of passion and politics as they struggle to survive not only a war but the darker side of humanity…

94,000 words

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Wilde spirit of rebellion

“Man is least himself when he talks in his own person. Give him a mask, and he will tell you the truth.”Oscar Wilde

The Victorian author probably wasn’t thinking about the Internet and online gaming. But the words apply. Net-anonymity creates more truth than it hides. A person standing in front of you will not bare her or his soul. But on the net, people are free to reveal, free to feel, free to troll, free to express unpopular opinions unfettered by immediate social repercussions, to transform (or degenerate) into the essence of their true self.

“Human slavery is wrong, insecure, and demoralizing. On mechanical slavery, on the slavery of the machine, the future of the world depends.” ― Oscar Wilde

How true this has turned out to be. Even without robots (yet), we rely on our mechanical devices to free us from the drudgery of cooking, cleaning, sewing, gardening, even walking or entertaining ourselves. Now I’m beginning to wonder if this Victorian author was actually a time traveler.

This photograph was taken in 1882, yet something about him is like a pretender to the 19th century, a 21st century mind donning the trappings of a bygone era. He’s alive, not a rigid golem of sepia tone, nor the echo of a long-dead husk with tired, malnourished eyes and grim visage. He seems a slouching sardonic subject of the cyber era, posing in anachronistic amusement.

“It is what you read when you don’t have to that determines what you will be when you can’t help it.” ― Oscar Wilde

How about what you write, when you don’t have to? What does that determine?

There is something of Wilde in my upcoming book, Stellarnet Rebel. At one point, the heroine directly quotes him, saying, “Who, being loved, is poor?” But there is also something of him in the spirit of the story. 

“Every woman is a rebel.”

“Disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man’s original virtue. It is through disobedience and rebellion that progress has been made.”

“An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all.”

“Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.”

“Every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future.”

I did not read the following paragraph―written while Wilde was imprisoned doing two years’ hard labor for the “crime” of homosexuality―until after writing Stellarnet Rebel. They are sentiments to which I can only pretend, with characters such as Duin the alien revolutionary, but they are beautiful, horrible, and true. The best fiction is that which tells the truth, and I hope I have done Wilde some justice.

“When first I was put into prison some people advised me to try and forget who I was. It was ruinous advice. It is only by realising what I am that I have found comfort of any kind. Now I am advised by others to try on my release to forget that I have ever been in a prison at all. I know that would be equally fatal. It would mean that I would always be haunted by an intolerable sense of disgrace, and that those things that are meant for me as much as for anybody else – the beauty of the sun and moon, the pageant of the seasons, the music of daybreak and the silence of great nights, the rain falling through the leaves, or the dew creeping over the grass and making it silver – would all be tainted for me, and lose their healing power, and their power of communicating joy. To regret one’s own experiences is to arrest one’s own development. To deny one’s own experiences is to put a lie into the lips of one’s own life. It is no less than a denial of the soul.”

~ J.L. Hilton

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Minecraft skins of Genny, Duin and Belloc

I play Minecraft, so I thought it would be fun to make skins of Genny, Duin and Belloc. It’s a challenge to render anything in such simple graphics, but I think they turned out really cute.

With Genny, I gave her viridian hair, blue-green eyes, a strappy dress and her blu-tooth earrings. She also has her bracers–which are basically wearable tablets, alight with colored icons and apps. The Glin have their big dolphin eyes, crypsis coloring, and wallump suits. Duin’s clothing (bottom) displays his special talent for embellishment with its pearl buttons angling across his chest and the iridescent sheen.

~ J.L. Hilton

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Net slang: The language of the future?

This post originally appeared on the Contact Infinite Futures SF blog on September 27, 2011.

In STELLARNET REBEL, I assume that leetspeak, chat acronyms and gaming memes become mainstream vernacular by 2062, as Generations X, Y and Z age into senior citizens. So, my characters use many of these words and phrases, even if they are news reporters, doctors or military officers.

Readers tend to respond to this in one of two ways:

1) “u haz stuff off teh internets!”

2) “How in the world did you make up so many slang words?”

Which reveals who spends all their time gaming and reading comment sections, and who doesn’t.

Readers with reaction #2 are surprised to discover that I invented very little of the futuristic slang:

– “l’up” (look up, as to “l’up” some information on the net)
– fresh/stale (for good/bad)

The rest are words I lifted straight from chats and MMORPGs. Here are several examples that appear in the pages of “Stellarnet Rebel”:

– cosplay (costume play, dressing up as a fictional character)
– epic (incredible, wonderful, immense)
– fail (messed up; if very bad then “epic fail”)
– full of win (awesome)
– Imma (I’m gonna)
– k tnx bai (OK, thanks, bye)
– k or kk (for OK)
– lag (slow response time, such as when playing an online game)
– lo (hello)
– looking for group (or LFG; “seeking a group to adventure with”)
– nom (act of eating, or the item eaten – “Imma nab sum noms”)
– noob (person who is new to something; a mash up of “new” and “boob” pretty much sums up this word)
– owned (defeated, bested)
– prolly (probably)
– scope (check out)
– shipper (often seen in fanfic and discussion boards, refers to fans who are jonesing for two characters or two people to be in a relationship)
– smart mob (real-life assembly mobilized by technology)
– smexy (smart and sexy)
– squee (the noise a happy little girl makes – and trust me, they really do; my 7yo squees a lot)
– squishy (in gaming, someone who dies easily, such as a wizard or healer)
– sup (short for wassup, or “What’s up?”)
– tank (strong warrior with high armor class, tough)
– uber (from the German for “super”)
– ur (your, you’re)

So, what do you think? Are these chat, computer and gamer terms around to stay for awhile, or will they go the way of “rad,” “far out” and “the cat’s pajamas”?

~ J.L. Hilton

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Brigid’s Jewels and the fire of inspiration

One of my recent jewelry creations, the Clockroach Earrings.

Jewelry and storytelling are two of my lifelong passions. At a very young age, I realized that jewelry was more than just a shiny thing or an expensive gift. It was a symbolic language, telling tales of who we are, what we value, where we’ve come from, and where we’d like to go.

In addition to writing, I also tell stories made of brass and beads. I sold these narrative baubles at the Central NC Pagan Pride festival over the weekend, with my friend Jill. I’m JLHjewelry and she is Liv’n’good Jewelry, but together we call ourselves “Brigid’s Jewels.”

Brigid is the ancient Irish goddess of inspiration, poetry, and smithing. Seems appropriate, as I hammer on both a keyboard and a jeweler’s anvil.

I haven’t sold at an event in ages — let alone an outdoor event, in the rain. Good thing we had a canopy! Here’s my side of the booth:

~ J.L. Hilton

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Would an alien be a person?

Image copyright© Jena DellaGrottaglia-Maldonado 2011, used with the artist’s permission

This post originally appeared on the Contact-Infinite Futures blog on August 30, 2011.

In popular SF, aliens are often an all-or-nothing situation. In Firefly, Blade Runner, or Gattaca, there are no aliens at all. In Star Wars, Babylon 5, and Star Trek, aliens are everywhere, no big deal.

Contact with aliens tends to fall into either the “inspiring” or the “invasive” categories. Inspiring: Close Encounters of the Third Kind, E.T., Cocoon, Starman. Invasive: The War of the Worlds, Alien, Invasion of the Body Snatchers and Battlestar Galactica. Both inspiring AND invasive: Doctor Who.

But what about something in between? If we moved beyond the solar system, built a colony in space, and found alien life, what would really happen? What if it’s not there to invade us? It’s not there to warm our hearts or give us advanced technology. It’s just… there.

Would we extend to it the same rights – “human” rights – as we do to our fellow homo sapiens? Does it have the right to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”? Does it have the “right to keep and bear arms”? Is it protected from imprisonment and dissection? Involuntary servitude and exploitation?

Merriam-Webster defines the word person as a “human, individual” or “the personality of a human being.” Dictionary.com goes with “a human being, as distinguished from an animal or a thing.” Wikipedia says a person is “a human being, or an entity that has certain capacities or attributes associated with personhood… agency, self-awareness, a notion of the past and future, and the possession of rights and duties…”

When does alien life cease to be an animal or an other and become a person? When does it become like us? Would it need to look like us? How much? Would it need to be capable of language, intelligence (to what degree?), tool creation and manipulation, musical aptitude, creativity, or religious thought? All of the above? Some of the above? How do we decide?

If we did find intelligent life, would humanity have a large contingent of xenophobes who reject the rights of aliens – on the grounds that the extra-terrestrials are inferior, dangerous, or just too different? How would we change our laws, morals and beliefs to accommodate someone who is not a human being? In the U.S., as of this writing, most states don’t allow gay marriage. Would they allow alien/human marriage?

Would aliens be assumed to possess a soul? Would they be children of God, or fallen angels? Proof of God, or evidence against the Bible?

These are difficult questions, but I think they’re worth pondering. SF too often takes one of the easy roads – no aliens or widespread acceptance of aliens, inspiring or invasive – rather than addressing the very complicated (and probably much more realistic) issues in between.

~ J.L. Hilton

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