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Fisplen
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14 Jan 2014, 5:45 pm

I am currently writing a novel under the development name ' 2045 ' I have had a name decided for it for quite a while, but it will not be revealed yet, not until I'm sure this could be a thing.

It is in the style of journal entries, since thats the only kind of writing I'm good at.

I'm not gonna say what the story is about, I like to see what the reader thinks its about.

Right, lets have the first 3 entries.


20th January 2045
I have had an eventful day today; we found out that our organisation 3-Facts has announced that under pressure from the recession and government raids on our facilities, our anonymous leader has said that in effort to continue our work, he will cut down our work force by 35% and have new complex plans in place to make sure we can succeed as an organisation.
Reducing the work force by 35% will involve kicking out our not so hard working employees.
This worries me , greatly , I get paid good money for doing what I do and I enjoy it , it’s bad this situation has come about so I’ll have to up my game and work harder and quicker if I want to stay part of this organisation.
This recession’s hit me so hard I’m thinking of selling my old 2021 2nd Gen Robot from R.E.

24th January 2045
I have been working hard for the past few days trying to maintain my level of efficiency at work I’ve seen many friends and colleagues leave a Job they so dearly love with passion , but I guess it’s for the best , no work , no pay as my manager says.
Meanwhile it’s been quiet in the world… Al-Barrie has finally been put to rest, with its leader Abdullah shot dead in his compound in Russia.
So obviously it’s starting to get harder nowadays looking for something shocking in the world, I mean there’s just nothing much happening anymore, since the events in North Korea a few years back, it’s just been China again and again, but that’s the thing, everyone’s in China, but I want to do something different, and so does the Manager here, I can tell he’s just itching to kick me off the team, I mean after all we run on donations.
But I’ve got something in mind to make a run for his money.

25th January 2045
It’s been done, I’ve asked.
The reaction was of anger and shock; I mean I don’t blame him, but for what it’s worth, we could go far with this!
Robotic Earth electronics, I asked if we could investigate what is happening with Robotic Earth, developed in the 10’s, rose in the 20’s, now a multi-billion international company with its electronics spread around the world, hell I even have a Robot.
But the thing is NOT ONE slip up has occurred in this time, not even a single controversial thing has happened, it seems like the perfect company, Apple, well back when that was around, was simply a shadow of the empire that Robotic Earth is.
I’ve asked if I could investigate, maybe even slip in to operations.
The Boss said he’ll think about it and tell me soon.

Anyway, thats it for now, I'll continue if this seems to get anyone interested.



AspieWolf
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14 Jan 2014, 6:50 pm

1. I will be long dead by 2045, so I don't care what happens. Well, that is unless I am reincarnated by then. That will be a real downer!

2. By 2045 the world will have a single one-world government in the form of a socialist/fascist police state. Freedom and privacy will be completly gone.

3. Hopefully there will be a revolution by that time. If not then, our only hope is an outer space frontier.

4. Otherwise, keep writing. It's a good way to exercise the brain.


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modernmax
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15 Jan 2014, 3:45 pm

I am also writing a sci-fi novel in the future, from 2040-2048. Isn't it cool how you don't have to do as much research when you're writing about the future, since you can make stuff up that seems impossible, improbable, or impractical because "you never know, anything could happen by then."?


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pete1061
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16 Jan 2014, 2:26 pm

AspieWolf wrote:
...

2. By 2045 the world will have a single one-world government in the form of a socialist/fascist police state. Freedom and privacy will be completly gone.

3. Hopefully there will be a revolution by that time. If not then, our only hope is an outer space frontier.

....


If that revolution doesn't happen by 2045, I'll work to start one. I'll be 75 then, but I'll still fight as much as I can!
This BS going on now in the world CAN'T go on that long, and by 2045 SHOULD be put to a very harsh end.
It will be one of the most epic wars mankind will ever see (a GLOBAL revolt). But either the people need to put the global control freaks out of business, or mother earth will put us all to an end.

And outer space frontier? Under the current system, that will only be a privilege for the super rich.
If there isn't a revolution, that hope for a outer space frontier is an empty one.


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Robdemanc
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18 Jan 2014, 4:09 pm

I'm not sure what to say your book is about. It looks like your character lives in a world that had become more slave driving and pressure on people is even greater than it is now.

Your writing is good and I think doing journal entries for a future story is interesting.

I think reading the first 3 entries leads me to think you may be making some statement about humanity/society in your novel.



Fisplen
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28 Jan 2014, 6:52 pm

Well since I got some form of reception, I'd thought I post some more.

3 more entries out of the book.

1st February 2045
It’s February now, boiling as I speak, this climate change is real, is too late for our lazy asses to do anything though.
Anyway I had a little chat with the boss, he said that there wasn't a point and I would be wasting my time looking into Robotic Earth, I then told him my side argument and it gone from there onwards…
Fair to say he agreed, but I will need to be quick, I NEED TO GET SOMETHING BY THE END OF THE MONTH.

4th February 2045
Well, I’ve been poking around lately online, as of such the only interesting topics I’ve found is that Sam Coughlan ( CEO and builder of RBE ) seemed to have a dark side about him, apparently he used to have quite the temper, and some said he had disturbing thought’s, but that was back in his teens, nobody would care now, he seems nice, the perfect entrepreneur role model to follow…
More work needs to be done on this…

6th February 2045
I’ve looked more into Sam’s past but found nothing more but positive news… same goes for the Robotic Earth company, I’ve got to start acting quick… maybe I should ask around, the HQ seems to be the place to start, 60km tall, designed to be a look alike of a standard model of Robot, they manufacture all of the Robot’s here, since 2036, when the structure was finally completed after 6 years of work.
Ah, what’s this, a dream?
Robotic Earth HQ is located in the UK, with the limited money rolling in, a trip to the UK is out of the question, maybe after a few more days I find nothing, I’ll give this story up…



Fisplen
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06 Feb 2014, 2:50 am

Has anyone looked at this?



wcoltd
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06 Feb 2014, 11:52 am

I have.



