Erotica author, aka Elspeth Potter, on Writing from the Inside

Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pirates. Show all posts

Monday, September 20, 2010

Pirate Linkgasm

Before I wrote The Duke and the Pirate Queen, I didn't realize quite how many websites existed about pirates, especially pirates from the 1600s through around 1720, particularly in the Caribbean. That's the most common idea most people have of pirates, based on movies and novels such as Treasure Island.

Because I was writing a fantasy, I was able to use a mixture of ideas about "classic" pirates mingled with elements from nineteenth-century naval adventure novels and books about the pirates of Japan. In the course of all that, I found some fun websites.

The Port Royal Archives, which includes research papers, maps, and other documents.

The Queen Anne's Revenge Archaeological Project.

Maritime Museum of the Atlantic in Nova Scotia.

No Quarter Given, the website of a pirate magazine.

The New St. Augustine Pirate & Treasure Museum is set to open in November, 2010.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Alison Tyler interviewed me, and The Duke & The Pirate Queen cover!

Alison Tyler interviewed me about fairy tales and my story in her Spice anthology, Alison's Wonderland.



And the cover of my December 2010 Spice release, The Duke & the Pirate Queen. Just because.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Pirates and Swords



Sometimes, a picture says it all.

Nummy, aren't they?

Photo is of Errol Flynn and Basil Rathbone in Captain Blood, 1935. You can see the sword fight here. It's visible that Basil Rathbone was a real fencer; Errol Flynn said, "I really can't fence worth a damn. I just know how to make it look good."

Regardless, it's very unlikely sailors of that period would fence as those two did in the movie--the edged weapon of choice for sailors of the 17th and 18th centuries was the cutlass, a slashing weapon that required little training and was excellent for use in close quarters fighting. The cutlass is both shorter and heavier than, for example, the saber, which was often used by cavalry. Cutlass blades were sometimes straight, sometimes slightly curved, and sharpened on only one edge. Often, the hilt (and the wielder's hand) was protected by a curved or basket-shaped guard.

Tomorrow, Kirstin Saell will guestblog on "Writing F/F(/M) for the Female Gaze."

Monday, August 10, 2009

Fabricating a Plot-Generating World

The novel I'm currently writing for Harlequin Spice, tentatively titled The Duke and The Pirate Queen, is a sequel to my first book for the line, titled The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom & Their Lover.

The books are set in a fantasy world that's loosely based on our own; the cultures depicted in The Duchess were mostly similar to eighteenth-century Europe, but the characters also visited a more cosmopolitan, Mediterranean land with elements of several centuries and countries. In that novel, I introduced Captain Leung, a mercenary ship captain employed by Lord Maxime. At the time, I had no firm ideas for her homeland, other than that it would have elements of the Chinese Empire of the fifteenth century, which I'd been reading about in Gavin Menzies' 1421: The Year China Discovered America. Also, I planned for her to be mixed-race.

Here's a description of Captain Leung: "A bald woman stood in the doorway, her scalp completely decorated with blue and white and red designs; tattoos…Below, her feet were bare, exposing more swirling tattoos. She was the tallest woman he had ever seen…Her eyes…were a startling, mossy green, like sunlit water, contrasting starkly with her honey-colored skin."

Though she had a role in the plot, it was a secondary one. However, I had created her intending that she would, eventually, end up marrying Maxime, another secondary character. (Yes, the dreaded Sequel Bait!) Because she was a sea captain, I couldn't resist putting her into a plot full of elements from classic pirate novels and sea adventures.

Because the novel is set in a fantasy world, I'm using a different approach than I would for a historical novel. I'm building the plot -- and the world – in tandem. Elements of Imena's character exist because they are useful to the plot as well as interesting to the reader. Some aspects of the world she lives in exist because they create barriers against her goals, and Maxime's.

It's been a synergistic process. The purpose of the novel was for Imena to marry Maxime. What barriers would stand in their way?

I began with two elements. First, she had been a pirate or a privateer. Second, her father had come from a distant land. I chose privateer (in government pay) rather than pirate (freelance) because it seemed like a more honorable role, and one that could be more easily resolved at the novel's end. However, while being a former privateer is an excellent job qualification for working as Maxime's spy, it could be a flaw for a future duchess and thus a plot complication. The king who ruled Maxime, in particular, could be unhappy that she'd been chosen. This became the major exterior blocking element of the story: someone is actively trying to prevent Maxime from marrying outside the kingdom.

