Category Archives: Writers talk about their stories

Kristine Kathryn Rusch on “The City’s Edge”

Diving Into the Wreck by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Diving Into the Wreck by Kristine Kathryn Rusch

Q: Tell us about your story in Bridging Infinity?

“The City’s Edge” focuses on a failed engineering project—one that was on track, and then disappeared in the dead of night. There’s more than one gigantic engineering piece in this story, which made it fun to write.

Q: What was the inspiration behind your story?

When I received the anthology invitation, I decided not to write a story in my usual sf universes (Diving and the Retrieval Artist). The stories would’ve been too long, for one thing, and for another, I have loyalty to Asimov’s which usually publishes those first. However, that tied me up in serious knots. How do I write about a major sf engineering project without reaching into my usual sources.

I’m not really a near-future kind of hard sf writer, although I thought about doing something. I couldn’t find the hook. So, I read a few books on historical projects and something in a book on the New York subway system caught me—all the started and failed parts of the project. I realized I’d been looking at this wrong. Projects work after a lot of failure. That led me to my character, which led me to the story.

Q: What do you believe makes a good science fiction story?

Characters, setting, emotion. We writers need to take our readers on a vacation to a place they’ve never seen before and will never see in their lifetime (we hope, in some cases). We always remember the characters more than the idea of an sf story, because we’re social creatures. We get our information from each other, and our stories too.

Q: What are you working on now? And if people like your story in the book, what other work of yours should they seek out?

Over the last few years, I expanded my Retrieval Artist universe with the Anniversary Day saga. That large project made me ignore the Diving Universe, so I headed back to that with a vengeance. The Falls, a standalone novel in the Diving Universe, just appeared, and another novel will appear in that universe next year. I’m still not done, though, and I’m currently writing about yet another group of characters in that large setting. And that doesn’t count all the editing I’m doing for Fiction River or some of the other editing projects on the hopper. Plus, I have a mystery coming out next year under my Kris Nelscott pen name, and I’m catching up on short fiction after too long a hiatus….

Back to your question, though, what should readers pick up? My Diving Universe books will probably appeal to the folks who like this book. Start with Diving Into The Wreck or pick up The Diving Bundle, which is a group of collected novellas, and go from there.

Thoraiya Dyer on “Induction”

Crossroads of Canopy by Thoraiya Dyer
Crossroads of Canopy by Thoraiya Dyer

Q: Tell us about your story in Bridging Infinity?

Rising sea levels threaten Anguilla, but businessmen can always make a buck. It’s up to an ex-astronaut to save the ordinary people from his half-brother if he can. With the help of an engineer. From the depths of a shaft drilled the full thickness of Earth’s crust.

Q: What was the inspiration behind your story?

A combination of: Journal articles on Russian and Icelandic deep-drilling efforts, and wondering why they didn’t drill where the crust was thinnest. Renewable energy research. Alzheimer’s disease striking my friends and family. A chance encounter with someone who grew up on Groote Eylandt.

Q: What do you believe makes a good science fiction story?

Good balance between storytelling craft and rigorous extrapolation of scientific discovery/application/societal impact.

Q: What are you working on now? And if people like your story in the book, what other work of yours should they seek out?

I’m working on Book 2 of my fantasy trilogy, “Echoes of Understorey”. If people like the characters in my story, they can buy Book 1 in January 2017,”Crossroads of Canopy. If short stories are preferred, my 4-story collection Asymmetry is about 50/50 science fiction and fantasy. If only science fiction will do, my story “Going Viral,” in Issue 8 of free online magazine Dimension 6 from Coeur de Lion, follows a brother and sister battling both tradition and an engineered rabies outbreak on an alternate-history Sumatra.