Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Virtual Book Tour + #Giveaway: Song of the Oceanides by J.G. Zymbalist @GoddessFish
Song of the Oceanides
by J.G.
Zymbalist
GENRE: YA Fantasy
BLURB:
Song
of the Oceanides is a highly-experimental triple narrative transgenre fantasy
that combines elements of historical fiction, YA, myth and fairy tale, science
fiction, paranormal romance, and more. For ages 10-110.
NOTE: The book book is now permafree on all seller
EXCERPT:
Dyce’s Head, Maine.
31 August.
Rory Slocum had only just returned
home from Putnam’s General Store and Newsagent when he noticed the girl
standing in the heart of the garden. She
seemed to be lost in the music of the wind chimes dangling from Mother’s lilac
tree. Still, despite the girl’s seeming
innocence, somehow he just knew that she must be one of the Oceanides who had
been taunting him all summer long.
She must have heard his footsteps in
the salty afternoon breeze because she turned to look upon him. What a comely girl too.
A bit of jam and then some! He stopped in his tracks and studied her
classical features.
She had plum-black hair, eyes of sea
green, bold chiseled planes to her face, fine hallowed cheeks, and a sharp jaw
line. How could she be anything but an
Oceanide?
Slowly he advanced as far as the fog
cannon where he paused a second time.
Perhaps he would do something so as to entertain her, and once she
realized how amusing he could be, she would tell the others to leave him
be. He walked over to the lilac
tree. “Look what I’ve got here!” With that he held up his copy of Sir
Pilgarlic Guthrie’s Phantasy Retrospectacle.
She must have resented the whole
notion that a boy like Rory would even think to approach someone like her. Grimacing, she called to another girl who had
just walked up through the gale-torn bluffs.
The two of them spoke in a tongue resembling the Byzantine Greek in
which the drunken churchwarden sometimes delivered his public addresses.
As giddy as ever, Rory advanced a
few more steps. “You know what they call
this sort of picture book, do you? Down
at Putnam’s, they tell me it’d be un comique pittoresque. Just like the newsagents sell down there in
Paris.” Now he pointed to the picture on
the dust jacket—the Oceanides’ long flowing hair and the mint-cream linen gowns
reaching down to their ankles. Afterward
he pointed at the girls themselves standing there in their own creamy-white
gowns. “Sir Pilgarlic Guthrie, he’s the
bettermost! Everything bang up to the
elephant and—”
“Have you any idea how odd you are?”
the first Oceanide asked. “And you’ll be
beginning your fifth year in school next fall, isn’t that right? They’ll tear you apart, a beanpea like you.”
Guest
Post:
Where do ideas come from?
Ideas
come exclusively from the unconscious mind.
There is no muse or Holy Spirit and no messages from the gods. Also the unconscious mind does not
necessarily communicate or transmit ideas in dramatic vivid-colored
dreams. It might be okay to write about
dreams in a romantic way, but no one should be callow enough to believe in that
sort of revelation happening even once in a lifetime. For most people, any given dream slips away
so quickly, it cannot possibly be remembered or analyzed or deciphered. Most often, the unconscious mind breaks
through the surface in a mundane way.
The best ideas come to you as you’re brushing your teeth or raking the
leaves.
Learning new words and things also happens
in a totally random way. You might read
a really great work by Aldous Huxley and not learn a single word or phrase that
you might want to jot down in your idea book or someday use. The next day, you might go on to some writer
who does not have a reputation anything like that of Aldous Huxley but still
find several extraordinary words or colloquialisms that would fit perfectly in
something you’re either writing or planning.
The same thing holds true for art, cinema, opera, whatever. You never know and can never predict when any
work or any scenario in your life will hit you in a special way or provide some
word or spark that triggers your imagination.
Because ideas and words come so randomly,
it is absolutely necessary for any writer to keep an idea book or at least a
collection of papers upon which to record any and all breakthroughs,
epiphanies, vocabulary words, and phrases.
The best way to keep an idea book or set of idea papers is to break up
every page into a set of boxes—something like a checkerboard. When an idea comes to you, write it down in
one of the boxes. When the next idea or
word comes, write it down in its own box.
After a while, when you’ve got a pile of these kinds of papers, it will
be no trouble to cut everything up with scissors and then mix and match the
different squares to see which ideas and words seem to go together. At that point, you’ve already (pretty much
effortlessly) sketched out the makings of several different literary units or
works. The leftovers that don’t fit into
any specific pile can be reconciled with the next batch you accumulate.
AUTHOR BIO:
J.G.
Źymbalist began writing Song of the Oceanides as a child when his family
summered in Castine, Maine where they rented out Robert Lowell’s house.
The
author returned to the piece while working for the Martha’s Vineyard Historical
Society, May-September, 2005. He
completed the full draft in Ellsworth, Maine later that year.
For
more information, please see http://jgzymbalist.com
LINKS:
Giveaway:
$50 Amazon/BN GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better
your chances of winning.
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13 comments:
Thank you for hosting today.
To everyone at Avid Reader, thank you for hosting! Also Song of the Oceanides is now free and available in kindle, apple, and nook formats. You can find the apple version at iTunes and the nook format at the Barnes & Noble site.
Thanks for sharing the excerpt!
I enjoyed reading the excerpt. This book sounds like such an interesting and intriguing read. Looking forward to checking out this book.
I really enjoyed reading the entire post today. Thank you for the reveal!
Happy Wednesday and thanks so much for the opportunity to win
To Victoria, Ally, Nikolina, and James, thank you for your kind words! It's my pleasure!
Congrats on the new book and good luck on the book tour!
I have added this book to my TBR list and look forward to reading this book!
I enjoyed the Guest Post.
Thank you, Ally
Thank you, Mary
I really loved this post! Gave me a lot to think about concerning my own creativity! Thank you! :)
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