Richardson's Rubicon

John Richardson

Richardson’s Rubicon is a speculative fiction podcast. Each episode dives into worldbuilding, strange ideas, creative failures, surprising successes, and the deeper questions behind imagined worlds. Writers, worldbuilders, and curious listeners will find honest conversation, dark humour, and thoughtful insight into how stories take shape. Season Five focuses on the art of speculative storytelling and the minds that create it.

  1. MAR 29

    First Contact Without Songs or Stories | Macaulay Christian, Apocalis Universe

    What would it take to build a society that looks calm on the surface, but stays that way by controlling what people are allowed to imagine? In this episode I’m joined by sci-fi author Macaulay Christian, creator of the Apocalis series. We talk about Holindrian and The Human Revolution, a prequel that digs into oppression, resource control, and the uneasy trade-offs between freedom and security. One of the most striking parts of the conversation is the culture on Eridu, where creativity is treated as a threat. Stories, songs, and open artistic expression are not harmless hobbies, they’re a problem to be managed. We also touch on Children of Eternity, where the lens widens from internal control to a much larger, stranger universe, and the pressure shifts onto duty, survival, and consequences on a cosmic scale. If you care about worldbuilding that has rules, enforcement, and day-to-day consequences, this one’s for you. Macaulay's website where you can buy the books and learn more! https://www.macaulaychristian.com/ And here is the episode page itself: https://richardsonsrubicon.com/no-songs-no-stories-first-contact-macaulay-christians-apocalis-universe/ And if you want to have a go at answering the world building questions... https://richardsonsrubicon.com/community/season-5-speculative-fiction-where-worlds-meet/balancing-security-and-freedom-in-speculative-fiction/ #SciFiBooks #Worldbuilding #SpeculativeFiction #WritingCraft #AuthorInterview #SciFiAuthor #WritingCommunity #BookPodcast

    39 min
  2. MAR 14

    Why Magic Needs Limits | Aurora Winter, Magic, Mystery and the Multiverse

    What makes a 16-year-old aspiring actress the right protagonist for a multiverse story? Because performance, mimicry, and knowing when to lie or tell the truth become survival skills when your world treats speech as dangerous. This week on Richardson’s Rubicon, I’m joined by Aurora Winter, award-winning author of Magic, Mystery, and the Multiverse. We get practical about how she builds a portal-linked multiverse with rules, gates, and consequences, rather than just a grab-bag of cool settings. We also dig into the spine of the trilogy: free speech, identity, and moral choice, expressed through a regime that can punish people for saying the wrong thing and a villain built for that theme, the Crimson Censor. If you like worldbuilding that actually affects behaviour on a normal Tuesday, this one’s for you. Make the theme enforceable: censorship only matters if it has mechanisms, detection, and real consequences. Match skills to pressure: Ana’s acting background isn’t flavour, it’s an adaptive tool in a world that polices language. Use constraints to power the plot: portals and keys matter when they have limits, costs, and strategic implications. Listen to the episode, then head to the website for the companion write-up and the discussion prompt. Episode website: https://rubipod.link/MagicMultiverse Discuss censorship as a pressure: https://richardsonsrubicon.com/community/season-5-speculative-fiction-where-worlds-meet/censorship-as-worldbuilding-pressure/ #Worldbuilding #SpeculativeFiction #WritingTips #FantasyBooks #PodcastLife

    35 min
4.8
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

Richardson’s Rubicon is a speculative fiction podcast. Each episode dives into worldbuilding, strange ideas, creative failures, surprising successes, and the deeper questions behind imagined worlds. Writers, worldbuilders, and curious listeners will find honest conversation, dark humour, and thoughtful insight into how stories take shape. Season Five focuses on the art of speculative storytelling and the minds that create it.