References in my “Book of the Peace Dossier” stories
My three contributions to The Book of the Peace Dossier – “A Farewell to R.M.S.”, “A Prelude to a Prelude”, and “A Shift in Focus” – were written in a single sitting a few months after I finished “A Farewell to Arms”. You can read all three for free on the Obverse Books website!
Below the cut, expect spoilers for those three vignettes as well as “A Farewell to Arms” itself, which I recently covered in a similar fashion. Please consider buying The Book of the Peace from Obverse Books!
A Farewell to R.M.S.
This story expands significantly on the brief line in “A Farewell to Arms” about the history of the planet R.M.S.
The Bookkeepers didn’t used to be called Bookkeepers. This is because, as astute readers will note, Huxley had called them the “Plume Coteries”. Named, perhaps, after the majestic multicolored birds they used to ride!
The Great Houses arrived on the planet in a vast cathedral, one of the 91-forms which The Book of the War mentions serving as bulky embassies for the Great Houses. The description “vast cathedral” links back to my earliest piece of published fiction: the poem “A Vast Cathedral” in the fan anthology Shit Trips: Volume 1. (I am forever grateful to that anthology’s editor for giving me my start!) That poem never explicitly connected to the rest of the universe, so I used this Dossier vignette to tie up the loose thread.
Credit for “House Bluewood” goes to my friend Nilso, who offered a list of spectacularly creative Great House names inspired by great TV composers, like House Marigola. Of course, I summarily ignored all those options and picked his simple, nature-sounding “Bluewood” instead. Thanks again Nilso! I imagine House Bluewood to be a counterpart to the House of Redloom, perhaps with a connection to the Lune Forest?
The obtuse description of the Great House representative – a whirring silver creature which cocks its head and speaks in a buzzy voice about its generation unit – and the Bookkeeper’s description of it as a “House Military bitch” and instruction to “sit” – might seem extraneously crude. But I promise there’s a very good reason.
The “agreements” the Houses have made with other powers include the treaty Chris Cwej negotiated with the Daleks in Dead Romance, giving them time technology in exchange for their neutrality in the War. Surely nothing could go wrong there!
The Bookeepers’ field agent deficit is a problem that will be solved sometime soon, perhaps using whatever technology they’re trading for the planet. We hear more about the Houses’ treaties with other powers in the next vignette:
A Prelude to a Prelude
Long before I was invited to the Dossier, I wrote a little story called “A Prelude to Arms” which was published in the fan anthology Shit Trips: Volume 2.5; it’s also been reproduced on this blog. That drabble follows the two characters who provide the italicized commentary in “A Farewell to Arms”, and it ends just before they start watching the reconstruction of the body’s biodata.
As a prelude to that prelude, “A Prelude to a Prelude” takes place during the first four lines of “A Prelude to Arms”, told from the point of view of the she/her technician rather than the he/him.
Primer for the Spiral Politic (Post-War Edition) has never before appeared in a story proper, but it was excerpted on the “back cover” of all the Faction Paradox Protocols audios. Given its encyclopedia-entry-like format, I think it was an early version of the Book of the War concept.
The message-boards are a loving reference to the old Faction Paradox forums and rec.arts.drwho, which I’ve had much fun poring over through the years for insights into the Faction Paradox universe and series history. The Emperor is the Emperor of the Needle.
