RockHill Publishing LLC
RockHill Publishing LLC
PO Box 62523
Virginia Beach, VA 23466-2523
  • Home
  • About Us
  • The Authors
    • Myron Edwards
    • Mark Everglade
    • John L Ford
    • Barbara Harrison
    • James L Hill (aka J L Hill)
    • Patti Lee
    • Athina Paris
    • G C Rosenquist
    • Zack Varkaris
  • Excerpts
    • All I Ever Wanted Jessie
    • Between February and November
    • Get Out Now!
    • Killswitch Overkill
    • Killer With A Heart
    • Killer With Three Heads
    • Killer With Black Blood
    • Killer With Ice Eyes
    • Knight Kisses
    • Love & Madness
    • Mistress of the Rock
    • PEGASUS: A Journey To New Eden
    • Scylla: The Revenge
    • The Emerald Lady
    • The Ruby Cradle
    • The Vevellis Chronicles
    • Uncle Zwizzler's Circus Galaxica
    • When Dani Smiled
  • The Bookstore
  • Press Room
    • Athina Paris Press Kit
    • Myron Edwards Press Kit
    • Barbara Harrison Press Kit
    • James L Hill ( J L Hill) Press Kit
  • Events
  • Dragon Wisdom
  • The RockHill Blog

The Evolution of Storytelling

5/26/2019

0 Comments

 
by Athina Paris

Since time immemorial people have been sharing stories. However, the way they told tales in times past has changed considerably in comparison to how we do so presently. Back in the day—centuries to millennia ago—the only way they knew how to communicate and share exploits was orally.
 
When groups of people first gathered in caves, they could hardly be called communities. Sure, they banded together for safety, hunting power, and helped raise each other’s offspring, but they were not yet connected by any specific thread. There were no races, tribes, or distinct cultures; much less what we call civilization.
 
It is a fascinating fact that one of the primary things people did around fires was to describe their daily adventures; a successful mammoth hunt, narrowly escaping a saber-tooth tiger, falling off a cliff while trying to outrun a stampeding herd of buffalo. These exchanges were more a retelling of events than stories but they brought individuals and groups together, and helped create ties that bound them into collectives.
 
Their narratives did not have real plots, tension lines, climaxes or traditional endings as we know them today, as their oral exchanges were impartations of facts, but along the way, they also became conveyances of historic events—forerunners gathering the knowledge we share today. And there were no peripeteias (turning points) in their tales, and neither were there happy endings nor tragic ones.
 
Shared stories created two ways of thinking, paradigm and narrative. And whereas paradigm is often associated with set ideas that suddenly look at a new aspect on how to do things differently, narrative thinking comes across in connected and structured waves. Even back then we could already see the fundamental scientific brain at work—invention of the wheel, and the emergence of a creative spirit; cave paintings—as they shared individual and combined sequences of events.
 
As oral accounts began to evolve, memory and dramatization started playing a larger role. This implies that not only did the narrator remember his tale and recount it numerous times, but so did his audience, who doubtless habitually asked for a favourite to be repeated. And it must have been around this time too that storytellers felt the need to create reminders; just in case the details escaped them. Hence why a substantial number of cave paintings exist around the world.
 
When the narrator looked at that wall, he was instantly reminded of his adventures’ details, which began sounding better at every subsequent retelling, for not only was he digging into his long-term memory but he started elaborating in a way that crossed between realism and fantasy. It must have been then too that fish tales were invented, as raconteurs began making use of rhyme, rhythm, song, and dramatics, which further helped carve the memory into the minds of the riveted audience. As mentioned briefly, storytelling and history became a melting pot of fact and fiction.
 
As these events became common, so did record keeping as an essential part of each distinct group, for now they could be called tribes, and cultures were springing up and passing on at a rapid rate. Again, paradigm thinking struck; the first writing came into being. Certainly, cuneiform looks complicated to modern humans, but this system developed over 5500 years ago by the Sumerians of Mesopotamia was a godsend. They could now record daily life and historical events, but as all natural evolutions tend to, it is also possible that a creative soul wrote a couple of love letters and a few stories, even if they could not be too long; imagine going to book club with those heavy carved tablets.
 
After the Sumerians, came the Egyptians, then Indians, Chinese, Greeks, Romans, the Mayans… and all developed their own writing methods, as multitudes of early manuscripts routinely reflect scribes’ preponderance to directly record oral accounts, unlike today’s prevalence of complete fiction. It wasn’t until the Renaissance that the western novel appeared, albeit still mostly record keeping of our ancient verbal traditions. But in the 17th century, true novels materialized; think Don Quixote, Paradise Lost, and Othello. Finally, fictional prose was no longer oral, as it had become long and complicated. It needed the book.
 
