Califia by M.D. Coverley was published by Eastgate Systems in 2000.
With permission from the publisher, I am creating a "reimagined" version for the web, tablets, and other touch-screen media.
Return to *CALIFIA* Information
The Making and Unmaking of Califia
M.D. Coverley/Marjorie Coverley Luesebrink
CALIFIA: "Once upon a time there was an Island named
California where dreams came true."
So begins the opening address
to the reader in the electronic narrative, Califia - a story of
five generations of Californians on a quest for a lost stash of gold.
The gold was buried, it seems, in the Southern California mountains some
few years after the great gold rush of 1849. And then, through a
series of California dust-ups, it got lost. From the discovery of the
earliest clues - the Baja Map and the blue-blanket embroidery of Willing
Stars - the characters puzzle though earthquake, fire, a mysterious
train wreck, Hollywood nights, strange land-buying expeditions in the
desert, flight plans, and Chumash legends to link together the elusive
path to the dream of riches - and the longing that makes seekers of us
all.
Califia (2000),
Eastgate Systems), by M. D. Coverley (pen name for Marjorie Coverley
Luesebrink). The
descriptions in italics are from the M.D. Coverley website.
Introduction
By now, all of us (or at least everyone reading this) have probably
marveled at the speed of change in the world of digital communications
technology. Who would have
thought that Flash, a central element in the development of interactive
web sites, would be gone in a flash (pun intended)?
Nonetheless, we move from desktop to laptop to tablet to
hand-held or wearable devices, from browser to browser, and from
software to cloudware in rapid succession.
For users and readers, this has made our digital experience a
swift ride. But for writers
and artists – a rollercoaster in the dark.
When digital electronic writers began creating for the computer, the
rate of tech change came as a sneaky surprise.
Certainly, there were examples of newer inscription technologies
not preserving as well as previous ones (words written on stone last
longer than papyrus, vellum lasts longer than paper).
We also had ample evidence of early 20th century film
either becoming unplayable or orphaned without machines to play it on.
Still, there just wasn’t any precedent for the lightning-fast
loss of digital material.
Califia
was begun in hypertext form in 1995.
It was published by Eastgate Systems in 2000.
By 2010, it would no longer play on most computers.
Holy crumbling stone, a shelf life of ten years!
And, although Califia is
longer and technically more complicated than most other e-lit fiction,
the trajectory of its creation and loss – the pattern of its life-span –
bears many similarities with other e-lit writing.
It took a long time to make and a relatively short time to unmake.
CALIFIA
is a multimedia, interactive, hypertext fiction for CD-ROM.
Califia allows the reader to
wander and play in the landscape of historic/magic California. It
is a computer-only creation of interactive stories, photos, graphics,
maps, music, and movement.
Early Stirrings
As a print writer, I had
always been interested in multi-voice, multiple point-of- view
narratives – what is now termed the “networked novel.”
I particularly liked the structure of John Dos Passos’ USA
Trilogy – a
"four-way conveyor system”
–
as he called it. I tried
this approach in print, but the possibilities were limited.
In my first novel (Love and
The Dragonfly), written in the 1970’s, I experimented with multiple
modalities by using the “elements” feature on my IBM Selectric
typewriter; this allowed me to assign different typefaces to each kind
of segment/fragment.
However, using conventional print, I could do no more than change fonts
on a static page. The
opportunity for layering, multiple linkages, imagery, sound, and
symbolic architecture – the technology to actually do that – would not
come into my hands for another fifteen years.
As
with many ambitious, epic-like narrative works (both in print and in
digital form) the idea for Califia
germinated long before the writing began.
For many years, while I was “working” on the concepts for
Califia, the technology did not exist for its creation.
Like the characters in Califia,
I had a legacy of gold from my ancestors – but most of it was in the
form of photographs, documents, brochures, old newspapers, diaries, and
family myths. I started
assembling these. And I
began to teach myself the skills I would need to write the novel that I
imagined. In addition to
word processing, I learned to manipulate images and photos, create
animations, do some programming, and edit sound.
It was to be a montaged, multi-modal, interlinked story of three
California families as their lives intersected over five generations of
Los Angeles history.
CALIFIA: The moment I began to
create the first screen on the computer, I could see it happening: the
weary and beleaguered Samuel Walker - leaving the Tejon Ranch with his
wife, Willing Stars, and the renegade mission Indians - desperate to
find a place to hide the heavy gold he had mined in the Sierras.
And the generations that
followed, dreamers all, risking their lives for the belief that the gold
was still there, buried and waiting for the one who could decode the
clues, read the hypertext of star lore and plot maps and legends of gold
and movies and airplanes and the history of water and land combines:
find pattern in a seeming chaos of desire. Erskine Summerland was in my
imaginary California, flying a plane from San Simeon to Tehachapi and
straight into a mountain. Quintana, of Chinatown, lost to fire and
water. I saw Augusta, just the other day, digging in her own back yard
the morning after her father was buried, certain he had left a stash of
gold coins under the eucalyptus grove above Hollywood Boulevard. . . .
And you, too, were there. All
of us at the interface between acceptance and passion. The western edge
is a place where, as Joan Didion once wrote: "the mind is troubled by
some buried but ineradicable suspicion that things had better work here,
because here, beneath that immense bleached sky, is where we run out of
continent."
NEH Seminar - Literature in Transition, UCLA
In 1995 I was awarded an NEH fellowship to attend Katherine Hayles’
seminar, “Literature in Transition: The Impact of Information
Technologies” at UCLA.
