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Stellar

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Everything posted by Stellar

  1. An old short story I wrote that you may enjoy :)
  2. <3 Tom, I hope you have an awesome day
  3. Stellar

    Epilogue

    Publication has been on my mind, though first I would need to wrap my head around the ways and means and so forth, for what purposes I'd find most suitable. I thank you for your high consideration of my work I take a lot of satisfaction from knowing readers such as yourself have enjoyed Hidden Sunlight. I trust you will enjoy what I next produce - at this stage it is looking most likely to be a Book Two.
  4. Likely the sequel will be the next thing I write, as all my other bigger long term projects are unduly complex to get involved in straight away. You will see that kitten again. I can assure you of this. Thank you, I am glad you enjoyed it. The real science and plausibility of the fictional science, is important to the genre, I believe. It certainly will continue, though I hesitate to place any time-frame on when that will take place. Publication is something to be considered. It would depend on a lot of things, I think, but that is my end goal. Ah, making people feel and believe when they read something I've written; that is a truly wonderful experience! There are few things that compare to the sort of happiness that brings. And yes, indeed, Mira! Who wouldn't fall in love with him? Who wouldn't be insanely jealous of Shay?! Again, I must say that I won't set any time frame on when you can expect to see the next part of this story, just that it will come and will be nothing short of major. Thank you so much for reading and I'm glad you enjoyed it so thoroughly
  5. Stellar

    Yesterday's Law

    Thank you! I'm glad you're enjoying it You are early on, so there is plenty to come.
  6. Stellar

    Epilogue

    Long, definitely. Strange, you bet. I am glad you enjoyed it and certainly hope you will be around for whatever comes in the future!
  7. Stellar

    Leagues Of Night

    'Obsidia' is a human-named world, any belief that the black colour of obsidian has anything to do with the arbiters is sheer coincidence and hearsay. The name exists because of the volcanic density of metamorphic rock on that particular world, which is renowned in Hidden Sunlight's universe for industrial mining. Thank you, I'd certainly like to believe so.
  8. Your response is high praise to me and I approach any words of conviction with the greatest respect. Any good tale should capture both the mind and heart in as many ways as it can; and to weave a story with layers to it that has elements of the mundane and the fantastic within the component parts. All the language I have available to me sometimes seems to be too petty to describe the richness I imagine when I dream of worlds like this. Feeling that I have succeeded in sharing even a small part of that ethereal depth is fantastically rewarding. Especially when I know that there is so much more to come and that I want to show it to others, to let them see what I see. So, I thank you, for your understanding. This is a big part of what I write for and I wouldn't have it any other way.
  9. Stellar

    Epilogue

    Thank you! I will CC a more detailed response in your forum thread reply.
  10. Stellar

    Hidden Sunlight

    Then I am glad I did not disappoint you, as Konstantin made it to the end. Thank you, my friend. It is a pleasure to have you as a reader.
  11. Stellar

    Sunlight Unbound

    You do? Good heavens, whatever for? I rather think you don't mean to make him a lumberjack in such an urban place? Seriously though, though there are plenty of targets assaulting him to swing a big heavy axe into, I don't think that is his style. Still, I appreciate the sentiment. He has not had it easy in Aspira - none of them have.
  12. Stellar

    Epilogue

    Oh, there is more to come, as I have said. The tale cannot end there, for this is no true ending, only a temporary one. I am glad you enjoyed it. I trust you will enjoy the sequel when it comes.
  13. Stellar

    Epilogue

    Thank you! I'm very glad you enjoyed it. Publishing is the goal, at some point. I would certainly love to see it as a book.
  14. Stellar

    Leagues Of Night

    Well to be more precise, the story began in orbit around Lucere after arriving from Earth and it finished in the reverse - in orbit around Earth after arriving from Lucere; but yes, I thought it fitting. The only people remaining that Shay cares about are those with him - Mira and Konstantin. Everyone else is left behind or dead. It's a lot for anyone to take, especially a teenaged boy. Yet Shay isn't just any boy, and he is to my mind more hardy than many.
  15. Stellar

    Sunlight Unbound

    yes, Shay certainly gave Hartley back the words he spoke earlier. Poetic justice. La Tigresse however isn't as devoted to Hartley as Mira is to Shay, so her reaction and subsequent movements are somewhat different.
  16. Stellar

