BOOKS - Return (Talbot Book 3)
Return (Talbot Book 3) - Richard F. Weyand March 8, 2024 PDF  BOOKS
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Return (Talbot Book 3)
Author: Richard F. Weyand
Year: March 8, 2024
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 2.6 MB
Language: English

and "Would you consider a return to Fortuna? and "When the president of the United States asks you a question like that, you have to at least consider it.Michael, Sue, Matthew, and u0026 Denise Talbot head back to Fortuna, but this time they take two hundred colonists with them. Their Create a self-sustaining, multi-species society on the planet.It's a long slog, though. They begin with simply trying to create the equivalent of Tudor England.But the first question they have to answer is, Who do you take with you, and why?.INTERVIEW WITH RICH WEYANDThe Talbot story continues?Yes. Everybody knew that there would have to be another trip to Fortuna. The point of exploration was colonization, after all. So the Talbots - Mike, Sue, Matthew, and Denise - go back to Fortuna, and they take the beginnings of a colony with them. The first two hundred people.What are the hurdles?The first one is technology. I've never been very happy with colonization as described in most fiction. It doesn't seem to track very well with actual historical colonization events. Everybody goes there, and Voila! Civilization. Look at something like Plymouth Colony. You have a hundred people show up on this small ship, and they get to build a life pretty much from scratch. It was pretty tenuous there for a while, and a lot of people didn't make it.How would a space colony get started? You have a lot of the same issues the Mayflower people had. You have long crossings, with a minimal number of things you can take with you. What do you take? How do you get started? What are the problems?The first hurdle is technology. What's the next hurdle?There is another species already there. Not indigenous, they're colonists, too, or the descendants of colonists. How is that going to work? The colony leaders and their backers on Earth are adamant that they will not repeat the mistakes of past colonizations. Second-class status, slavery, and genocide. They are not going there. Not everybody gets the message. One big conflict in the book is over that very issue.How did this book write?A little slowly. Forty-four writing days for 80k words. About 1820 words a day. As you go deeper into a series as an author, your writing normally speeds up. You have your main characters, your world-building, all in place. This book, though, took a lot of research. What would you take? How do you do some basic things, like make Portland cement, or steel, or even charcoal? How do you raise a barn? This stuff doesn't all just appear. You have to build it, and I had to learn how to do that, at least well enough to portray the effort in the book.Your books are mostly people stories. Is this one, or is it all technology work?No, it's a people story, first and foremost. When the president asks the Talbots to go, will they? What are the considerations there? What about the kids? Sue Talbot's growth into the role of governor of the colony is a big topic. The kids' role in the colony, and how they fare, is a big part of it. The political and financial considerations back on Earth. All the people issues are there, front and center.What's the cover about? What's with the gun?That's Sue Talbot, governor of Fortuna Territory. She sees something that will NOT be allowed to happen on Fortuna. And therefrom spins a chunk of the story. Another excellent cover by Luca Oleastri and Paola Giari in Italy.What's next for the Talbot series?The one thing we still don't know is where is the bird-people's parent civilization? They were colonists on Fortuna themselves.

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