The story I wrote, Geist is top of mind at the moment. This is the tale that I was motivated to write after my visit to America in 2007, when I got to rub shoulders with some of the most creative people I know- in both the writing and podcasting world.
Then a social media meme sprang up on Twitter among those same people, called Solidarity. Writers all over the globe posted their word count and supported each other to write more.
So Geist was born.
Deacon Sorcha Faris has plenty of supernatural problems and also her fair share of real life ones. A terrible riot caused by a geist attack has left her partner and husband badly injured and she is assigned a new partner that she doesn’t want. Merrick Chambers is young, talented and tormented by what he saw Sorcha do to his family years before. A good start to any partnership. As Active and Sensitive they are supposed to work seamlessly as a team. Sorcha wonders what their Abbot was thinking.
In the north, the Young Pretender to the throne that Sorcha’s Emperor now sits on, is struggling to find a safe harbor to make repairs to his ship. When Raed Rossin is offered the isolated village of Ulrich, he is grateful. However he cannot know that his ancient familial curse and the rising threat of the unliving will combine to make this place the most dangerous place for him to go.
The inspiration for the story is once again drawn from history. The world that Sorcha and her Deacons inhabit is based loosely on Imperial Russia, vast and packed with bickering Princes. The idea of an Emperor that was invited in to rule is not without precedent. George I of Greece and Haarkon VII of Norway were both born Danish princes.
The concept of the Deacons, who are sworn to protect the world from the unliving, came from several places. The Knights Templar might well have become the Deacons in another world. Organized in the same way as a religious order, they gave up the belief in what they call ‘the small gods’ in the face of a steady stream of paranormal attackers. While their weapons, the Gauntlet and the Strop hark back to ancient stories of artifacts imbued with special powers- the magical shield or sword of the Celts and Vikings.
And the challenges Sorcha faces… well I have always thought that in the fantasy genre real life personal crisises are not realistically portrayed. The hero rides off with the heroine and all is well. But what if the heroine chose the wrong person? What if like real life things changed? Hence Sorcha has to face the kind of turmoil people in our world know all too well.
So the supernatural, intrigue, dirigibles and a tormented heroine.
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I like this idea. I have always been fascinated with what happens at the end of the story. When books end with a epilogue, I always think, wow what a great jumping off point. What if these things happened a little differently, and that would make for a great story. I guess they call the a sequel but, in my mind, that could be the best part of the story.
The war was over, they had won, but now they had to go home…
“So the supernatural, intrigue, dirigibles and a tormented heroine.” … sounds great! Can’t wait to see this, available somewhere.
This sounds awesome Pip! I can’t wait to hear more about it and read it.