eruheran wrote:
Wow Seer....are all these for one book? Your poor readers!
I actually don't know what they're for since it's been years since I've tried to write a book

. The Apsarans are currently worldless (never figured out which world I wanted them in), the Underwater races are in a couple of my worlds, but most prolifically in Fantasia (my world that is populated solely by races based off of fairies), where there could be several of them: the freshwater Nixes, Naiads, and Limnades, and the saltwater Merrows, Roanes, and Selkies

. In my amorphous world of Mythica, there are essentially 2 underwater races (well...maybe 3). The River people (currently unnamed) and the Merfolk (which need to be renamed). The noncorporeal races are mostly in Mythica but I might have one or 2 in Fantasia as well.
eruheran wrote:
I think it's great that fantasy writers can expand beyond the conventional humans and elves.
With the exception of the Apsarans (which were my own brainchild) I generally do the same thing that the earliest fantasy authors did: look at the fairy creatures of legends and adapt them into races (I can't wait to introduce you to the Poltergeists

). I just tend to pull from worldwide fairy-lore.
eruheran wrote:
Perhaps some sort of communication that is entirely through vibrations or some sort of sound that would travel through the waves. Or perhaps they communicate by touch? (i.e. Touching their fingers together or something like that). That would make long-distance communication very difficult but maybe because of that they could be a very compact race, living all together...I don't know.
This is similar to an idea that I saw in a Disney Channel Movie called the Thirteenth Year (which is about a boy who finds out he's a merman at age 13 after growing up on land his whole life). In it the main character starts exhibiting strange features as his mer-nature slowly emerges. One of these is that he generates lots of static electricity (this first happens when he tries to kiss his girlfriend and winds up shocking her). When he finally completes the change and meets his mermaid mother, her palms glow and he touches them and it's implied that this is why he generated so much bioelectricity and that it's how merfolk communicate.