Artwork Endeavor Five Year Anniversary

Drawing has been an on-and-off hobby of mine since, well, I can remember. When we were little, my brother and I used to spread huge pieces of moving paper on the living room coffee table and create mural-like drawings.

Thinking back, I’m sure some of them were inspired by Mark Kistler’s Secret City drawings. We were sometimes shown these videos in school.

 

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tK70tHKhME&w=400]

 

 

I always liked to doodle every so often, but for the most part, I considered my brother to be the family artist.

Five years ago my wife and I moved away from Chapel Hill, NC. She had just finished her degree, and since I was still attending NCSU, we moved closer to Raleigh.

With all of our stuff in boxes, all I had to entertain myself were a couple old boxes of colored pencils (the date stamped on the box goes back to the Clinton administration).

I was working on this project called History of the Wiener Dog, which would become An Orthogonal Universe. I had just become stuck on what would become A Foundation in Wisdom, when I had an epiphany. Why don’t I try drawing out the scenes I’m writing?

With that, I immediately got started procrastinating. Below is the very first drawing I completed in summer 2008.

 

Helicopters

R: You look real goofy driving that old thing.
L: Yeah? Well, that’s the most hideous fedora!

 

The above drawing has nothing to do with the plot of An Orthogonal Universe, but it did have one significance. I would soon start making a real effort to improve as an artist.

I took my old Clinton-era colored pencils and colored Ry, the Squirrel.

 

Ry the Squirrel

Poorly drawn Ry the Squirrel!

 

There was a novelty in seeing some of the characters I spent the past year writing about “come to life” in a visual form. Maybe that’s why I kept going, even after I broke through the writer’s block.

 

Start of Artwork Endeavor

 

I consider the image below to be the first drawing that came after a point I said to myself, “hey, I think I’d like to give improving a shot.”

This is a scene from An Ember in the Wind, the sequel to A Foundation in Wisdom.

 

Poorly drawn Mara

Mara and the Puppets! Mara has always had a Wolfpack Red tunic. The colors of Locana, the city she lives in, are Carolina Blue.

 

Eh, that wasn’t very good. The “puppets picture” is an important one, though. Every so often I redo it. The problem with learning any skill, especially if you’re self-teaching, is that progress seems to come so slowly. Improvement is measured in months and years, which is problematic if you get discouraged early on.

Below is the last colored pencil drawing I ever did. It’s John Bartlebee and Sheridan, the protagonists of the An Orthogonal Universe series.

 

LeSabre '88

The stars of An Orthogonal Universe: John Bartlebee and Sheridan! John drives an ’88 Buick LeSabre. John operates his school of the classical sort out of his classic car.

 

Sometime later I realized I could scan my line-art drawings and color them on the computer. I sat down with my copy of The GIMP, and griatch-art’s tutorials, and gave it a go.

Hey, it’s the puppets picture again!

 

Mara 2

Slightly better Mara and the Puppets. This is the very last drawing I did with a mouse.

 

2009 – 2010

 

My wife got me a Wacom Bamboo pen for Christmas 2009. Once I got the hang of it, it made a huge difference.

But, starting in 2009, my free time dwindled considerably. In Fall 2008 I finished the last of the core coursework in my degree program, and began working with my research advisor.

Qualifier exams are notorious in just about any Ph.D. program. Despite their infamy, the workload only goes up once they’re over and done with. At least at NC State, though, the pressure goes down.

The qualifiers make up the last “gateway”, after which, few people leave the program. Still, I didn’t have much time for anything other than quick doodles. Here’s an illustration of Marcus, the protagonist of A Foundation in Wisdom.

 

Marcus

An old illustration of what is now chapter 12 from A Foundation in Wisdom. Marcus is contemplating the highway.

 

Physical pfizer viagra tablets therapy aims to restore the proper function of the thyroid gland. It removes stiffness and also increases the mobility of valsonindia.com buy cialis limbs. If the flow of the blood is levitra samples enhanced, it would lead for harsh results of recovery. The sacral vertebra runs from the pelvis to the end of the thing. pfizer viagra for sale is a wonderful drug for curing erectile dysfunction and the good thing is that it does not cause any side effects.

2011 – today

 

I graduated in May 2010. After my first semester as a full-time professor, I began to have more free time.

