Tuesday, February 14, 2017
Full Service Tour + #Giveaway: Wayfarer Returns by Stephanie R. Sorensen @SassaMargot @GoddessFish
Toru: Wayfarer Returns
by Stephanie
R. Sorensen
GENRE: Historical Steampunk Fiction
BLURB:
A nation encircled by
enemies
A noblewoman with
everything to lose
A fisherman with
everything to prove and a nation to save.
In Japan of 1852, the
peace imposed by the Tokugawa Shoguns has lasted 250 years. Peace has turned to
stagnation, however, as commoners grow impoverished and their lords restless.
Swords rust. Martial values decay. Foreign barbarians circle the island nation’s
closed borders like vultures.
Tōru, a shipwrecked
young fisherman rescued by traders and taken to America, defies the Shogun’s
ban on returning to Japan, determined to save his homeland from foreign
invasion. Can he rouse his countrymen in time? Or will the cruel Shogun carry
out his vow to execute all who set foot in Japan after traveling abroad? Armed
only with his will, a few books, dirigible plans and dangerous ideas, Tōru must
transform the Emperor’s realm before the Black Ships come.
Excerpt:
“Rather than argue with them, you
should invite them to make the first flight with you,” said Takamori. “At first
they will agree, since it is their place as the leaders. Everyone is very
excited about the dirigibles. Set the time and place for the first flight. Jiro
should explain that is not a good time because of the wind or something
technical that needs testing first. You argue with Jiro and perhaps even scold
him for impertinence in front of the daimyōs.”
“Yes, I am often scolded for
impertinence,” said Jiro. “I have a talent for it, you know.”
“Indeed you do,” said Tōru. He saw
where Takamori was going. “Then they notice the risks and uncertainties…and
they ask me if it is safe. I tell them honestly that we have no idea if it is
safe or if it will work, and that we might all crash to a fiery death and
therefore perhaps I should test it first myself before we endanger them.”
“And I will be impertinent again and
tell you in front of them that you don’t have a clue how to fly one of these dirijibi!” Jiro finished the plan for
them. “Which is also true, by the way. I know how to fly one of these, and you
don’t.”
“You’ve never flown one either,”
protested Tōru.
“I have built one. Almost. Soon. How
many have you built?” asked Jiro, with his broad grin.
Tōru opened his mouth and closed it
again.
“See? Problem solved,” said
Takamori, as he pounded Tōru on the back. “We have a fine dirijibi pilot, the finest dirijibi
pilot in all of Japan, our good man Jiro here.”
Interview
with Stephanie R. Sorensen
Have
you ever had an imaginary friend?
No, not exactly. The closest I came was a friend who had
an imaginary friend. We were very small, maybe six or seven years old, and she
didn’t roll without her friend Emily, who was invisible to the rest of us. We
had to make room for Emily in the car pool and ask her preferences when making
plans. Emily got us into trouble a couple of times, like when she wanted us to
swim in the lake we weren’t allowed to swim in unless adults were around, or
the time she wanted to make perfume so we had to tear all the roses off the
rose bushes in my friend’s mother’s garden and smash the flowers to get the
rose oil for the perfume. My friend moved away and I missed her and missed having
a good excuse for doing outrageous things like smashing all the roses without Emily’s
help.
I do have a motto for this situation. “Reality is for
those who lack imagination.”
Do
you have any phobias?
No, but I spend way too much energy hiding my appalled
reactions to other people’s horrible statements or actions. You could say I
have a phobia about expressing what I really think, lest I offend. An ingrained
habit of politeness prevents me from speaking more freely, and that perhaps
drives my desire to write fiction. I’m going to create some evil and outspoken
characters in future books, and revel in the doing. I feel it coming on. Soon.
Do
you listen to music when you're writing?
Yes. Classical music or Celtic or Scandinavian metal goth,
something full of motion and liveliness for cranking out first drafts. Editing
requires silence, for I have to try out different options in my head without
them being carried along by a musical flow that distorts my understanding of
them.
Do
you ever read your stories out loud?
Every word, once I am in final edits, while I pace in
circles. I have to hear it aloud to know if it is working.
Tell
us about your main character and who inspired him/her.
Let me back up to where the story came from, and how that
got me to the character.
I originally wanted to write a steampunk story, something
lively and fun and adventurous like Cherie Priest’s Boneshaker series. But
she’d already done the Civil War period, and the Brits had done Victorian
England. To death. Over and over again. What to do?! So, thinking about ways to
freshen things up, I thought about Japan, where I had lived, studied and worked
for several years. The concept of “Japan plus early steam = defeat the West”
struck me as quite steampunk and a fun alternate history to explore.