    Epilogue

    In the year 2104 A.D., on Thursday February 14, a hitherto unknown disease appeared in a quiet suburban neighbourhood of the provincial city of Palatus, a western hub in the Capital Arm region of the continent Aurum, on the planet Lucere. This disease was an extremely transmissible mutation, known initially as the Valentine's Sickness and then forever after as the Sharpe virus, named for the doctor that described the first cases. Humanity was unprepared to deal with a thing of such uncompromisin
  17. There are some experiences that go beyond adequate description. It may be the sum of the experience is complex in a way that can't be grasped, or that the language we possess is too crude to describe it. Looking back, I was never sure which was the case at Aspira's heart, though I did bring away from the plaza one concrete lesson. Power -- real power -- shows a person's true nature. I did not well remember the walk from the control node's chamber to the plaza's surface. It was not becaus
  18. I could hear the combat behind me as I ran, Mira beginning his defence of our underground passage. Though the urge to look behind was strong, to make sure he was okay, I knew it would be a big mistake to stay close enough for the sharpelings to detect me, and that he would best them as he had everything else so far. Instead, my vision was filled with the grey-black of the undercity, a moving collage of gloom and straight lines. Aspira's base level, in the CBD at least, rested on a network of con
  19. Hello, dear readers. You are here no doubt because you have finished Hidden Sunlight. I will address that in a second, but first ... here is a bunch of trivia about the story. If you aren't interested or don't care, I'm not entirely sure why you're reading this post in the first place However, in case of TLDR and if you just want me to get to the point, please skip to the end of the bullet points. yes, the wording about Lucere in the epilogue was correct. The pre-outbreak population of the planet was just a little more than a billion people. The total death/mutation toll for the Sharpe virus in 2104 including the other colonies was in the billions. Humanity got majorly screwed over in just a couple of months. it follows that you'd be curious about the home planet and if there are piles of corpses and mutants roaming the streets or ... whatever! Am I going to tell you anything about what's been happening on Earth? Nope! I'm not. At least, not in *this* part of Hidden Sunlight there was a joke about Twilight in chapter 14, but I'm not sure how many of you picked it up. It was more blatant originally, but during beta I was encouraged to make the humour more subtle and as a result I think I made it *too* subtle and it flew past most people. Ooops! Le Renard's name is a tip-of-the-hat to The Day of the Jackal. Translated from French, it means: The Fox. The principal villain from that book was of course named The Jackal. who's a fan of Portal and Portal 2? Bonus points if you noted the 'A deadly disease! For Science!' comment and recognised that it came from the aforementioned games. the reason Lily called Konstantin 'Dimi' all the time was because when she was little, she couldn't pronounce his name, but she could say his middle name, Dmitri. That became shortened to Dimi and it stuck. it wasn't mentioned anywhere, but Lily's family was from Canada not the United States, though at the point in Lucere's history they were at, Shay likely couldn't tell the difference or never noticed it. along the same lines, the ancestor Konstantin refers to in chapter 3 was none other than Yuri Andropov, a real historic figure who was chairman of the KGB and General Secretary of the CPSU, leader of the Soviet Union in the early 1980s. a number of times I used the terms 'clip' and 'magazine' interchangeably but mostly in the earlier chapters. They do have different meanings, and anyone who knows guns may have noticed the indiscretion. The rest of you probably don't care - but hey, I'm a details guy. If it's not right, it bugs me! Konstantin is somewhat inspired by the gun-dealer Marcus Kincaid from Borderlands 2 (passing resemblance only, Konstantin only shares Marcus' love for guns, but none of the mercenary capitalist attitude and questionable morals) but much more by Father Grigori from Half-Life 2, the shotgun-wielding priest in Ravenholm who is living alone in a town full of headcrab-infested human zombies. He's unusually happy given his rather disturbing congregation and possibly a bit crazy to boot, but I liked him so much I even stole one of his better quotes and modified it for Konstantin to use. the religious theme, incidentally: just for anyone who is curious, I'm not a Christian. However, I quite enjoy writing characters that are contrary to who I am, regardless of my own view on the issue. Faith is an important part of Konstantin's life, so the text reflected that. while we're on the subject of zombies, the original idea for Shay's stasis was inspired by ... The Walking Dead! The pilot episode, Rick Grimes, the main protagonist and a police officer, gets shot during a robbery and goes into a coma in hospital. He awakes (I think three?) weeks into the zombie apocalypse, in a ruined hospital with no effing clue what has happened. I knew as soon as I saw that show that I wanted to write something like that in a science fiction setting, only I went to the extreme end of the scale and made it centuries instead of weeks. incidentally, the original time period for Shay's sleep was much longer - 600 years not 200. I cut that down a lot though, rationalising that even with the best possible conditions on hand from aqumi, there wouldn't be any people left after that long. Also, that even the best technology would probably have stopped working by then, regardless of how great Lucere was at manufacturing. continuing on that theme, the numbers 2 and 14 crop up with surprising frequency. They are found together in combination in various points in the story. The obvious one is 214 years, but there are quite a few examples if you were paying close attention. How many did you spot or can you recall? the names of Aurum's provinces are almost exclusively scientists from Earth's history. Tesla is the obvious example, though every other named