Everything except my degree program was put on hold until I graduated. Afterward, I came up with the idea of an illuminated hypertext novel. I started creating a lot of full-color illustrations for A Foundation in Wisdom, one for each chapter. This version had 30 chapters.

Of the set, the image below is one of my favorites.

 

Eru

Chapter 17 of A Foundation in Wisdom. Marcus climbs the Mount of Mislor to meet with Eru, the wise man.
Random trivia: “Mislor” was my mom’s AOL username back in the mid 90’s. I think my brother came up with it.

 

If you’ve read the book, some of these scenes may look familiar. The one below won’t, unless you read the 2011 version.

 

Peoria

Peoria from A Foundation in Wisdom. This was an illustration of a scene in which Marcus and Peoria went inside a leaf. The scene was deleted from the final manuscript.

 

Vasigari

Vasigari, the Priestess from A Foundation in Wisdom. Poor Marcus – do legs bend like that? I still like that forest.

 

Like I said earlier, learning a skill can be frustratingly slow, unless you’re the patient type.

I like to think I’m of the “patient type,” at least, most of the time I am. But, sometimes, it’s easy to look at the work of people who have been at it much longer than you – and forget just that – that they’ve been at it longer.

That’s why I sometimes redo the “puppets picture.” It was the first illustration. This is the last version, and already it’s over a year old.

 

Mara 3

Mara and the Puppets – the latest version! Recognize the machinery?
Fun fact: The desk and lamp is a reference to the attic in Alone in the Dark.

 

It was completed in March 2012 (although it’s dated 1 April). At this point, I was still planning on releasing An Ember in the Wind as an “illuminated hypertext novel.” So I needed to redo this illustration for the new site, anyway.

This was also the last illustration I created with the intent of releasing An Ember in the Wind as an illuminated hypertext novel.

For various reasons, I pulled the project. A couple months later, I re-declared A Foundation in Wisdom as a novel, and began working with editor Kisa Whipkey to polish it.

While I was waiting for the manuscript to come back, I took requests from random people on deviantART.

 

 

superheroes

Someone on DeviantART asked me to draw her and her friend as superheroes. That’s a futuristic San Francisco in the background.

 

And, just because I felt bad for John Bartlebee and Sheridan, I redid their scene.

 

LeSabre 2

John Bartlebee and Sheridan make their return after 4.333 years. That’s a much nicer looking LeSabre!

 

Now we get to this year! Although I’m not doing illustrations for an “illuminated hypertext novel” anymore, I still enjoy drawing. Up above I mentioned griatch-art’s tutorials. Below is a scene depicting one of his characters.

 

Biltmore

griatch-art@deviantART asked people to draw his characters. That’s Ebb the Dragon, about to make a snack of the Biltmore estate.

 

We’re coming to the end! After nearly five years, I figured it was about time to try drawing myself. I tried using a mirror as a reference, but I kept getting myself backward.

Thinking about what happens next in a story can be hard work. Despite all those monitors, I still primarily use 15-cent Walmart notebooks.

 

self

Incomplete self portrait. Shown: me, hard at work revising A Foundation in Wisdom, while in actuality, putting the real task off.

 

And now, the latest illustration – completed five years after I drew the very first doodle in my notebook.

Even though I’m not working on an “illuminated hypertext novel,” I haven’t lost sight of why I started drawing these scenes in the first place. Drawing the scene out is a great way to break through writer’s block. And since I’m working on An Ember in the Wind, well, here’s Mara again.

 

Forest

Five years later, I finally drew a forest I’m happy with.
Mara still has her Wolfpack Red tunic. Go State!

 

After five years of self-teaching, I’m finally pleased with how I’m doing. As for the illustrations, I may have found a use for them.

I don’t think my experiments with the “hybrid novel”, or “illuminated hypertext” are done. But utility aside, sometimes it’s just fun to draw.

 

The Hybrid Novel

The Text, with apologies to MunchThe Kindle, Amazon’s ubiquitous e-reader, is less than a decade old. e-Readers, and in a larger sense, tablet computers, have become so ingrained in our culture that one would be hard-pressed to find someone who hadn’t at least heard of them. But it would also be hard to find someone who couldn’t remember a time when “books” and “paper” had a unanimously-agreed upon alliance.