Originally, this vignette was an imaginary The Book of the War excerpt about the Peace, but the editor was afraid it might mislead readers, so I cut it up and added the context narrative. For posterity’s sake, here’s the full text of the original entry, with the missing part(s) in bold:
THE PEACE [All Sides: Events] The War in Heaven was defined by its lengthy entrenchment phase. Both sides were bunkered-down for decades, continually reinforcing their noospheres and meeting only in minor skirmishes. However, less well-known to the Needleborn are the many attempts to find an end to the War even during this time. One of the first of these attempts took the form of direct negotiation with enemy representatives on Dronid. These talks came to an abrupt end when the Cataclysm began mere hours later, but they were responsible for paving the way for the Utterlost Accords, which first cemented the concept of “Hot Peace” in House Military ideology. This doctrine was reinforced a few years later by the Venue Accords, which were as high-potential as they were short. Some of the more inventive Remote suspected the Venue Accords to be yet another of the many Peace hoaxes orchestrated by the Faction during the first several decades of the War; of course, the truth has become more obvious in recent years. There were also many attempts to find a path to the Peace without negotiation. [REDACTED (FOR NOW)] Another experiment, secretively initiated by the more traditional Houses in response to the perceived failures of House Military biodiversification projects, involved a dramatic expansion of the Nine Homeworlds project. All of the newly-created, specially-primed “lesser Homeworlds” were given their own enemies to fight in microscopic models of the greater War. Confined as they were in bottle universes and oxbow timelines, none of the resultant conflicts approached the scope or intensity of the War in Heaven, but they provided “homegrown” inspiration for strategies and technologies that could prove useful against the enemy. (One example, notable in hindsight, involved a race of mechanical invaders who gladly agreed to try their metaphorical hands against a few Homeworlds in exchange for the time technology that would give them a fair shake. The sole Homeworld to escape their assault did so through not military innovation but self-enfeeblement: by returning to organic models of childbirth, then enacting the ritual of the “entrenched last stand” of gallant victimhood, they cried out to the unknown future, “We are the ‘deserving-at-war’, rescue us! Won’t someone think of the children!” Their battle against the invaders ended in an uncomfortable détente. Like all the others, this experiment ended in failure, discontinued when the number of lost Homeworlds became too distasteful to bear for the same traditional Houses that initially sponsored the project. No; the Peace, when it finally came, was achieved much differently…
[2023 edit: Aristide Twain helped me to fill in the redacted gap above, and the result was published as “The Peace: A Lost Primer” on the Faction Paradox website!]
According to The Book of the War, the “direct negotiation with enemy representatives on Dronid” was conducted by the diplomat whose corpse features prominently in Alien Bodies.
“Hot Peace”, like the Utterlost Accords, comes from Simon Bucher-Jones’ The Book of the Peace connecting material. The Venue Accords were featured in The Book of the War. One of the Faction’s many Peace hoaxes was described in “A Story of the Peace” from A Romance in Twelve Parts, although you can probably think of at least one more.
The House Military biodiversification projects, and the traditional Houses’ corresponding squeamishness, were mentioned in The Book of the War. I was first introduced to oxbow timelines by Weapons Grade Snake Oil, and a Homeworld in a bottle universe featured in Dead Romance, as did the treaty with a race of mechanical invaders; these Invaders were also mentioned in “A Star’s View of Caroline” from Burning with Optimism’s Flames (which I’ve written a little bit about). The “uncomfortable détente” framing came from a Tumblr post by @dajo42.
Simon Bucher-Jones very graciously allowed me to interpolate a sample from one of his blog posts, “Faction Paradox Stands”. Simon wrote it right after watching The Day of the Doctor, and it was attributed to a fictional “The Book of the Peace” long before any such anthology was conceived by Obverse. I thought it was only appropriate that some part of the post made it into the actual release, even if just in the Dossier!
A Shift in Focus
In my mind, the neurosurgeon whose actions punctuate Huxley’s thoughts is a partition of her brain operating one or two of her arms/claws. I thought about adding in that description as a “twist” at the end, but I couldn’t figure out how to make it work, and I was under a tight deadline :)
The gender of the Shift’s body was never specified in the original story, nor is it specified here. But it’s covered with white tattoos and it was present at a timeship skirmish. This references two prior Faction Paradox stories, both by Lawrence Miles: the comic “Political Animals”, where the Mayakai are shown to have white tattoos, and the audio A Labyrinth of Histories, where we meet Demetra Kine’s faceless and notoriously hard-to-kill posthuman “trackers” in the middle of a timeship battle.
I realized after sending off “A Farewell to Arms” that it wasn’t clear enough that the Shift’s body’s tattoos weren’t physically changing but just “shifting” in meaning through mind of the beholder. I made sure to spell that out here!
The bit about the buyer ties in with the deleted Huxley scene and cut Nambiro plotline I explained in the “A Farewell to Arms” notes. Space HQ is a reference to the recurring location in the 60s Dalek stories. The airships in Czechoslovakia are a story for another day…
