I also knew that Imena was of mixed race. I chose to utilize this as both exterior and interior conflict. The exterior, again, was easy; Imena is a foreigner, which might be a conflict of interest if she became involved in the politics of Maxime's duchy. For even more exterior conflict, I went back to her homeland. What if the empire in which she'd been born was prejudiced against foreigners, and marrying foreigners? What if her marriage prospects at home were also limited because of her foreign father? From that idea, I worked backwards and created laws that would limit both her and her children if she stayed in the empire and married there, giving her a reason to want to marry Maxime aside from her desire for him. I thought more about her father and mother, and how their experiences as a mixed couple would affect the ways in which they attempted to find a husband for their daughter. I also considered how their choices would conflict with Imena's, and how she would feel about this, and how all of these elements could be thematically important.

As I progress in writing the novel, I expand on these ideas, weaving them in and out of the "action" plot, which is rife with tropes of sea adventure novels. I give more depth to the tropes in ways that enhance the main relationship plot: the pirates abuse their prisoners because they are pirates but also to intensify Maxime and Imena's emotions for each other. A storm moves the plot in a new direction, but how the characters deal with its effects also provides a vehicle for more emotional interaction.

Essentially, I am making up the details of the world as they're needed in the plot; but I'm also creating details that support the plot as well, and generate new aspects of the plot. It feels a bit like juggling, if I could juggle for more than about two seconds.

Related posts: Researching Pirates. Ann Aguirre on Worldbuilding. Thematic Worldbuilding in The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover. Synergy in Writing and Research. Historical Detail in Fiction.

Here's an excerpt from the opening of The Duke and The Pirate Queen.

This post was originally written for Michelle Lauren's Fiction That Defies Boundaries Blog.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

The Book of Awesome

Today I bring you The Book of Awesome.

The Book of Awesome is why you should have friends. A short while ago, I was bemoaning the fact that I had read the Hornblower books and the Aubrey-Maturin books, and was writing a sea adventure, but didn't really understand how sailing ships actually worked.



Sherwood Smith, whom I've known online for several years, said, "You need Seamanship in the Age of Sail: An Account of the Shiphandling of the Sailing Man-Of-War 1600-1860, Based on Contemporary Sources by John Harland." Despite having read Sherwood's book Inda when it came out, I had completely forgotten that the book included sea adventure, thus I had not approached her for help with research. However, my complaint about my problem brought her to my rescue, and I was able to obtain The Book of Awesome.



How awesome is The Book of Awesome? So awesome, I cannot tell you. I am speechless in the face of its awesomeness. In fact, it is so awesome and gives such detail that at times I wish I could spend a few months studying it in detail. Or maybe years.



The Book of Awesome tells you the names of all the parts of the ship and the various sails, often in many different European languages. It tells you how those sails can be worked, and what they look like under different conditions, and how they would be adjusted for those conditions, and why this was done. It has diagrams. I cannot stress enough how totally awesome this book is. I particularly love that it was written by a man who lives in a town that is totally landlocked (though the illustrator had experience with working sailing ships).



It's a perfect book for a giant research geek like me. Because actually, The Book of Awesome is way too awesome for my needs. I imagine some readers of my sea adventure/pirate book will enjoy the ship geekery, but some won't notice it at all, and others will wonder why I have to talk about ships so much. I can't include so much detail that the novel starts to be about ships and not about the characters. But it doesn't matter. The research part of it is for me.

I love my Book of Awesome.

Stop by tomorrow for my guest, Cecilia Tan, who'll be posting on "Why Writing Romance and Erotica is Like Being Good in Bed."

Friday, May 15, 2009

Pirate Romance For The Win!


I think romances with pirates in them, or at least sea adventure, have some of the best backcover copy ever.

These are best enjoyed if read with great expression and appropriate emphasis on any use of pirate/sea/sailing terminology. Bonus emphasis on the word pirate whenever it occurs.

And if you have other examples, please share!

1. Susan Grant, Once A Pirate
Love Spell Timeswept, November 2006

Once A Pirate

Andrew Spencer sailed the seas seeking revenge and there were very few merchant's treasures that he hadn't given a jolly rogering. But on this particular voyage, he found his task harder than usual. As a brown-eyed beauty was hoisted from the waves, he found his pirate's soul plundered from without and a fiery need conjured up from within.

