<span class="vcard">Written Well</span>
Written Well

Cyberpunk Guide

It might not look like it is true hard science (see below), but it is closer to that intellectual space. We live today (2020s) in a world where climate change is having a significant, measurable impact on our world and our lives. Where the high-water mark of the 1970s, in terms of rights for minorities and women in the United States has been slowly driven backwards. Where billionaires

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Apocalypse Thriller Blueprint

Back to apocalypse thriller Please note that not all apocalypse thrillers follow this blueprint exactly, and most don’t follow it perfectly. If your book will still be thrilling and interest readers without one of these pieces, or with some of them done differently or in a different order, feel free to do your own thing. This blueprint is just so that you can understand a basic format that your readers might expect from the genre. Three Act Apocalypse Thriller Act 1 Act 1 is shorter than the other acts, as the action is contained mostly in Acts 2 and 3....

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Apocalypse Thriller Guide

This is the moment when all hell breaks loose, and the heroes must find a way to survive those first few hours or days when everything is falling to pieces around them. Later, after things stabilize, you might have some sort of “Return to Normalcy” moment. Or you evolve forward into post-apocalyptic storytelling as things will never be the same and folks must make do.

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Steampunk/Dieselpunk/Technopunk Guide

What is ’Punk?

A new technology that has overturned the expected traditions of the past, thereby changing the world. Heroes in punk stories tend to be people interested in and exploiting this new tech before it becomes mainstream. Inventors. Adventurers. Occasionally criminals using their new knowledge to right some wrong that the system is perpetrating.

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Time Travel Guide

Related to Alternate History, this sort of story started with the characters traveling (presumably backwards) through time, either to make some change, witness some important event, or discover that time itself is unchangeable.

To write in this subgenre

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Alternate History Guide

Go back in time and pick out some event that happened. Or didn’t. Make a change as a world-builder, then extrapolate outwards from there. The Difference Engine (William Gibson and Bruce Sterling) posited a world where Babbage’s invention of the same name was completed, and the Computer Revolution started a century earlier. (This book also is somewhat foundational in the entire Steampunk Genre.)

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Steampunk Study Materials

If you want to write in a genre, you have to read that genre. Experts in the industry are consistent with their advice that you must be an avid reader of a genre to write well in it. Along with the books below, read the books on the steampunk bestseller list, especially the self-published ones, to know what's happening in the genre now.

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Alien Invasion Guide

The 1950s went a little crazy with this genre, in books but especially in movies. In those days, it tended to verge over close to horror without actually crossing over. (Remember, in real horror, the bad guys win. Only in Hollywood is the monster defeated by the heroic guy, his romantic interest, the older scientist, and occasionally a plucky sidekick who might survive.)

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Science Fiction Guide

Science fiction is one of the “What if…?” genres that characterize speculative fiction.  The answer to that question is going to vary widely by subgenre. While a genre like fantasy is distinguished by magic, the thing that might identify science fiction is technology. Always a little (or a LOT) ahead of the timeline in question, so you can have steampunk where mad scientists invent fantastical—TECHNOLOGICAL—devices. Magic can mean anything, and sometimes the hand-waving can get far enough out there. Arthur C. Clarke posited three laws for writing about science fiction. The laws are: But it is technology. Reproducible by machine....

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