Born and raised
in New York City, Margaret Fieland has been around art and music all her life. Her
poems and stories have appeared in journals such as Turbulence Magazine, Front
Range Review, and All Rights Reserved.
She is the author of Relocated,
Geek Games, and Broken Bonds, and
of Sand in the Desert, a collection
of science fiction persona poems. Learn more about Margaret at her website.
Alien Landscapes
In mid-September of 2010 I
decided to write a science fiction novel. My main motive for this was a desire
to overcome my phobia about writing in the genre. As a long-time sci-fi fan,
I'd read reams of the stuff but never written any. At the time, my middle son
was in the army and doing a tour of duty in Afghanistan. Looking back, I
believe that played into my choice of a desert landscape for the alien planet,
Aleyne, where I set my story. NaNo (National Novel Writing Month) was about six
weeks away, and I quickly joined an online sci-fi and fantasy writing group.
Most of the advice I got was
to lay out the plot in as much detail as possible. However, since the
world-building was giving me anxiety attacks, I concentrated on that. The
planet I envisioned had glittering sands that sparkled with red, blue, purple, and
gold in the light; mountains of purple stone; and brightly colored flowers. My
alien city had wide boulevards paved in sparkling stone that glittered with the
colors of the desert sands. The stone houses by-and-large had center
courtyards, tiled roofs and were surrounded by the fragrant flowers. The foliage
was red instead of green—I have long been fascinated with red leaves and by the
idea of red ground cover—and the trunks of the trees gray. The flowers I
pictured as mainly purples and reds.
I could visualize the
landscape in my head, but I wanted to see it. Fortunately, I'd already
discovered GIMP (Gnu Image Manipulation Program), a freeware program with many
of the features of PhotoShop. I set about generating digital drawings of the
landscape as well as manipulating some of my own photos. Not only did I draw
pictures from scratch using GIMP, I manipulated the colors of my photographs as
well as 'painting' over parts of them. Pictured ere are a few of the many images I
generated. You can see more of my digital artwork here.
Broken Bonds
Sex with aliens? How about romance with aliens? A treason
accusation? Brad Reynolds has his hands full. When Major Brad Reynolds is
assigned to head the Terran Federation base on planet Aleyne, the last thing he
expects to find is love, and certainly not with one of the alien Aleyni. How
can he keep his lover, in the face of political maneuvering and of Ardaval's
feelings for his former partners -- and theirs for him?
Lovely artwork. What was the inspiration for the story plot?
ReplyDeleteMiddle East would look like an alien country to most Americans. Smile! Egypt was forbidding when I was there years ago.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful landscapes, Anastasia. Good luck with your science fiction story.
Linda, I had read a sci fi story years back where aliens formed two-couple households but they were basically two pairs- not a true foursome. My reaction? That's not the way I would write it. And when the time came, I didn't.
ReplyDeleteSandy, my two oldest boys traveled through Egypt and the Middle East at one point - it sounded fascinating.
Very nice pictures, Margaret. I could certainly see them as part of an alien landscape.
ReplyDeleteBest wishes with your books.
Wow, the vivid colors are so cool. I'd love to see them hanging to get a real impact. Good job!
ReplyDeleteLovely pictures! Puts me in the mood for Autumn!!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun post. I love the photos. I didn't know you could do that with the programs.
ReplyDeleteYour story sounds fun. I wish you much success!