Today’s Special Challenge Participant is author, Cherie Reich! She is the author of the Gravity and Foxwick series, and one of the sweetest people I know. Her theme for the Challenge this year was twenty-six flash fiction pieces from the Foxwick Kingdom. The result was her book, A to Z Flashes of Foxwick.
What made you decide to do flash fiction for the Challenge?
I’ve participated in #fridayflash off and on since July 2010, so I decided flash fiction would be the way to go. It’s generally short (I think my longest pieces was 600+ words, but most were in the 200-300 word range), and I thought it was a great way to showcase my writing.
Did you write it all in advance or as the Challenge progressed?
If I remember correctly, I wrote them all in March, but I had my critique partners look over them, so I didn’t get them all scheduled in advance until after the first week of April. I like to plan ahead.
Which one was the most challenging?
It’s a tossup between “Merrilea’s Music” and “Tyre and Thay.” For “Merrilea’s Music,” the piece wanted to be much longer than a flash fiction piece, so it was a hard idea to translate into flash fiction form. For “Tyre and Thay,” I wanted at least one drabble (100-word exactly flash piece), and I kept going under and lower before hitting it just right.
Which was your favorite piece and why?
Such a hard decision. Hmm, I’ll have to go with “Yonder Yew” because I amused myself with the pun on “Yew” and “you.”
What are the Shadowlands? (And what is a Foxwick?)
The Shadowlands is where souls go to live after they part from their bodies (i.e. die). I came up with the name of Shadowlands from my favorite quote from Sophocles’s Ajax, “For I see the true state of all us that live – We are dim shapes, no more, and weightless shadow.” Thus, we end up in the Shadowlands. As for what is a Foxwick, I’m not sure. I can’t even really remember how I came up with the name. It was either a Fantasy Place Name Generator or something else. I first used Foxwick as a setting in October 2010 for “Lady Death.” I thought perhaps it might be the founder’s name, but the more I play in Foxwick’s realm, I don’t think that’s true. So far, it hasn’t given up that secret, but I will keep searching.
Where do you get the names for your fantasy characters and places?
Various places. I’ve used a fantasy name generator. I think that’s how I got the names for Lochhollow and Merrilea Sea. I studied a lot of history in college since I majored in Classics, so some of the names come from there, like Vesta. I also do baby name searches. That’s how I came up with Eirwyn, Attor, and Kona. And the A to Z Challenge gave me a few names, such as Quaylin.
Now that the Challenge has ended, how can people read A to Z Flashes of Foxwick?
I self-published A to Z Flashes of Foxwick on April 16, and it’s a free read on Smashwords, Amazon, Kobo, and iTunes. Of course, people can read it on my blog for free or purchase a copy for $0.99 on Nook and various Amazon affiliates who would not price-match to free.
What are your plans for the Challenge next year? More Foxwick?
My original plan was to write a YA Fantasy Foxwick story featuring Eirwyn (Princess of Wintermill at the time) called The Loveless Princess, but I soon realized my idea was too large for the A to Z Challenge, although I still plan to write it in 2013. Now I plan to find 26 random prompts HERE and try to craft a short story from them for 26 blog posts. I’m not yet sure what genre the story will be in, but I’ll figure it out once I find the prompts. I plan to collect the prompts in December and begin working on the story then. Yes, I really do like to plan ahead.
Thanks, Cherie - you rock!
Co-host Ninja Captain Alex is the author of CassaStar and CassaFire and his blog can be found HERE
Wednesday, October 3, 2012
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
Announcing The Nineties Blogfest with David Black
Please
join me in welcoming Ninja Captain Alex's friend, David Black. Alex
participated in David's previous blogfest celebrating the years 2000 to 2009 (The Noughties...tee hee) and
recommends that we join David's next party. I for sure am in! Sounds like lots of fun, and remember, you always meet new people
when you join a party!
Nostalgia is a funny thing. We look back and time concertinas so that objects in your rear view mirror appear closer than they are. We are all a product of our past and sometimes popular culture is the only tie that bind. Last year I ran The Noughties Blogfest. I had written Review-Of-The-Year type posts of my favourite Films/TV/Music/Books/Comics etc from the years 2009 to 2000 and invited people to suggest their own favourite things from each year of the decade.
Now I've almost finished writing about the Nineties as well. So I would like to take this opportunity to invite you all to join in with The Nineties Blogfest on the 15th of October.
Now head on over to his house and sign up! Tell 'em Tina and Alex sent you.
