Exogenesis
is our second Atlantis title, and once again, writing it was a sheer
pleasure.
The
ideas for Exogenesis and The
Chosen came simultaneously, but The
Chosen fit better as a Season 1 tale, whereas Exogenesis
needed more Season 2 elements. The entire storyline of Exogenesis
spent months in the back of my mind brewing, before I put finger to
keyboard. Beth had a bunch of scene and dialogue ideas in mind, with
a clear picture of where to use them. Consequently, entwined plot threads
notwithstanding, Exogenesis came together
quite quickly.
This
is a story I really wanted to write, more or less from the moment I
saw 'Rising', because McKay's character has some truly inspiring...quirks.
All of the show's characters obviously carry degrees of emotional baggage,
but McKay's border on crippling. I wanted to worm our way behind his
defensive façade, utterly mess with his head, and explore the
fragility of those emotions, all without taking away from the Rodney
we have all come to know and love. The story spiraled out from there.
In short, ‘How about we do this to Rodney, and then create a world
around that premise?’ We also wanted to toy with the McKay/Zelenka
dynamic, squeeze the mixed-up Weir/Caldwell/Sheppard power structure,
toss in Ronon's sense of loyalty, and see what popped out. Teyla’s
place on the team versus her role as a leader of the Athosians also
comes under the microscope, and poor Carson Beckett is lumbered with
far more than anyone should ever have to deal with. Really, these characters
offer a feast of possibilities on so many levels, and then of course
we dump them into a churning, action-oriented tale.
As
to the backdrop, I've taken parts of Exogenesis
into a world that's second nature to me: underwater. It's set a few
episodes after ‘Grace Under Pressure’ so we also have Rodney’s
accumulated neurosis from that little incident to play with. The physical
descriptions of the settings come from quite literally thousands of
dives on countless reefs and wrecks (Port and Starboard fish really
do exist), one spooky experience in a submersible, and an even spookier
free diving (versus SCUBA) encounter with the biggest dogtooth tuna
I've ever seen - and man, it had attitude. I’ve also
found several underwater wrecks, including an intact
WWII Corsair fighter plane. For those interested, a bunch of my
underwater (and topside) commercial photos can be seen over at www.divevanuatu.net
and www.sailawayvanuatu.com.
Yeah, it’s not just volcanoes that tweak my interest <g>.
Oh, and I once hauled in from the depths the particular species that,
well, you'll know it when you read about it. Rodney sure did. I've still
never figured out the evolutionary reason for a fish having jaws several
times larger than its body.
Couple
of points that come up in the story: I’ve busted my eardrums because
of reverse ear block, and, thanks to too many years of free diving (and
hence, rapid pressure changes in the sinuses) killed the roots of two
teeth. One of those incidents occurred over Christmas and New Year,
and the effect was ongoing throughout the writing of Exogenesis.
I like to share my pain. My dentist, Mike, is also a Stargate fan. Not
sure if that’s a good thing or not, because he's also a fan of
root canal therapy.
Probably
the most offbeat thing about this novel, though, is that it will be
submitted as part of my Masters thesis over at Queensland University
of Technology (Brisbane). The exegesis (the academic paper that's submitted
along with the novel) is being written from a social anthropology perspective,
focusing on the use of mythology (or in the case of The
Chosen, what happens when you remove a society's mythology)
to create verisimilitude. The Stargate mythology is rooted in the ideas
of Lovecraft, Hubbard, Pauwells, von Däniken, Sitchin, and so forth.
I’m not absolutely positive, but based on a search prior to writing,
it would appear that I am the first person to have ever undertaken a
postgraduate degree centred entirely on Stargate.
A
degree in Stargate, huh?
Cool.
Weird, but cool.
And
yeah, the title is no coincidence. It's a reminder to the rest of my
MA cohort group, published writers all, of our mutual pain. My supervisor
even allowed me to retain the title of the exegesis, 'The Attraction
of Sloppy Nonsense'.
Hope you enjoy Stargate Atlantis Exogenesis.
You can read Chapter One here. You
can purchase a copy from www.stargatenovels.com.
They now ship from the US as well as UK. As with The Chosen,
Exogenesis is available in US as well as UK bookstores,
Borders bookshop Brisbane, and Galaxy and Infinitas in Sydney. Most
Australian bookshops will stock them if asked - you can buy them direct
or have your bookshop order them through: DA
Direct Books, Melbourne.