Interview with
Robert G. Williscroft
Author of: The Oort Chronicles and The StarChild Trilogy
(I'm going to take a guess and suggest that Robert is on the right in the photo.)
Please tell
me a little about your current work in progress.
I am halfway through writing the 2nd
Oort Chronicle, Federation: To the Stars. It follows Icicle: A Tensor
Matrix. In Icicle, Braxton Thorpe (a wealthy entrepreneur) dying of
cancer arranges for his head to be cryonically preserved upon his death. He
wakens in an electronic matrix where he discovers the presence of another
intelligence, the Oort, that is older than humanity, and learns of an impending
existential threat to both the Oort and humanity—an alien invasion. They engage
the invading aliens and prevail, capturing two aliens. In Federation, after
Thorpe has saved the Oort and humanity, together with the Oort, he establishes
the Oort Federation—to coordinate the activities of humans and Oort throughout
the Solar System. They develop an FTL drive, deal with intransigent rogue
elements in the Solar System, discover the truth about the Oort and the alien
invasion, and eventually mount an expedition to the home system of the invaders
who attacked the Solar System in Icicle.
Where did
you get the idea for this book or series?
The inspiration for The Oort Chronicles is
linked to the inspiration for Slingshot, the first book in The
Starchild Trilogy. I spent a year at the geographic south pole in charge of
the National Science Foundation’s atmospheric projects at the pole. I took
several scientific papers with me to study during my sojourn. One paper by
Keith Lofstrom was very exciting. It described the science and technology for
building a Space Launch Loop—a way for getting into orbit and beyond without
using rockets. When I returned to the U.S., I looked Keith up, and we spent
several days together working out the basis for a novel that chronicled the
construction of the world’s first Space Launch Loop between the Pacific equatorial
islands of Baker Island and Jarvis Island. That became my noel Slingshot.
It was launched in Seattle at the International Space Elevator Conference, and
every Space Elevator scientist in the world has a copy of this novel on his or
her desk.
A couple of years ago, Keith and I were discussing
his latest work. He described ServerSky to me. This is an orbit-based global
internet concept where the backbone of the network consists of billions of 10-cm thinsat chips in orbit that
collectively form a powerful, self-powered, global-coverage internet system.
Independently, for years I have played around with the concept of cryogenic preservation
of a human body or brain for later revival when appropriate technology is
available. I discussed this with Keith, and he suggested that the Oort Cloud
could easily support thinsats made of ice that could function like his
ServerSky thinsats. I combined these three concepts, ServerSky around Earth,
ServerSky in the Oort Cloud, and cryogenic preservation of a human head, to
form the basis for Icicle: A Tensor Matrix and the subsequent volumes of
The Oort Chronicles.
Do you
write in more than one genre?
I do. I write Hard Science Fiction, as already
discussed, and I write Cold War submarine and diving espionage technothrillers.
These are based upon my own personal experiences during the Cold War as a nuclear
submariner and saturation diver.
Tell me
about something that you believe makes your writing unique or worthy of
attention.
My research is meticulous. The science,
engineering, and technology in my stories, whether SciFi or technothrillers, are
accurate, genuine, or reasonably projected from what we know today. Combine
that with my ability through language to make complex topics understandable to
ordinary people.
Is there
anything about your personal history or personality that manifests strongly in
your writing?
I firmly believe that I am the captain of my ship
and the master of my fate. My principal characters exhibit this trait.
In real life, I led a team of saturation divers who
locked out of a bottomed sub and tapped into Soviet underwater communications
cables. I spent 22 months underwater as a submariner, a year at the geographic
south pole, three years in the Arctic ice pack, and a year conducting manganese
nodule research off a ship in the equatorial Pacific.
What else
would be helpful for readers to know about you?
I try to respond personally to every communication
I receive from readers. I am happy to appear at book clubs, reading circles,
and the like, if they are within reasonable driving distance.
Excluding
your own work, what underrated author or book would you recommend that more
people read? Why?
Two authors come to mind: John B. Rosenman, author
of The Inspector of the Cross series, and Alastair Mayer, author of The
T-Space Series.
Inspector of the Cross Series.
The Inspector of the Cross is a Boris Vallejo/Frank Frazetta painting brought to life
within the pages of a classic space opera yarn. Turtan is the epitome of a
Frazetta/Vallejo hero, a man’s man, a warrior full of derring-do and wild
adventure. The women in his life, human or otherwise, are as eye-filling and
lethal as anything Vallejo or Frazetta ever imagined. Step aside, Barbarella –
you ain’t got nuthin’ on Yaneta! Rosenman doesn’t worry about the niceties of
biology or physics as he spins this delightful yarn, and he blows away
political correctness. You might not want your pre-teen to read this, but any
red-blooded young man or woman will love this far-future adventure.
Alternatively, The Inspector of the Cross
is a complex study of religious and cultural differences. Rosenman imagines a
far future where two dramatically different cultures wage war over vast
distance and time. Turtan has lived nearly 4,000 years, mostly in cryosleep.
