
Cover art for the Wars of Reaving, by Neil Roberts
Кот выбрался из мешка, типа. Если вы понятия не имеете о чем это я, то окажите себе услугу, и не обращайте на это внимания. Так будет прикольней.
Теперь, когда все подутихло, я подумал, почему бы не написать немного о том, как я все это писал. Это мой первый сорсбук, написанный в одиночку, и думаю, вы с удовольствим проследуете со мной по этому безумному путешествию
В начале было…Этот проект зародился где-то лет пять назад, српзу после того, как я переехал в округ Колабмия. Сюжет Джихада как раз только подбирсляся к середине, и ВизКидс все еще достаточно неплохо управлялись с их MechWarrior: Age of Destruction. Спущенная сверху (т.е от WizKids) доктрина гласила, что Кланы, те, что не перебрались еще в Сферу не тема для обсуждения. Никаких романов, никаких рассказов, никаких намеков вообще. И тем не менее, это было интригующе любопытная тема, которой, возможно, нам никогда бы не довелось рассказать.
WizKids игрались и так и этак с участью домашних кланов, бросая немеки там и сям, и крупнейший из них был в романе Ильзы Бик "Кровавый аватар". Как вообще он мог быть намеком, исходя из уст случайного гражданина, that wasn’t anyone in the universe outside of a hick town’s coroner, Я так и не понял, но... они так захотели, и так и сделали.
Так что, периодически играя кланами и выискивая все больше и больше возможностей что-нибудь написать, на тот момент я был одним из наиболее "постоянных" авторов КБТ, из тех, кого Херб считает "активом" - я поделился идеей с Рэндаллом и Хербом - почему бы однажды не написать книгу про Кланы. В то время никто даже и не собирался ее воплощать - Визкидс по прежнему были главными, они этого не хотели, но мало ли что...
И с этим на уме, я начал собирать и подбирать всю имеющуюся информацию по Домашним мирам и всему за пределами Периферии. Также я начал обмениваться мыслыми касательно Войн разорения с Рэндаллом, скорее обдумывая возможности, чем планируя что серьезное. И так и продолжалось до 2008 года, когда я сталыв помощником Разработчика Линии.
И все завертелось (здесь пропускаем, пропускаем...) И внезапно, в 2009, я получил подтверждение, что "сорсбук Война разорения" вошел в десятилетний план, разрабатываемый Каталистами. По графику, он увидел бы свет не ранее 2015 года, но это было уже что-то.
Теперь, зная, что книга точно будет, я начал прорабатывать детали. Первоначально, книгу должны были писать несколько авторов, как и со всеми другими продуктами Каталистов. Единственными исключениями, на тот момент, были Хэндбуки, среди которых я уже зацапал Куриту, на отдаленное будущее (если он вообще будет) Так что я подумал, что раз уже забежал вперед и начал подбор данных и уже просмотрел части, что достанется мне, то почему бы не набросать черновик, что возможно даст мне шанс на написание книги целиком. Гарантии, разумеется, не было, но Херб с Рэндаллом знали, как отчаянно я хотел ее написать. Очень =очень сильно.
Собрав все данные вместе, включая самые уклончивые, я начал получать общую картину происходящего, и мне она активно не понравилась - похоже, что в Домашних мирах шел свой собственный, параллельный Джихад. Я так понял, что виной тому была загруженность авторов книгами Джихада от Хотспотов, до новых ТРО, загнавшие их воображение в узкую колею. Я так же знал, что подобное никак не пройдет. Банально повторять то же самое для кучи фракцих, заранее описанных как стопроцентно чуждые для Внутренней Сферы с иным мышлением, образмо жизни и привычками?
Нет.
Я помню, как жаловался на это Полю Сжардину. Он тоже хотел для Кланов что-нибудь особенное, и раздумывал над одним интересным сюжетом для его собственной клановской фракции. Стоит заметить, что он придумал любопытный сюжет, и после долгих раздумий и некоторых изменений, он оказался ключевым для меня. И, по мере того как проходиол месяц за месяцем, я продолжал его шлифовать. На конференциях в ходе моей основной работы, я набрасывал заметки в одном из вечно носимых с собой блокнотов. В основном, запасая мелькающие в голове мысли, что уже после, за ужином и перед тем как отправиться в постель, превращал в полноценные идеи.