That’s because the “e-book generation,” the people who could have potentially had access to e-books their entire lives, have barely started elementary school. But, realistically speaking, anyone younger than four probably came from a household that hadn’t hopped on the bandwagon.

While some of us have taken to the electronic book like a cat takes to water, we can all probably agree that the future looks bright for the pocket-library.

Remember the buzzword of choice that reigned in the mid to late 90’s: multimedia? Sound! Video! Text! Together at last. Supposedly, we had just been thrust from the age of easels, slides, and overhead projectors to the world of clip-art and diamond transitions. Like with any new technology, a halo of fantasy projected our wildest dreams into the not-so-distant future. Here’s Apple’s vision, from the past:

 

 

[youtube=http://youtu.be/tlfTDlgAl_A&w=500]

 

 

Tacky, the talking tack

Your office software friend. Meet Tacky!

Too bad multimedia, at the time, had more to do with talking office supplies. I’ll emphasize at the time just in case you hadn’t noticed that much of the forecasted technology was put to use in this blog article. If you don’t believe me, just click the “cyberlink” above and watch it again.

Actually, we’ve surpassed that future. I can go out and purchase a single device that will let me do all of that, and order a pizza.

But what about the novel? Where does it fit in the world of “cyberlinks” and You-Tube?

My wife was a library science graduate student from 2006 to 2008, the two year period that brought in the age of the e-book and saw the close of the twentieth century literary world. During her first semester she told me about something called a “hybrid novel.” The hybrid novel would combine text, video, sound, and interactive software to tell a story. The user could read some text, then watch a video. Perhaps the novel would have an interactive map. It seemed like a fantasy vision of what the unproven “e-reader” was capable of.

But early e-readers primarily supported text, and maybe some limited internet browsing capabilities. As the boundary between e-readers and full-blown tablet computers becomes more blurred, the age of the hybrid novel may be upon us.

It turns out that in 2011, NPR released an article about Melville House, a publisher offering “illuminations”, described as “the equivalent of DVD extras to books”

{ Hybrid Books: ‘Illuminations’ And The Future Of The E-Reader }

Although it is interesting to see the idea still alive four years after I first heard about it, the “hybrid book” I remember was more of an experience that was part of the story, rather than supplementing it.

 

My Own Experiences with the Hybrid Novel

 
As with any herbs or medicines, check with your spediscount tadalafil t if any of these most regular reactions continue or get to be annoying: The runs; dazedness; flushing; migraine; acid reflux; stuffy nose; irritated stomach. It is a pharmaceutical product of Ajanta Pharma and now widely recommended by various healthcare professionals of the world. levitra 40 mg The results will last for around 4 to online levitra 6 hours while some patients have reported longer effective time. It is the pressure put viagra 50 mg https://regencygrandenursing.com/post-acute-sub-acute-care/post-surgical-rehabilitation into each vertebra of the spine, thus hindering the proper flow of blood to the penis.

girl with page of textWith the 2013 publication of my novel, A Foundation in Wisdom, the last remnants of the 2011 version have all but disappeared entirely. The 2011 version was, in fact, set to be released as a hybrid novel.

Self-dubbed an “illuminated hypertext manuscript,” it combined the concepts of an illustrated novel with a hypertext novel.

It was designed as a game of sorts, somewhere between a standard, linear story, and a “choose your own adventure” written in third person. There was only one story. The “game” aspect came into play through “extras”, hidden links the reader could discover that lead to alternate story arcs and complementary content. These side stories didn’t change the main story itself. However, they could alter the reader’s perception of the main story – for example, through the introduction of dramatic irony.

The reader had only two controls – a “next” button, and a “previous” button – nothing that a standard e-reader didn’t provide.

rules excerpt

One of the story arcs was that which the image above is an excerpt from – in which the characters explain the “rules” of the “game”.

Alternate arcs were discovered through hidden links in the illustrations. The entire project was put together using image maps and HTML – nothing a late 90’s web browser couldn’t handle.

If an arc lead to information that contradicted the main story-line, the story would terminate – usually via the death of the narrator. The observant reader could avoid this by learning which types of images usually lead to “death”, which was a rare event anyway. Most of the arcs didn’t last long, and immediately dumped back into the main story.

