Saturday, August 27, 2011
'Sarabande' paperback edition now "live" on Amazon
I'm happy to announce that my new fantasy "Sarabande" was released today in trade paperback. Now, I'm on pins and needles waiting for my author's copies. I have the cover art and the PDF, but it's not the same.
Told from a young woman's point of view, this is fantasy with an edge. My protaonist, Sarabande, undertakes a 1,600 mile journey alone to find the powerful Sun Singer in hopes he will get rid of the ghost who has haunted haunted her for three years. Her journey will take her from the mountains of Montana to the corn and soybean country of central Illinois.
Sarabande is warned that the journey is dangerous. She is told to carry a sharp knife. But on a foggy night in a desolate spot on the Montana plains, the knife isn't enough to help her and Sarabande's world changes forever.
You May Also Like
Sarabande's Journey, "Release Date Nostalgia"
The Write Type, "Sarabande by Malcolm R. Campbell" (a snyopsis and an excerpt)
--Malcolm
Labels:
fantasy,
Malcolm R. Campbell,
paperback,
Sarabande
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
'Sarabande' GiveAway on GoodReads
Three free copies of my new fantasy "Sarabande" are available on GoodReads in a giveaway celebrating the pending release of the paperback edition. To enter, just click on the widget in the right-hand column of this blog.
The novel is already available in an e-book format on Kindle and Smashwords as well as on Kindlegraph.
New Blog for Writers
I have started a WordPress blog called Malcolm's Book Bits and Notions. I come across so many reviews, news and feature stories, and other bits and pieces of book information every week, I decided to put the links into posts so others can pick and choose.
Hope you find some helpful links there.
--Malcolm
Labels:
Book Bits,
book giveaway,
fantasy,
Goodreads,
KindleGraph,
Sarabande
Friday, August 19, 2011
People tend to Google everything - so why write a book review in the dark?
Going on a date with somebody? Google him or Google her and see what they've been up to. That's part of today's dating ritual.
See a bit of history on a TV show and think it's wrong? Google it. If you're wrong, nobody's going to know. If you're right, you can tell your friends, make an enlightened comment on Facebook, or leave a comment on the program's blog or website.
In this Google world, I was surprised to read an online book review today about a well known, award winning book set in another country in another era and find that the reviewer didn't understand some of the political terms in the novel. The reviewer enjoyed the book, but was a bit puzzled by the politics.
This seems to be a common reader complaint: being puzzled by a book due to lack of knowledge that's really easy to look up. Quite often, the author will fill in some of the details about political parties, movements, geographical areas, cities and their histories, etc. as it applies to the plot and to the characters' motivations.
If not, why not Google the name of the political party, town, forest, mountain range or famous person out of the past? You'll know the answer in an instarnt and the novel will make more sense--especially if you plan to review the book.
Now, I don't expect people who are searching for random facts in novels to be a major online force when Yahoo and other search engines track what's trending at the moment. But really, typing "Rabat" or "Tory" or "Virginia Woolf" into search field doesn't take any longer than typing "Burger King Ads," "Hershey Walkout" or "Daniel Radcliffe."
That's my two cents for this Friday afternoon.
--Malcolm
See a bit of history on a TV show and think it's wrong? Google it. If you're wrong, nobody's going to know. If you're right, you can tell your friends, make an enlightened comment on Facebook, or leave a comment on the program's blog or website.
In this Google world, I was surprised to read an online book review today about a well known, award winning book set in another country in another era and find that the reviewer didn't understand some of the political terms in the novel. The reviewer enjoyed the book, but was a bit puzzled by the politics.
This seems to be a common reader complaint: being puzzled by a book due to lack of knowledge that's really easy to look up. Quite often, the author will fill in some of the details about political parties, movements, geographical areas, cities and their histories, etc. as it applies to the plot and to the characters' motivations.
If not, why not Google the name of the political party, town, forest, mountain range or famous person out of the past? You'll know the answer in an instarnt and the novel will make more sense--especially if you plan to review the book.
Now, I don't expect people who are searching for random facts in novels to be a major online force when Yahoo and other search engines track what's trending at the moment. But really, typing "Rabat" or "Tory" or "Virginia Woolf" into search field doesn't take any longer than typing "Burger King Ads," "Hershey Walkout" or "Daniel Radcliffe."
That's my two cents for this Friday afternoon.
--Malcolm
Saturday, August 13, 2011
Fantasy often begins with an old myth or legend
“We call it Lightning Falls,” said Marten. “Deucalion named it so. A holy man appeared to him in a dream and said, ‘Stand inside the storm and you will find nothing but the freedom of your dreams.’ The sky was black at noon, so the story goes, when lightning struck the rock, creating a tunnel. A thousand people walked through before time closed the portal and guarded it with a pillar of fire.” -- from "The Sun Singer"
Alice steps into a fantasy world via a rabbit hole. Lucy finds Narnia via a wardrobe in a professor's house. Harry Potter walks through a hidden passageway at a London train station. In my 2004 novel The Sun Singer, Robert Adams finds Pyrrha via a remote mountain cabin.
