Sci-Fi, fantasy and speculative Indie Authors Review discussion
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Another genre classification problem 'Science of'?
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It's not really the same motivation as Sir Terry's science books, Elizabeth. He was using fantasy stories to illustrate a science book, whereas mine isn't going to have any actual stories in it. Naturally I'll be rolling out a few technological hobby-horses, though.


Over on Lulu someone does D&D type illustrations, maps, and such and has a decent following.
If you marketed it as the science behind your series I doubt the Amazonians would object.
Readers who have an interest in a series as well as what makes it work would likely enjoy the primer.


I'm now giving myself a similar problem, only more so. I'm writing a heavily-illustrated book describing all the ships and space stations from my imaginary system, with technical descriptions of them and of the scenario. It's not a work of fiction in that there are no characters and no plot, but of course the world it describes doesn't exist.
The nearest analog I can think of is those "science of..." books, though the science in those is all ballocks, and I naturally think mine isn't. I imagine the 'bible' used by movie people might be similar, too.
I recognise that the market for something like this is... severely limited... but that's not a major consideration for me. I'm wondering, though, what tags to put on it when I put it up on Amazon. Does anyone know of a category that might fit, maybe in non-fiction somewhere? I can put it in hard sci-fi, but then it may disappoint for not having a story.