Alternate story arc map

Alternate story arc map. Click to zoom in.

One problem with the hybrid novel design was that the 2011 version was really building off of the original 2008 novel draft. The alternate arcs felt forced, because they were. They were an afterthought, tacked onto an already complete story.

The true state of A Foundation in Wisdom is a traditional novel. That’s how it was designed in 2006, before the age of the e-reader, and certainly before the hybrid novel. That’s not to say it couldn’t be done. But would it be worth it? Sometimes it’s easier to build from the ground up, rather than repurpose an existing structure.

It’s also easier to experiment with something less gargantuan than a novel. Not that A Foundation in Wisdom is that long. It’s closer to a novella, than a novel, in length. But it seems more appropriate to the spirit of the “illuminated hypertext manuscript” to design a (short) story with a rich tapestry of arcs, rather than an arc structure that mimics a rural stretch of Interstate 40.

arc structure comparison

Pick the more interesting design.

 

What is the Future of the Traditional Book?

 

“Traditional,” in this sense, refers to the linear structure of the story itself, not the way it is presented. I think you would be hard-pressed to find anyone who will claim the traditional story is on its way out. Perhaps we’ll see more “illuminations” as publishers find new ways to sell the content consumers bought those fancy gadgets to access. Even if it’s on an e-reader, sometimes one just wants to read a good story.

That said, there’s no telling what the future will have in store for storytelling. We are already seeing the fusion of movies, video games, and hypertext. It’s just a matter of time before we see novels regularly hopping into the mix. There’s no guarantee we’ll all like the results, especially those of us who still like the feel and smell of a paper book. But whenever we’re ready to experiment with the hybrid book, certainly we will be able to access them on our phones.

The Good Advice That You Just Didn’t Take

Remember, you must behave in life as you would at a potluck lunch. If something disgusting is brought to you by a friend or superior, put your hand out politely and pretend to eat. After your friend or superior turns around, you may discretely feed the food to the dog.

 

A recurring novelty in A Foundation in Wisdom is Aspen’s little philosophy handbook.  The Philosophy of Many Hands, sometimes dubbed, “The Pseudo-Random Philosophy,” is a little guide to life produced from unknown* origins.

It’s not quite as extensive as The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and it lacks the large, friendly letters. But it gets the job done.

The Philosophy is actually a parody of The Handbook, by Epictetus. Epictetus was a Greek philosopher who wrote the precursor to Life’s Little Instruction Book.

I learned about Epictetus during my senior of college. I took a philosophy course from a professor who had a reputation for not being able to make it through an entire 50-minute class without a cigarette.

It is second best treatment generic soft cialis http://amerikabulteni.com/2014/10/29/ortadoguda-yeni-kriz-kapida-obama-netanyahu-savasi/ for erectile dysfunction is here to help you. The malfunctioning of hormones may cause many body amerikabulteni.com generic viagra disorders. This symptom could be an indication towards PCOS especially if it’s viagra tablets in italia http://amerikabulteni.com/2017/10/25/havada-erkeksiz-ucus-sosyal-medyada-yanki-buldu/ taking a lot of effort to lose that kind of weight, and only the very determined can do it and only with support. It is now said that Malaysia grows its own natural form of viagra usa mastercard http://amerikabulteni.com/2014/08/31/susi-nasil-yenir-tokyolu-susi-ustasi-acikliyor/.

On one cool, crisp autumn day – the sort of weather that is perfect for a long cigarette break – class ended early. A couple friends and I sat in the field, trying to not let the nice weather distract us from reading. I had my copy of The Handbook which soon became dotted with – flies.

At some point I closed the book and realized I had inadvertently smashed a couple flies in the pages.

Never to let a smashed fly get me down, we renamed the book The Philosophy of the Flies, which could have been a play on Lord of the Flies, but with fewer conchs and more onions and crustaceans. It was a suitable title. Most of the flies were smashed on the quotes about death.

Some years later I merged the quotes into the predecessor to An Orthogonal Universe, “The History of the Wiener Dog.”

In any case, this little piece of the world of A Foundation in Wisdom can now be downloaded on the “My Books” page.

 

* perhaps the origins are discovered in the book. 😉