So I borrowed the title from my current favourite song, One Direction's Best Song Ever, just because it's so easy to change one word and create an entire new meaning. This last trip to the INSPIRE: Toronto International Book Fair started with Elizabeth Munro's (West Coast Book Reviews: Indie Pick review of the Upper Kingdom series. It started with Journey but quickly she devoured all three and had this to say about them:
"TO JOURNEY IN THE YEAR OF THE TIGER is the first in a Ground-Breaking Original Series by H. Leighton Dickson. This is a powerful, post-apocalyptic story of lions and tigers, wolves and dragons, embracing and blending the cultures of Dynastic China, Ancient India and Feudal Japan. Half feline, half human, this genetically altered world has evolved in the wake of the fall of human civilization. Fans of Tolkien, Game of Thrones, Redwall or Japanese anime will be entertained in these intelligent and beautifully written pages in a blend of science, fantasy and zoological speculation. Kirin Wynegarde-Grey is a young lion with a big job – Captain of the Guard in a Kingdom that spans from the mountains of western China to the deserts of the Middle East. When an ancient threat awakens in the West and threatens to overthrow the Empire, he must lead a team that includes his enigmatic brother, a lethal swordswoman and three radically different and mysterious specialists through a world where humans are legend and animals walk like men. This is the journey of six individuals as they travel beyond the edges of the known Empire, into lands uncharted and wild. It is a journey of magic and mystery, science and swords, romance and intrigue. It is a journey of different perspectives and unexpected kharma and love found in surprising places. It is a journey that takes place five thousand years or so in the future, naturally in the Year of the Tiger. I finished reading To Journey in the Year of the Tiger a couple of weeks ago and found it hard to sit down and write a review. It should be easy, considering how very much I adore this book but then again, that could be what makes it such a challenge to find the right words. Now that I'm half way through the second book, To Walk in the Way of Lions, I have a good idea what to say. I've never read anything like this. The idea of big cats living in the hierarchy and values of Imperial China caught my attention and the mystery and characters held me to the story. Each powerful character avoids stereotype. From the amazed and energetic Scholar, the dark and seductive Alchemist to the honour-first Captain each was well rounded, developed and managed to surprise me while staying in character. The descriptions of everything from scenes to garments draws on my knowledge of Imperial China and builds on my own imagery without making me struggle to make things fit in my own mind. I could use words like vivid and stunning because they would be true but the fact that the complex settings are so digestible makes this book so very rich. I found both books one and two in this series free and made sure I paid for book three before I found it free as well. Didn't feel right to enjoy this book so much without supporting the author with a few dollars. To Journey in the Year of the Tiger is like finding a bag of treasure and knowing you've stumbled upon something fantastic. It is definitely worth purchasing. To Journey in the Year of the Tiger is seductive and crass, powerful and humble, wicked and pure, humorous and stoic and rich and simple. The power of this book is in the contrasts it presents. Experience it." Elizabeth summed it all up in those paragraphs, the pain and the purity, the struggle and the victory that was this Journey. She perfectly described what I would want in a reader's response and it was the very best way to begin the Book Fair, which would be equal parts exhausting and exhilarating. Needless to say, it's reviews like this that make me keep writing, knowing that the characters are not "me" but strike a cord in everyone. That cord is, in fact, our shared humanity. And as I always say, some of the best stories about people, aren't about people. Chat soon.
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Has NaNoWriMo got you feeling intimidated? Overwhelmed? Ready to watch old episodes of 'Seinfeld' for 'research' rather than write? Well, here's a question I just got last night from an author friend who's hit that proverbial NaNoWall.
Question: Well, I've taken the triple dog dare, NaNoWriMo style! Saturday I topped out at just over 1000 words, and that took me most of the day. So not a real auspicious start. I'm a very slow writer, big surprise there. As you know, I'm taking a crack at retooling the Ryssaverse in a non-Trek context. Lots of cool ideas for fun character moments and vignettes, no real idea for an engaging and original overall plot or where the characters are going. Kind of a disadvantage in writing fiction, yes? Thing is, I actually really like the little bit I have so far. I'm also finding that as I write, new bits and connections occur to me. It's like I don't really see the forest or the whole path through it, but I can see a few more trees with every few steps I take. Still, I wonder if it's folly to write a novel without having some rough outline, some sort of overarching plan, some sense of going from A to B to Z. Not to mention having some sort of cool, compelling, non-cliched, knock-yer-socks-off plot figured out. I'm also sensing the secret to NaNoWriMo is to write like a maniac, instinctively, without fixing or editing anything. But that is so not my jam. I type, pace, wordsmith in my head, pace, type a bit more, repeat ad nauseam. Something tells me I need to either radically change my process or radically reduce my word count target, and just make sure I write every day. *Sigh* My Answer: I think that maybe the problem is your expectations. If you're liking what you're writing, then keep it up because all too often, you start off going in one direction and the characters take you somewhere else entirely. So go with it for now. You haven't really written like this for a very long time so you're going to be rusty so use NaNoWriMo as an excuse to brush off those cobwebs and polish up the skills. Nano is perfect for that 'cause no one's gonna see it. And, the beauty is the fact that, once you write it, you can totally edit it later. You can't edit something you haven't written. I still edit as I go, even in Nano, but I'm not competing against anyone. I'm writing a frickin' book and it's MY frickin' book and I can write how I want. But I have to write. Writing is the secret of NaNoWriMo. So don't stop because you'll be defeated before you start. Just write little vignettes or introduction scenes or snippets of conversation or action and stick them in a folder. It's like money in the bank. Don't bury it, dude. Just play. Besides, I triple-dog-dared you, and I have 3 dogs. Just sayin'… ;) So, good advice? I think so. Just write. Edit if you want. Stop and smell the roses and the coffee and the triple dogs but get back to your laptop and write about said roses and coffee and dogs. It's only one month so you can be as crazy as you want and the world will roll their eyes and shake their heads but admire you for all your crazy passion and flying fingers. It's an excuse to do it and who cares what comes out of it at the end. It's your book and it will be done when it gets done. End of story. And blog, for that matter. ;) And just for good measure, here's some photos of the triple dog dare... |
H. Leighton DicksonAuthor. Zoologist. Imaginary Genius. Engineer of Fantastical Worlds. Master of None.
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