Interview
What do you write?
It’s absolutely a cliché for me to say this, but… everything. I have three chapbooks of published poetry — one of which is 5–7‑5 English Language Haiku — and I’ve had one of my haiku pieces republished in the Eastern Structures haiku journal. I’ve also published short stories which fall into genre categories – science fiction, mostly. I write extensively on Medium.com because I like working on articles and academic essays. It all interests me. That said, my pure passion is so-called “genre” work within the popular fiction realm. I grew up watching Babylon 5 and reading DUNE and Lord of the Rings; I’m a science fiction and fantasy man through and through and I’m quite dedicated to the importance and overall merit of that sort of work. As Ursula K. Le Guin said: Realism is just as much a genre as fantasy.
Is there an author or artist who has most profoundly influenced your work?
Well, that’s one of those questions that can never be answered in the singular. There are so many people who have influenced me! At the top of my mind, right now, perhaps I would say “Terry Pratchett.” But I could just as easily say Genre Roddenberry — whose work informed my personal philosophy and helped make me the person I am today. Or J. Michael Straczynski. Or Frank Herbert. Or Le Guin. Better to say that I, as a writer and a person, am an amalgamation of all those artists and writers I have encountered. Neil Gaiman might say that these artists have helped me to grow fertile compost for my own ideas, a point which I’d agree with easily.
Why did you choose Stonecoast?
Because they were not merely friendly to genre fiction but actively realized the importance and worth of science fiction and fantasy. Also, because they had a residency in Ireland — it’s quite sad that the winter residencies closed down, actually, as those were far more inexpensive on a student budget. What made me pleased, after the fact, with my choice of Stonecoast, was how rich of a faculty selection they offered. Real writers who have extensive and prestigious publication records. That let me know that I would be trained by people who could offer me the sort of support I need to take my own work as far as it can go.
What is your favorite Stonecoast memory?
I loved the popular fiction dinner because it was just a long table of people talking raucously about aspects of their craft and the things that they love. I really enjoyed my workshops with Tobias Buckell and Robert Levy, too, because I was in an environment where my work was being appreciated yet also pushed to be better. And never once did I feel like I was being told to write differently — that I had to write to suit a mentor’s preferences or the desires of the workshop group; I felt like I was surrounded by people passionate for the art of storytelling and the craft of writing who were genuinely excited to be able to share their thoughts and ideas. That’s the sort of environment that inspires growth.
What do you hope to accomplish in the future?
A PhD., teaching at the college level, worldwide publication, fame and fortune. Seriously, though, I do plan on continuing my education deeper into the academic world with the intention of eventually teaching at the college level. I enjoy being in a mentorship role and I’d like to pass on some of thing things I’ve learned to others who want to become writers. And I also have my own hopes and dreams regarding publication. To that end, it’s all about continuing to hone my craft and stay true to my dedication. I might not ever reach worldwide book sales, but I do want to publish more of my writing and continue exploring the exciting universes living in my brain.
If you could have written one book, story, or poem that already exists, which would you choose?
You know, I’m not sure I would want to. When we read, we are encountering the mind, the hidden “spirit” if you will, of another human being. Sometimes transmitted across years or centuries. Someone speaking straight to us in the most intimate of ways. What I love about the works of others is that they are the works of others — and that, in turn, inspires me to create my own work. However, there are some things which are cooperative enterprises. I would love to have written episodes or tie-in novels for franchises like Babylon 5 — those larger stories which meant (and mean) so much to me. And maybe, in the future, I’ll be able to do just that.
Featured Work
All Our Lonely Chains
The following is a short story by Odin Halvorson exclusively for Stonecoast Review.
SolSenate is Mother,
SolSenate is Father,
Humanity, beneficent, stands together forever.
-From the anthem of the Beneficent Unity
Fires of vermillion washed across the void, scattering the enriched guts of a dozen starships into the arms of emptiness. And, just like that, the ‘war’ was over. At least it was for everyone by Lorenzi, Captain of the warship named Astrodus, a man with one final order to obey.
He knew, as he stood on the empty deck of the observation gallery, watching the explosions glow hot and brief in the darkness, that he would obey those final orders. But this knowledge dragged at him, clung to him like a bacterial infection, made him painfully aware of the motion of blood passing through his neck and just behind his ears. And so, at least for a short time, his hand was stayed from the final command.