И внезапно я обнаружил возможность включения в книгу не одного сюжета, но трех. Обнаружил трудную и возможность попробовать сплести воедино три отдельных арки в один цельный сюжет, рассказанный в той же манере. И поскольку до вероятной книги было все также далеко, я так и продолжил жонглировать мыслями и идеями. Принялся лазить по сорсбукам, подчеркивая полезную информацию. "Что если я попробую связать это с тем? Что, если превратить этот инцидент в нечто большее?" И в то же время я стал более сдержан с информацией по кланам для ТРО и ХОТ Спотов, ведь каждый намек мне придется учитывать, и каждая обмолвка могла пустить сюжет под откос. (Кое-что все равно просочилось, а именно - некоторые даты или временные интервалы, над которыми позже пришлось работать)
И наконец-то я возвел каркас сюжета. Оставалось лишь вчерне обвесить его содержимым. Продумать ряд моментов, вроде времени событий, точек зрения, напряжения, правил, технологий, масштаба... В общем, вопросов, требующих ответа.
Но с этим я никуда не торопился... до прошлого лета.
The Fall of DisquietShortly after GenCon 2010, I was chatting with Herb during one of our semi-regular “catch-up” calls regarding the line. We usually discuss upcoming product, future plans, print schedules, writer evaluations, etc. in those calls. And the War of Reaving book (that was the working title at the time) came up.
It was now on the schedule for the beginning of 2012. The schedule had been radically changed (for a variety of reasons) and the result meant that WOR got booted to an earlier date. I admit, the initial news was very exciting. Especially when I was tenetively given full authorship, though I could pull in additional help if necessary.
My first task was to get an initial outline submitted. Fortunately I did have one in a rough form, though nowhere near our standard CGL project format. It went like this:
WOR Sourcebook Tentative Outline
TOC/How to Use this Book
Fiction
Ripples
Art: Full page before chapter
Detailing some of the events post 3061 that lay the foundation of the WOR
Sidebar: Clan exploration
Sidebar: Diamond Shark market expansion
Sidebar: Quest for an ilKhan (by Kael Pershaw)
Reaving
Covering Jan 1, 3067 – Dec 1, 3071
Art: Full page before chapter
Probably broken into Clan by Clan sections, focusing on each Clan’s actions during this four-year stretch.
Sidebar:
Sidebar: The Tanite colonies
Sidebar: The new ilKhan
Sidebar: The Hellion’s gamble
Rebellion
Covering Dec 1, 3071 – Feb 3074
Art: Full page before chapter
Clan by Clan sections, including one for ??? (at the end).
Sidebar:
Sidebar: War of Words
Sidebar:
Rending
Covering Jan 3074 – August 3075
Art: Full page before chapter
Clan by Clan sections, covering the final stages of the Homeworlds
Sidebar:
Sidebar:
Sidebar: Where do we go from here?
Rebirth
Covering August 3075 – Dec 3081
Art: Full page before chapter; Clan logos
Clan by Clan sections, but more epilogue in tone, similar to how the Clan synopsis was done in Op: Klondike SB. Focus mainly on the major adjustments to each society, plus holdings and current political tone.
Sidebar: Return home to Terra?
Sidebar:
Appendix
Personalities (optional)
New faction 1
New faction 2
Dark Caste
Rules Annex
New ProtoMechs (3 new art)
New Mechs (3 new art, one recycled):
ProtoMech Weapons/Equipment
New ‘Mech weapon/equipment (TO style):
RPG elements
Other equipment
-Half-page each; minor fluff, mostly RPG mechanics.
Record Sheets (12-13 pages)
(There was a bit more detail here but I removed it due to possible spoiling of the finished product.)
I’ll make it clear now that this in no way is even close to the final form of how things worked out. You’ll understand why as we go along.

Final proof for Khan Magnus DelVillar
The outline is more for an idea of how many words we’re looking at for the product, to get an idea of page count. That, in turn, gives us a good estimate for initial price. These are important because retailer sell sheets for coming quarters are prepared well in advance.
Speaking of which, I also had to quickly do up a BCC, or “back cover copy.” It’s what you see on the back of a book, to give you an idea of the contents. I was a little hesitant to write this, because it can lock you down if things go awry, but I did the best I could. The BCC probably looks familiar to those who saw the recent listing on Amazon:
As the Word of Blake unleashed their Jihad, one enemy of the Inner Sphere remained in the shadows, riven by internal strife and dissent. As political and military alliances among the children of Nicholas Kerensky are broken and forged, the Clans turn inward as one Clan unleashes the unthinkable upon the rest. A war that reaches deep into the bloodlines of each; none are untouched. Those who survive will not speak of it. A war of Reaving. The Clans will never be the same. Wars of Reaving details the long-sought happenings of the Clans after the results of the Great Refusal through the end of the Jihad, compiled from detailed reports culled from each of the Clans and others. Included within are personalities, equipment, units, and factions that all had a hand in the upheaval that enveloped the Homeworlds, changing them forever.
