Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Welcome, Krista D. Ball on her Blog Tour

As I sat on the bank of the swallow river, the drums pounding in the distance, I asked myself why the ancestors abandoned me. I had always behaved the way my elders taught me. I worked hard, shared with those around me, and never took more from the Earth than what I needed. I listened to my chief and my elders and respected the wisdom that the Spirits offered them. Why, then, would I be called “Cursed One”, never to be a person again?

The crowd in the distance sang and whooped in excitement, rhythmic drums echoing back to my isolated patch of ground. My job during the Gathering consisted of fetching water from the cold stream. Fearful of my presence polluting the festivities and angering the ancestors, several small children were designated to collect the bladders of water from me and run them back to the celebrating people. I could not even bring the water itself.

I was no longer Dancing Cat, messenger of my people. I was Cursed One. I would not experience the opening of the Sacred Bundle and receive guidance.

I looked out and over the endless field of grass opposite of the river and sighed. Someday, I will find a way to deliver myself. Even if I have to call upon death to rescue me.

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I’m a partial outliner. I like to write a quick blurb about the main purpose of the book and the outcome. Then, I ask, “What is the risk?” That answer allows for the overall direction of the story. For Harvest Moon, I wrote “discovery” as the risk. In reading Harvest Moon, you’ll find several instances of Dancing Cat’s fear of discovery.

As I knew some basic information about First Nations people in Alberta, Canada, I did my research after writing my first draft. If I do it before hand, I find that I include way too much back story and historical information that distracts from the main character’s path. I tweaked their wardrobe, their diet, and the passing months to better match the moon phases.

After that stage, it went to a few of my beta readers in my critique group. I made some changes based on the feedback. The largest feedback was the assumption of this being set in the United States and the confusion over a six month winter! Inserting geographical references was the hardest part of writing the story, since Dancing Cat’s world is pre-contact.

After it was all tidied up, Harvest Moon entered the world of submissions and, happily, found a home at MuseItUp Publishing.

You can learn more about Krista on her Muse It Up author's page.  You can also watch the video by clicking here.

Follow Krista as she continues her tour:

Nov 3
Nov 4
Nov 5
http://www.pennylockwoodehrenkranz.blogspot.com/


2 comments:

  1. Enjoyed the excerpt, Krista. Very well written.
    I should outline, but I find it difficult so far. My characters tell me where they want to go, but often they meander. I must outline more!

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  2. Thanks, Diane. This is actually it's own story about Harvest Moon, sort of the main character talking about book :)


    Outlining comes in different ways, Diane. Not everyone can draw out a full outline at the beginning. However, if there are a couple of scenes of events that you want to happen, make note of those. If things change, make note of why you did it. That way, you can avoid making huge changes that only get cut later -- or keep the changes that are going to stay.

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