This is the end. My only friends, the end.
As promised, I'll be answering some questions and dropping some last-minute trivia here in this last post related to the Lords of Kobol series.
There will be a few SPOILERS, so just in case, we'll dive in after the JUMP.
Trivia?
I got the name "Ahljaela" in Book Five from Superman II. ("Huh?" you're saying.) As a kid, I misunderstood a line spoken by General Zod, thanks to Terrence Stamp's scenery chewing. I could swear he said, "At last we will have revenge on the son of Ahljaela." I thought "Ahljaela" was Jor-El's nickname or something. Took me a few years ... I might have been a teenager, even ... before I realized he was saying "our jailer." Oh well.
Why didn't you charge for the Lords of Kobol books?
One word: lawyers.
I tried to get them published by the company that published the few BSG novels that do exist, but they didn't bite for whatever reason. Their form letter was vague.
Even though virtually none of the series directly intersects with Battlestar Galactica, it is very clearly based on the show and concepts established on it. If I charged money for the books, I'm pretty sure I'd get a cease-and-desist letter, if not a straight-up lawsuit.
By keeping the books free, though, I've reached a larger audience than I would have otherwise. (Barring being picked up by an actual publisher, of course.)
Why do you hate Book Four?
I don't. I sometimes poke fun at it because it is the lesser of the first four books (review and rating-wise).
In my own mind, it's the odd-man out because 1) it's not part of the greater continuity and 2) it doesn't fit into the more realistic world of the show and trilogy (something I've already talked about extensively).
Have you read Ray Kurzweil's Singularity? Have you thought about incorporating that?
(This is an older question asked well before Book Five was published.)
I have and I did. In Book Five, the Transference that the wealthy engage in is my attempt to bring "Singularity" to this universe. The total merging of technology and man. They start by moving their minds into computer storage cubes and/or mechanical bodies, eventually sending their minds into the ether of Larsa's Internet. I liked the class aspect of how the rich could get this form of immortality and the poor couldn't. I kept it in the background, sorta, to keep from having to get too detailed. (Details can often look silly a few years later when real-world science surpasses or disproves them.)
Why name Larsa's Internet the "Matrix"? Everyone will think of the movie, you know.
I know, but I liked the sound of it. Plus, beyond our words for it (Internet, web) and the Kobollian word (Stream), I didn't come up with a term that conveyed the same thing as simply as "Matrix." I found that after a few chapters, I didn't think of Neo and Morpheus any longer.
In Book Two, Prometheus gets an "upgrade" to Messenger. Does Aurora get the same (Confused, I asked for clarification.) Becoming angels.
Well, in Book Four, Prometheus and Athena are chosen by The One as the only two of the Lords to remain as angels. In the trilogy, though, Prometheus didn't get upgraded to "angel" status. He was chosen by the Messengers to carry out some heavy-duty parts of their plans, but he failed them when he went his own way. Aurora stuck to the plan very well in getting the Thirteenth Tribe off Kobol, but she wasn't upgraded either. The Messenger in the form of Hades said she was very inspirational and that he would have to utilize her spirit in the future (intended to be a vague hinting toward Kara Thrace).
And then it hit me ...
Oh. I called the angels "Messengers" throughout the whole series. AND, in Book Two, the Draco called Promethues (and Philip Anaxo) "Messenger," too. Holy crap. No wonder that's confusing.
My intent with the Draco's honorific was that Prometheus was deemed someone in touch with The One. A title akin to Mohammed as "Prophet," but without the baggage that word would carry and without much of the reverence. (Though Draco millennia later may very well revere Prometheus more than before).
Damn. I'll have to consider another edit.
Since it is known that the human race was born on Earth (our planet), don´t you think that on the end of the series the Galactica (and all the other ships) had jumped in time and went to our past? It bothers me ´cause in the last episode, before the last FTL jump, there's a singularity nearby. I think the right time line is this: we started on Earth, then we went to Kobol, then to the Colonies, then back in time to our Earth.
That's a very cool and interesting idea. It's not one I've ever heard before either.
However, there's one major problem with it: only the Galactica was near the singularity in that last FTL jump. The other ships of the fleet would be stuck in the far future of your idea.
While it doesn't work in the context of what we saw in the show, it's still a nice concept.
Have you thought about a book to connect the new Galactica with the original Galactica?