So by September 2010, I had a rough outline, several notebooks of jotted notes and ideas, my master Clan timeline built from already-published and soon-to-be published material, and a BCC. I was set to begin serious plot and story construction, including forming characters, pivotal events, and more. Things were set for a good pace…until….
I was informed at the end of September the book would now be released in summer 2011, due to another shuffle in the schedule.
Still very doable, by the way. I built several milestones to hit; first draft completed by early January, playtest/factcheck through February, editing in March, layout to begin in April. That gave me fivemonths to craft and write the book. Plenty of time…
Not.
At the same time all of this was going on, I was in negotiations with another publisher regarding my non-fiction book, Gamer’s Most Wanted. And that one nailed down a publication date of November 2011. Which meant they wanted the first draft by February 15, 2011.
I now had a roughly 100K word sourcebook to create AND half of a 50K word non-fiction book to write.
In roughly five months.
Across two major holidays AND my anniversary trip with my wife to Europe. And I work a full-time job in downtown DC.
Suddenly, things did not look rosey at all.
An easy fix would be to farm out the WOR to other authors, but I rejected that notion fairly quickly. Partly because I still wanted this project, and partly because I felt that the best voice to tell the story needed to be a consistent one; I’d already rejected the Hot Spots format of scattered reports across a theme. That worked fine for the Jihad (and I stand behind that assertion) but it would not work at all for the Clans. It didn’t fit their culture, their character.
The book had to be told in one voice, regardless of whether the time frame was from 100 years in the future (making the WOR a Historical) or in the near-aftermath (a la the FedCom Civil War sourcebook). And that meant it had to be one author to maintain cohesion.
What to do?
In the end, I had to choose. I began work on WOR, collating my timeline and notes, then writing each Clan’s story from start to finish. I cleared through four Clans…and then lost steam. It was exceptionally hard to do, because as each Clan interacted, they had to have their own perspectives on how events went. Each subsequent Clan was even more difficult, so researching and constantly reworking details increased exponentially with every new Clan section. Which meant constant reviewing and checking against prior work…and that took time. I was aiming for 4K a night; I was clearing 1500, maybe 2000 on a roll, and both time and my word counts were slipping.
At the same time, my day job’s busiest period is late October through December. My biggest projects are at this time, and it sucks a lot of mental energy. By the time I got home, all I wanted to do was eat and just be with my wife. Everything slipped and I stopped writing completely around Thanksgiving.
At that point, I had a choice to make. Gamer’s Most Wanted was an easier write (each chapter is 2,000 words), so I turned to that project instead. And WOR was pushed to the side in December after emailing Herb and Randall and telling them it wasn’t going to happen within the initial timeframe. (There’s more to this period that I’ll cover in a future post.)
Which worked out perfectly. Another project had shifted into the summer slot due to its own lag, so WOR was moved to Christmas 2011. My deadline was pushed to August.
Everything was working out…until a phone call at the end of April, 2011.
Reaving the WritingSo before we continue onward in our journey, a side trip on how this book is actually written. (This is going to end up across a couple of posts, so you’re warned.)
I decided early on that I would not be including the Nova Cats or the Wolf-in-Exiles. Somehow, because they were already cast out of the Clans, they didn’t seem appropriate here. Neither of them figured into any of the plots I’d constructed and since I’d made a conscious decision at the start to not rehash much of the Jihad material, they made little sense within the scope of the book.
Originally, my idea was to tackle each chapter in a Clan-by-Clan format. Using hard date stops, I planned on writing each Clan’s narrative from each start to stop dates. (What were those dates? December 12, 3067; November 4, 3071; December 1, 3071; July 29, 3074; December 31, 3075.) Done from the perspective of the Loremaster or a Watch Star Colonel, this would provide a skewed perspective of the main Reaving events, as well as “their side of the story” for the smaller conflicts. Sounds cool, right?
I thought so too. And while it sounds pretty cool, affording each Clan fan the chance to read their faction info straight through, it is incredibly difficult to write. I didn’t figure this out, however, until nearly two months into the process.
Medium OmniMech, Wars of Reaving
First, I had to pick apart the 44 page timeline I’d built up; more details were pinned down from 3067 through 3073, moderate detail for 3074 and 75, and nearly nothing but a few notations for 76 onwards. Going through the timeline, copying out relevant passages for each affected Clan…grew tiresome. But after two weeks, I had 14 different timelines, one for each Clan.
