Three Thoughts About Worldbuilding
By Brad R. Cook
Every
writer creates a world, some more complex and unique than others. This isn’t
just for the science fictions and fantasy writers out there. Even if you write
contemporary, your world may be different from what the reader knows. Maybe
they live in a different part of the country using different terms, and slang,
or with unique customs. Worldbuilding may not be inventing a whole new world, but
to the reader is a place they’ve never been.
If your
building a whole new world, or if you’re only molding this one, here a few
thoughts to keep in mind.
1 – Remember the Details
Details
are everything in Worldbuilding. As a steampunk author, my novels are set in
the Victorian era, a time when the modern world was emerging. It is the details
I provide that recreate that world. Plus once I add the steampunk elements, I
have to describe in detail what something is, or no one will understand. A lot
of people might know what a carriage looks like, four wheels, a driver’s perch,
and passenger compartment, but do they know what a steamcarriage looks like?
With a detailed description of the sound of the engine, where it sits, and how
the driver controls the carriage, the reader will understand.
Same goes
with any world. A unique world is not sold by the broad strokes of a writers
paint brush – like this world has wizards. What sells the reader on a unique
world, and more importantly what sets your world apart from any other writers
are the details. How does the wizard cast magic – with words, hand gestures,
elaborate potions, magic wands, or technology? Focus on the details and
worldbuilding will come more easily.
2 – May Not Use Everything
Writers
can spend weeks, months, or even years creating the details for their worlds. Writers
can get lost in the minutia of a world and never write a single sentence, but
they are important. However, that doesn’t mean you need to include them in
every scene you write. The point is to impart enough details to immerse the
reader in your world. Sometimes though, a coin is just a coin, or a carriage is
just a carriage. If you describe what every coin in the characters pockets
looks like the reader will get bored. In my novels I describe the
steamcarriage, but I only mention what the reader needs to know about the
regular carriages.
I
always think about JRR Tolkien when I’m world building. The Hobbit and the Lord of
the Rings trilogy are wonderful books with immersive worlds filled with
details and yet, if you’ve read The
Silmarillion which was published by his son after Tolkien’s death, then you
know he created thousands of years of history. More languages with more words
than would ever be used in the books, but they were there if he needed them. As
writers, we might create more than we’ll ever need, but what’s important is
that the writer provides what the reader needs.
3 – Everything is Connected
Nothing
in the world exists in total isolation. Okay, yes there are creatures that live
in caves, or fish that only live in a single pond. But, my point is that the
cultures you create interact with the cultures and the environment in which
they live. Plus, even within a culture, there is change. Every culture or environment
is dynamic – even elves – our own world is classified by decades. Change is
what people are about. We share or steal ideas from other cultures.
Environments
are even more connected than cultures. The snow pack that falls on the mountains
melts into the stream, which flows into the river, and is carried to the sea.
When creating your world use real natural formations as an example. One of my
favorite examples is temperature. Common sense says it will be cooler up the
mountain and warmer in the valley, however, cold air settles. So depending on
conditions cold air can settle in low parts and be warmer at a higher elevation.
It’s all about the world you create.
Remember
too about rivers. Cities tend to be built on their shores, along the entire
length from the mountain head waters to the deltas. Something to remember though
is that trade, fishing, transportation and ideas flow upstream and downstream. There
is a symbiosis to everyone along a river, whether that is for good, or through
conflict.
Build
your world. Populate it with unique people, and interesting technology. Your
reader will appreciate it, and make them want to visit more.
What is
your favorite part of Worldbuilding? Let us know in the comments.
Brad R.
Cook, author of the YA steampunk series, The
Iron Chronicles. Iron Horsemen - http://www.amazon.com/Iron-Horsemen-The-Chronicles/dp/0989207951 and Iron Zulu - http://www.amazon.com/Iron-Zulu-Book-Two-Chronicles/dp/0989207978. A member of SCBWI, he currently serves as
Historian of St. Louis Writers Guild after three and half years as its
President. Learn more at www.bradrcook.com, on
Twitter @bradrcook https://twitter.com/bradrcook,
or
on his blog Thoughts from Midnight on tumblr http://bradrcook.tumblr.com/
Favourite part: When my imagination takes me to places/things that I'd never even considered before. :)
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