Soon after I started writing the Abendau books, I ran
into research blackholes. Most could be addressed by asking appropriate
questions or reading books. But one proved problematic: my characters - many of
them, anyway - were in the army, over a variety of ranks.
Now, this is what I knew about an army. It's big. It has soldiers,
with guns. They say 'Aye, Sir!' a lot.
I knew nothing about the culture or language. I could - and did -
research ranks, and roles. I understood the leadership required - I'm a
leadership consultant and the skills are transferable. But I didn't understand
how belonging to the army can affect that leadership approach.
In short, I did not have the knowledge or understanding to write a
convincing army officer. And my main character was destined to become a CEO....
Having accepted my limitations, I started chewing my lip nervously.
Happily, Jim Kane, a Game of Thrones fan, posted to offer advice to writers writing military scenes. It turned out he was a major in the
US army.
As a blagger extraordinaire, I asked if he’d look
over my scenes. I expected a quick readthrough and some critique. I had no idea
that five years on Jim would still be reading and advising on my third
book having put me through my paces on book one and two.
JIM:
Browsing
around the forums I saw that people would post short stories or chapters of
longer pieces up for critique, and two things really struck me: 1) That a ton
of people write about military activity, whether in the real world, fantasy
worlds, or in future science fiction environments, and 2) Holy cow do they have
some weird ideas about how things work in the military.
I mean,
when you’re in the military you see these kind of things all the time in books,
TV, movies. Things that as I like to say with Jo: “Make me cringe.” But it’s
one thing to see them and just think ‘Oh my God they have no idea.’, and it’s
another thing entirely to read through something like that analytically, like
you would editing or beta-reading. In the second case you have to really look
at it and ask, “Why does this make me cringe? What about it is completely
ludicrous?” and then the far more important question, “What would have to
change to make this make sense?”
So,
after throwing in critiques on the forums for a bit, I posted a thread offering
to give a military-specific once-over to anyone that wanted it. I don’t
remember exactly what I wrote, but I remember that at the time I was trying
really hard to be polite and not just scream at the forums something like, “You
God damn civilians…”
Anyway,
I must have been sufficiently restrained because I was approached by a few
people, Jo Zebedee being one of them. It was actually a fortunate coincidence,
because a lot of Jo’s military scenes revolved around her main character, Kare,
going through a boot camp/basic training program, and at the time I was the XO
for a basic training battalion at Fort Sill, Oklahoma. I had a lot of recent
first-hand experience with her subject matter, and I could always just yell
outside my office for a drill sergeant if I needed a more specific opinion on
something.]
Jo:
I don't ask Jim to read all 90,000 words.
I doubt he'd have time, for a start, and, also, I have beta readers who help
with full, continuity readthroughs. What I ask of Jim is different. To take
some 10-15,000 words, with limited context, and make sense of them. To comment
on sections of a book is, I've always found, harder than commenting on a whole.
First, I go through the document, pulling out the scenes I think are
relevant. Then I wince at the wordcount and trim. After, I fiddle with the
continuity - so storylines and characters go together, rather than the order
the scenes appear in the book - and provide context. And then I send them off.
JIM:
[Jo
asked me to write about what I look for, and what makes me cringe to read.
Well,
first off there are a lot of tropes about the military that you see in media
that are, well, honestly they are a little insulting if you think about it.
People just screaming at each other, soldiers acting like mindless robots that
do exactly what they are told, and a kind of awkward machismo that would fit
better with the character of a thirteen year-old wannabe bully than with an
adult who has to live in intimate proximity to hundreds of other guys in a
barracks. Those things defy logic if you think about it. I mean these are
people you are talking about here. Perhaps people who are inculcated with a
slightly different culture, but still people none the less. No one in any
culture would act the way a lot of soldiers are portrayed.
After
the tropes are the things that don’t match with those differences in military
culture. There’s a way of speaking to people of different ranks, the way people
are treated by each other, that kind of thing. I saw a lot of this early on in
Jo’s sections with the way people addressed each other (first names? My God!),
and it continues to pop up in motives behind personal interaction and conflict.
I find myself giving a lot of commentary on sections where the characters are
in conflict with each other and suggesting more military-culture appropriate
ways to get at the character interaction Jo is looking for.
Finally,
I end up looking at how things are experienced and the way things work
physically. Soldiers in Jo’s universe are doing things that are beyond what I
would expect are common for most authors in their own personal lives. Ever been
in a sandstorm? Jumped out of a perfectly good aircraft in flight? Fired a
rifle? Taken a good punch? An author might guess what these things feel like
and describe them correctly, but if they don’t guess correctly it sticks out to
someone who has experienced them.]
