Even if you write science fiction

I guess you guys all know I write mainly space opera. So you might be forgiven for raising an incredulous eyebrow (maybe even two) when I talk about writing what I know. And sure, I take out the space opera tool kit for the space bits. FTL travel, artificial gravity, shields to divert radiation (and attacks) etc etc. But not everything happens out there in the wide black. I usually have some goings-on planetside. And Crisis at Validor is no exception.
Senior Commander Brett Butcher was Grand Admiral Saahren’s adjutant in the Iron Admiral series, but this time, he’s getting his own story. Newly promoted to captain after the events chronicled in the Iron Admiral, he’s gone home to Validor for a brief holiday before he takes up his new command – a battle cruiser. It’s a boyhood dream come true. But he arrives on planet just in time to become embroiled in an attack on the Ruling family, where he’s reunited with Tarlyn, who had been the unattainable love of his life before he left Validor, aged seventeen, to attend the Fleet Academy.
Although we’ll get back up into space later down the track, in the early chapters Brett and Tarlyn are on a boat, heading for a meeting with the Ptorix.
And this gives the opportunity to write what I know.
Several years ago I was privileged to go on a three-day sail in the Whitsunday Islands off Queensland. It was a memorable experience, and it lends authenticity to a scene in Crisis at Validor. Brett and Tarlyn take a boat out of a bay between two headlands. That’s based on my experience when we sailed through the Solway Passage, with its churning waters and whirlpools, all overlooked by a stormy sky and the towering red cliffs of a distant island. My scene isn’t exactly the same, but I’ve drawn on that journey to lend some colour.

But that’s not the end of the sea adventure, and here I dragged out another experience, when I went to horizontal Falls several years ago (gosh, is that really so long ago)? I wrote about it here. I’ll be using that image, of a tide roaring through a narrow gap, in another exciting scene.
See? You can write what you know, using places not too many people on this planet have seen.

Crisis at Validor is my usual mix of history, politics, adventure, and a slurp of romance. Tap the image to find out more.
