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	<title>David Drake &#187; Roger Brownell</title>
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	<description>Science Fiction &#38; Fantasy Writer</description>
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		<title>Newsletter #53</title>
		<link>http://david-drake.com/2009/newsletter-53/</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Oct 2009 15:04:30 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Newsletters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Con*Stellation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Isles Series]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lance Larka]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roger Brownell]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Complete Hammer's Slammers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vietnam War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Web site]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[What Distant Deeps]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://david-drake.com/wordpress/?p=2389</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dear People, WHAT DISTANT DEEPS, the next RCN (Leary/Mundy) space opera, isn&#8217;t quite finished. It&#8217;s coming along fine and I&#8217;ve got well over 100K words in draft&#8211;but it just flat isn&#8217;t done. I&#8217;ll be a lot happier when it&#8217;s finished. Or&#8211;realistically; this is me we&#8217;re talking about&#8211;I&#8217;ll be a lot less miserable.  Each of my [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!-- p.MsoNormal { margin:0in; margin-bottom:.0001pt; font-size:12.0pt; font-family:"Times New Roman"; } -->Dear People,</p>
<p>WHAT DISTANT DEEPS, the next RCN (Leary/Mundy) space opera, isn&#8217;t quite  finished. It&#8217;s coming along fine and I&#8217;ve got well over 100K words in draft&#8211;but  it just flat isn&#8217;t done. I&#8217;ll be a lot happier when it&#8217;s finished.  Or&#8211;realistically; this is me we&#8217;re talking about&#8211;I&#8217;ll be a lot less  miserable.  <span id="more-2389"></span></p>
<p>Each of my books is different in structure and in the process of creation.  (This may not be obvious to anybody who isn&#8217;t in my head while it&#8217;s all going  on.) Each one therefore feels as though it&#8217;s going badly wrong as I write it,  because it isn&#8217;t exactly the same as the ones before it. Certainly that&#8217;s how  I&#8217;m feeling about this one.</p>
<p>Much of life is like riding a motorcycle: you learn what the limits of  cornering traction are by exceeding them and going down. I&#8217;m a very placid  biker, so almost all my serious problems have been the result of somebody else  doing something that I couldn&#8217;t avoid.</p>
<p>As a writer, however, I&#8217;m not placid. One of these days, and maybe this very  day, I may skid completely off the road. Whereupon I&#8217;ll pick myself up, limp  home on the current book, and do it a different way the next time.</p>
<p>I tend to think that What Distant Deeps is going slowly. In fact it&#8217;s not: my  average daily rate (a little over a thousand words of rough draft) is right  where it usually is on normal days. There&#8217;ve been a lot of non-normal days  during the past two months, particularly a neat family vacation to the Four  Corners Region, but the book is really moving right along.</p>
<p>The thing is, the progress is hard even if it isn&#8217;t slow. The first climax of  this one is a complex naval battle for which my plot outline is very sketchy.  Every morning I had to choreograph the action as well as writing it, rather than  just checking what I planned four months ago and proceeding.</p>
<p>Furthermore, as I got into the writing I realized that I needed an additional  scene for artistic reasons, wrapping up a sequence earlier in the book. (This is  very unusual for me. Usually I would have caught the problem in the outline  stage.) So I&#8217;m in the process of mortising in new material, which is harder than  it would have been to do the job right the first time. When I screw up, I  _should_ be punished; nonetheless, the situation hasn&#8217;t helped my mood.</p>
<p>The mass market of THE GODS RETURN, the final volume in the Crown of the  Isles trilogy and the Isles series more generally, is due out from Tor in  December, 2009. I&#8217;m proud of the series for what it says, for how it says it,  and not least for the fact that it really is a connected series which goes from  point A to point B through nine volumes, all of which are basically  self-standing. (Though if you read 7, The Fortress of Glass, I _really_ hope  you&#8217;ll read 9, The Gods Return. The final trilogy has a number of strands which  run through all three books and which will be disconcerting until followed to  their conclusion.)</p>
