Wednesday, February 5, 2020

In the Spotlight: Roland Clarke ~ Author of "Feathered Fire"

Over the coming weeks, the IWSG Anthology blog will be featuring posts
from each of the authors in Voyager: The Third Ghost.
Our author today is Roland Clarke.


Roland Clarke on his short story "Feathered Fire" . . .


Flying Fur

Pass. My first reaction to entering a middle grade anthology competition. I’m not stepping outside my comfort blanket-zone.

Scared - caught like a rabbit in the headlights.

Except I was stuck down a rabbit burrow, and the Ninja Captain was encouraging me, saying, “You can do it! Write and finish the story...”

I do love a tempting rabbit hole, but my reading and research had led me into the wrong warren: fearless Soviet airwomen in World War II, notably ‘Night Witches’. Not relevant or suitable for a MG story, even if the ‘historical fiction’ box was ticked.
Anyway, what was meant by Middle Grade Historical – Adventure/Fantasy?

Did my alternative history about Kanata fit? A tale about a young Leif Eriksson and a shamaness girl hove into sight. A goddess inspired voyage to a new world. Possible. Plus, I’d researched and developed my Viking Age for my 2017 Blogging from A to Z theme “The History of Kanata”.

Did I say I love researching down rabbit holes?

I'm late, I'm late for a very important date – well, a deadline. No time to write and start again.

Not too late to read a superb MG historical fantasy- Katherine Rundell’s The Wolf Wilder – my book of 2019.

That was the magical trigger for Feathered Fire, a tale uniting the Firebird and my flyer fixation. Combining historical fact and Slavic folklore proved to be a winning formula.

Finally, I suppressed my fears, switched off my urge to edit, edit, edit, and edit forever. I managed to integrate the comments from my wonderful beta readers - especially an awesome MG kid-reader from the UK with some awesome suggestions.

And the flying fur?

On the Eastern front, the fearless all-female 588th Night Bomber Regiment – nicknamed the Night Witches – wore moleskin fur masks to protect their faces in the open cockpits of their biplanes. But that’s another mole runway.


Yevdokia Bershanskaya 
Commander of the 46th Taman Guards Night Bomber Aviation Regiment 
Instructing her crew in 1942 
 Photo Credit:  Olga Shirnina / KMediadrumworld

Blurb 
Can 12-year-old Vasy do more than tend goats while watching the evil invaders of her Soviet motherland?
Her older sister, Kalyna, might harass the fascist enemies as a Night Witch, but how can she help?
Injustice tore their lives apart even before WWII. Not all their communist comrades recognise their worth. Is it worth dreaming of a better future?
But their dead mother taught them the Firebird kindles hope. Will they outwit evil if they are united?




Excerpt

"Feathered Fire" by Roland Clarke

Vasy followed Galina to the central firepit where the partisans ate and talked. Smoke, soup, and chatter curled around her. Her mind searched for a tale she hadn’t told them.
In her skirt pocket, her fingers brushed the feather. Only one fable felt right. The origin of Zharptica—the Firebird.
Haggard faces gathered around her. Word had spread that she would weave her magic again.
Serious men, cunning women, and admiring youngsters stared at her, eagerly.
She was not kulak scum tonight.
“You remember The Firebird and Princess Vasilisa—”
“—you told that last week.” A sandy-haired boy her own age groaned. “You have to know another. Why don’t you?”
“I haven’t told you who Zharptica is.”
“It’s a bird of ill omen,” said one of Commissar Krupin’s gang.
“Only if you’re the Tsar and driven by greed and ambition. Only evil is punished. We aren’t like that, are we?”
A chorus of voices replied, “Never.”
Vasy nodded and raised her hands, palms down to settle them.
“You all know Zharptica comes from a distant land as a blessing for those in need. But what was the Firebird’s origin?”
“A magician,” said a young soldier clutching his ancient rifle.
She smiled. “Someone knows then, but I suspect not everyone. According to folklore, the Firebird is very rare, with plumage blazing red, orange, and yellow like the flames of a flickering fire. When removed, the feathers continue to glow. That is why some people try catching Zharptica.”
She paused and studied her spellbound audience.
“Once upon a time, thousands of years ago, a meek and gentle orphan girl named Maryushka lived in a small village…”


The Second Sun
by llifi-kei  



Bio

After diverse careers, Roland Clarke was an equestrian journalist and green activist when chronic illness hastened retirement. But he hasn’t stopped exploring rabbit holes and writing - mainly mysteries and alternative history. Roland and his wife – both avid gamers - now live in Idaho (USA) with their four fur-babies, although their hearts are in North Wales (UK).


Coming on Wednesday, February 12, 2020 . . .

Next up is Sherry Ellis who shares her backstory for "Ghosts of Pompeii." Can Bubba and Squirt warn everyone before Mount Vesuvius blows, so they don't end up like the Ghosts of Pompeii?



* * * * * * * * * *


The release date for VOYAGERS: The Third Ghost 
is May 5, 2020,
but purchase links are available,
and you can preorder a copy now.

Print 9781939844729 $13.95
EBook 9781939844736 $4.99
Juvenile Fiction - Historical / Action & Adventure / Fantasy & Magic
Dancing Lemur Press/Freedom Fox Press


Amazon - Print https://www.amazon.com/dp/193984472XKindle https://www.amazon.com/Voyagers-Third-Ghost-Yvonne-Ventresca-ebook/dp/B083C4WPR5/

Barnes & Noble - https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/voyagers-yvonne-ventresca/1135912991?ean=2940163430857

ITunes - https://books.apple.com/ca/book/voyagers-the-third-ghost/id1493413956

Kobo - https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/voyagers-the-third-ghost

12 comments:

L. Diane Wolfe said...

We're very glad you fell down that rabbit hole. Your story fit perfectly with the theme and gave a glimpse into a lesser known part of history.

Fundy Blue said...

Congratulations, Roland! I'm looking forward to reading your story!

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

I'm glad I pushed you then!

Roland Clarke said...

Part of me is still in that rabbit hole - and others. Thanks for all your help, Diane.

Roland Clarke said...

Thanks Louise, for this chance to say more. Looking forward to discovering more about the other writers and reading their tales - including yours.

Roland Clarke said...

I'm glad you did too, Alex - this is proving enjoyable...most of the time.

Sherry Ellis said...

Good for you for stepping out of your comfort zone and writing something excellent! Not many people can do that.

Katharina Gerlach said...

This sounds more and more like a completely cool anthology. I'm looking forward to reading your story, Roland.

Roland Clarke said...

The trick, Sherry, was finding are a comfortable corner in a new genre - and rekindling my buried child.

Roland Clarke said...

Thanks Katherina. We seem to be such a diverse group of readers and the tales seemed to reflect that. Can't wait either.

Rebecca M. Douglass said...

I love rabbit holes. I have been researching pioneering women and children in the US for several decades, and my anthology story is the first thing out of all that to be published! Then there’s the research I’ve done (20 years? 15, anyway) on WWI, especially from the Canadian POV. That will probably never lead to any publication, but has led to a lot of fascinating reading. So... rabbit away. You never know where it will lead.

Roland Clarke said...

After the WWII rabbit hole led to my anthology entry, I need to keep burrowing; current rabbit hole is Van Gogh and that's bearing fruit. Looking forward to learning more about your entry - and to reading it, Rebecca.