Hidden worlds in fantasy novels are frequently reached via portals or tunnels, and they open up before the reader and the protagonist as realities complete with customs, characters, background myths and legends. My alternative world is called Pyrrha, named after the wife of Deucalion from the Greek myth of the flood. (The graphic here shows Deucalion and his Pyrrha in the version of the story told my Ovid.)
North American Connection
In The Sun Singer, the residents of Pyrrha believe that Deucalion and Pyrrha came to North America as they fulfilled their orders from Zeus to repopulate the world. To avoid conflict, they left the reality that would ultimately become Glacier National Park and followed a tunnel into a look-alike world they named Pyrrha.
Greece, Zeus, Deucalion and Pyrrha have nothing to do with the plot of The Sun Singer. I included them in the book to give the world of Pyrrha a solid foundation. Likewise, readers of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, The Chronicles of Narnia, and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone also find secret worlds that not only exist in the here and now, but also have a history to them. Tolkien, of course, went further than anyone in creating a living and breathing world in Lord of the Rings.
Sarabande Leaves Pyrrha and Returns
Fantasy, like its cousin magical realism, needs an anchor to keep it from becoming wholly speculative and ephemeral. I grew up with the Athurian legends, Middle Earth, and Narnia, and was always impressed by the fact that the masters of fantasy gave readers a lot more than a thinly constructed arena for the here-and-now adventures of their stories. They created worlds with as much depth as our own.
Like The Sun Singer, my upcoming fantasy adventure novel Sarabande gets its depth from the myths and legends behind the world or Pyrrha as well as the very real mountain world of Glacier National Park. My intention here is to give the reader the impression that my protagonist Sarabande's journey begins and ends at a place so real, her story quite possibly is true.
In The Sun Singer, young Robert Adams finds adventure by leaving his home in Illinois, traveling to Glacier Park and discovering Pyrrha. In Sarabande, the young Sarabande finds adventure by leaving and then returning to Pyrrha. That is, her trials and tribulations occur on both sides of the magic doorway between worlds.
Readers already believe in the stuff of which their own world is made. If I can lure them into believing in the stuff of my fantasy world, then I have a strong foundation for telling them a good story. Background myths and legends are an old writing technique that can be a writer's best friends.
--Malcolm
Labels:
fantasy,
Harry Potter,
Middle Earth,
Narnia,
portals,
Pyrrha,
secret worlds
Wednesday, August 03, 2011
If only we stayed as curious as children
Just watching my granddaughter puzzle out how things work makes me smile.
With toys, computers, or her mother's digital camera, she wants to know all the variations the object is capable of performing. And then she experiments. What does the world look like when the camera is upside down, closer, farther way. Which toys float and which do not? How does one peel an orange or open up a small, individual pack of Gouda cheese? The red covering of the cheese fits on one's nose, one's ear, on the end of a crayon, did you know?
Writers, I think maintain some of this curiosity. So, too, with artists, actors, musicians--how many ways can one improvise on what is or what might be?
There's unconcerned innocence in my granddaughter's improvisation, for while she knows that certain actions make things break, she isn't to the point of anticipating what untried actions might also be dangerous in some way.
Unfortunately, we give up some of our innocent play when we ldearn to think ahead and consider the consequences of one thing vs. another thing. A necessary step, I suppose, but we give up so much when we finally take it.
How dull life can seem without the what if of a writer, a painter or a child. I like watching my granddaughter's what if play because it reminds me of how I was--and of how I can be for short periods of time when I write.
With toys, computers, or her mother's digital camera, she wants to know all the variations the object is capable of performing. And then she experiments. What does the world look like when the camera is upside down, closer, farther way. Which toys float and which do not? How does one peel an orange or open up a small, individual pack of Gouda cheese? The red covering of the cheese fits on one's nose, one's ear, on the end of a crayon, did you know?
Writers, I think maintain some of this curiosity. So, too, with artists, actors, musicians--how many ways can one improvise on what is or what might be?
There's unconcerned innocence in my granddaughter's improvisation, for while she knows that certain actions make things break, she isn't to the point of anticipating what untried actions might also be dangerous in some way.
Unfortunately, we give up some of our innocent play when we ldearn to think ahead and consider the consequences of one thing vs. another thing. A necessary step, I suppose, but we give up so much when we finally take it.
How dull life can seem without the what if of a writer, a painter or a child. I like watching my granddaughter's what if play because it reminds me of how I was--and of how I can be for short periods of time when I write.
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