Goodreads Authors/Readers discussion
Fantasy
>
Writers & Authors: How expanded do you like your universe?
date
newest »


mike@thewiltons.net.

As long as the storyline follows a logical, entertaining format, without straying into absurd and totally illogical realms, there are no restricitive or taboo subjects, plots, sub-plots, or potential audience/reader expansion opportunities.


To me, a Universe that is frozen and unchanged is a dead Universe. A good author with imagination can and should always add to it as he/she goes. I write sci-fi (Space opera types, time travel), historical fiction, alternate history and military/spy fiction, so there are very few barriers to what I can put in my stories. However, I always do lots of preliminary research work before writing a novel because, while it is fiction, it must feel and sound realistic, especially on a human level. History is written by warm-blooded persons, not by wooden figures. Thus, you should also expand your Universe in terms of the human dimension and not only in terms of World building.

* I do a fair number of little vignettes, largely for my own benefit, to help capture a character or a concept. Just two thousand words or so, but it can crystallise some ideas and concepts.
Likewise the Building Jerusalem series has any number of spin-off options.
Any good book will. There will be little corners and future developments and bits of background that are simply hinted at in the original novel but left out because they weren't needed for the novel.
A rich story will generate these.


My just completed novel, 'Morris', is not fantasy or science fiction, but it follows that rule. It is 640 pages about a fictional multi-generational family. Why? Because I didn't want it to be 1,000, but it very easily could have been.
I felt I needed all the tangential plot lines, side-stories and back-stories for each of the characters, even those that might appear peripherally or as ancillary to the main story, to be completely thought out to make them whole and be more real to me; not just a caricature added for plot purposes. And that each then became pretty much a story unto themselves.
My intention was not to do this as a series, but I now see that I will be revisiting those characters' developments and give them their own platform to expand the story further.
Here's the real question: To what length does your fantasy universe span outside the course of your novels?
The flagship novel of my first fantasy series, Trials of the Serpent God, actually started out as the backstory to my LARP character (you can read about that in my blog). Over the course of several years, I started to really expand on the overall concept, lore, and details of the world my novel series would eventually take place.
Now, on the proverbial eve of my second novel's release, my universe has expanded to include a homebrew D&D campaign and the potential for spin-off comics. So, to circle back to the question, how far do you like your universe to expand? Do you like to have only the pieces required for your writing, or do you go off the rails and expand it ridiculously like I do?