Trang

Nhãn

Thứ Ba, 10 tháng 3, 2015

The Literary Genre Of Special Forces Military Fiction Novels

By Leslie Ball


When you love to read, you are always looking for new directions to take yourself, to explore new genres. One such genre that you might wish to consider is the war novel, or special forces military fiction novels. Sometimes, when the author has the opportunity to hide behind a cloak of anonymity, he can spin a more truthful yarn than he could if he were writing a non-fiction feature article.

Most 21st century war novels are set in just about every continent apart from North America. While this generation of war stories will be mainly about the Gulf wars and the Balkan conflicts, the Baby Boomer generation were generating stories about the Vietnam War. Their parents were living and writing about Korea and World War II. The next generation could well feature inter-planetary conflicts.

The special forces, such as the Navy SEALS, are a popular topic. Special ops teams tend to be smaller units, making it easier for the author to fully develop characters. Special ops teams also seem to get the most gripping, fast-paced stories.

The act of authoring a war novel can help a soldier-turned-writer come to terms with what he had to face "over there." It can serve as a catharsis. This could be why so many authors churn out series' of novels. Take Josef Black, for example, and his series called, "The Blades." His novels have been set in Colombia, London, Paris, and Las Vegas.

In a similar genre but going in a completely different direction is the "AFTER" post-apocalyptic series by author, Scott Nicholson. The first volume in this series is called "Shock, " in which a massive solar storm kills billions of people and demolishes the world's technological infrastructure. A handful of survivors struggle to survive while a new, violent, population evolves.

For a real adventure, try military sci-fi. These novels take true stories based on historical conflicts and then amend them so they are set in the future and involve galaxies, not just countries. An example of a futuristic setting that refers back to ancient history is the Star Trek TNG episode where Captain Picard is in a situation similar to that of King Gilgamesh of Mesopotamia in the third millennium B. C.

Readers have been captivated by war stories since the days of Virgil and Homer and the Aenid and the Iliad, respectively. Although the stories and the characters themselves may not be true to life, it is possible to cram a lot of realistic detail in the descriptions of the scenery, characters and how they lived.

So, what next for 21st century war stories and beyond? Emerging stories will most likely concern the emerging cold war between Russia and a growing contingent of the western world. What is really going to set the cat amongst the pigeons is if the Navy decide, as they are in the process of doing, whether to include women in special ops units like the Navy SEALs. We could see a whole new generation of heroins and an added dimension of human wartime relationships.




About the Author:



Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét

Tổng số lượt xem trang