No. Simply put, I think they're incompatible.
I would have to explain how there could be two Adamas, two Apollos, two Starbucks, etc. I'd also have to come up with a reason for mankind to go back to Kobol and then exodus again to establish another Twelve Colonies. Not to mention the original's set of Lords of Kobol, the Beings of Light, and so on. Those theological elements, in particular, just don't meld.
Yeah, I know. "All of this has happened before and all of this will happen again." That's supposed to be a good narrative device, not a crutch. For me to establish that the original series happened at some point in the intervening 150,000 years after the Galactica got to Earth II, circa 1980, would strain credulity to an extreme.
That's one of the reasons I didn't care for the comics series called Final Five. It showed us a Kobol and an Earth I that weren't far off from Caprica at all. Everything felt the same, right down to the names of characters, designs of Vipers, etc. There was nothing really new there to grab me. It was "All of this has happened before ..." with a yawn.
It'd be the same for a TOS/RIS bridge book. I'd have to re-trod the same ground over and over again and then say "God did it" for the more difficult parts. And as we all know, there are plenty of fans who didn't care for that aspect of the re-imagined series.
Speaking of ...
"A great book for sap suckin tree huggin hippies. Theire is only one God you queer author. The auther is a fag who has never played a sport in his life. And for all you non believers go crap in your mouth fags. The book sucks major nuts. Dont get it. Overall rank is gay fagtorium."
or
What is your religious leaning?
Atheist. Raised Methodist/Southern Baptist, but that didn't last much beyond high school.
If I had to guess a next question, it'd be something like, "How can you write about all of this religious, 'One True God' stuff if you're an atheist?"
Well, I just remember that it's part of the show. God and the angels were established very early on. It seems clear to me that the deity of this universe doesn't align with the deity many worship in our own world (though, I guess many people could project their beliefs onto The One, as they do in Book Five). I'm just writing about an extradimensional being that has taken an interest in our universe.
I apologize if this ruffles feathers or if, suddenly, you seem to enjoy my books less. That's the last thing I want to do. By all means, appreciate them on whatever level makes you happiest. If that's a spiritual level, go right ahead.
Do you have any regrets?
Oh, I have a few.
Regrets about the books? Well, that's different.
I really don't. Not aching, painful-to-consider regrets. I have a few wishes.
I wish I had kept Book Four more separate. Maybe released it under a totally different title or umbrella. Of course, when I finished Book Four, I had no idea that I'd be writing a Book Five. I don't like that the flow is interrupted by an "Elseworlds" issue, I guess is what I'm saying.
I've said before that I wished I could have come up with a way for the Prometheus and Athena arc from Book Four to have been part of the trilogy, but given how the story was structured, it just wouldn't work.
I wish there was a more thriving market for "expanded universe"BSG books. If there were, someone might have been interested in buying mine.
I wish more people who liked Lords of Kobol would give my other books a shot.
Wishes and horses, you know.
Will there be a Book Six?
No. The story of Larsa/Kobol is finished. The only unexplored element of that world's history is most of everything that happens before Book Five. Since there are no Psilons or Cylons involved then and since that's before the Messengers arrived, it's not really germane to the overall story.
Also, there are tidbits in Scythia as the remnant of mankind tries to survive the nuclear fallout before the Draco lands but that's just a story of basic survival, maybe with the Messengers lending a helping hand. Then there's the Golden Age of the Lords of Kobol after the war with Prometheus and before the organic Cylons are created, but everything was going well and would likely be boring to read about.
What's next?
Oh, I'll catch up on some TV shows and movies I neglected while I spent most of my free time writing. Then, in about a month, I'll get restless and somewhat depressed. I'll continue in that vein, spiraling down for a couple of weeks before I finally realize that I miss being creative.
I plan on re-reading my other novels (Displaced, Diary of a Second Life, Sexcalation, The Red Kick) and doing an edit on each. Then I might head back into How to Raise a Geek, my pseudo-parenting book. I stopped once it became obvious that it was barely going to be a pamphlet. For some reason, I'm very brief when dispensing advice.
After that? I've got some ideas, including a scifi book that has a pretty compelling hook. More on that some other time.
I cannot thank all of you enough for reading along with me these last few years as I cranked out books no one asked for. It's very heartening to see how much you enjoy them.
Until next time.