Fisplen
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06 Feb 2014, 4:31 pm

Well atleast I have an audience.



modernmax
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06 Feb 2014, 5:13 pm

I am. When do you plan on publishing this? Maybe I'll try and get mine released around the same time, so that we can have them as a crossover/tie-in deal, you can reference stuff that happens in my book, and I can do the same for yours. I'd love to read more.


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Fisplen
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06 Feb 2014, 5:34 pm

modernmax wrote:
I am. When do you plan on publishing this? Maybe I'll try and get mine released around the same time, so that we can have them as a crossover/tie-in deal, you can reference stuff that happens in my book, and I can do the same for yours. I'd love to read more.


Well this topic is mainly to see if I have what it takes to be a write and perhaps if I were to release one day I'd have people who'd wanna read it.

Basically the thing is I've had the main plot established for a few years in my head now, It's likely gonna be a trilogy of sorts, but I've been thinking if I were to publish it I'd have the second and third novels come out first and then the first as a prequel, kinda like what they did with Star Wars.


What You're reading is the first entry in this trilogy, what may be the prequel.

But if I were to publish this first novel, I'd say sometime when I'm in College, around 2016-2018, this is mostly a draft at the moment.

BTW The idea You have doesn't seem to be that far-fetched, maybe we could work something out, but I'd have to know what Yours is also about so.



AngelRho
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06 Feb 2014, 9:48 pm

I'm not a writer, but as young as you are I'll pass along some advice I got when I was in college.

My big dream was to be a composer. I love playing piano and clarinet, but I'd much rather perform my own stuff and have others play my music as well.

So went to college to study music and my composing was put way back on the backburner for 3 or 4 years. I didn't give it up completely, but that particular college did not encourage a lot of creativity. I was distressed because I'd gone all that time and never picked up any formal training in music composition, yet the whole time I was bugging my theory professor, who was also a composer, to give me some training in composition. He refused to do it, but I harassed him about it anyway on a fairly regular basis. I got him to at least listen to my music and tell me what he thought. Honestly, I didn't ENJOY very much of what he had to say; nobody ever does. But he was truthful, didn't hold back, and every conversation ended with "Just keep writing." It took some time, but I paid attention in my upper level theory and music literature courses, doing my best to emulate what I heard. I'm not sure what happened, but it was like a light bulb went off in my brain and I was composing "real" music. So I let him hear this art song I composed in collaboration with an English major, and he went NUTS over it. I let him hear an atonal piece I did for synthesizer; and though atonal music was not his particular thing, he gave me unusually positive feedback on that one.

Over the next 1 1/2 to 2 years I met other composers and applied for graduate studies in music composition, and all that without a single formal lesson in music composition. I had to figure all this stuff out all on my own and synthesize everything I'd learned in theory, history, and literature. Sure, I had to take analytical and orchestration courses, standard with any undergrad music major, and I also had to take instrumental methods courses, which meant I got hands-on practical knowledge on the basics of playing every orchestral instrument out there. So I basically had the knowledge tools to compose, and I'd been composing jazz and pop-style instrumentals since high school; all I lacked was a lot of mentoring and heavily critical feedback that people with extensive formal training normally get.

And even though I got accepted into a grad school, I got my butt handed to me on a weekly basis. Long story short, my professors weren't crazy about the idea of their name being associated with a crap student composer who didn't know what he was doing. They WANTED me to succeed--MOST of them, anyway--and they didn't tolerate a lot of garbage from me. I had to learn fast if I wanted to survive grad school, and I ended up composing some really good stuff that I'm still proud of. I don't get to compose the way I used to, and I'm not making a living at it. Now I'm focussing more on something a little more commercial--I've got bills to pay, just like everyone else. The wonderful thing about being put through the wringer like that is developing a critical ear, not to mention an open mind and a desire to ask people for honest, hard-hitting feedback. I've even gotten to know people in record companies and publishing companies--enough to know I'm not interested in their services! I've gotten some wonderful advice from industry professionals that way. In the end, I compose because I love composing. I'm capable of making music that people will enjoy and will purchase, and one of the best ways to know what people will buy is to just ask them. So I've done the research to know what's going to sell. And while between teaching privately, performing, and (hopefully) recording, I'm hoping to support myself in doing something more "art for art's sake," composing purely for the enjoyment of it rather than someone's approval.

And therein is the secret of succeeding in any artistic/creative work, especially writing: You do it because you enjoy it, and the approval of an audience or peers is secondary to the joy of completing the work itself. Getting approval is something you do for reasons beyond the scope of the work, and there's no shame in that, but you do those things for your own reasons in hopes that you improve your ability to do the work and to reach whatever goals you set as a measure of your success.

In short: Just keep writing. Don't stop writing. I suspect the best compositions, songs, and books have this in common: They are not written--they are REwritten. Keep an open mind, always seek feedback, and always take good advice.

My wife's favorite trash romance novelist is Nora Roberts. She started writing pretty much because she didn't have anything else to do…now she writes 8 hours a day, EVERY day, and she doesn't start new projects in the middle of old ones. I suspect I spend 4 hours a day, give or take, composing, and I have 3 different projects going on at once. Everyone is different. But the main thing is work your butt off at it and you definitely WILL get better.

Good luck to you! Can't wait to read more of your stuff!



Allen22
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08 Feb 2014, 2:27 am

2045... I cannot even imagine my life by then... But good luck for your novel. :)