Through centuries of oral storytelling and the occasional etched stone or engraved scroll, we developed a taste for specific kinds of tales and Joseph Campbell (1904–1987) set it out beautifully in his 1949 The Hero with a Thousand Faces, as he expounded on his Monomyth (one myth) concept, which is the theory that suggests that all fictional narratives are variations of one single story, that a common pattern exists regardless of origin, or time of creation. In other words, it refers to the classical hero’s journey, which splits into three distinct acts. Breaking it down further, it translates into beginning, middle and end.
 
In romantic novels, but specifically the happy-ever-after kind, we call it the meet, lose, and get, which sounds frivolous but if writers do not follow the prototype they can end up with unsold copies as word of mouth travels faster than a forest fire. Understand, I am not saying every story has to have a happy ending but the formula has to be followed somewhat, whatever genre you write in.
 
From Science fiction to romance to thrillers there has to be an exposition, a confrontation, and a resolution, even if just momentary, for the tale could continue in book two or three. Every story needs to find its inciting incident, object of desire, the pursuit of that desire, and culminate in a climax that does them all justice.
 
I am certain that I’m not the only one who has come across books that do not fit the expected model. Instead, we have discovered thousands of words gathered into chapters that do not fit the classical mould, because instead, they are groups of events, sequences and scenes, but that is precisely what progression does; it changes and adapts styles and formulas.
 
Hence, the evolution of storytelling is thus; we have changed from mere narrators into intuitive creators, swing from fact to fiction, and move back and forth between the real world and whimsical ones among the pages. And the reader begs, “Lead me in, hook me with your prose, hold my interest with your turning point, and reward me with the best pay-off you could have possibly crafted.”
 

0 Comments

Achieving Your Objectives

5/19/2019

0 Comments

 
By James L Hill aka J. L. Hill
​
                When I started writing these blogs, I told myself I wouldn’t make it one long commercial for my writing. I want to give you, the reader, some useful information on writing, insight into what a writer thinks about as they work and how we view the world of science fiction, and other lofty goals. Now I do quote my own work because I don’t want to get into a copyright debacle over using someone’s work. We writers are like mothers of a newborn baby, proud and overprotective. When we ask you, what do you think of our work, what we really want is for you to smile and say ‘beautiful’. We want reviews not criticisms.
                I recently found myself in a discussion on just that, I thought one person was complaining about a negative review she received; however, she was more concerned that the reviewer didn’t spell check and correct her grammar in the review. She felt the reviewer didn’t take the time to craft a quality review which in her mind reflected poorly on her book. I have found myself in a similar situation with two reviewers of my book, Pegasus: A Journey To New Eden. They virtually said the same thing to me, however, one person wrote the review, and the other never finished reading the book.
                The first person disagreed with my style and said so, but was so compelled by the story and the way I told it, had to read it to the end. And he loved it. Now, I committed a major no-no in writing the book. I kept switching the point of view, abruptly at times, making the book difficult to read. I learned from an English teacher when you edit your own work turn it upside down and read it; it makes you concentrate on what you are reading. Pegasus was not meant to be a lighthearted story. Basically, I turned my book upside down to make it difficult to read, while I kept the story interesting to pull you through to the end, you must concentrate on what you are reading.
                The second reviewer couldn’t have disagreed with me more. No matter how interesting she felt the story was, she couldn’t get pass the unconventional style and quit half way though. No review was written. They both asked me consider rewriting they book and changing the style. I will not (ok I did some minor transition work). You see the book achieved its objective; it makes you think about the story. I guarantee neither person will take Pegasus lightly whether they liked it or not. Pegasus makes you think about the future, about human behavior, about technology and its use.
Readers who are looking for a light and easy read will probably not want to read this book. For those of you who are looking for a deeper and more thought provoking science fiction story will love it. And with that, I will tell you, I achieved my objective.

