Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Guest Blogger: Jason Korolenko

Hi, blog readers! Today is a special post as it is my first time welcoming a guest blogger onto Equus Phasmatis. My friend and classmate, Jason Korolenko, released his novel The Day I Left this past August. With my journey to Japan in search of a story, I asked him to write about how his time in France influenced him to pen his novel.

Thank you so much Jason for being my first guest blogger! Readers can buy his book here at Amazon.com for the kindle. Also, please follow his blog Infamy and Misfortune to follow his writing adventures!





Heidi asked if I’d talk a little bit about the writing and research process behind my recently released novel The Day I Left. These are both directly linked to the main reason why I begin writing anything: inspiration.

Much of my work is set in foreign environments because I have an insatiable passion for travel, a passion for breaking out of my comfort zone into places I wouldn’t normally go, and these unfamiliar locations inspire me to write about them. I’d written three novels (which, if you are wondering, were locked in a trunk, chained up, and tossed into the ocean) before a single line of The Day I Left was committed to paper. One of those novels was set largely in Paris, written almost immediately after my first trip to France. Another novel alternated settings between Scotland and Brazil, shortly after . . . well, you get the idea.

In 2007, I began a year of study abroad in the southern French town of Pau, about an hour’s drive away from the border with Spain. And though I didn’t work on it right away, I knew I would eventually write a book about the place.

It took me three years to start that book. And when I did, I only had the seed of an idea. What if an American kid came to study in France, but witnessed so something terrible and life changing that he spent the rest of his days running away from the truth of what he’d seen?

Okay, the idea needed work. And a lot of it. But at least I had a setting.

The writing process was easy. Sit down, churn out words. I don’t really subscribe to the idea that writing is some magical, esoteric thing where the writer’s conscious mind shuts down, and the blah blah blah of “the characters come to life and tell me what they want to do” takes over. While that does happen from time to time, writing is mostly just work. It’s long, exhausting, and sometimes tedious work. But without that work, the characters are nothing. If you love it, which I do, it becomes easy.

But it is work.

Once the first draft of The Day I Left was complete, I found myself researching locations I hadn’t been to in three years. I pulled out all my old maps, pictures, home videos, and hand-written notes. I memorized the layout of Pau in a way I hadn’t before, even when I actually lived there. But there was one problem.

The town had changed quite a bit since 2007.

So, what did I do? I took a bit of artistic license. I wrote the town as I remembered it all those years ago, but exploited the hell out of Google Maps to make sure one street still connected to another, and to make sure the general layout of Pau worked within the context of my story. I think it did.

And if it didn’t, well, that’s why we call it fiction.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Book Review: The Horse Road

The Horse Road
Author: Troon Harrison
Published: Bloomsbury (August 7, 2012)
Genre: Historical Fiction, Middle-Grade
Rating: 5/5

Let's face it. If there's a horse in a story I will read it. It doesn't matter what age range the book was targeted for. Since graduating from SNHU's MFA writing program this past summer I haven't read many equine related novels. Instead I went through this alternating pattern of reading Japanese literature, historical fiction, and homosexual romance novels. When I saw this novel was slated for release I knew I had to read it.

Kallisto is an exceptional equestrian at the age of 13 and her mother has some of the finest Ferghana horses in central Asia. They are considered "heavenly horses" by the Chinese Emperor who wants them. He wants them so much he sends an army to invade Ferghana to take these horses. Kallisto suddenly finds herself in charge of saving her own horse, her family's horses, and her family's well being. How far will she pushed and what hidden elements will she discover within herself in a time of such extremes?

What I loved best about Harrison's writing was ability to ground me into place and setting from the first page. This is truly a tool and talent historical writers need to draw in her readers and Harrison has nailed it. Her descriptions and ability to establish the setting through scene are some of the best I have read in a middle-grade novel in the past few years.

One a side note: this novel is inspired by an actual historical event. Emperor Wu of Han China sent 40,000 men to Ferghana in 104 BC to try and obtain the Ferghana horses. You know those horses in Chinese art and sculpture you see at museums? Those are Ferghana horses which the Chinese did eventually get through a trade agreement in 103 BC after he sent 60,000 men after the first attempt failed. Back then, a country's power was in their blood stock of horses and the fineness of their cavalry. For myself, I can can understand the level of sacredness at which the Asiastic cultures held these horses. It is believed the Ferghana's are the ancestors of today's Akhal-Teke horse breed.

Resource: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferghana_horse





Saturday, November 17, 2012

Book Review: The Young Elizabeth

The Young Elizabeth
Author: Alison Plowden (deceased)
Published: The History Press  (Reprint 2011)
Genre: Biography
Rating: 5/5

I know. I am obsessed with Tudor England and learning about this time period is one of my biggest passions in life. When I find a biography on Elizabeth I written with flesh and blood and not just dry facts I am pleased. Alison Plowden's first book in her quartet covering Elizabeth I's life was a pleasure to read.

This well-researched biography brings the reader into the complicated and twisted first 25 years of Elizabeth's life. Plowden had done a marvelous job supporting her interpretation of Elizabeth's life and the psychological affects of her childhood with first-hand accounts. Readers and Tudor Historians can only suspect how the execution of Anne Boleyn and her father's consecutive marriages influenced Elizabeth's mental and spiritual development. What Plowden does supply her audience with are the tales and records of a shrewd, young, diplomatic young woman who was forced to learn how to protect herself and her status from a young age. Through her supporting evidence readers can see how these real life events helped mold Elizabeth into the stubborn, strong queen she would become.

For anyone looking to learn about Elizabeth's childhood I would strongly recommend this biography. Another biography I would also suggest is David Starkey's Elizabeth: The Struggle for the Throne.