Aunghadhail, the many variations.

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I have been reading Shadows blade's story about Rohanna and find it entertaining. There are, however some unanswered questions.

I think that several Authors have written about Aunghadhail, though I do not remember who. In one story, Aunghadhail is killed. I do not know who originated these tales about Aunghadhail, though in this story it seems possible that Rohanna and Aunghadhail may come to a truce of sorts.

The "liturgy" around Aunghadhail seems so authentic that I thought perhaps there really was an ancient Queen like her, or that there really was some sort of folklore or mythology like it. In the last few months Google has gotten even more stupid and limited than previous, so the exclusion of her in search results does not necessarily mean anything.

Still enjoying it.

Gwen

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Aunghadhail

Appeared in one of the very first (if not the first) Whateley Universe stories, The character Nikki Riley, code named: Fey, written by Maggie Fenson herself, was a boy (Nicholas) who manifested into a beautiful redheaded magic user, that the spirit of Aunghadhail co-existed with Nikki in their female body.

Aunghadhail, a very powerful queen of the sidhe five fold court helped Nikki to udnerstand and use magic. The character grew very powerful as the stories progressed and after Maggie stopped writing canon stories the other canon authors "killed off" the old queen's spirit, leaving Nikki the sole owner of their once shared body and much of the tremendous power the dual spirited girl could wield was also removed with the death of Aunghadhail.

The character has and still appears in canon stories and fanfics.

All of what Shadowsblades has written about Ro's interactions with Aunghadhail coincide with the timeline before Aunghadhail's death.

A lot of the mythos in the Whateley universe spawns from Irish folklore and the Cthulhu Mythos, sort of a blending of the two. So you see the Irish Gaelic word Sidhe (pronounced Shee and translates to Faerie) used as the main name/title for all the faerie races.

Where Maggie Fenson came up with the name to begin with, only she could say.

We the willing, led by the unsure. Have been doing so much with so little for so long,
We are now qualified to do anything with nothing.

Cthulhu Mythos and H.P. Lovecraft

Thank you. Now it all makes sense.

I've been reading Sci Fi since the mid 1950's or earlier and can certainly understand writers in a group passing ideas around. The practice used to be and perhaps still is very common.

I think that "any writer worth their salt has written some demented poetry" and had their material stolen.

I am enjoying this and did not realize that some/much of this was actual collaboration.

Much peace

Gwen

shared and non-canon

We are probably close to 20 authors total among those who have written for the canon storyline, though never were all 20 active at the same time. Perhaps the most active at one time was around the time we added the second generation stories (the ones that begin in 2016 instead of 2006) because at that time we had 6-8 authors writing in the original timeline and added another six authors to the team specifically working on gen 2 characters. But while 20 authors working on a shared universe seems a lot, that's actually just the canon authors. There are probably more than 40 authors (that we know of) who have used enough of the concepts and characters of the WU that they felt the need to tag the stories as fan fiction of the universe (or as we call it these days, WhatIF - Whateley Independent Fiction). Some of that is REEEEEEally non-canon. As in, not only are the world mechanics and deeper stories misrepresented, but characters that are well know are portrayed doing very uncharacteristic things and so forth. On the other hand, some really great stories are out there that if you didn't see the tag, you'd never know they were non-canon. Some of these have been adopted into the canon (Sleethr's "Whisper" storyline, for example) because some element of the story expanded on something that we wanted to include in the canon and the story was well enough written that it would be silly of us not to just include what was there... in Sleethr's case, he expanded the development (and spent a lot of time in mail and PM's with me to get it right) on GEO... which has gone a bit off the radar in the timeline for the moment... but will return with a vengeance in the Spring 2008 time frame.

