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Printed from https://shop.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/3984
Action/Adventure: September 29, 2010 Issue [#3984]

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Action/Adventure


 This week: Adventures in Outer Space
  Edited by: Kate - Writing & Reading Author IconMail Icon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  Open in new Window.

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

Greetings! Welcome to this week's edition of the WDC Action & Adventure Newsletter

         Each day is a blank page, an adventure to be written, action and re-action ~ be pro-active. Writing itself is action ~ creating an adventure for your readers to embrace in prose or verse. I'm back again in search of adventure and hope you will share with me this exploration and maybe create one of your own in prose or verse.

         You don't need superman to fly across space.


Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

Greetings, fellow Adventurers ~

         "I hope they don't flush when they fly over our house," Nick commented as the space station appeared over the horizon, its path weaving a diagnonal that would take it right overhead. Appearing larger than Jupiter to its north, the shuttle seemed to weave from port to starboard and back.

         "By the time it hit here, would just look like a large plop of pigeon stuff," Tom replied, laughing.

         "More likely, passing through the stratosphere, it would mutate with some interesting specimens and take flight, hitting one of those space disks the NASA guys have been buzzing about."

*Star**Halfstar**Star*


         Yes, we watched as the space station flew overhead in mid-September, carving an arc across the twilight sky. It did appear to wobble a bit and was signaling portside with an occasional red blink visible to the naked eye. What was it signaling, a left turn? another craft? or were they opening a hatch to flush? It would be a fun adventure to explore, sailing across the open sky. I say sailing because space travel incorporates nautical terms.

         Space adventures are no longer the stuff of 'B' movies, 'Twilight Zone', and you don't need to be 'Superman' to soar high above Earth's atmosphere. I think space adventures are a near-time reality that we will be able to experience in our lifetime, given enough cash or a lack of aversion to going steerage with compressed oxygen in the luggage hold of a commercial shuttle.

         Today, writing space adventures is more the stuff of potential reality than fantasy. If we can imagine it, we can make it happen. That's the stuff of invention and the craft of writing an adventure in the ocean that is outer space.

         Space adventures can be comic or ethereal. Consider the websites offering tours to space, or journeys to the space station. Tourism, politics, or just a good downright adventure for adults and kids in zero gravity. Do you hear each other speak or do you invent a signaling system? How do you replenish your oxygen if your tether comes loose? Can you hear a scream in space?

         Have a plan of attack, not necessarily a battle, but a challenge to overcome and in the success (or failure) effect a change in the universe, or maybe just our world.

         To make your space adventure real for your readers, learn and incorporate some nautical terms. Here are but a couple that relate to our experience above:

         *Bullet*Port The left side of the boat when looking forward. Also called 'red.' When sailing at night, your red light lets other boats know the location of the left side of your vessel. So we knew the shuttle was moving forward, not backing up.

         *Bullet*Starboard The right side of the boat when looking forward. Also called 'green.' When sailing at night, your green light lets other boats know the location of the right side of your vessel. So why didn't we see a green light? Is it possible the space station was trying to stay out of sight of something coming from the moon (just about to rise when it flew over our house)? There's something for your adventurer to consider.

         A believable space adventure incorporates good science, which is relatively easy to find online, much of it understandable even for those of us not rocket scientists. Leading to some creative adventures that blend reality with possibility.

         A good space adventure offers depth of sensory experience, engaging sight, touch, smell, and sound (if you do hear a scream in space, or a crack in the hull), incorporating a sense of wonder with reality's potential. Large portions of any space adventure will take place aboard a spacecraft. Though there is no need to be overly concerned about science in your creation of the spaceship, remember the nautical terms. Your ship can be a military vessel, a space yacht, or perhaps the mass transportation of the future. It can be lavish or stark. This is up to you and the direction you want to go with your story. In a space adventure it's the adventurers and their action that carry the story, give meaning to the adventure.

         And, a space adventure, writing it and reading it, should be fun. Why not give it a try, and if you do I hope you enjoy the ride, both as pilot and passenger (whether or not you've stowed away).

         Here's a place you can start, or revisit for some information on the spacestation and some of the real adventures that have already taken place and perhaps guide your keyboard to pen one of your own*Wink*

                   http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/main/index.html

         Until we next meet, may your adventures be a joy to create and fun to revisit!
Write On!
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading Author IconMail Icon


Editor's Picks

Embark on adventures in outer space envisioned by some of the daring members of our Community ~ and share in the journey with your comment or review*Thumbsup*

 Maria Elena and the Pirates Open in new Window. (18+)
Pirates are gone forever. WRONG! They're just in outer space! And just as vicious.
#221718 by Dad Author IconMail Icon


 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#749456 by Not Available.


 Challenger Rising Prologue and Chapter 1 Open in new Window. (13+)
Stardate May 22, 2249. These are the voyages of the starship Challenger....
#1627468 by Rear Admiral Zassiliss Author IconMail Icon


 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#1553080 by Not Available.


 What Love Began - Part I Open in new Window. (E)
A navy frigate out around Jupitor finds an alien starship and chaos begins
#1177713 by SigmaWind Author IconMail Icon


 Invalid Item Open in new Window.
This item number is not valid.
#1614081 by Not Available.


 
Image Protector
STATIC
"FLIGHT" Open in new Window. (E)
I Traveled to the outer limits of space alone.
#893692 by Kings Author IconMail Icon


 
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Ask & Answer

         I thank you for abiding with me ~ my prior saved selections and comments did not update and many of you first saw blanks. Because of this error of which I was unaware for several days, I've tried to attain some balance by donating the stipend for this week's newsletters to RAOK.

Until we next meet,
Write On!
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading Author IconMail Icon

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