With the timeline pulled apart, it was also easy to see where the “holes” were within each Clan. Some, like the Scorpions, had practically zero events from early 3068 to one of the milestone points in late 3071. (Well, aside from that whole pesky Eridani thing.) Others, like the Wolves, had a huge amount of events up to a certain point, and then spun out into the Jihad. So each section would be varying in length.
Of importance this early was the rules section. And there are a lot of them, which needed to cover not just Total Warfare, but also A Time of War. I jotted down extensive notes on various new BattleTech equipment and weapons, a new OmniMech design family (three total new Omnis), and four ProtoMech designs. Also included were several ATOW-effect “weapons” in the form of chemicals and “lab experiments” that needed detailed. Rounding it off was a new anti-WarShip weapon.
I then passed the chapter on to Herb, who is much better versed in “rule-ese” than I. Plus, with new ProtoMech designs, we needed new construction rules. Herb needed to tackle those because the progeny of these Wars would see next-generation designs pop up in the next planned TRO: Prototypes.
Before I began, I also needed to examine the “when” and “why.” When would this report be taking place? 3150, just after Fortress Republic? That would make it more Historical in nature. Less “urgent.” It was the best approach, considering that in-game, no one knew of the Homeworld Clans from 3074ish onwards, so using the Republic would be an opening to allow the Inner Sphere (and the ‘universe’ at large) to learn of the happenings. Why the Republic needed to know was pretty generic: they were musing about another outside threat.
But I wasn’t really comfortable with that, partially for reasons I cannot discuss here regarding CGL’s future BattleTech plans. And partially because, to me, it cheapened the whole mystique we’d built around this time. Something so traumatic, so devastating needed to be treated with the same reverence and humiliation as the Not-Named debacle (and I’m not talking Betrayal of Ideals, either).
So that canned the after-the-Dark-Age idea. How, then, could we do it?
The best option, I believed, was to do it as a report given after the end of the Jihad, sometime around 3080. An all-purpose warning, sort of a “look, this is how badly messed up they are, let’s just not deal with them” report of the Homeworlds. Something to give evidence as to why the Inner Sphere Clans would shun their brethren, and could be repeated over and over for future leadership.
Herb and Randall liked that approach and green-lit it. The report would be tied together by one of the Spheroid Clan Loremasters. I gravitated to the Sharks, considering their reach and ease of acquiring the information necessary for such a compiled report.
Now that the “when” and “why” were answered, writing could begin.
It took about a month before I realized how difficult my original approach was going to be. Writing out the first Clan, Blood Spirit, from 3067 through 3072 was relatively easy. But as I progressed to other Clans, I found myself going back to what I’d written previously and making sure I had things correct. If one detail changed, the effect rippled through previously-written portions. And as I began a new Clan section…the effect magnified. (At one point, I had over twenty windows open on my laptop, from PDF files to specific emails to Excel lists to Word documents…it was chaos.)
It got frustrating and irritating very quickly. By mid-November, I’d had enough. About 25,000 words were written by this point; I wasn’t about to chuck them all, but they were all in the first person viewpoint. That is a very tough POV to use in a source book and if I abandoned my approach, I would either need to rewrite what I’d done or scrap it completely.
During the November-December-January stretch, I abandoned WOR. I had to; my other book needed completed. It was a welcome respite and allowed me to rethink the entire WOR concept.
At the end of February, I tried again. The material I’d written before would be salvaged; most of it would be changed to the standard source book viewpoint we use, that of third person (limited). It would be written in summary form, as if Diamond Shark Watch analysts had spent years pouring over data to construct a timeline and then summarize it. Using insertions by the Shark Loremaster, I could slip in additional detail, opinion, and asides. And a multitude of sidebars could be used to flesh out larger issues, such as a primer on Clan economics or a rundown of how the Dark Caste operated.
So I began again.
Using my master timeline as a guide, I began to reconstruct the narrative. Early on, I realized that this would allow me to also “cover” the gaps in time of some of the Clans. The problem was, I had several opposing voices going on in the completed Clan sections I had done. Initially, I simply used a sectional break to change the voice, though still altering the point of view from first to third. It worked, though progress was still slow.
About the end of March I completed the merging process. I’d also filled in the remainder of the Clan information for the first section, which detailed 3067 through the Tamar attack in 3070.
Then I read it.
It was bad.
Disjointed, incoherent, jumbled. The voice didn’t work. Discouraging, yes – but fixable. However, I would basically need to restart again.
Окончание следует...