Since publishing Book 1 of The Cursed Ground, I’ve started to get questions from readers about the world the story is set in. I like to let the story tell itself, so I avoid including a lot of backstory in the narrative. But for those who are interested, I thought I would set out some of the very broad concepts behind the fictional world I’m using.
Just to note, I’m releasing The Cursed Ground as a series of five shorter books. Book 1, The Child-Stealers, is already on the market, and Book 2, Children of the Keeper, is slated for release on May 5, 2015.
In terms of genre, I conceive of The Cursed Ground as historical fiction. However, the book might fit better in the market category of historical fantasy. I don’t use magic or the uncanny (much) in the story, but I admit to speculative elements, simply because the historical period I’m dealing with is understood only in general terms.
Here’s a bit of the big picture. The Cursed Ground takes place on the Earth, but at a remote time period when:
- Humans commonly live for hundreds of years.
- Cultural memory is very stable, because the long human life-span allows considerable overlap among generations.
- All humans speak the same language (well, almost all — you’ll have to keep reading to get to that).
- The names of people and places all have an understandable meaning, because of the common language and durable cultural memory. For that reason, all names in the story have a meaning in English, since that’s the language I’m writing in.
- The human population is expanding rapidly into many millions.
- Human civilization and technology have reached a level of development much higher than the modern world might expect.
- The world is becoming increasingly violent and unstable.
- The world is facing a major extinction event, but no human knows it.
A writer of speculative fiction must undertake a considerable task of world-building. In conceiving the world of The Cursed Ground, here are some of my assumptions about how the story fits into our understanding of the human past:
- The story is broadly based on the account given in the Biblical book of Genesis.
- Genesis is taken as an accurate historical and cosmological account, but not necessarily in the way that is often presented by religions of the world.
- The story assumes a very old Earth, but a relatively young human race.
- The conventional academic historical chronology is assumed to be accurate only back to about the mid-second millennium before the common era (BCE).
- The methods used to date all kinds of objects that researchers dig up from the ground are probably only accurate back to about 4,000 years before the present (BP). The older an object is, the greater the likelihood that the ascribed date is off, perhaps by orders of magnitude.
- During the early history of humankind, rainfall did occur on the Earth. This is a detail that matters, as many Bible readers take the view that it had never rained before the global flood. In the world of The Cursed Ground, Genesis 2:5,6 refers to a much earlier phase before the appearance of humans.
Here are some other articles I’ve written that might shed light on these various assumptions:
- Writer of Genesis: Moses or Someone Else?
- Why the Majority Is Usually Wrong
- What Would We Be Like if We Lived for Hundreds of Years?
- How Much Does Archaeology Really Reveal?
- How Much Do We Really Know About Human History?
- The Way Things Are, the Way Things Were, and What Is True
I recognize that many of the assumptions I’ve mentioned here could spark controversy. I don’t mind discussing my rationales, but in the end I’m writing a story, so I don’t intend to get into ideological arguments with people who disagree with the way I’ve built the world of The Cursed Ground. It’s fiction, after all.
ARK — 24 April 2015
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