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Madeleine Holly-Rosing
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Q&A > Q&A with Madeleine Holly-Rosing

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message 1: by Kristen (last edited Feb 23, 2013 02:48PM) (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments The Q&A with Madeleine Holly-Rosing will be held here in this topic on Saturday, February 23 at 3 PM PST/6 PM EST.

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A TV, feature film and comic book writer, Madeleine is the winner of the Sloan Fellowship for screenwriting, and the Gold Aurora and Bronze Telly for a PSA produced by Women In Film. She also won numerous awards while completing the UCLA MFA Program in Screenwriting. She has a short story featured in February's edition of eSteampunk Magazine called The Clockwork Man. She currently has novelettes and novellas for Kindle, Nook and Smashwords based on her webcomic Boston Metaphysical Society. Her goal is to eventually develop a series of novels based in this world.

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Please be polite, use spoiler tags if necessary and stay on topic in this Q&A. Any posts that are deemed inappropriate or off-topic will be deleted and you will receive a warning.

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Remember to refresh often!


message 2: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments The Q&A has now officially started!


message 3: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I'm here and I'll try not to screw up the spoiler tags if I need them. :)


message 4: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments I'm sure you'll do great!


message 5: by Alex (new)

Alex Woolfson (alexwoolfson) | 40 comments I'm here too. :)


message 6: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Also, let my apologize up front for any typos, punctuation errors, etc. as I will be typing quickly.


message 7: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Hi Alex!


message 8: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments My first question is: How did you start working with you partners on the webcomic, Emily Hu, Troy Peteri, Gloria Caeli and Fahriza Kamaputra?


message 9: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Do you have a question?


message 10: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments Madeleine wrote: "Also, let my apologize up front for any typos, punctuation errors, etc. as I will be typing quickly."

That's fine Madeleine :) Also, no need to rush! Take your time!


message 11: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments OK. Emily I met thru a friend in my sequential art class after nine months of searching for an artist.


message 12: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Troy I met at Image Expo when he came over to say hello to Christina Strain (Fox Sister) who I was sharing a table with.


message 13: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Gloria and FAhriza are from Stellar Labs in Jakarta. I got them through Dave Elliott (Atomeka and A1) who I also met through a mutual friend. So it's was quite a thing to put this team together.


message 14: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments I'm here, the birthday celebration ended early.

Q: What makes a story "steampunk" instead of Jules Verne-esque science fiction.


message 15: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I had met 6 other artists who I liked besides Emi, but they all fell through. Lucky me!! I liked her art, had her do two sample pages (which I paid her for) and off we went.


message 16: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I make a point of paying whoever works for me on time and fairly as I'm just starting out in the industry and want to have a good reputation of someone you want to work for.


message 17: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments Hi Bill! For me it has to do with the social mores and values of the time. It's not just about the gadgets, but about the relationships and how they struggle with the cultural restraints of the time.


message 18: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments Meeting these people seems like it was so circumstantial. I guess we're lucky that you managed to get your team together!


message 19: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments The tech stuff is just fun. Trying to visualize the tech at the time and amping it up a bit or in the case of my short story THE CLOCKWORK MAN, quite a bit. LOL.


message 20: by Mike (new)

Mike | 1505 comments Mod
Hi Madeleine :)

Madeleine wrote: "So it's was quite a thing to put this team together."

Wow, that is quite the long journey to get the crew together. The art suits the story wonderfully. Did you have a set visual style in mind or did it evolve based on seeing Emily's art, etc?


message 21: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments (Devil's advocate) But what is different about the relationships in a steampunk story than in a regular novel set in Victorian times?


message 22: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I had help. :) But it all came together because of relationships I had developed. Dave Elliott loved the story and the art, but I also came through a trusted reference. Very important.


message 23: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Mike I like clean lines and not a lot of fussy stuff. That's just my personal taste. I wanted the art to enhance the story not bury it. Emi did just that. :)


message 24: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments Madeleine wrote: "The tech stuff is just fun. Trying to visualize the tech at the time and amping it up a bit or in the case of my short story THE CLOCKWORK MAN, quite a bit. LOL."

Do you do a lot of research to get an idea of what steampunk gadgets would look like or how they would work?


message 25: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill Victorian times had much defined social classes. To try to break through one or the other brought real consequences unlike today. And yes, we do have social classes in the present, but it's much easier to slide into one or the other.


message 26: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Kristen Yes, I do a lot of research. I have to understand how something works so my readers can understand it as well. Or at least understand it well enough they get the gist.


message 27: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments Oh, yeah. Bertram and Lady G. have to deal with exactly that class stratification. ;)

Q: Any significance to Boston instead of New York, London, San Francisco or Detroit?


message 28: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I'm fortunate to have a rocket scientist for a husband, so if I have questions we can sit down and discuss it. (Or I can just yell the question from my office to his. LOL. I still have to understand it though.


message 29: by Mike (new)

Mike | 1505 comments Mod
Madeleine wrote: "The tech stuff is just fun. Trying to visualize the tech at the time and amping it up a bit or in the case of my short story THE CLOCKWORK MAN, quite a bit. LOL."