location in the Capital Arm apart from Aspira and Palatus also fall into this category. yes, the kitten is still with them. It was just safely deposited inside Shay's backpack for most of the plot's climax and denouement. A murderous warzone is no place for such a thing to be running around. names of major characters and their meanings. Names are important to me, and I chose most names accordingly. Shay: his name has Irish roots. It means 'hawk-like' or 'admirable', though the Hebrew variation could also be appropriate: 'gift' Konstantin: a Russian or German name, it's derived from the Latin Constantinus. The name means more or less what it sounds like: 'constant', 'steadfast' or possibly 'loyal'. Carlos: the Spanish variation of Charles, itself derived from the Germanic Karl, meaning 'strong' or 'manly.' The old Anglo-Saxon 'ceorl' was a related term, being used in England as a term referring to the lowest rank of free man since before the 12th century. Klaus: a shorthand German version of Nicholas, origins in the Greek Nikolaos; 'victory of the people'. Miles: English name from the older Germanic Milo, Latin Milos. The roots of the Germanic origin are tied to the Slavic word fragment mil- which is 'gracious' or 'merciful'. While I'm sure this is line with the sort of image Hartley wanted to portray, the more accurate root is the Latin one, which is derived from militatus - a soldier or warrior. Lily: she is, of course, named after the flower. The etymology for the word traces all the way back to Egypt, and originally meant none other than 'flower.' White lilies especially were seen as a symbol of purity. There was a good reason why Mira gave her a flower in chapter 17 and of course, I could not forget Mira himself. His name origin is probably the most apt out of all of them. While the name is usually in a feminine form when spelled Mira (the masculine form being Miro) this is because of the word it was derived from: miracle. This word was typically taken to mean a marvellous event caused by God, something to wonder at. Indeed, mirari and mirus as origin forms invoke 'astonishment', 'wonder' and 'amazement'; if this is taken further back, there are deeper roots in Sanskrit, Greek and liturgical Slavic that describe 'smiling' and 'laughing'. A friend also pointed out to me not long after I named him that mira in Spanish is also the verb for 'look', which makes perfect sense when you relate that back to the meaning of 'miracle.' Considering his preference for communicating with Shay through sight and not speech, I don't think I could have chosen a better name. for the perverted among you, Shay is Slightly-Above-Average, while Mira is Significantly-Larger-Than-Average but a little short of Porn-Star-Ridiculous. He inherited fantastic genes from Synnove and is the sort of teenager who would cause insecurities of Freudian proportions in many grown men if they ever glimpsed him undressed. There you have it, and if you deny wanting to know that, I shan't believe you. Everyone always wants to know more than the rather ambiguous descriptions in the text ... or at the very least, you were thinking it. Now this is where I say: This ... is how I tell a story. Thank you for sticking with me and reading it, if you have made it this far. If you want to say 'thank you' to me for writing it, there are three things you can do: I dislike the reputation system on here and I think it's flawed, but it's the only material way of measuring 'approval.' So I would ask that if you loved Hidden Sunlight, then please go through and like each chapter and the story itself if you have not already done so. Any registered user can do this. If you don't, I won't be upset or anything, but anything that helps raise my profile as an author is valuable to me, as well as being a token of thanks. Reputation is one of those ways. The other way is to simple tell me what Hidden Sunlight was like to read, for you. Seriously. Send me a PM or write it here, whatever you feel you'd like. I love hearing from people about my work, what they enjoyed, what they didn't and why. Reader reaction gives me enormous satisfaction. Don't be shy, I won't bite or be rude. Both of the above, not just one or the other. I also want to give thanks to my betas for all the work they have done for me over the past year or so. Cassie, Rob and Paul -- you guys have been awesome and I'm glad I had you along. Lastly: yes, there WILL be a sequel. The epilogue pointed towards it, as did the final chapter. The question is, dear readers, do you want to see me write this sequel first or move on to something different? Because, and this is a warning, I don't do anything by halves. If I take a break to do anything else it will in all likelihood be something equally time intensive and demanding and it could be a long while before you see anything relating to a book two for Hidden Sunlight. So, there you have it.
  20. Happy Birthday!
  21. Woah, haha! Thanks guys, to all of you Much appreciated. And Cassie ... sssh! You ain't got much on me ... and yes, Bee, I guess I'm safe for another five years, right?
  22. That's pretty cool, Weta is an industry unto itself in Wellington these days (it was dubbed Wellywood for a while by the media, as they took to the idea of our film industry doing so well in the wake of the LotR movies.) I have seen Sherlock, and I was initially drawn to it by Benedict Cumberbatch as the title character, but after seeing the fantastic chemistry between him and Freeman, not to mention the general quality of the production, I became a fan very fast.
  23. Oh, for sure. I got to meet him when he was here filming The Hobbit. I served him at my workplace and just about flipped out when *nobody* else recognised him when he walked into the store - freakin' ingrates, don't know fame when they see it! I really wanted to talk to him but I didn't have the nerve to say anything. I was also amused by the fact he's so short - I'm 6'1 so I was towering over him, lol.
  24. What?? I *am* a colonial and I love Simon Pegg's humour. Plus, Martin Freeman is a good actor and a really nice guy to boot. What's not to like?
  25. A vuvuzela? Please keep that hideous thing to silence or I will be forced to impose strict quiet upon the audience.
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