Labels:
albums,
art,
blogfest,
books,
David Black,
gig,
music,
nineties,
popular culture,
song,
Theater,
tv
Monday, October 1, 2012
When Africa met Asia: Rohini Chowdhury and Zukiswa Wanner
Two years ago, in the London Book Fair, two acclaimed authors, Rohini Chowdhury from India, and Zukiswa Wanner from South Africa met up, and over lunches, and dinners and reading each others' work, bonded, and discovered common ground.
Their association led to Behind the Shadows, a collection they edited, 21 short stories from Asia and Africa which include Penguin-shortlisted author Isabella Morris; Caine Prize-shortlisted writer Lauri Kubuitsile; Singaporean Young Artist Award recipient, Felix Cheong; and emerging Indian writers Rumjhum Biswas, Monideepa Sahu, and Sucharita Dutta-Asane.
6. Why would you recommend that readers download Behind the Shadows?
Zukiswa Wanner is the author of three critically-acclaimed novels and her latest novel, Men of the South was shortlisted for Commonwealth Prize for Best Book Africa region. She is the co- author of the Mandela house biography 8115: A Prisoner’s House with award-winning photographer Alf Kumalo. She has also written widely for international and African newspapers, journals, and magazines.
Rohini Chowdhury writes for both children and adults, and has more than twenty books and several short stories to her credit. She is published in both Hindi and English, and her writing covers a wide spectrum of literary genres including translations, novels, short fiction, comics, and non-fiction. Her most recent publication for children is Gautam Buddha: The Lord of Wisdom, a biography of the Buddha, published by Puffin India. Her most recent translation is that of the widely-acclaimed Hindi novel Tyagpatra by Jainendra, into English, published by Penguin India earlier this year. Her literary interests include translation, mythology, folklore, mathematics and history.
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This interview brought to you by Damyanti @Amlokiblogs
Their association led to Behind the Shadows, a collection they edited, 21 short stories from Asia and Africa which include Penguin-shortlisted author Isabella Morris; Caine Prize-shortlisted writer Lauri Kubuitsile; Singaporean Young Artist Award recipient, Felix Cheong; and emerging Indian writers Rumjhum Biswas, Monideepa Sahu, and Sucharita Dutta-Asane.
Today, Behind the Shadows is being released worldwide on Amazon, and the editors are here in an interview, to talk about how a random meeting led to mutual respect, a long association, a beautiful friendship, and a roller-coaster ride which led up to this collection.
-------
1. What inspired you to conceive of and edit Behind the Shadows?
ZW: Rohini and I first met at LBF 2010 through a Britsh Council organised
meeting matching a South African writer to a writer to an English writer. Then
they sent us an email introducing us and I thought, hold on, Rohini doesn't
even minutely sound like blue-eyed, blonde-haired Anglo-Saxon but I figured if
Mandela could have admired Gandhi, I'd probably have fun with Chowdhury.
So we met at the hotel where I was staying. And she went away with one of my
novels to read. And then I went to her house for lunch and left with a few of
her books. We both admired each other's literary style. And really liked each
other as people and we had so many similar experiences despite our different
backgrounds. We decided we were the Gandhi and Mandela of literature but we had
to collaborate in order to make it work (I mention Gandhi and Mandela for
absolutely no reason at all than to increase e-book sales).
RC: It was one of those mornings when the world seems perfect, so when I
received an email asking if I would be happy to buddy a South African writer
for the forthcoming London Book Fair, I agreed! Later, of course, I had the
shivers, and spent a sleepless night wondering who would show up! So when I received
Zukiswa's email id, I wrote a very polite, very formal email to her. I was
blown away by her reply, which was the most cheerful, bubbly, friendly email I
had ever received from a stranger. And so began a wonderful friendship. We
thought of collaborating on a novel, maybe write different sections, because
our styles would complement each other beautifully, we thought of putting
together a collection of our own short stories, and then one day it came to us
- we'll do an anthology that would bring Africa and Asia together!
As to the theme, both of us have a strong sense of right and wrong and
we have both seen suffering and injustice up close and sometimes personal. We
have seen it affect people all over the world, regardless of class or color or
creed. What's more, we felt it was particularly relevant for Africa and Asia,
who share a history of colonial misrule, and who are, despite economic
development, still suffering the fallout.
2. What has your experience been like, while editing the collection? Any interesting tid-bits you'd like to share?
ZW: The experience has been phenomenal. If I ever have to do another
collaboration on anything literary again, it would have to be with Ro or
someone like her (her daughters for instance. They are like her). We respect
each other enough as writers and editors so we would discuss our selection
without arguing and generally we both enjoyed more or less the same stories
when we were selecting. We had a few interesting experiences with established
writers who had submitted mediocre work and when we rejected their short
stories, they were very miffed and wanted to know 'what exactly did you not
like about my story' and what our criteria for selection was, and didn't we
know who they were...blah blah blah.
