Henry Neilsen (He/Him)

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131 Following
139 Posts
Sci-fi/thriller writer. Occasionally writes articles about things I care about. Lefty Snowflake. Art is political. Warhammer40k enthusiast. Editing what I hope will be my debut novel. Previous work here: https://linktr.ee/henryneilsen
@TwilightSunder good luck with the job search! When you get sorted, reach out to me and I might still be able to get a special edition to you! Otherwise, it'll be available to order online pretty much wherever!

Fan of THE EXPANSE, THE MARTIAN, or BATTLESTAR GALACTICA?
If so, head to https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/henryneilsen/sunward-sky-a-novel to register your interest for the Kickstarter campaign for my latest novel, SUNWARD SKY, coming Q4 2024.

I’m incredibly proud to announce that signups are now available for the novel adaptation of popular podcast Sunward Sky, the science fiction drama that first aired in 2020, born in the depths of Melbourne lockdown. People who back this new project on Kickstarter will receive a paperback book with all-new custom artwork by artist Jon Stubbington.

It’s mindblowing to think that what started as a COVID project to occupy my humming brain has now been downloaded more than 70,000 times, has a 4.5 star average on Spotify with nearly 100 ratings. It even briefly broke into the top 100 Science Fiction Podcasts on Apple in 2022. This response has blown me away, considering I have never actively promoted or advertised it, and I am extremely thankful for all the people who have listened to it.

However, I always knew the story wasn’t quite as finessed as I knew it could be. I was writing it weekly for episodic purposes and briefly revising before each recording.
With this new novel edition, it’s given me a chance to revise the plot, rework the writing, condense, tighten and improve the story. It moves faster, it’s leaner, it’s more suspenseful, and I feel it’s now become the story I knew it could have been.

When the Kickstarter hits its goal, it will be a great launchpad for the release of the standard edition next year, and I would also love to hit a stretch goal to hire a professional voice actor for a new audiobook version.
I must thank you again for your generous support, and encourage you to go to the link and register your interest in the novelisation of Sunward Sky. If you felt like telling a sci-fi fan friend or two, I’d be most grateful.
Thank you so much for first listening, and soon reading.
Henry Neilsen

@TwilightSunder hi Jordan, I'm not sure if you're on here, but I have set up the Kickstarter for a physical copy of Sunward Sky, if you're interested!

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/henryneilsen/sunward-sky-a-novel

@henryneilsen I finished it! It took me a while longer than I thought it would. What an absolute ride.

The juxtaposition of Alyssa's kindness against the harsh near-future nearly-dead Earth and the cruel working conditions of those aboard... I don't know if I have words, but I had a lot of feelings. Thank you for making this. I've told my brother, an avid podcast listener, about Sunward Sky.

I definitely cried near the end.

@TwilightSunder thank you so much, I'm glad you enjoyed it, and I'm glad that juxtaposition hit home. I think being kind even in the face of darkness is a very important thing for us as people.

I do intend on remastering/editing it and releasing it as a book (along with getting a proper voice actor for the podcast) probably next year, so make sure you're following it on whatever platform for when I start doing all that stuff, if you're interested. Just need to finish my current projects.

Thanks very much for listening, I really appreciate it.

@TwilightSunder great to hear, I hope you enjoy it!
@henryneilsen Another listener! Gonna listen to it while I'm at work tonight.

This is probably the last post celebrating the downloads of Sunward Sky, but 50,000 plays is about 49,999 more than I ever thought it would get. I started writing it and releasing it more as an exercise than anything else, because I was in the middle of Lockdown.
The first season went out and you can see it went nowhere, as did the first part of the second season. I'm not sure what happened but at some point people started listening to it. Which was a bit of a shock as I'd half abandoned it.
Like, I was thinking "I should finish this, some day" but it didn't seem to matter because, like, nobody was listening to it. It was done, y'know? Who cares.
Then one day I noticed it had been listened to over 2000 times in a week, which for a podcast with no advertising...
I checked my insta, and I had a few messages from people who were asking when the story was going to be finished. One of the reviews on apple podcasts expressed their disappointment that it wasn't completed.
And suddenly I knew I had to finish it. Not at some arbitrary point in the future, but very soon. So I finished my plans for the remaining six episodes and set to work.
In the end, it made it onto the top 100 downloaded sci fi podcasts on apple podcasts one week, and it's continued to have a steady listenership ever since. Not bad for something I recorded with Ableton lite, free downloads and no professional sound treatment gear.
That said, the way it was written basically means the project was released as a first-ish draft. There are definitely things I'd like to do differently, and there is a bigger story that I'd love to tell, and more deliberately.
When this project started it was a bit of a joke. All the characters are named after cricket players, and I just wanted to write something set on a spaceship. But it became a story that, apparently, a lot of people have connected with.
So maybe, one day, maybe soon, I'll go back and polish the story I started, to hone the rough edges and work through it and turn it into a book. I think I'd like that. In the meantime, for anyone who's ever listened, thank you so much for joining me on the journey.
And if you haven't heard of my podcast, why not give it a go? I like it, and hey, it's free. What could go wrong. Keep an eye and an ear out for that updated and revised version in the future. It's Called Sunward Sky, and it's a story about doing the right thing even when the world is against you. And it's set on a spaceship. Available on all podcast platforms.

Thanks for reading, if you did.

@katerberg that's fair. It gave me very mixed feelings.

@katerberg I agree, but also! I think that was kind of the point? It seems to have this constant thematic thing about how much it hates the weaponisation of nostalgia, and the fact that it's so self aware. Like, it *starts* with a shot for shot remake of the opening scene, and then agent Smith staring into the camera and saying "Warner Bros made me do it", after *bugs bunny" pulls him out of retirement. So the rest of the movie, where it's a tired thing with lame quips and lackluster straight to DVD action scenes, makes complete sense.
Yet it remains the tired thing full of lame quips and lackluster straight to DVD action scenes.

But THEN it's talking about how things don't have to be a binary. So it can be an extremely clever deconstruction of the concept of a zombie franchise reboot, and kind of a bad movie at the same time.

Or I'm just being the exact kind of nerd at the start of the movie that Lana Wachowski was making fun of.