Jo:
So, I get it back. I read over the suggestions and implement those I
think add and fit with the rest of the book (read for that, most of them.) I
also need to decide where to wing it a little for the sake of tension in the
story - but at least now I know I'm winging it.
But what really helps me is the discussion we have. For instance, I
have a character in the books who is a professional soldier. She hates the CEO
yet stays in his army. I wept blood over why she might do that. Why not leave?
I fought to find a reason.
I mentioned this to Jim. He responded by asking why on Earth she
would leave. She was a career soldier, why would she walk away over something
like that?
Suddenly I knew that character in a way I hadn't before. That
comment - encapsulating a culture I had no understanding of, a new mindset -
took things in a new direction. The right one.
For me, this beta relationship has become a very unique and special
one (made all the better by meeting up in person). We're very different - I'm a
pacifist, he's a soldier (although, as Jim rightly points out, I’m the one
writing about violent warfare). I'm from Northern Ireland, he's American, with
all the accordant cultural nuances. And yet, I value Jim's judgements. When he
told me a speech in book 2 was all wrong, I gave it a rehaul instead of a
rewrite. My editor roasted me for that speech. I should have listened.
At the end of all this, Jim has still had the appetite to read the
books. I wondered - how does it feel to see the scenes in their final piece?
Can he recognise where his input was felt, not just in the specific scenes but
in the wider context?
Jim:
[At this
point I’ve gone through and provided commentary on quite a bit more material
than I have seen in finished form, so I would have to say that actually the
thing that has struck me most is the difference in draft passages that I have
received from book 1 through 3. I read the stuff that she sends now, and there
is no cringing involved.
It’s
also a little funny that she specifically asks if I can recognize where my
input was felt in the wider context. I am currently reading through Sunset Over
Abendau, and I noticed that throughout all the new material I was reading
(remember that Jo doesn’t let me see the full manuscript – she even tries not
to give away “spoilers”) all the military characters seemed to act, well, like
they were in the military. Not being perhaps as introspective when I am reading
for pleasure, I asked myself, “Why the hell is she sending me those other
passages for a military-beta when she’s obviously got a handle on this?”
So - does this process work? I believe so, very well.
Here's a before and after scene. See what you think.
Before (Jim’s comments are bolded in brackets)
Sam handed over the comms unit
and Kare waited for a moment before there was a cautious answer. “Simone?”
“Yes, who is this?” came the
reply, calm and unruffled as ever.
“Is the line secure?”
“Yes.”
“It’s Colonel Kare,” he told
her.
“You’re alive, then,” she said. “That’s good, we were worried. I was worried, Sir.”
“Alive, and not too bad, all
thing’s considered. It’s nice to hear
you are too. Do you recognise my authority?”
“Sonly has sent a very clear message, Sir. Yours
is the commanding authority in Abendau.”
“How many troops (have you
do you have available)?”
Kare asked.
“I have twenty in the palace, seventy
in the city and thirty of these are military.” [I am
confused by this part of the conversation.
He asks how many “troops” she has, which I would assume is a reference
to Soldiers. Then she says she has, I
think, 90 “troops” total, but only 30 are “military”. I don’t clearly understand what she
said. Perhaps “I have twenty agents
in the palace, and seventy in the city.
Thirty of my agents in the city are military.”]
“Good. Can you confirm
report to our leader I aim to take the port
this evening.” [‘confirm’ implies that he is
checking the orders he has received, I think ‘report’ would be better since I
think he wants her to just tell their leadership that he is attacking.]
“Yes, Sir.”
“Once I secure the port, she
can bring her troops in [how about “...bring the
main assault force in.”] I
land at five this evening; they will be expecting a prison convoy. [who is ‘they’?] Have your people at the port, waiting.”
“Do you need anything further
from us, Sir?”
“No,” said Kare. “I know the plans
layout of the port well. I’ll make contact once we’re in.” [recommend ‘layout’ since there are all kinds of ‘planning’
occurring and ‘plans’ being carried out]
He put
the comms unit down.
“How do
you know the port?” asked Sam.
“We were
planning an assault on Abendau just before I was taken,” said Kare. “I’m basing this attack on those plans, and
they were viable, both General Rjala and I agreed. In fact, with the army [‘strike
force’, ‘assault battalion’, anything other than ‘army’ please. She is not bringing an army]
Sonly’s bringing, if I can get them in, it’ll be a bigger force than I planned
it with, initially.”