RC: Yes, those were some of the aggravating moments, when writers whose
stories were rejected attacked us with email after email. I remember having to
deal with some very persistent ones. Thankfully, it was Zuki by my side, with
her ready humor and her ability to laugh at all the foolishness. I tend to get
hassled, but Zuki would always restore perspective. I have worked - or tried to
work - on other collaborative projects. But I have to say that working with
Zuki has been the best. Mutual respect, and an intuitive understanding of each
other went a long way in making this such a happy experience. During this
project, there were times when one of us would become extremely busy. The other
picked up the slack easily and naturally. Zuki is right, if I ever do another
collaboration, it would have to be with Zuki (there isn't another like her!)
3. What is your advice to new writers hoping to get their work published?
ZW: Read well to write well. Whether it's a short story or a novel, a new
writer who reads more generally tends to be a better writer that one who does
not and one can tell from their stories.
RC: Be very demanding of yourself. Criticize your own work ruthlessly, and
never hesitate to rewrite. Be open to constructive criticism. Also, a
trick that works for me - show your story to someone you trust before you go
live with it. This may not work for every writer, though. I am just very, very
lucky that I have two brilliant editors in my daughters who read everything I
write before ever a professional editor sees my work. They don't hesitate to
tell me what sucks, and what is even better, they give me strategies to fix it.
:)
4. Did you find a personal resonance with any of the stories in the collection? A scene or description that reminded you of something similar in your own lives?
ZW: I liked all the short stories (that is why I co-selected them for the
collection). The title story made both Ro and I cry. I remember chatting with
her after reading and she had just finished reading it too and we were both
sobbing. Rain's Lime Green Push Up Bra and call Centre addressed prejudices
very well but without being preachy. Remember the Wormhole was very innovative
in its story telling as Wiki page. I think as Rohini said before, the
beauty of the collection was that in reading them we experienced a shared
humanity.
RC: Yes, I remember that evening too. We were in tears after that story,
but ended the conversation on a high note because we had found such a lovely
piece for the collection. For me, Pishi's Room was very evocative of my childhood
in Calcutta. Cape Farm No 432 brought back dark memories - gangs of
lepers who used to sometimes roam the streets of Calcutta, ringing a bell to
warn people off, and begging for food and money. I used to be frightened of
them as a child; with Cape Farm I saw their heartbreak.
5. Who is the target audience for this collection, and what genre would the stories fall under?
ZW: The target audience, because of some profanities and some experiences, would be adults. I am not sure I would push it under a genre.
RC: Yes, I'd agree with Zukiswa here.6. Why would you recommend that readers download Behind the Shadows?
ZW: Because its a really
really awesome collection and I would buy it too if I had not edited it.
RC: Because the
stories are powerful, compelling, touching and a great read.
-----------------
Behind the Shadows is now available on Amazon, so I'd urge you to grab a copy, because that would push it higher in the rankings, making it visible to a larger audience worldwide, an audience it richly deserves due to the depth of human emotion and variety of voices it carries in its pages.
I have a story in the collection, but that's not the only reason for my requesting you guys to buy it. I'm reading the book now, and some of the stories are indeed moving enough that I have to put my Kindle down and breathe.
----------------------------------------
-----------------
Behind the Shadows is now available on Amazon, so I'd urge you to grab a copy, because that would push it higher in the rankings, making it visible to a larger audience worldwide, an audience it richly deserves due to the depth of human emotion and variety of voices it carries in its pages.
I have a story in the collection, but that's not the only reason for my requesting you guys to buy it. I'm reading the book now, and some of the stories are indeed moving enough that I have to put my Kindle down and breathe.
----------------------------------------
Zukiswa Wanner is the author of three critically-acclaimed novels and her latest novel, Men of the South was shortlisted for Commonwealth Prize for Best Book Africa region. She is the co- author of the Mandela house biography 8115: A Prisoner’s House with award-winning photographer Alf Kumalo. She has also written widely for international and African newspapers, journals, and magazines.
Rohini Chowdhury writes for both children and adults, and has more than twenty books and several short stories to her credit. She is published in both Hindi and English, and her writing covers a wide spectrum of literary genres including translations, novels, short fiction, comics, and non-fiction. Her most recent publication for children is Gautam Buddha: The Lord of Wisdom, a biography of the Buddha, published by Puffin India. Her most recent translation is that of the widely-acclaimed Hindi novel Tyagpatra by Jainendra, into English, published by Penguin India earlier this year. Her literary interests include translation, mythology, folklore, mathematics and history.
This interview brought to you by Damyanti @Amlokiblogs
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