Limits Larry Niven (audio ebook reader TXT) š
- Author: Larry Niven
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LIMITS
LARRY NIVEN
Phoenix Pick
An Imprint of Arc Manor
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Limits copyright Ā© 1985 by Larry Niven. All rights reserved. This book may not be copied or repr o duced, in whole or in part, by any means, electronic, mechanical or otherwise without written permission from the publisher except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any actual persons, events or localities is purely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author and publisher.
Tarikian, TARK Classic Fiction, Arc Manor, Arc Manor Classic Reprints, Phoenix Pick, Phoenix Science Fiction Classics, Phoenix Rider, Manor Thrift, The Stellar Guild and logos associated with those imprints are trademarks or registered trademarks of Arc Manor, LLC, Rockville , Maryland. All other trademarks and trademarked names are properties of their respective owners.
This book is presented as is, without any warranties (implied or otherwise) as to the accuracy of the production, text or translation.
Digital Edition
ISBN (Digital Edition): 978-1-61242-070-7
ISBN (Paper Edition): 978-1-61242-069-1
Published by Phoenix Pick
an imprint of Arc Manor
P. O. Box 10339
Rockville, MD 20849-0339
www.ArcManor.com
===LIMITS===
INTRODUCTION
Half my output used to be short stories.
Itās common knowledge in this field that the money is in novels; but itās also true that stories come in their own length. Stretching an idea beyond its length is even worse than over-compressing it. Ordinarily I would have continued to write short stories.
What happened was, I hit a bump in my career.
A novice writer should try anything, not just to pay the rent, but because he needs practice, versatility, skills. Later he must learn to turn down bad offers: the first bump.
The second bump comes when he learns to turn down good offers.
Iām a slow learner.
I learned to say no; but that was only a couple of years ago. Show me a contract and I flinch; but if I committed myself years ago, it gets signed; and then the book must be written.
Footfall, being written with Jerry Pournelle, is a year and a half overdue and finished. But everything else is backed up behind it.
I didnāt know whether The Integral Trees and The Smoke Ring would be one book or two; it was conceived as Siamese twins. Itās two, and The Smoke Ring is awaiting Footfall.
So are a childrenās book to be written with Jerry Pournelle and Wendy All; and The Legacy of Heorot, with Jerry (again) and Steven Barnes. A collection of the Warlock stories needed rewriting to remove redundancies. Iāve been rewriting speeches into articles for the Philcon.
Where would I find time to write short stories?
But I did.
In 1983, Fred Saberhagen wrote me with a strange proposal. How would I like to write a Berserker story?
The idea: Fred will ask half a dozen friends to write tales of human-Berserker encounters. Fred will shuffle them into the order he likes, and write a beginning and an ending to turn it all into a novel.
Sure I wanted to write a Berserker story! I didnāt have to do any research; it was all in my head. Iāve been reading them long enough. I wrote āA Teardrop Fallsā and sent copies to Fred and to Omni, which bought it for an indecently large sum considering that I hadnāt even built my own background.
Iāve since seen other Berserker pastiches in the magazines, and I await the novel with some eagerness.
There was to be a new magazine on the stands, a meld of fact and fiction aimed at the general reading public. Its name: Cosmos. Its editor: Diana King.
Diana commissioned a story for that magazine from me and Jerry Pournelle. Topic: probably asteroid mining. Tone: space advocacy, and light. āWhat weād really like to be writing,ā I said, āis āTo Bring Home the Steel,ā by Don Kingsbury. Only itās already done.ā
Call it a character flaw: I have to be inspired. Jerry and I gathered one evening to plot the story. I didnāt get going until we realized who it was that scared Jackie Halfie into leaving Earth.
What happened? Cosmos became Omni. Diana King resigned and was replaced by Ben Bova. Ben rejected āSpiralsā because it was too long. The story ultimately appeared in Jim Baenās Destinies.
Collaborations are hard work. The only valid excuse for collaborating is this: there is a story you would like to write, and you donāt have the skills youād need to write it alone.
Exceptions? Sure! Jerry and I wrote āSpiralsā together because it was more fun that way. And there is a classic exception, a way of collaborating that holds no risks at all.
Hereās how it works. Youāve got a story in your trunk. Somewhere in there is a terrific story idea; but it never jelled. You broke your heart over it when you didnāt yet have the skills, and now you canāt throw it away and you canāt bear to look at the damn thing either.
Then you meet a writer who seems to have the skills you would have needed. Hand him the manuscript! āCan you do anything with this?ā
Look: youāve already done your share of the work, and itās earned you nothing. Heās done no work at all. If he says āNo,ā youāve lost nothing. Heās lost nothing. If he says āYes,ā itās his risk. Maybe you can get reinspired.
It was that way with āThe Locusts.ā Iād only recently met Steven Barnes. The direction he was taking, he would soon become the best of the New Wave writers. Well, I couldnāt have thatā¦
I handed him āThe Locusts,ā and he made it work. Ultimately I watched that story lose him his first Hugo Award. Weāve since written two novels together.
At the
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