I went looking for a hero and found the true story of
Manjiro, a ship’s cook who had been rescued by Americans and taken to America
where he lived for eight or nine years in the 1840s. Eventually he missed his
mother and found his way back to Japan. This was forbidden, on pain of death,
for anyone to leave Japan and return, so he should have been executed by the
Shogun. But the Japanese government was really nervous by then about the
foreign threat, and decided to milk poor Manjiro for all the intelligence he
could provide about the West. Manjiro was made a samurai, and served the Shogun
in some capacity when Commodore Perry came, helping to interpret the Americans’
behavior and speech.
*SPOILER ALERT* Tōru’s story follows much of Manjiro’s
tale, but I sparkled Tōru up a bit, making him quite talented and giving him a
fancier lord for a father and a (possibly) shapeshifter mother in contrast to
Manjiro, who was an illiterate fisherman and, as some of the less polite
history books assert, not very bright or insightful about his experiences in
America.
This brought me to the point where I could create Tōru’s
character. One part of Tōru is formed by the circumstances of his birth.
*SPOILER ALERT* He is a bastard, an illegitimate son of a great father and a
mysterious mother, raised in humble circumstances but exposed to great wealth
and power, and superbly educated. He belongs to neither world, not the small
safe village of his mother, nor the great castle of his lord father, where his
father’s wife makes sure he knows his inferior station. Imagine how that would
shape your soul, to be so close to greatness as your society defines it, but
denied direct access. (Jon Snow, anyone?) And yet, in your desire to please a
father who does care for you and interacts in nurturing ways with you, you
would give anything, do anything to win that father’s approval, even risk your
life, not once, but over and over again. Now amp it up, and you are sworn by
that father not to reveal the relationship, not to rely on that father and his
power, but single-handedly attempt to save your country. Imagine the
loneliness, the pressure, the mingled pride and longing and alienation of that
young man, with so much weighing down on him.
So Tōru isn’t carefree and fun-loving like his blacksmith
friend Jiro, or even his low-ranked samurai friend Saigo Takamori, both of whom
may be humble but are comfortable in their places in the world. He’s majime (“serious,” “earnest”) and
dutiful, which yes, is one stereotype of Japanese, but it comes out of who he
is and his role and his upbringing. The weight of the world rests on him, and
has since his birth. I then layered onto this inner soul the personality of
Japanese young men I had known well once upon a time, young men who were very
serious and dutiful, remembering how they moved, studied, ate, drank, spoke and
fell in love. And that is where Tōru comes from. He’s not flashy or charismatic
or fun-loving. He embodies qualities of duty and self-sacrifice which are hard
to make sexy in a world that values more flash. But I love him for his courage,
his steadfastness, his heart, his compassion and empathy for the lesser born
people he grew up with in his mother’s village. I hope readers will set aside
their preferences for a more Western and charismatic hero and appreciate Tōru
as he is in his Japaneseness and in the character formed by the circumstances
of his upbringing.
AUTHOR BIO:
Stephanie
is a writer based in the Victorian mining town of Leadville, Colorado, where
she lives at 10,251 feet with her husband, five chickens, two bantam English
game hens and one Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. After a former life in big
cities-New York City, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Boston, Mexico City, Atlanta, Los
Angeles and Santa Fe-she now enjoys the birdsong and quiet writing time she
finds in Leadville. Her first novel draws on her experience living and working
in Japan; her next historical novel is set in Mexico where she also lived for
several years. As a Leadville local, she likes her Victorian attire spiced with
a little neo-Victorian futurism and the biggest bustle possible.
Recognition
for "Toru: Wayfarer Returns"
--
Finalist, Fantasy category, 2016 Next Generation Indie Book Awards
--
Bronze Medal Award, Multicultural Fiction category, 2016 eLit Book Awards
Author LINKS:
Publisher
Links:
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Links:
Buy
Link:
Giveaway:
$50 Amazon or B/N GC
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8 comments:
Thanks for hosting!
congrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
Thank you for hosting Toru and his friends today! And Happy Valentine's day too! By the way, I've put the digital version on $0.99 promotion today through the end of the tour, so please snag your copy now if you would like to read more about Toru.
Great to learn about your characters!
--Trix
This book sounds excellent. Love the cover. Thanks for hosting. What is a "full service" tour?
Great post - I enjoyed reading it!
I really enjoyed reading your interview, thank you!
A great interview thank you.
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