World of WarCrafts: The Helvetica Venture

Recipes, action figures, art -- the fans of Warcraft are a creative bunch, and Kyt Dotson is no exception. Rather than artwork or crafts, however, Kyt creates vivid worlds with the written word. Kyt's latest work, The Helvetica Venture, can be found on Vox Ex Machina. The story involves a starting blood elf character named Helvetica and her adventures in Azeroth, but it takes a humorous twist to the usual form of narrative storytelling.
Take a look after the break for more information about Helvetica and her creator.On the table nearby, taking up the only clear space in the entire room, is a green box. Imagine a box, an ordinary 5¼"x 7½" video game box sporting fold-out inserts for the cover and a preternatural lightness to its heft that belies the contents stored within. Emblazoned over the surface-above the oh-so-handsome staring face of a blonde elf with vorpal eyebrows and nuclear green eyes-display the words: World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade.
"You haven't played one of these games before, have you?" asked the screen that comes up after she installs the game.
First things first: Why the name Helvetica? "One: I really like the font," Kyt answers. "Two: It's just a cool name. Three: The Swiss Guard -- aka the Helvetica Corps -- have a sort of mystique as being the best bodyguards in the world. I expect to extend that mystique (while making fun of their amazingly garish uniforms) in one of my upcoming novels." Speaking of novels, when asked if this was simply a hobby or if writing was a full time job, Kyt replies, "I am a semi-professional fiction author. Right now I'm making a little bit of money (but not a living) from being part of the webfiction community. I do make some grocery money from short stories, but really I'm a novelist. I got into the craft when I wrote and published my first novel in 2003, The Specter in the Spectacles."

So what kind of novels does a novelist read? "Every book I read, I use to inform my craft -- both the good and the bad. I cannot say that I read any one author frequently, but I have a special place for Mercedes Lackey, Tad Williams and David Weber. Also, two years ago I discovered Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden series. I read a lot more science fiction than I do fantasy, but I prefer to write contemporary/urban fantasy."
Any words of advice for aspiring authors or fanfiction writers out there? "I don't write much fanfic, but I certainly read a lot. It's the community I'm here for. Fanfiction is both the lifeblood and the seedy underbelly of the community when it comes to fan culture. When you join in with fanfiction, you join a tradition as old as bards. You can write to build the community, to explore the untold stories of characters of lesser renown, to fill the rough edges where canon ends and fanon begins, or just for the hell of it. But if you do write and join in, you'll discover it's a very rewarding experience."
Thanks for your time, Kyt -- and be sure to let us know of any future Warcraft writing!
Filed under: World of WarCrafts






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Hanak Oct 11th 2010 7:26PM
First chapter is funny enough :)
Gonna read the rest tomorrow when I actually have time :p
Hiwa Oct 11th 2010 9:04PM
I was getting all psyched for a comic about fonts ^.^
This sounds pretty cool too though.
prenden2 Oct 12th 2010 12:27AM
Apropos of nothing: Wasn't the Swiss Guard named the "Corps Helvetica" in Dan Simmon' Hyperion Cantos?
Kyt Dotson Oct 12th 2010 6:35PM
Yes! Actually that's what prompted me to become so interested in the Swiss Guard in the first place (irrespective of my love for the font and the font's name.) With a few semesters of Latin I knew about Helvetia and the Helveticans; then came Dan Simmons with Hyperion and that sealed my appreciation for the word.
Most of my friends have their own pet elite-of-the-elite marshal forces from around the world and science fiction worlds (from Navy Seals to the Spartans or Jedi) so I figured that I'd pay my homage to the name Helvetica in my own way. Take a look at their Wikipedia page sometime, the Corps Helvetica Papal Guard uniforms are absolutely the most garish thing I've ever seen, but I still love them so.