Sam
stood up. “I’m getting some food; do you
want any?”
“No,” said Kare, “I’ve eaten
more today than I have in months. Breakfast and lunch, Sam. I don’t want to get carried away with dinner
as well.”
Kare watched the doctor walk
away, and thought how lucky he’d been to have Sam join them. He decided to keep
Sam very close this evening; he didn’t want him getting himself killed.
Lichio and Silom returned at
half past four.
“Well?” Kare asked.
“We’ve got your hundred,” said
Silom. “Of that, about half of them are useful, the others are, at best, keen.”
[see earlier comments about the mess I believe this
would be.]
The clear green eyes switched
to Lichio.
“I managed to find one pilot
in the Banned group, but you’ll have to be co pilot [finding
a pilot amongst the slaves wouldn’t be too beyond believability either. Finding an individual with a useful skill to
work with sounds reasonable, it is the coordination of large numbers of human
beings on the fly that I think is impossible]. As instructed, you me, and the Doc aren’t
allocated.” [I don’t remember those instructions.]
“We’ve got their arsenal,” said Kare, “and I
need weaponry distributed. Lichio, you
sort that out, Silom you make sure everyone knows how to use them. Oh, and show Sam, too, make sure he knows how
not to shoot himself, at least. Or me,”
he added, remembering his decision to keep the doctor close. [Exactly! Multiply Doc
Prentice by 100.]
And this is the scene from the final book. What strikes me (apart from the fact I'm not wincing at it, and my point of view discipline is improved) is how much leaner this scene is. The terminology, once nailed, can be used sparingly, with one change of word giving context so much easier - an assault force conjures up a different - and correct - imagery than the woolier (and wholly incorrect) army.
Sam handed over the comms unit
and Kare waited for a moment before it was answered.
“Simone?”
“Yes, who is this?” came the
reply, calm and unruffled as ever. He smiled at the familiar voice. He hadn’t
given the spies up, but he’d come so, so, close, his mother’s mind worming into
his. That day– the lashings, the shocks; oh gods, the shocks– had faded
into a red circle of horror but he still remembered how he’d been on the verge
of saying their names and only their faces– faces he’d chosen, trained and
placed– had stopped him.
“Is the line secure?”
“Yes.”
“It’s Colonel Varnon,” he told
her.
“You’re alive, then,” she said.
“That’s good, we were worried. I was worried, sir.”
Kare smiled at her lack of
emotion, knowing the small statement said more than any inflection might have
done. “Alive, and not too bad, all things considered. Do you recognise my
authority?”
“Sonly has sent a very clear
message, sir. Yours is the commanding authority in Abendau.”
“How many agents do you have
available?” Kare asked, and hoped his relief didn’t show in his voice. Up until
now he hadn’t been sure, not completely, that Sonly would back him.
“I have twenty in the palace,
ten in the city and five of those are military.”
“Good. Can you report back that
I aim to take the port this evening?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Once I secure the port, Sonly
can bring her assault force in. I land at five-thirty this evening; the port
will be expecting a prison convoy. Have your people at the back door to the
port, waiting.”
“Do you need anything further
from us, sir?”
“No,” Kare said. “I’ll make contact once we’re in.”
As he put the comms unit down,
Sam placed a bowl in front of him. He frowned. “More food?”
Sam shrugged. “It’s nothing
much. Porridge.”
Kare lifted the spoon and then
set it down again. “I’ve eaten breakfast and lunch, Sam. I don’t want to get
carried away with dinner as well.”
Sam crossed his arms. “Eat. I’m
the doctor, and I say you need it. Now eat.”
***
Later, Kare looked at the
drawings of the port and palace in front of him. They were drawn from memory,
but he was pleased by how much he recalled. The two seats opposite were pulled
out from the table and he looked up to see Lichio and Silom.
“Well?” Kare asked.
“I managed to find one pilot,”
Lichio said. “The only other with any flying experience is you; you’ll
have to co-pilot.”
Kare winced at the thought of flying a heavy desert transporter to
Abendau. “That sounds fine. Silom, show Sam how to use his gun, make sure he
knows how not to shoot himself, at least. Or me,” he added, remembering his
decision to keep the doctor close. “Lichio, your big sis is bringing the
cavalry, so we will have an assault force.”
More about Jo's books can be found here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Jo-Zebedee/e/B00VM61TZG
Comments
Thanks so much
Jo