His subjective life is about 40. As “Inspector of the Cross,” he represents the
Empire of the Cross – the Holy Roman Empire that rules all humanity in this
distant future. Opposed to the humans are the Cen, a cruel, logical race that
is slowly winning the war. Without FTL drives, communications time is measured
in decades or centuries. Turtan pops in and out of the normal time stream as he
travels in frozen sleep over interstellar distances. The Cen are sufficiently
similar to humans, that they can interbreed, and they each are attracted to
their sexual opposites in the other race. The Cen are not inhibited by Human
moral constraints, and so are winning the war. Turtan continues his quest for a
weapon that will allow Humans to overcome. Anyone who has read the Christian
religious classic, The Pilgrim’s Progress, cannot help but see the
parallel between Turtan and the Pilgrim. I do not know whether or not Rosenman
intended this parallel, but while Turtan is significantly more lusty and
warrior-like than the Pilgrim, their lives are remarkably parallel. Rosenman
introduces the Jax, a ubiquitous small sentient race who act as servants to
both Humans and Cen. The Jax, however, are more than they seem, taking on a
role hauntingly similar to that of the angels that help the Pilgrim from time
to time.
If you like science fiction, and especially if you
like space opera, you will love this series!
The T-Space Series.
Unlike John Rosenman’s writings, Alastair May
writes genuine hard science fiction. The science and engineering are real or
reasonable projections of what is real today. Humanity is ready to travel to
the stars. The Western Block nations have developed a working spacewarp drive
based upon the Alcubierre solutions to Einstein’s General Relativity equations.
The drive requires a huge amount of power, but Western Block fusion reactors
are too large to fit into the warp bubble the drive creates. The Chinese Block
nations have developed a smaller fusion reactor that will fit into the warp
bubble, and so the two blocks combine their technologies to undertake the first
interstellar trip to Alpha Centauri. In the Alpha Centauri system and other
systems they eventually visit, they discover terraformed planets, modified 50
million years ago to exact human standards.
As humanity expands away from Earth, explorers
continue to discover terraformed planets comprising what comes to be called T-Space.
The series consists of two parts, the initial exploration and settlement of the
terraformed planets (The Alpha Centauri Series and The Kalkuloa
Series), and about 50 years later, the T-Space Archeology Series with
archeologist Hanibal Carson and starship pilot Jackie Roberts who search for
the race that did the terraforming while dealing with ancient, primitive
cultures and interstellar criminal syndicates.
This is hard SciFi as good as it gets.
Which of
your books do you most highly recommend? Why?
What a tough question 😊 My just published First Oort Chronicle, Icicle: A
Tensor Matrix, comes to mind as my most sophisticated, thought-provoking
novel yet. It introduces the radical concepts of human-to-electronic uploads,
immortality, wormhole transportation, FTL travel, and believable interstellar
conflict. On the other hand, The Starchild Compact & The Iapetus Federation,
the second and third volumes of The Starchild Trilogy taken together,
constitute a magnificent epic saga of humanity’s expansion into the Solar
System and beyond, driven by outside forces beyond human control and by forces
on Earth that may very well be incubating within today’s international
cauldron.
Which
break, event, decision, or fortuitous circumstance has helped you or your
writing career the most?
My surviving birth was probably the pivotal event
that enabled my writing career. More to the spirit of the question, however, I
have lived a life of adventure dramatically different from most people. I grew
up in Europe, spent 22 months underwater, a year in the equatorial Pacific,
three years in the Arctic ice pack, and a year at the Geographic South Pole.
These experiences give me a unique perspective on life and what is possible.
For example, spending nine months at the South Pole in isolation with 16 other
people helped me to understand how a crew might handle a trip to Mars.
What
question do you wish you would get asked more often?
How large of an advance would you like for this
manuscript?
Do you have
a catch-phrase or quote that you like? What is it? And why do you choose it?
I am the captain of my ship and the master of my
fate. In my world, someone doesn’t make me angry. If I get angry, this is my
reaction to an internal or external stimulus. In my world, I am responsible for
my failures and successes. You do not receive my respect automatically; you
have to earn that. I will always treat you with courtesy, however, until and
unless you demonstrate your unworthiness. I am very fond of something the
Honorable Dean Alfange wrote back in the early 20th century:
I
do not choose to be a common man.
It is my right to be uncommon—if I can.
I
seek opportunity—not security. I do not
wish to be a kept citizen humbled and dulled
by having the state look after me.
I
want to take the calculated risk; to dream and
to build, to fail and to succeed.
I
refuse to barter incentive for a dole.
I prefer the challenges of life to the
guaranteed existence; the thrill of
existence to the stale calm of utopia.
I
will not trade freedom for beneficence
nor my dignity for a handout. I will never
cower before any master nor bend to any threat.
It
is my heritage to stand erect, proud and unafraid;
to think and act for myself, enjoy the benefits of
my creations and to face the world boldly and say,
this I have done.
The Honorable Dean Alfange was an American statesman born December
2, 1899, in Constantinople (now Istanbul). He served in the U.S. Army during
World War I and attended Hamilton College, graduating in the class of ’22.
Hamilton offers the “Dean Alfange Essay Prizes” established by Dean Alfange and
awarded to the students who write the best and second-best essays on a feature
or an issue of American constitutional government.
Alfange was the American Labor candidate for governor of New York
and a founder of the Liberal Party of New York.
____________________________
Thanks to Robert for participating in the interview. It's not every day that submariners and antarctic visitors drop by.
I got to enjoy some time with my oldest daughter yesterday. I was telling her that we should do a podcast together. When it came to titles, I suggested something like, "I Hate Everything You Like." She suggested, "Cover Your Ears, My Dad is Talking." We're on the same wavelength.