<p>And the first omnitrade volume of THE COMPLETE HAMMER&#8217;S SLAMMERS is out from  Baen Books this month (October, 2009. They reprint the contents (including John  Treadaway&#8217;s interior art) of the Night Shade hardcover volumes (which are still  available from Night Shade).</p>
<p>Omnitrades are somewhat bigger than traditional mass markets but are smaller  than traditional trade paperbacks. Nobody&#8217;s sent me cover flats&#8211;I should  ask&#8211;so I can&#8217;t tell you more than that. Kurt Miller&#8217;s striking art for all  three volumes, however, is <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/tag/the-complete-hammers-slammers/">on my website</a>.</p>
<p>Karen, my webmaster, is planning a major revision to the website for its  tenth anniversary in April, 2010. Apparently the problem for people trying to  navigate the site is that there&#8217;s really a lot of material there. This is a Good  Thing, but it makes information retrieval difficult. I don&#8217;t know that the  problem is solvable, but it&#8217;s being worked on. Currently, though, there&#8217;ve been  only minor additions, which I&#8217;ll detail below.</p>
<p>Besides writing (and life generally) I&#8217;ve been going through the considerable  number of photographs which I&#8217;ve taken over the years. This is an interesting  process, because it takes me thirty and forty years into the past. That&#8217;s not  always a good thing, but there are good aspects to it.</p>
<p>I&#8217;m really struck by the fact that I didn&#8217;t take enough pictures of people.  There are more or less interesting buildings (the Dubuque Country Courthouse  appears repeatedly over a period of thirty-odd years; it doesn&#8217;t change a heck  of a lot in that time), and many, many pictures of (largely Roman) ruins, some  of which I can identify.</p>
<p>None of these particularly matters to me now. For example, when I wanted a  picture of the so-called Tomb of the Christian Woman built by Juba II in the  First Century AD, it was easier to have Karen find it on line than to dig out  the photos I took with my Minox in Algeria in 1980.</p>
<p>The pictures of friends (some of them writers) and family, many of whom are  now dead&#8211;those I wish I&#8217;d taken more of. Still, there were some pleasant  surprises: I&#8217;d shot a roll of slide film of Lee Brown Coye during a visit to his  house in 1975. At some point these (or a selection of them) may appear on my  website. For the future, though, I&#8217;m going to take more people pictures.</p>
<p>And I&#8217;ve had some recent opportunities to do so. As I mentioned above, my  wife Jo and I spent nine days with the Knights, old friends, in the Four Corners  Region. We saw many pueblos, cliff dwellings and rock formations, which I duly  photographed [example at <a href="http://david-drake.com/2009/southwest-trip/">http://david-drake.com/2009/southwest-trip/</a>]; but I made sure I  was getting pictures of my companions also. Their presence was more important to  me that the scenery even at the time, and I know that if I live another ten or  twenty years, the memory of them will have grown out of all proportion to that  of Spider Rock. (Which I&#8217;m glad to have seen, however.)</p>
<p>There&#8217;s an odd, short interview with me for <a href="http://writingraw.com/files/7%20Question%20Interview%20with%20David%20Drake.pdf" target="_blank" onclick="pageTracker._trackPageview('/outgoing/writingraw.com/files/7_20Question_20Interview_20with_20David_20Drake.pdf?referer=');">WritingRaw</a>.   I answer whatever questions I&#8217;m asked, but sometimes my personal mindset is  enough different from that of the interviewer that I&#8217;m not sure of the  context.</p>
<p>And I had my birthday, which tends to depress me. Not because I&#8217;m 64&#8211;I&#8217;m in  good physical and mental shape for a man of my age, and my emotional condition  hasn&#8217;t gotten worse over the past 40 years or so. I tend around my birthday to  take stock of the things in general, though, and even a bouncier person than I  am would agree that the present world has its share of problems.</p>
<p>Nonetheless, my birthday has been an excuse for a pigpicking every year since  the early &#8217;70s. This year&#8217;s was great&#8211;perfect weather, perfect pig, and some of  the best friends any man ever had. Cleverly (remember, I&#8217;d just gone through a  lot of photographs) I gave my camera to a couple friends and told them to use  it, so there are even pictures of me this time. <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/2009/birthday-2009/">Two of them are up</a> on the web site.</p>
