Sunday, February 22, 2015

Castle Aco

My characters have names. 

I searched through lists and lists of medieval names online (the internet was PERFECT for this task) and found one I liked for my main female character. She is Alamanda, but everyone will call her Lamb. And what name for the brother of a lamb? A lion, of course. He is Lionet, or Lio. 

And so, for now at least, the story is Lio and Lamb.


Those lists of names were brilliant. In fact, I pillaged them for names beyond those of characters. The main setting's castle (Aco) and money unit (Brand), for instance.


Lio and Lamb live in a roughly medieval, created world. And so it has been my pleasure these past few weeks to dig into the nonfiction side of my library, where Frances and Joseph Gies' Life in a Medieval Castle and Life in a Medival Village were just sitting around, unread. 





A few fun facts:

* When farmers (male and female) headed out to the fields for a morning of work, it was not uncommon to leave their babies at home. Unsupervised. Sometimes they would tie the babies into their cribs so they wouldn't wander off.

* Pretty much every household was a brewery / tavern. No licenses needed, just brew up a batch and hang out a sign, and there you go. Better brew it up strong, though. What revenues the lord of the manor missed out on by not licensing the brewing industry he collected in fines for weak ale. Cool fact: This was one area where women were quite industrious.

* Speaking of ale, a primary source of calories, it seems the typical consumption was a gallon a day. When serfs worked a day for their lords, food and a gallon of ale were provided.

* Rural marriage? A kiss and a promise.

* And wedding rings went about the fourth finger of the left hand because a vein there led straight to the heart of a woman, ensuring unity and love.


Sunday, February 15, 2015

Children's vs. YA vs. Fantasy

Where do I want to go next?

YA?

I thought so. I thought I was ready for it.
There is a definite shimmer of temptation inherent in YA. I have so many favorite YA authors. I dream of sitting at a table of colleagues among those very authors. I know YA concerns and have an abundance of in-my-face models to use as character inspiration. Marketing is possible. Get one teen talking and let her spread the word. But I'm not sure my heart is in it.

Children's literature?

It's a genre that requires tight plotting and lean prose beautifully rendered. Like poetry, its main challenge is finding the perfect phrase. And that's my favorite part of writing. 

Fantasy? (Or at least fantastical.)

I am eager to build a world. It would entertain my little brother, at least. Something with castles and brigands, grit and hunks of bread. With an unlikely hero (of course) who saves the day. 

How to decide?


Well, inspiration has hit on several levels.


1. I heard a speaker challenge his audience members to take a close look at their lives and see where time is lost, to claim that time, and to compound it in order to achieve their destiny. I admit, it's a rather cheesy message. But it strikes home. The most productive month of my life was the February I shut off my television and got serious about publishing SPOTD. Now it is a new February. A month with little (or at least less) television would not be easy for me, as addicted as I am to characters of various shows. But I'm ready for a challenge. 


2. A new character has been born in my mind. I thought the story belonged to his sister, but it doesn't. At the very least, it is a shared story. 


3. This line from the musical Matilda: "All escapes start with the click of a lock." 


4. Finally, I am heeding the call of Neil Gaiman's words (posted in my last entry): "Try to make your time matter: minutes and hours and days and weeks can blow away like dead leaves, with nothing to show but time you spent not quite ever doing things, or time you spent waiting to begin."

And so, I'm beginning. 

Sunday, February 8, 2015

New Year's Wishes

Each New Year's Eve, I like to post lovely words from Neil Gaiman's various New Year's Eve toasts on my Facebook page. I neglected my ritual this year, an oversight I mean to rectify today.

Please enjoy Gaiman's lovely words for 2015: 

Be kind to yourself in the year ahead. 

Remember to forgive yourself, and to forgive others. It's too easy to be outraged these days, so much harder to change things, to reach out, to understand.

Try to make your time matter: minutes and hours and days and weeks can blow away like dead leaves, with nothing to show but time you spent not quite ever doing things, or time you spent waiting to begin.

Meet new people and talk to them. Make new things and show them to people who might enjoy them. 

Hug too much. Smile too much. And, when you can, love.







Sunday, February 1, 2015

Kate DiCamillo Marathon


The "you have eight books to pick up" from the local library message on my answering machine made me laugh. As if I'd have time for the luxury of reading eight books on a whim the same week that semester one grades were due. But when the eight books turn out to be, as expected, as delightful as Ms. DiCamillo's are, I'll make time for the distraction.

I was particularly enchanted by Gollie and Bink.



Here's what I love about DiCamillo's work:

     1. Little details that repeat meaningfully.
     2. Musical language that rarely speaks down to younger readers.
     3. Characters that aren't explained; they just are.
     4. Visuals.

Although the characters in my next project won't be modern gal pals (see above), nor a chicken who adventures around the world (Louise), nor a pig who eats buttered toast (Mercy Watson), I plan to write with meaningful details, musical language, and characters that need no explanation.

And someday, Publishing Gods willing, my next story may include visuals, like those in Gaiman's Fortunately, the Milk or Patrick Rothfuss' The Slow Regard of Silent Things. I just love the back and white sketches in such novels, how they add a layer to the enchantment and accessibility of the stories. Even as an adult reader, the thoughtful design of such visual pages draws me in.