0 Comments

World Building - Part III

5/12/2019

0 Comments

 
​Science Fiction for the Ages

By James L. hill (aka J L Hill)

                When people think of Science Fiction they picture a distance future world with spaceships, laser death rays, and robot armies. It has been the bread and butter of the genre for many decades. But I challenge you to write a science fiction story in the Age of Kings, or The Bronze Age, or even in Ancient Greece.
                Before you yell, “been there, done that, and have the T-shirt to boot!” I’m not talking about time traveling, another staple of the sci-fi world. I am talking about building a world in the actual time period based upon the science of the day. For example, you heard the saying, ‘don’t bring a knife to a gunfight.” Suppose you write about the first person to bring a gun to a sword fight.
                It goes something like this. You’re a cannon maker; the king comes in your shop and says, “Your cannons are the best on the battlefield. But every time I get them set up and fire a few shots, my enemy moves and attacks from another direction. It takes hours to reposition my cannons and in the mean time my soldier are getting slaughtered.”
                You reply, “check out my latest invention, a personal cannon small enough for one man to handle, yet powerful enough to stop a man dead in his tracks.”
                “What do you call it?”
                “I named it after my son Gunter; I call it the Hand Gun.”
                How about building your world around ancient Greece and the Archimedes’ death ray? I know what you historical fiction writers are saying, “keep your hands off my genre!” But that’s only true if I write about Archimedes. If I write about one of the soldiers holding the mirrors, or how the mirrors works (A bit of history – the Romans sailed on Syracuse, Archimedes home state. He in turn built a giant mirror and used the power of the sun to incinerate their ships at sea. People have tried to prove or disprove the claim) you take it out of the realm of history and focus on the science. (Pun intended)
                So another important aspect of world building is the age in which you build your world. Sci-fiers do not limit your selves to a time far into the future. And you need not jump into your way back machine to write about the past. I loved the Mr. Peabody and Sherman cartoon when I was a kid. Imagine what it might have been like to stand in the sands of time and experience the first time a new invention was revealed.  If you concentrate on the ‘what’ and ‘how’, instead of the ‘who’ and ‘why’, then you are writing historical science fiction. You will build a world that exists in the mind and heart of the readers.
                Since world building is an integral part of science fiction, I will from time to time touch upon this subject with aspects that will help you create viable worlds for your characters to thrive in.
0 Comments

World Building – Part II

5/5/2019

0 Comments

 
By James L Hill (aka J L Hill)

                To write science fiction you must create two things in particular, an environment and people. In part one, we discussed creating environments. I spoke about building a multi-faceted environment. Now I tell you to apply that same logic when populating your worlds. Look around there are millions of life forms on Earth. Each one so different from one another it is hard to believe they all live on this one planet.
                Nothing is more disturbing then reading a story where this is a single creature until man shows up. I always ask myself what this thing did before Biff the Spaceman arrived. Did it just sit around saying, “I’m so hungry I wish some humans would come over for dinner”?
                You see if your world has a singular life form then it is either a cannibal or a plant. That is not very interesting. When I build my world, I make two charts, what is life like on a daily basis, and what is life like in the long term. Daily there are things to be considered such as, what does it eat; where and when does it sleep; is it sentient and cognizant of itself and its environment or does it act on instincts alone. In defining these aspects of daily life, you will have to create a varied ecosystem.
                On a long-term basis, I pose the questions is it a predator; is it the prey; is it both. We like to think of ourselves at the top of the food chain. But that is only true in our own environment. Once outside of it we quickly fall down the list, in the ocean we are prey to sharks and other predator fish. In the jungle, lions and other big cats have the upper hand. We humans rely on are superior knowledge and dexterity to maintain our edge. Where does your creation fit in its food chain and does it move from top to bottom outside its environment? What does it use to stay alive from day to day?
                Your creation – how does it grow, change, procreate and finally die? What other creatures help it throughout its life cycle? Life is a symbiotic existence. Life forms need other life forms support whether they know it or not. Add some supporting characters to your world. The Earth supports life forms from the microscopic to the multi-ton at the same time. Life forms have come and gone. Some have mutated into entirely new forms, while others have found their niche and dominated it for millions of years. Your worlds should be as diverse and teeming with life.
                When I start to build my world, I look at my fish tank. I have three or four different species of tropical fish, an algae eater, some snails, and couple of plants (some I am trying to get rid of – algae), rocks large and small (for the small fish to hide in – even though the fish don’t eat each other). In that little fifty-gallon tank there is a lot of life, I probably find out exactly how much if I was foolish enough to take a sip of its water. Then I take a look at my friend’s tank, the same size but with only one big fish. It hardly moves. Believe me that is no life, not even for a fish.

0 Comments

    Authors

    James L Hill (J L Hill) author and publisher of Adult Fiction - not for those under 18 or the faint of heart, Fantasy, and Science Fiction.
    Athina Paris author of romance and contemporary fiction, editor of all form of literature.

    Archives

    February 2020
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    September 2016
    August 2016

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Monthly Special Link
Picture
Member of

Web Hosting by iPage