The cynical part of the answer is that I expect to see a good deal more space opera, set far enough in the future as to be disconnected from contemporary issues.
Sometimes the reader will decide something else than the author's intent; this is certainly true of attempts to empirically decipher reality.
At one point I intended to write precursor and sequel novels, about the establishment of the Web and its next evolution, but I am very unlikely to now; they would take place in a different universe.
Creating the fictional background for a game world isn't significantly different from creating a background for fiction.
I don't think anyone wants a reader to be completely lost - certainly not to the point of giving up - but there's something to be said for a book that isn't instantly disposable, that rewards a second reading.
I'm very happy that the New York Times has spoken well of my stuff; who wouldn't be? But it's not a choice I made.
Naturally, the reader has access only to the events I show and the way I show them, but as has been said, there's generally a good deal of ambiguity in that presentation.
People tell me they laughed hard enough to wake their spouses, that they've given away numerous copies to friends, and that it's the one Trek book they'll give to people they wouldn't expect to like others.
The ideal, it seems to me, is to show things happening and allow the reader to decide what they mean.
The language fictional characters use is chosen for effect, at least if the author is concentrating.
The people who don't like it tend to dislike it intensely. That's unfortunate, but not surprising when one deliberately goes against audience expectations.
There are people who believe in an absolutely transparent prose; with every respect for clarity of expression, I don't.
There are readers who want every point to be clearly and unambiguously set forth, and there are those who want to pry ideas and meanings out for themselves.
Well, it's an adventure story, and a Bildungsroman, of course, but there was also the intention to describe a culture that had been seen in rather narrow terms.
I long for the simplicity of theatre. I want lessons learned, comeuppances delivered, people sorted out, all before your bladder gets distractingly full. That's what I want. What I know is what we all know, whether we'll admit it or not: every attempt to impose the roundness of a well-made play on reality produces a disaster. Life just isn't so, nor will it be made so.Collection: Reality
We're all living on borrowed time. The trick is to come up with works of sufficient interest to pay off the debt.Collection: Debt
Every book is three books, after all; the one the writer intended, the one the reader expected, and the one that casts its shadow when the first two meet by moonlight.Collection: Book
Observe, don't imitate.Collection: Writing
We're not lost. We're locationally challengedCollection: Lost