The tech details in what I've read so far have been really awesome! Everything's well grounded and explained. Really looking forward to "The Clockwork Man"! (note for others - this is a new story in the BMS universe exclusive to this month's issue of eSteampunk Magazine)

I found the tech in "The Steampunk Rat" particularly impressive, especially when it came to Tinker. :) How did you stumble on the idea of a "cyborg" rat as a central character for a story?


message 30: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill Yes. I had already done the research for a script I wrote at UCLA about a late 19th century astronomer by the name of Mina Fleming. She worked at the Harvard Observatory. (The script was called STARGAZER and won the Sloan Fellowship.)


message 31: by Mike (new)

Mike | 1505 comments Mod
Madeleine wrote: "@Mike I like clean lines and not a lot of fussy stuff. That's just my personal taste. I wanted the art to enhance the story not bury it. Emi did just that. :)"

Totally agree. It looks great!


message 32: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments I'll second how well the tech is done. As a retired factory rat/engineer and machine-controls designer I haven't had heartburn yet. As someone fascinated by marine technology, too, ya' done good, Kid. ;)


message 33: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Mike My husband's partially to blame for that. On the first page of chp. 2, you see a small steampunk rat coming out of frame. Well, originally Emi forgot to draw the rats in which were in the script. So, after three passes, ti still wasn't right and my husband says, "you should have a steampunk rat coming out of frame." He was right. I liked it so much I wanted to do a story about a steampunk rat and found the cover art by Elizabeth Jackson. Then another reviewer suggested I do a story about Jonathan Weldsmore in happier times and STEAMPUNK RAT was born.


message 34: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill. Thank you. I try.


message 35: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments Q: How important are second-tier publishers (e.g. Smashwords, Kobo & al.) when publishing your stories, novellas and hard-copies? What market do they address that Amazon + Barnes&Noble don't (or don't address well)?


message 36: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments Did you plan Boston Metaphysical Society as a webcomic from the beginning?


message 37: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill Back to the Boston question...yes, I was lazy as I had already done the research. :) But I also liked how it sounded.


message 38: by Mike (new)

Mike | 1505 comments Mod
That's awesome! I completely missed that rat - I need to pay closer attention!

Having read Steampunk Rat first I was a bit shocked at Jonathan's portrayal when he appeared in the comic. Can't wait to find out more about him and the other supporting characters.


message 39: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill I think hitting all markets is important just because, well, you never know. I have had sales on Apple, Kobo and Diesel thru Smashwords, but they don't have the market share like Nook and Amazon do. I think it's important to have your stories available in all formats just so you don't annoy potential customers.


message 40: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill Thinking about it some more...most of my overseas sales have been thru Apple (Smashwords). (Note: I use Smashwords to distribute to everyone but Kindle and Nook. For them I upload directly.)


message 41: by Bill (new)

Bill (escherton) | 10 comments Back to "steampunk" -- is the steampunk world already defined by convention or is the world in BMS strictly your own creation? Snow By Night for example has created an entire fantasy world that parallels Canada and France but is complete and complex unto itself. No conventions to follow. What about BMS?


message 42: by Mike (new)

Mike | 1505 comments Mod
What is good/bad about the various mediums you've worked in (comics, short stories, screenwriting, etc)? Do you have a favorite?


message 43: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Kristen No. BMS was originally a TV pilot I wrote while at the UCLA MFA screenwriting program. It was well received, but hard to sell because of the cost involved. It was suggested I re-create it as a webcomic/comic to use as pre-existing material. This is marketing speak in the entertainment industry for having making a project more attractive.

In the meantime, I discovered I really like writing comics and I have ideas for BMS as well as other series.


message 44: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Mike I do know how Jonathan becomes the man you see in the comic, but I'm not sure when I'm going to write that story. A novel maybe?

As for a medium I like...well they all have their pros and cons. I really miss writing screenplays (due to time) because they are lean and clean as are comics.

What's great about comics is you can write what you want without worry about a production budget.

As for prose, it's hard, hard, hard, but it allows you to explore the world and your characters much more fully. And I love that.


message 45: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Bill Yes BMS is my own world with it's own conventions. Any resemblance to our history is entirely coincidental. LOL.


message 46: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Mike I'm currently in the middle of a fantasy middle-grade novel so that has been a challenge of a different kind.


message 47: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments @Mike BTW, did you get the book?


message 48: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments I have a sneaking suspicion I maybe a closet novelist. :)


message 49: by Kristen (new)

Kristen | 1179 comments Speaking of history, why did you choose to use Bell, Edison, Tesla and Houdini in Boston Metaphysical Society? How did you go about characterizing them?


message 50: by Madeleine (new)

Madeleine Holly-Rosing (mhollyrosing) | 152 comments The problem with comics is the expense of hiring an artist, colorist and letterer. You would think you could get one person to do the whole thing, but you quickly learn they are different skill sets.


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