Wonder Archive

Seedcorn 4: Starving in Abundance

Posted January 11, 2023 By John C Wright

Seedcorn is now posted.

Three of Four.

THIS episode contains the only scene I really thought was well done, at least, given the youthful greenness of my quill, which was the fight scene with a paintbrush.

Again, copying another writer’s style, I also attempted to adopt her worldview: and consequently the soldiers are somewhat less masculine and soldierly in their approach than would have been had I written in my own voice.

The ending is on an ambiguous but perhaps hopeful note, as mimicking the ending of LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS or THE DISPOSSESSED.

And so we say farewell to the Ekumen of Ursula K LeGuin. I will never offer this story for publication for money, and she has gone to discover the truth about the Dry Lands beyond the farthest shore.

I hold her to be a fine writer, one of the best in the field. She came from a time before 2015 when the Sci Fi field was not poisoned with politics and political correctness, and one could love a writer’s work without agreeing with the writer’s opinions as a civilian.

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Seedcorn 3: The End of the Envoy

Posted January 4, 2023 By John C Wright

Seedcorn is now posted.

Three of Four.

IN this episode is my conceit of how political conflict is resolved, as seen from the moral foundation of a philosophy one might call Occidentalized Taoism.

Real Taoism is quietist, a philosophy of renunciation and submission to fate. Occidentals, informed by Christian thought even when we do not realize it, cannot accept true fatalism or true renunciation. The furthest we of the West tend to go in that direction is toward stoicism, or pragmatism, or the idea that ideals are worth pursuing even if they cannot be enacted.

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Seedcorn 2: A Second First Beginning

Posted December 21, 2022 By John C Wright

Seedcorn is now posted.

Two of Four.

The art of mimicking another author’s voice, always a doubtful proposition if not done out of pure admiration, consists of three elements: first, copying the lyricism, vocabulary, and word-choice (a particularly entertaining challenge when mimicking Jack Vance, for example); second, copying the plot-rhythm, stylistic patterns, or structures favored by the author (a thrilling challenge when mimicking A.E. van Vogt whose rapidfire sense of pacing and plot-twisting is legendary); but finally and most of all copying the theme and worldview of the author, making the kind of point with the story he himself would have made, not expressing your own opinion.

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Seedcorn 1: A Planet Called Patience

Posted November 30, 2022 By John C Wright

Seedcorn is now posted.

One of Four.

I have written more than one story in the background of favorite authors, such as Jack Vance and A.E. van Vogt, and, with the permission of their estates, had them published. As ever, my aim is to mimic the voice and vocabulary, capture the mood and message of the original author as best I may, intruding nothing of myself.

Some authors are more difficult to mimic that others. This was my attempt to pay homage to Ursula K LeGuin, by setting a story in the background of her Hainish Cycle, which includes such works as Rocannon’s World (1966) The Left Hand of Darkness (1969), The Word for World Is Forest (1972), The Dispossessed (1974), as well as Four Ways to Forgiveness (1994).

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Draconian Outlaw 6: Beneficial Lethality

Posted November 23, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted.

Six of Six.

Here we say farewell to LeClerc, as he says farewell to the human race. Had your humble author written this tale later in life, he may have made provision for a wife or children to accompany him in his journey, or at least made clear whether the voyage was round trip or one-way.

Watch this space for a new tale of phantasy and wonder next week!

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Draconian Outlaw 5: Alien Familiarity

Posted November 16, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted.

Five of Six.

This is the scene which I first recall when I think on this yarn, and the one that gives the tale whatever character and amusement value it may possess.

Your humble author displays a long-distance emotion related to pride of workmanship of his outer mantle layers (Exclamation!).

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Draconian Outlaw 4: Tarnished Golden Age

Posted November 11, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted in a tardy fashion.

Four of Six.

Your humble author’s extrapolation of the folly of mankind when driven mad by politics seems, in hindsight, to be extraordinarily conservative and muted. In reality, the human reaction to such a golden age would be much more insane. For example, the text offers no example of feminists or activists objecting to the use by the alien translation machines of the first person singular pronoun in English; and rather comically assumes that, once antimatter warheads were available for mutually assured destruction, nuclear weapons would be retired and reused as starship propellent.

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Draconian Outlaw 3: Something for Nothing

Posted November 2, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted.

Three of Six.

Your humble author’s attempt to imitate Ayn Rand in the chapter is muted a bit in favor of his attempt to mimic Keith Laumer.

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Draconian Outlaw 2: Distant Approach

Posted October 26, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted.

Two of Six.

This story was not written so very long ago, but I already notice the anachronism of age, akin to seeing a mention, for a example, of a steel-nib pen rather than a ballpoint in a story set forty years in the future. In a montage passage of newspaper editorials, the author makes no mention of blogs, podcasts, wall-screen, or brain-radio.

As for the quotes from editorialists, they have a certain tone and point: I am only surprised the author did not specify the newspaper was called The Banner, and give the editor’s name as Gail Wynand.

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Draconian Outlaw 1: Unwelcome Embassy

Posted October 19, 2022 By John C Wright

Draconian Outlaw is now posted.

One of Six.

This is a previously unpublished story, once rejected by the great Gardner Dozois (may he rest in peace) of Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine fame. In those long-ago days, I was pleased to receive rejections where the editor wrote a personal letter to explain the reasoning of his harsh but just condemnation.

My revenge was to sell my first two professional sales thereafter to Asimov’s, to appearing in four anthologies edited by Mr. Dozois, including his “Year’s Best” anthology for 2004 and 2010.

I have rewritten certain passages in hope of improving the story to pass muster with Mr. Dozois, or what I imagine his standards would demand. My readers are the final judge, as ever.

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Second Contact, Chapter Four: Judgment, Compassion

Posted July 27, 2022 By John C Wright

Second Contact is now posted.

Chapter Four of Four

Of alien races, the Shfathshfain have formed the closest bond to humanity, despite remarkable differences in intellectual, sexual, and individual neural organization. The emotional compatibility from the first is remarkable, as was reflected by repeated contacts during the war centuries, most notably in the person of sealwife of The Alverin Cumae.

Of course, as one wag observed, it is easier for humans to get along with creatures that look like harp seals, warm and fuzzy with big, soft eyes, than with the silicon-based dendrites, blind flower-creatures, methane-breathing manta-rays, liquid-nitrogen-swimming cephalopods, or titanic, armored monster-worms.

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Second Contact, Chapter Three: Memorial, Oblivion

Posted July 20, 2022 By John C Wright

Second Contact is now posted.

Chapter Three of Four

The dialog here is taken from the unedited transcript recovered after the war, but the wording follows the Laureate translation, rather than the machine-translation actually in use at the time. The musical notation has been lost, so the alien’s lyrics are presented here as text.

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Second Contact, Chapter Two: Sorrowing, Mourning

Posted July 13, 2022 By John C Wright

Second Contact is now posted.

Chapter Two of Four

For the record, Langstrom’s mortal encounter during Second Contact with the spore-explosive Sfath, as a matter of dramatic license, has been conflated with the tragic death of Dietrich during First Contact. These events occurred, but not in this order, nor this rapidly.

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Second Contact, Chapter One: Unarmed, Unafraid

Posted July 6, 2022 By John C Wright

Second Contact is now posted.

This is a unpublished tale from my Unconquered Earth Cycle, and takes place in the same background universe as Farthest Man from Earth, Not Born a Man, and Twilight of the Gods.

Chapter One of Four

These events date from 3250 A.D.

The entry for this century from the Historical Institute Analects reads only:
At about this time, the privately funded expedition multigeneration starship Aristotelian makes contact with the hidden Sfathshfain colony at Procyon.

However, the records kept by the Aristotelian expedition, including journals recording personal information, were meticulous, shared with the Sfaths, who revered them, and added them to first-priority long term memory chains. These records were later recovered intact by The Evelyn Drake and shared with The Alverin Cumae via the intercession of his sealwife.

The events have been compressed, and some dialog altered or added, for ease of reading or dramatic effect.

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Loyal to the Destroyers, Chapter Six: Prisonbreak

Posted June 29, 2022 By John C Wright

Loyal to the Destroyers is now posted.

The dialog here is hypothetical. Records concerning Djalerat Surat Sangn recovered after the war are incomplete. No further record of Anne Shamlin and her work among the Djannumen, whether it was for many years or few, has survived.
Whatever brave deeds she and the deserter bands among the slaves of the Destroyers accomplished will never be known for certain.

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