<p>I went to Constellation in Huntsville. The con was fun, though (as happened  the previous time I&#8217;d gone there) the airline (different airlines) cancelled one  leg of the flight. This time a NASA engineer drove me from Memphis to the door  of the hotel, bless his heart.</p>
<p>In Huntsville, Lance Larka (who runs the David Drake Fan site on Facebook)  gave me a tour of the gene lab he manages. It was amazing to see cutting-edge  science at industrial scale. (The building is striking also, but I don&#8217;t suppose  you need a picture of Eric Flint providing scale for a pair of fig trees in the  atrium. I&#8217;ll go with a <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/2009/constellation-2009/">picture of Lance, Eric and me in the lab</a>.)</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t have any new Ovid translations up at the moment, but I&#8217;ve read  through the Hercules Cycle of the Metamorphoses and expect to do something  serious with it as soon as I&#8217;ve finished the current space opera. I&#8217;m getting  back into a Roman frame of mind. (The next project will be a Roman-based fantasy  in series with The Legions of Fire, coming out from Tor in July, 2010.)</p>
<p>There have been a number of mentions of photos in this newsletter; here&#8217;s one  more. I sent the <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/2009/five-firebases/">essay</a> I did as a  forward for the <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/2009/mongoose-game/">Hammer&#8217;s Slammers role-playing game</a> to the quarterly  of my veterans&#8217; group to reprint. When they ran it, I got notes from a couple  buddies from 1970. One of them (Roger Brownell; he also took the picture of me  at the top of the Nam section of my website,) sent an additional picture which  is <a href="http://david-drake.com/wordpress/2009/vietnam/">now included there</a>.</p>
<p>As background, Viet Nam has a very high water table. My unit, the Blackhorse  (and this may have been true of the US Army generally), disposed of human feces  by burning it. You pull the tub (a cut-down 54-gallon drum) from under the hole  of the latrine, pour in diesel fuel, and light it. After it burns down somewhat,  you stir the remnants with an engineer stake to ensure adequate combustion.</p>
<p>I say &#8220;you.&#8221; In the rear base at Di An, we hired locals to do the job. In the  field, it was the duty of the enlisted men&#8211;like me. Roger sent a picture of me  on shit-burning detail in the field with First Squadron in July, 1970.</p>
<p>There are a number of things to note about the picture. It shows what I mean  when I say I used to be thin. I&#8217;m not especially heavy now, but I&#8217;m a lot  heavier than I used to be. And you can also see in the background the jungle in  which we operated.</p>
<p>But the main thing is simply the job. I must&#8217;ve just lighted the tubs and was  ducking out of the smoke until it was time to start stirring. Most people don&#8217;t  have a notion of what it&#8217;s like to live in the expectation that in the next  instant a bullet will zip by or a mine will go off under your vehicle, but if  you&#8217;ve ever cleaned a catbox or stepped in the wrong place in the dark, you&#8217;ve  got some feeling for this.</p>
<p>And this wasn&#8217;t the bad part. The permanent expectation of sudden death or  maiming was the bad part.</p>
<p>1970 had a number effects on me. Many writers get remarkably full of  themselves if they&#8217;ve had a little success (and in some cases when they  haven&#8217;t). One of the reasons that didn&#8217;t happen to me was that I knew very well  what the measure of my worth was in the world&#8217;s terms: a person suitable for  burning human feces in the hot sun while occasionally getting shot at.</p>
<p>Another aspect is that the experience made me very hard to bully when I got  back to the World. No matter what this editor or that reviewer might do, I would  remain in a better place at the end of their abuse than I had been in the  past.</p>
<p>Those are both valuable things, and they&#8217;ve contributed considerably to my  success as a writer.</p>
<p>The downside is that I pretty well gave myself up for dead in 1970. That has  affected me in a number of ways, generally bad ways. It presumably has a good  deal to do with my ongoing depression.</p>
<p>But I&#8217;m functional, and I&#8217;m intellectually aware of how very good my life  really is. And you know? I&#8217;ve come a really long way from July, 1970.</p>
<p><em>–Dave Drake</em></p>
<p><em>***<br />
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