#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing?
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
@cstross I don't think I want to read the Laundry Files. Death is about the only thing that gives me a reason to keep going at present.
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
@cstross I had totally forgotten about the Laundry Files. I'd gotten and read the first few books, and then just... Thought there weren't anymore. Now I'm on a mission to read them all, as I loved the premise of the first few!
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@cstross I had totally forgotten about the Laundry Files. I'd gotten and read the first few books, and then just... Thought there weren't anymore. Now I'm on a mission to read them all, as I loved the premise of the first few!
@emag It's complete (for now!) and runs to 14 books. Might be a short story collection too, in a couple of years. Spoiler: Bob and Mo survive, but are not unchanged.
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
@cstross I dislike too much research, so that's historical out of the question unless I heavily fantasy it up.
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
@cstross there are at least two books in the Laundry Files that I haven't re-read for this exact reason, even though I really enjoyed them. I suspect some of it may be to do with when I read them in terms of personal things - maybe I should give them another go...
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#WritersCoffeeClub Feb 22—Are there types of settings you avoid writing? Why?
I used to avoid writing truly grimdark settings (I couldn't do more than a couple of stories for Warhammer 40K) but then 50 years of Tories and Brexit happened and I lost my shit completely and the result is the way the Laundry Files went, where death does not necessarily bring escape!
But sympathetic protaonists need at least the illusion of hope, or many of your readers will be too depressed to press on to the end.
@cstross You wrote stories for 40k?
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@emag It's complete (for now!) and runs to 14 books. Might be a short story collection too, in a couple of years. Spoiler: Bob and Mo survive, but are not unchanged.
@cstross I'm gonna have to get the whole collection. The few books I had were casualties of smoke/water damage back in 2018. And the few were Science Fiction Book Club versions. I did greatly enjoy them, so knowing there are many more, I'm pretty enthusiastic about getting reacquainted with them. I loved the themes especially wrt Eldritch horrors (barely outside my job at the time...)
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@cstross You wrote stories for 40k?
@starchturrets
Same question!
@cstross -
@cstross You wrote stories for 40k?
@starchturrets Once. In the late 1980s. Couldn't really stomach it, then got to meet Brian Ansell and had a bad "hell, no!" reaction to all things GW thereafter.
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R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic