rachelmanija: (Staring at laptop)
( Jan. 5th, 2011 02:01 pm)
I. I'm looking for recommendations/suggestions for books which meet one or more of the following criteria:

1) The American west and southwest, and adjacent areas of Mexico, any time between about 1750 and 1900. The California Gold Rush would be the most relevant, but I'm also looking beyond that.

2) I'm not looking for histories which recount what happened when and why it was important, but for personal accounts written at the time (diaries, letters, etc) or retrospectively by people who lived through those times, and/or anything which focuses on daily life, ordinary people, and/or the natural environment.

3) I'm especially looking for accounts of or, ideally, by people who are not important historical figures, and are not white Christian men. The entire thing doesn't have to take place in the west, just a significant part of it.

4) If it's sufficiently vivid, detailed, and/or interesting, any first-person account of life anywhere in America or Mexico before 1900. (ie, I have read the Little House books, but if I hadn't, they would be the sort of thing you'd recommend here.)

5) Western fiction of the iconic sort that delineated the mythology of the American West (ie, Louis L'Amour, not Cormac McCarthy.) For this, white Christian men are fine.

6) Try to avoid the Civil War, if possible - it's not very relevant to what I'm writing, AND I have already read really a lot of accounts of it.

II. If walls that are twenty feet high surround an area one mile by 3/5ths of a mile, what's the area of the walls in square feet? (Not a joke question, this is for something I'm writing.)
rachelmanija: (Firefly: Shiny Kaylee)
( Nov. 17th, 2010 11:05 am)
[personal profile] rushthatspeaks has posted a thoughtful and lengthy review of Steam-Powered: Lesbian Steampunk in which loved my story to death:

I am setting down my critical objectivity, over there on that table, and I will come and pick it back up again in a moment, I promise. I just-- THIS IS A LESBIAN STEAMPUNK GUNDAM STORY, OKAY? AND IT IS PERFECT. IT IS ACTUALLY GUNDAM. EXCEPT IT'S ALSO A WESTERN. IT MEETS ALL YOUR LESBIAN-STEAMPUNK-GUNDAM-WESTERN NEEDS, WHICH I DID NOT EXACTLY KNOW I HAD, BUT I TOTALLY DID! AND NOW THEY HAVE BEEN MET.

I haven't read the other stories yet, but I can't wait to do so - they sound fabulous.

You can pre-order the book by emailing editor JoSelle Vanderhooft at upstart.crow @ gmail dot com. It comes out in January.

In non-steampunk news, Marie Brennan is writing what promises to be a fantastic series of posts on fight scenes.

I might do a companion piece at some point on what it feels like to fight for real, and the different ways that can feel, and how none of it ever feels like sparring, except when it kind of does.
Here's the table of contents.

I can't wait to read the stories by N. K. Jemisin, Shweta Narayan (Mughal India clockpunk!), and Amal El-Mohar, to name the writers whose stories I've enjoyed before, and to get acquainted with the other writers in the volume.

I am also curious to see how the others interpreted "steampunk," which, I realized as I sat down to write my own story, is a somewhat vague genre. I even briefly worried that mine, which features mecha of unknown origin stomping through an alternate southwestern America, might not even count as steampunk at all.
rachelmanija: (Gundam Wing: Quatre listens)
( Jul. 20th, 2010 11:34 am)
The sale was made earlier, but I was waiting to make sure the editor liked it, as it was by invitation to an anthology.

"Steel Rider," a longish short story (6000 words), to JoSelle Vanderhooft's as-yet-untitled lesbian steampunk anthology.

It's set in an alternate American Old West, in which only women - and only the ones who have the right stuff - can ride mecha of mysterious origin. (Gundam West!)
.

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags