Saturday, October 19, 2019

Futuristic Fun with Old Ideas by Elsa Jade

Fall 2019 marks the fourth season of the Intergalactic Dating Agency—a sprawling multi-author universe of science fiction romances featuring aliens who’ve come to Earth searching for love. At the start of this season, the IDA universe was already 63 books strong, and I’ve penned a dozen of them!

From the beginning, the IDA universe was meant to be big, adventurous, romantic fun—for the readers and for the authors. Strangely, science fiction romance hasn’t really had its breakout moment. Because it’s a sub-genre of romance not yet as familiar to a wide audience as some other sub-genres, the first season of IDA authors landed on “alien mail order brides” as our core concept. Mail order brides is a favorite trope for many romance readers, and we thought it would be an easy crossover from lonely men looking for convenient companionship to lonely aliens seeking same!

Tropes sometimes get a bad rap in genre fiction when tropes are confused with clichés. Tropes are commonly repeated and readily identifiable story ideas—including characterization, plot points, themes, and more—that have proven their appeal over time. Clichés are badly done tropes! Done right, a trope signals to readers who enjoy that particular story idea that a new story might appeal to them as well.

One fun game as a writer is grabbing a trope with both hands…and then running wildly amok. J That’s what I’ve done with each of my trilogies within the Intergalactic Dating Agency universe. On top of my original Big Sky Alien Mail Order Brides trilogy, I sprinkled historical romance Regency tropes—Dukes! Rakes! Lords!—into my second Black Hole Brides trilogy.

BLACK HOLE BRIDES TRILOGY
With the last complete trilogy (which is actually four books!) I roped in Western tropes for the Cyborg Cowboys of Carbon County. My most recent trilogy which launched earlier this month includes drops of Atlantis tropes—and thus was launched the Mermaids of Montana!

CYBORG COWBOYS OF CARBON COUNTY
When I was brainstorming my most recent four-book trilogy (hey, it’s alien math!) I knew my alien heroes had crash-landed their spaceship somewhere in Montana, not too near the Intergalactic Dating Agency outpost where the rest of my Big Sky Alien Mail Order Brides stories are based. Thinking about what a handful of sexy aliens might’ve done to fit in with the locals… Cowboys, of course! And because I love alliteration the cowboys became cyborgs—the Cyborg Cowboys of…of Carbon County, yeah!

Cowboys (at least the romance version) are strong, sturdy, silent types with gentle hands and big, um, belt buckles. And they take good care of their land and the creatures on it. Cyborg supersoldiers are also strong, sturdy, and silent. Okay, maybe their hands are more murder-y than gentle, but see how those tropes fit together sorta? And my alien cyborg warriors didn’t crash with horses on their spaceship, but they do have an alien beast they rode into battle. Almost the same, right? And since they’d escaped a bad situation in space, they are even more protective of their adopted home, Earth. How lucky they have the muscles for all that protecting. J

Splicing common romance tropes into science fiction is like when you were a kid crashing your Star Wars TIE fighter into the Barbie Dream House…and then Barbie and Ken fall in love and have a Jawa baby! Er, wait… Maybe that was just me? J Anyway! I use romance tropes in my science fiction romance stories to make the strange science-y, space-y parts more accessible.

And now with my Mermaids of Montana, I’m diving into all sorts of undersea tropes. (Confession: Mostly I’m thinking of Jason Momoa’s Aquaman…) All the mystery and beauty of the Earth’s oceans might seem like an odd overlay for the middle of Montana, but prehistoric Montana was once covered by the Sundance Sea, a series of invasions by the Earth’s waters over what we now think of as a place far from oceans. So making Montana a home for mermaids isn’t too out of this world.

Morphing the long-time beloved into something unfamiliar but hopefully beguiling sounds like an alien shapeshifter’s tricks. J But playing with tropes is definitely an author trick too. Unless authors are actually aliens… Maybe that would explain why our heads are always in the clouds!

If you are new to science fiction romance, the first book of the
Big Sky Alien Mail Order Brides series, ALPHA STAR, is available free at http://www.elsajade.com/book/alpha-star/

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Bio: Elsa Jade is the paranormal romance and science fiction romance pen name for Jessa Slade. In addition to the Intergalactic Dating Agency, Elsa Jade has written the Wolves of Angels Rest paranormal shifter romance series and the Obsidian Rim space opera romance trilogy, the third book of which just released on October 15. The next two books of the Mermaids of Montana trilogy come out in October and November.






11 comments:

Sarah Raplee said...

"Big, adventurous romantic fun" - sounds just like what I need, a fun escape from reality. I loved your books written as Jessa Slade, cant wait to enjoy these!Thank you for Guesting with us at RTG.

Dora Bramden said...

Ridem cyborg �� Very entertaining post on how you blend tropes to make fresh fiction.

Elsa Jade said...

Sarah, thanks for having me on to geek out about sexy aliens! :D

Elsa Jade said...

Dora, tis said there is nothing new under the sun, but in science fiction romance there are a lot of suns!

Luanna Stewart said...

Okay, my first thought was 'this author must be from outer space if she thinks there can be mermaids in Montana' but now that you've explained about the primordial oceans its all extremely plausible. I love how you played with the tropes. Romance readers, of which I'm one, love their tropes - a marriage of convenience works just as well in 2019 as it does in 1819 so why not with interstellar hotties?

Judith Ashley said...

Elsa, it's so obvious you love what you do! And your readers love that you do it whether you are Elsa or Jessa. Thank you for joining us to celebrate Super Hero/ine month here at Romancing The Genres. While you focused on your Super Heros, I can only imagine they find romance with a Super Heroine.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

Alien cowboys sounds fun. I also write science fiction romance. One of the tropes I used were space pirates and that was fun. Space marines. LOL I love this genre. Best luck with the mermaids and who doesn't want to think about Jason Momoa

Elsa Jade said...

'this author must be from outer space' Lol, Luanna! One of my favorite parts of paranormal romance and science fiction romance is running amok with all that pesky reality. :D However, True Love is the one truth I never fudge!

Elsa Jade said...

Judith, thank you for letting me share my super shirtless heroes! And yes, I think I like my super men because I want all my heroines to have the best!

Elsa Jade said...

Susan, isn't our genre awesome? It's so fun to take the tropes -- along with the problems and choices of humanity -- and spin it all out into new spacetimes.

Maggie Lynch said...

As you know, I'm a superfan of your writing. It is amazing to see your analysis of tropes and how you go about setting up your ideas and trilogies (quadrilogies?). I also love that you don't take yourself too seriously--most of the time.

I admit that though I can see tropes when I read, I don't see it when I'm writing. I see characters winding their way through difficult situations. It's only after I've written I see the tropes. (big sigh).

One day I'll grow up to be more like you. Actually, I won't. I'm too stubborn to change. :)