Free Culture Book Club — WNV Universe — Other

Hi! You might want to know that this post continues ideas from the following.

This week, our Free Culture Book Club reads stories from the WNV Universe.

The book's covering, featuring a female silhouette set against a larger tusked silhouette, in a grassy field

To give this series some sense of organization, check out some basic facts without much in the way of context.

  • Full Title: An Old Enemy, Last Bridge, Operation: Firestorm, and True Love’s Kiss
  • Location: https://codeberg.org/SethPatterson/WNVUniverse
  • Released: 2020 – present
  • License: CC BY-SA
  • Creator: Seth Patterson
  • Medium: Prose (so far)
  • Length: Approximately twelve thousand words (in completed stories)
  • Content Advisories: Religious themes, violence, warfare, mention of labor camps, sexism,

This should go without saying—even though I plan to repeat it with every Book Club installment—but Content Advisories do not suggest any sort of judgment on my part, only topics that come up in the work that I noticed and might benefit from a particular mood or head space for certain audiences. I provide it to help you make a decision, rather than a decision in and of itself.

WNV Universe Stories

The blurb for the repository.

The WNV universe is a free culture story world featuring Woethief Nyla Valora as the main character.

This repository contains stories and outlines for future stories. Stories can be any genre as long as they take place in the WNV Universe.

I should note that the project has another seventy-five-or-so thousand words in stories marked as in-progress. I opted not to look at those, at least for now, given that the repository has some recent activity.

What Works Well?

While the story has some unpleasant problems that I’ll talk about in the next section, I do want to note that True Love’s Kiss has the best writing in this series, by far. The story has actual themes that it takes seriously, and generally doesn’t repeat itself or describe things that don’t need a description.

What Works…Less Well?

I have no idea how these stories relate to each other or The Woethief. As quoted above, the Codeberg repository claims that they exist as part of “a free culture story world featuring Woethief Nyla Valora as the main character,” but I don’t see any evidence of that in most of the stories, except in the sense that universes tend to have a lot of space for unconnected things to happen.

Despite my mild praise for True Love’s Kiss above, I do want to note its specific problems, which seem far larger than the other stories. The gender politics, in particular, feels repulsive, with everybody obsessing over the ownership and sexual purity of a young woman, and even worrying about how much of her body other people might see. And it has the nerve to try to contrast this sharply with selling women into slavery without even a hint of irony that their freedom also involves a shocking amount of controlling behavior and obsession with their genitals. Maybe related, the story also makes me a liar in last week’s post, in that it has apparently decided that it really does portray a generic fantasy universe where the non-human characters act exactly like human ethnicities with more prosthetics.

Likewise, the other story with recognizable connections to the main world, An Old Enemy, tries to atone for genocide with eugenics, which…I don’t know, maybe don’t go there? It seems problematic, at the absolute least…

Opportunities

The project has the Codeberg repository mentioned above, which seems at least somewhat active, though only Patterson appears to have contributed, so far.

What’s Adaptable?

Lealynn’s knife probably wins the day, in all these stories, though we get hints of airships, other powerful weapons, and meet Crystal Comfort with her ill-defined powers.

Next

Coming up next week, we’ll listen to another music album, Cauac Ox.

As mentioned previously, by the way, the list of potential works to discuss has run low, so I need to ask for help, again. If you know of any works—or want to create them—that fit these posts (fictional, narrative, Free Culture, available to the public, and not by creators who we’ve already discussed), please tell me about them. Every person who points me to at least one appropriate work with an explanation will receive a free membership on my Buy Me a Coffee page.

Anyway, while we wait for that, what did everybody else think about these stories?


Credits: The header image is the book’s cover, by Autumn Patterson, released under the same terms as the book.


No webmentions were found.

By commenting, you agree to follow the blog's Code of Conduct and that your comment is released under the same license as the rest of the blog. Or do you not like comments sections? Continue the conversation in the #entropy-arbitrage chatroom on Matrix…

 Tags:   freeculture   bookclub

Sign up for My Newsletter!

Get monthly * updates on Entropy Arbitrage posts, additional reading of interest, thoughts that are too short/personal/trivial for a full post, and previews of upcoming projects, delivered right to your inbox. I won’t share your information or use it for anything else. But you might get an occasional discount on upcoming services.
Or… Mailchimp 🐒 seems less trustworthy every month, so you might prefer to head to my Buy Me a Coffee ☕ page and follow me there, which will get you the newsletter three days after Mailchimp, for now. Members receive previews, if you feel so inclined.
Email Format
* Each issue of the newsletter is released on the Saturday of the Sunday-to-Saturday week including the last day of the month.
Can’t decide? You can read previous issues to see what you’ll get.