The seminar provided an overview of recent scholarship on electronic
textuality and offered participants the opportunity to develop their own
electronic texts. It was a
watershed time for me. This
experience served as a catalyst
for bringing
Califia from concept to finished coding.
Kate was a knowledgeable and inspired leader; she arranged for
our group to become familiar with the new fiction and poetry, the
authors and artists working in this medium (in fact, many of the
students in her seminars subsequently became pioneers of e-lit), and the
tools for creating digital projects. I
first tried Storyspace, but I wanted to use color images and sound,
which Storyspace did not support – so moved to Toolbook.
Happily, by the end of the
seminar, I had a start on Califia
in electronic form.
CALIFIA was written in
Toolbook software. Platform requirements: Windows 95, 98, 2000, or
later [Mac/Windows emulator], Pentium-speed processor, and sound card.
It has Three Narrating
Characters, Four Directions of the Compass, Star Charts, Map Case,
Archives Files, 500 Megabytes, 800 Screens, 2400 Images, 30 Songs, and
500 Words. Graphics
were prepared using Photoshop and Micrografix Picture Publisher. Music
was edited with Cakewalk.
The Software Scramble
Once I was set with an authoring system that met my needs, the writing
of Califia was rooted and running.
I had the rough outline of a story, the raw images, and a
structure that would allow me to integrate the characters, history,
myths, and popular culture into what I hoped would be truer than
reality. Oh, but I needed sound.
I set out to get some tunes.
CALIFIA features the work of excellent California musicians.
The flamenco music is written and performed by
Michael Olsen. The classical
lute and mandolin music is performed by John Schneiderman. Clips
from The Grateful Dead were made available by the Grateful Dead
organization with the valuable assistance of Alan Trist.
Califia was a joy to write. It took
some experimenting to build the structure in a way that the navigation
would be seamless: one
keystroke could take the reader to any section of the story.
Having the freedom to indicate relationships between characters,
places, symbols, and events (present and past) gave the story a vitality
and dimensionality that I could not have conveyed in traditional print.
Each working day was an opportunity to invent something new.
CALIFIA traces five
generations of Californians from 1849 to the present; its layered
histories contain legends of
early sea and land explorers, Chumash Indian tribes, lost gold mines,
and the Dream of Islands that makes all Californians seekers.
By far the most time-consuming and headache-producing part of
constructing Califia was getting the software and the early
computer hardware to do what I had in mind.
Fortunately, technology improved as the writing went on and
seemed to deliver additional functionality.
When I started, I could only use
256 colors; by the time I finished, every shade in the rainbow was
possible, millions of colors. Someone
less delighted with the medium might have anticipated trouble on the
horizon: but not me, not then.
Golden Days
The year 2000 was a great year in the
Califia journey. The tech problems were solved, the piece was pretty
much finished, and Eastgate Systems had agreed to publish it.
Reviewers were kind, friends were congratulatory, and readers
were enthusiastic.
CALIFIA:
consists of four journeys that the reader can choose among:
The Comets in the Yard -
The Journey
South is just a few blocks down Fairfax Avenue in
Hollywood to Paradise Home, where Violet Summerland forgets among the
palms.
Wind, Sand, and Stars -
East takes the characters into the desert-land of
Windmills and Goldmines - to meet the Man from Windpower. The Dipper
Mines begin to appear in the sky and on the ground.
Night of the Bear -
In the
North is San Simeon, but along the way our characters
get visits from the spirits, an unexpected plane ride, and another look
at the Summerland-Beveridge history.
The Journey Out - The golden
West brings a choice of endings and
a suggestion of beginnings. Augusta, Kaye, and Calvin find the Blue
Blanket, and, with it, the message from Willing Stars.
The Writing on the Wall
and then, suddenly, the Wall Itself
"Perhaps the dream they sold us is not quite the
dream we got."
The way in which these fragile works begin to fray,
the edges to crumble, and the center fail is now somewhat well known.
The disturbing signs are much the same, although they may not happen in
the same order. The company
that makes the software to process photos, animation, or sound goes out
of business. The authoring
software platform is sold to another company, which declines to support
it. The method of storage
and transfer evolves (from floppy disk to zip disk to CD-ROM to thumb
drive to cloud) – and corresponding changes in machine hardware won’t
accommodate a work. The
machine rendering advances so far that the work is all but
unrecognizable. Successive
browsers do not support the coding.
All of these happened to Califia.
And then, one fine morning, it was not possible for
me to play Califia on my own desktop.
The center had collapsed.
CALIFIA:
is
narrated by three contemporary California types:
Augusta, the day-trader,
lives in Whitley Heights in Hollywood, California. She is looking
for the stash of coins she believes her father buried on the hill behind
the house.
Calvin, the would-be movie director, lives next door.
He is between film projects and hopes to find out more about the
mysterious death of Jack Summerland.
Kaye, the mystic visionary, floats in one day in her midnight-blue cape,
decorated with moons and stars, and tells the legends and family myths
that set our characters on a journey of discovery.
California Optimism
Today, Califia sits in a
technological limbo. But, as
a child of the West, I am hopeful about the prospects.
New techniques of archiving and preservation are being developed.
“Virtual Machine” software is emerging that can replicate the
operating system of an obsolete computer, provided that a working model
still exists. These
developments may bring a future when a copy of
Califia can be called up and experienced just as it was in the
beginning.
And the promise of a literature that combines text, image, sound, and
architecture still beckons.
CALIFIA:
Even now, Augusta, Kaye, and Calvin are out in the Mojave Desert,
looking for the lost paradise.
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