Forever Her Man

The freak storm that caused her plane to go down in the Atlantic sent fighter pilot Carly Callahan's life spinning out of control as well. Pulled from the freezing ocean, she found herself in the hot embrace of an Adonis. But his eyes were cold and hard, and the man's burning lips swore she was someone else before he claimed her as his own. Carly knew she had one chance to go home, but there was so much to see and feel here--and the best was yet to come.

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2. Jennifer Ashley, Perils of the Heart
Leisure, November 2002

Uncharted Territory

Evangeline Clemens knew she tread in dangerous waters. Sent to seduce the captain of the merchantman Aurora, the English governess trembled in her innocence. Her stepbrother's life--and the life of the rugged sailor she must tempt--depended on her success. She swore to surrender her body, her virtue...anything Austin Blackwell demanded. But she never expected to relinquish her heart.

On a mission for the American Colonies, Austin suspected the timid temptress was a skilled spy ordered to sabotage his plans. She played the part of an untried miss to perfection, her inexperienced fumbling driving him wild with desire. But after sampling her sweetness, after one harrowing night fraught with passion and peril, the commander vowed to navigate any course to discover the truth. For his soul mutinied at the prospect of sailing into the future without the courageous lady at his side.

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3. Claudia Dain, Tell Me Lies
Leisure, March 2000

They were pirates--lawless, merciless, hungry. Only one way offered hope of escaping death, and worse, at their hands. Their captain must claim her for his own, risk his command, his ship, his very life, to take her.

And so she put her soul into a seduction like no other--a virgin, playing the whore in a desperate bid for survival. As the blazing sun descended into the wide blue sea, she was alone, gazing into the eyes of the man who must lay his heart at her feet....

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4. Julie Garwood, Guardian Angel
Pocket, 1990

The Emerald flew across the seas, carrying the pirate Pagan--despised by the ton, whose riches he plundered, and beloved by the poor, whose plight was eased by his gifts.

The Marquess of Cainewood vows to hunt down the pirate wretch in revenge for his brother's death. But when Jade, an enchanting vision of rippling red hair and eyes of jewel-green, appears at his door to beg desperately for his protection, the Marquess agrees to keep her safe from the villains who want her dead. Jade is infuriating, exasperating, and gorgeous; Caine is noble, strong-willed, and powerful. No woman has ever befuddled him so, nor so deeply aroused his desire. But as Jade answers his knowing caresses with an innocent, wild abandon, they are drawn into a web of treachery that will test the very heart of their love!

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Thursday, April 9, 2009

Researching Pirates


The novel I'm currently writing has pirates! I am very excited by this, as pirates are a classic element in romance novels.

Here's what I've been reading so far, as research. Links are to Amazon.com.

I started out with this one, a long time ago: The Complete Idiot's Guide to Pirates.

This collection of essays takes a much more academic approach. Bandits at Sea: A Pirates Reader.

I can't recommend this book enough, if you're interested in historical pirates in Asia: Pirate of the Far East: 811-1639.

This is perhaps the most valuable book I've found so far, overall: Pirates!: Brigands, Buccaneers, and Privateers in Fact, Fiction, and Legend.

This seemed to be the most detailed of the books on women and piracy: Seafaring Women: Adventures of Pirate Queens, Female Stowaways, and Sailors' Wives.

This will probably be my next purchase: Pirates, Prostitutes and Pullers: Explorations in the Ethno- and Social History of Southeast Asia.

I don't have this one yet, but it is completely tempting even though it's not relevant to my book: Jewish Pirates of the Caribbean: How a Generation of Swashbuckling Jews Carved Out an Empire in the New World in Their Quest for Treasure, Religious Freedom--and Revenge.

Please let me know if you have any recommendations!

Thursday, April 2, 2009

New sales!

I've sold two more books to Harlequin Spice.

The first one is tentatively titled The Duke and the Pirate Queen, but that will very likely change, since all of my other tentative titles have changed before publication. The second is open at the moment; I have several different ideas, and will talk it over with my editor.

The Duke and the Pirate Queen is scheduled for late 2011, and stars the Duke Maxime and Captain Leung, who appeared in The Duchess, Her Maid, The Groom and Their Lover.