“Lorenzi,” the voice came to him, disembodied, seemingly from the empty air. “I detect three thousand and ninety lifesigns, gauged from estimated density readings of verified escape vehicles.”
“There were over two-hundred thousand aboard those ships.”
“Yes.”
“Does it bother you? All those lives?”
“I was not the one who gave the order for their destruction, nor the one to carry it out.” The overtones of the voice were flat, but there was doubt, buried in the words.
The voice belonged to Astrodus herself — or, rather, her Avatar — Lorenzi’s sole companion since SolSenate’s initiative to eradicate the colonial threat began. And now, he thought, there would be nobody but her. Once their task was done, there would be no other living beings for a thousand light years. Even the rest of the crew, all ten thousand clone soldiers loaded into Astrodus’s belly, were long gone. Dead months ago on the titan moon of Mordul.
“Our orders are clear,” Lorenzi said. “Aren’t they? As long as those people live, the danger remains. Earth, Mars… the whole of human Unity is threatened.”
For several seconds, Astrodus said nothing. When she did speak, her voice sounded strained, as if searching for a way to disagree. “Yes. SolSenate decreed the danger. However, the wormhole is closed, Calamity’s mine’s took care of that last month.”
“But, even so… there’s a danger, isn’t there? There could, some day, be a danger to home?”
“There could.”
Lorenzi watched the distant glitter of the expanding debris cloud, his dark face overgrown by a week’s worth of peppery stubble. “Target the escape vehicles,” he said after the silence had stretched on for a minute or more. “Begin powering the x‑ray battery.”
“Understood. Charging, now.”
#
When he could no longer bear the darkness of the observation platform, Lorenzi retreated into the bright decks of the ship-proper. The Astrodus’s corridors, painted in comforting shades of green, blue and sunset orange, normally warmed his mood when things grew dire. But this time, even walking the cheerful hallways overlit by bright UV cords did nothing to end the tremble in his heart. Every man, woman, and child… that was his order. Not a single soul could be allowed to survive.
The refugee fleet out of Caliope Colony, the last of the now-destroyed extra-solar habitats, had burned its fuel hard for a whole week trying to escape their fate. But the Astrodus and her sister ships were designed for the chase. Their commandment a simple one: to destroy every last extra-solar human being. Eradicate them. Sterilize them from the universe. A terrible, brutal task but one which needed to be done. The danger these people posed was insurmountable; their way of life threatened not just the stability of the Unity, but the very safety of humanity.
“Are the weapons ready?” He knew they were but asked anyway, stalling time.
“Yes. X‑ray battery at full readiness. Targets are acquired.” Perhaps it was his imagination, but he thought he heard a trace of melancholy in her voice.
Of the Astrodus’s six sister ships sent to this war, only she still lived. Seven sisters and their seven solitary Captains, reduced to two lives and one fragile destiny. What were a few more deaths among a multitude?
“Wait for me, okay? I’ll be on the bridge soon.”
A brief pause, then: “I know.”
#
The bridge, a semi-circular amphitheatre-like room, curved around a central station where a glowing soligram hovered, displaying the ten-million kilometer sphere of the Astrodus’s sensor range. In this room, the walls were a bare, gunmetal gray.
Lorenzi went to the soligram sphere and touched it, his fingers dragging along the outermost edge of the crackling electrostatic field. The globe shifted at even this light touch, spinning gently until the space occupied by the refugee fleet’s debris field hovered before him. Astrodus marked the thousand or so escape vehicles for him, tiny glowing gold lights amid the background blue of the soligram field.
“Your sister ships…” He was not certain what to say. Astrodus’s sisters had used their own antimatter cores to destroy the renegade fleet, committing suicide for the greater good.
“The attack was executed as planned.” Astrodus’s voice was flat, emotionless in a way that chilled Lorenzi. “All of the target vessels were destroyed as well, though, as SolSenate predicted, the number of refugees who escaped destruction is dangerously high.”
“What could be dangerous about them?” The words slipped out before he knew they were in his mind. He struggled to right himself, uncertain what he was even trying to say. “There’s no way back for them. For any of us. A thousand light years, that’s the distance we would have to travel to get home.”
“SolSenate was quite clear about the danger they posed.”
There. Posed. Astrodus said nothing unless it mattered.
“These people are going to die even without our involvement,” he gestured at the glowing target dots hovering before him, “are they really so dangerous? Why did SolSenate order your sisters to destroy themselves, or order us to stay behind to finish off the stragglers? Look at them, they’re pathetic. Just refugees!”
“And cannot refugees be dangerous? Can they not harbor disease?”
“Diseases we can cure.”
“Ah, but Lorenzi, what about the diseases of the mind?”
He closed his eyes. That was the argument; that was always the argument. For ten years, ever since SolSenate had decreed its state of emergency, the one constant refrain was the supposed risk these colonists posed to Earth, Mars and the entire concept of the Beneficent Unity. Everything humanity had struggled to ascend to, over a thousand years, could be ruined by this untamed rabble spreading among a cluster of distant stars.
“I don’t know,” he said, surprised to realize that he truly did not. In the beginning, he had believed. But now? “Am I being selfish? If we do this, we die out here. There’s no going home for either of us.”
Astrodus and he were linked, inexorably, and by more than the cybernetic implants spidered through his brain or the organic neurons buried deep within her AI core. They had come through the wormhole together, had come through fire and vacuum to this place where the light of Sol was a thousand years old. And they had suffered together as they did their duty. Suffered as their friends died. Lorenzi knew what he wanted. He also knew what duty demanded of him. The two conflicting paths boiled within him as he waited for her reply.
“I do not want to die,” Astrodus said, at long last. “But I wish, far less, to be alone. So, perhaps it is selfishness. Perhaps, now that my sisters and your fellow captains have answered the call of duty, we are allowed to be selfish. Or, perhaps, if we chose poorly, we doom the home which birthed us.”
Lorenzi opened his eyes again, looking at the glowing sphere before him. The fragile dots, faint gold, still glowed. How long before air ran out, damaged hulls began to fail? The last of a free humanity, condemned to a slow and agonizing fate. Better to hand them a swift death. Better to follow orders and save his home, thought it was a home a thousand light years distant.
Astrodus was right, this was why he was captain — why there had to be a human captain aboard all sentient ships. Avatars could change their minds — had been known to contradict their orders. But a human? Guided by SolSenate since birth? No Captain had ever turned against the Unity. Lorenzi doubted if any had ever even considered such a thing. But he was considering such a thing. Perhaps the chain had been unbroken, but perhaps he was the weak link in the chains which shackled them all. Or, perhaps, he had been away from SolSenate too long, out among the freedom of the stars.
The command to fire hovered on the tip of his tongue. His lips moved as he mouthed the word. One word. Fire. That was all it would take.
“No.”
“Lorenzi?”
“They left Earth centuries ago. They lived out here, peacefully, for all that time. And now the wormhole’s closed. A thousand years for our final signal to reach home. As far as SolSenate knows, we did our duty. We accomplished our goal.”
The following silence had a deafening edge to it. Lorenzi once more felt the pounding of his pulse, a biological rhythm of his terror. He almost hoped she would reject him, that Astrodus would accuse him of treason and complete their mission on her own.
“The cargo bay can accommodate all of the escape vehicles.” Her voice was soft, striated excitement coursing through each syllable. “The clone soldier accommodations in my belly can house them all.”
The golden dots on the blue sensor globe flickered and their colors changed to green. The Astrodus had marked them as friendlies, as ships to be rescued rather than destroyed. This was, Lorenzi realized, the moment when everything changed.
“Then…” he lingered for a moment on the words, savoring the first decision he had ever truly made. “Bring the survivors aboard.”
Odin Halvorson is a Stonecost alumnus, a writer, poet, geek, and hopeful futurist. He is a graduate of the Stonecoast MFA. His work has been nominated for the Pushcart Prize and published in Collective Realms, Book XI: a journal of literary philosophy, Eastern Structures, Duende Literary, The Stonecoast Review, and two anthology collections from Enso Publishing. He has also self-published three poetry collections, including a chapbook of ELH Haiku. He writes avidly for his Medium.com blog @indubitablyodin, with pieces like Hard Work: The Greatest Con, and “Becoming Superman” The Book All Writers Need to Read receiving critical attention. Learn more at OdinHalvorson.Com
Odin is also the co-founder of Round Table Writers, an organization dedicated to the motto “Artists Support Artists.” They produce the Round Table Radio podcast, a weekly exploration of all things books and literature.
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