Shadowsblade's work is all What-IF (non-canon), and his representations of some of the characters departs a bit from continuity... doesn't mean they're bad stories, but that sort of thing CAN be confusing if you read a canon story and a non-canon one and you don't see the tags (or they aren't included properly) and you try to reconcile the differences in character. It is actually part of the copyright / usage agreement that people who aren't canon need to include the blurb... but shy of getting legal on someone, there's not much but sound like jerks. And we don't want to resort to legal recourse for someone who is just having fun writing stories. We'll save that for the people who are trying to sell stuff they don't own. :P

But yes, within the canon material... there's quite a bit of collaboration. Sometimes more than others, it takes a LOT of work to round robin a story but there are a number of things that were written with everyone contributing scenes to a coordinating author. We all review work that is approaching finish, which is how we manage the continuity problems as well as we do (not that there aren't continuity issues... there are lots). And a lot of the long range planning happens via email exchange or chat... so even when an individual is writing a specific story from one of their own protagonist characters (we often share supporting characters, but rarely write from the perspective of someone else's protagonists), there are plenty of concepts, foreshadowing, red herrings, and things from other plotlines that can be included. Which is where a lot of the depth comes from, I feel... because we've been seeding hints of things into stories that have yet to blossom 14 years later... but they WILL, assuming we all live that long. :P

Kristin

20 Authors, Wow !

I was not aware that it got that large. I really liked Sleethr's stories also. It seems like the authors here come from all walks of life. At my age, it just seems like a good idea to finish what is already on the stove.

There are some authors who have passed through here, and moved on to other things. Some were so good that we should feel blessed to have been able to read what they published here.

Gwen

Speak O' the devil!

Sleethr was the one who talked me into joining and start posting here at BC. Then after I saw how great the people were here, dragged shadowsblade over kicking and screaming. Okay he really didn't kick and scream about it but it'll be fun to see what he says about this post, since it is his fanfic character that got this thread started.

We the willing, led by the unsure. Have been doing so much with so little for so long,
We are now qualified to do anything with nothing.

Loner

I seem to be a loner, though it is not by choice. I am regularly in contact with one other person here, though I don't know why? Mostly just do things my own damn way.

Gwen

What in the heck is GOO?

I keep seeing them mentioned in stories but have never seen what they are defined? Any links please?

Shadows Blade's Rohanna?

I think I saw something in the first two stories? Apparently they were designed by their Mommies to be the nastiest of the nastiest sexual beings like ever?

See

H.P. Lovecraft's Cthlulu (spelling uncertain) or essentially a primordial builder destroyer of the world. Great (grand) Old One... Mythological engine of creation?

Bull's eye :)

Or as close as needed. GOO is an acronym for Great Old Ones. Ancient gods of the Cthulhu universe so alien in both appearance and thought that the mere sight of one is enough to drive mortals insane. In the Whateley universe most of the GOO are asleep and their presence is only seen through their much less powerful minions.

We the willing, led by the unsure. Have been doing so much with so little for so long,
We are now qualified to do anything with nothing.

goo

In the source mythos (Lovecraft and others), the GOO are incomprehensibly alien and powerful. Powerful in the sense that... they destroy entire star civilizations as a result of a hiccup in the night. Or because a twinge from an old war wound caused them to roll over. We don't know why they do what they do or why they sleep. We "can't" know... because they are so alien they might breath to start their vehicle, make coffee to reward a star for twinkling, or close an eye because a black hole is making too much noise, like a gnat buzzing around the most powerful microphone in the universe. In fact... all of THAT is far too human for it to even come close to allowing us to understand them.

Gotta love Lovecraft. :P If you're a horror fan and haven't... his work is available online (long past public domain): http://www.hplovecraft.com/writings/texts/

If you're not a horror fan. Don't. It WILL keep you up at night.

Rohanna and Aunghadhail might

shadowsblade's picture

Rohanna and Aunghadhail might have made a truce, but as I wrote their interactions, the old queen that was never wrong would come out and spoil what goodwill had been done. But for the most part in the Drows mind too much water had gone under the bridge for a peace to be declared between them.
that is why when Aunghadhail died off....Rohanna made sure to show the teen Fey the abject horror of what Aung had done back then and not to repeat that path in her new life and to be better than the ' long dead queen'

But I had my vision of Aunghadhail leave a living legacy that will come out in parts as time flows on...if you read that Easter egg yet and I do put them in my stories to see if anyone finds them!

ask questions I am always here for them!

Proud member of the Whateley Academy Drow clan/collective