Today is the first day of a new feature on the League: Topic Week! And this week's topic is all about influences.
I often get asked who my science fiction influences are, and I think people expect me to say Heinlein or something similar. But the truth is, with a very few exceptions, I didn't read that much science fiction growing up. (I
know, I
know. This is totally going to get me razzed later.) When I was younger, there were some SF books I loved. Namely: Madeleine L'Engle's A WRINKLE IN TIME and Orson Scott Card's ENDER'S GAME. But once I got past these, there were few adult SF books that I actually enjoyed--Douglas Adams's THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO THE GALAXY being one of the rare ones I adored.
I blame my husband for this. See, he loves
hard sci fi. I mean, whole chapters dedicated to the exact, precise functionings of the engine. He likes
science fiction, whereas I liked science
fiction. The adult SF books he was reading bored me to tears. I didn't care about
how the science worked--I just wanted something awesome to happen, preferably by blowing up.
There were whole years that passed where I didn't really care about science fiction books at all because of this. I was limited in my understanding of the genre (really, I prefer "space opera", but I didn't even know those existed before), and that led me to dismiss the whole genre as a whole.
Until...
Firefly.
While I avoided reading science fiction, I quickly fell in love with
Firefly (thanks to my husband, who insisted I'd love it). There was so much to love: quick plots, exciting twists, mysteries, snappy dialog. And there was science, but rather than spending ages explaining it, it just worked, much like magic tends to do in fantasy novels.
When I started working on ACROSS THE UNIVERSE, I knew from the start that I wanted to write science fiction. And I was scared. I'd never written science fiction, and I wasn't sure I could it. I knew I couldn't write hard sci fi. That was definitely not my scene.
But then I remembered
Firefly. Joss Whedon presented a science fiction world which emphasized fiction over science.
Now that? That I could do.