Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Who is Colleen of the Zenko Clan?

Colleen, the first kitsune (see earlier post, “Kitsunes of Darkwana”) you meet in Daughters of Darkwana, the first book in my novel series, plays an unusual set of roles.
First, she represents a possible love interest for Daughters protagonist, Wally Cook.
I didn’t use the word “possible” to sound coy. The relationship that develops between Wally and Colleen deviates from the usual, hero-saves-girl-so-now-she-loves-him-because-we (guys)-all-want-to-pretend-it-works-that-way path. It fails, in fact, to resemble that path in the slightest.
Colleen exists as a different species from Wally, which further complicates matters in partnership with the fact that Colleen hails from a female-dominated society.
Colleen grew up as an orphan in the Zenko Clan (see earlier post, “Zenko, Inari, and Shinto Clans of Darkwana”). She and her “sisters” waited, as children, for their parents to return from their war.
Their parents did not return.
This results in a confused and conflicted sense of anger, grief, and abandonment issues for Colleen.
A small portion from Daughters follows below. Colleen and Wally, in this scene, meet for the first time.
I will, next week, discuss Wally’s supportive cast, the other kitsunes of Colleen’s clan.



Wally stood, surrounded by rotten tree stumps. He stared at the creature before him. She regarded him from a cautious distance.
The anthropomorphic fox matched his height. She stood on two human legs. Human arms dangled at her sides. Her eyes glowed as liquid emeralds. Fangs filled her muzzle. Wally estimated her age in the late twenties.
A silhouette of a maple leaf decorated the left thigh of her baggy, green pants. She wore a matching, sleeveless shirt.
A long fox tail swayed behind her. Her exposed fur shone brown, short and smooth, as if painted upon her. A band of white fur encircled her throat. Another looped her right arm just below her shoulder.
A tree branch rested on the ground between her and Wally, his muddy handprints smeared across it. The monster had rescued him, he realized.
“What are you?” he asked, though he doubted the creature would understand the question, let alone possess the capacity to answer it.
She looked insulted. “I am a kitsune. Obviously.”
Wally blushed. “Right. That would be obvious. Except that I’m, ah, not from around here.”
She tilted her head. “From which portion of Darkwana do you hail?”
“I’m not from Darkwana. I’m from . . . farther away.”
Mild alarm crept into her face. “There is no farther away.” She retreated several steps, as if she dealt with a possible lunatic.
He offered her his sanest smile. “What’s our most distant location?”
“The snow lands of Southern Shell.”
“And after that?”
She paused. The question, it seemed, never before occurred to her. “ . . . Nothing.”
Wally refused to believe her. The real world must sit beyond Darkwana’s edges.
She turned to leave. Her tail swished.
“Wait!” He sprinted forward and seized her arm.
Her eyes blazed white, brighter than headlights. She spread her talons before his face. He tumbled backwards with a sting of terror before he tripped and splashed sideways into a shallow, muddy puddle.
A cellophane-wrapped pack of cigarettes flew from his breast pocket. It slapped a soggy nest of pine needles.
The kitsune froze. Her wide eyes returned to their previous emerald-green. She knelt with wonder to touch the cigarettes.
“What?” Wally asked, surprised by her reaction. “You smoke?” He stumbled to his feet, patted the empty pockets of his jeans. “You’re more than welcome to a cigarette, but I seem to have lost my lighter, so—”
She gasped, hugged the pack to her breast as if to protect them. “You would burn these?”
“What else are they good for?”
She straightened. Her tail thumped. “Nobody in her right mind would burn so much wealth.”
Wealth? The cigarettes are money, Wally realized. “Well, keep ’em.” She saved his life, after all. An idea occurred to him. “How would you like to earn an entire carton of cigarettes?”
She hesitated. Her rear claws squeezed fistfuls of mud. “What would you ask of me?”
Good question. Wally needed to return home in time to catch Perdita’s phone call. First, he needed to escape Baxter’s nightmare. He also needed time to invent a strategy for such a journey. He needed— “I need a safe place to hide,” he told her.
“Hide?” Her eyes narrowed. “Are you a criminal?”
Wally shook his head. “I write horror novels. Even published a few.”
She didn’t appear persuaded. “From whom do you hide?”
Wally sighed, too exhausted to try anything more creative than the truth. “Vasuki. His bishop, Baxter, is after me.”
She offered her hand with abrupt enthusiasm. “Colleen of the Zenko Clan.”
“Huh?”
She threw him an impatient glare. “My name is Colleen.”
“Oh! Wally. Wally Cook.”
They shook hands.


Thanks for reading.
Daughters of Darkwana received a sweet, succinct review, which you can read here, http://www.thebookeaters.co.uk/daughters-of-darkwana-by-martin-wolt-jr/
         Also, the third book in my series, Diaries of Darkwana, will hit Kindle just as soon as I find out what happened to my cover artist.

I publish my blogs as follows:
Sundays: Movie reviews at moviesmartinwolt.blogspot.com
Mondays: Short stories at martinwolt.blogspot.com
Tuesdays: A look at the politics of the entertainment world at EntertainmentMicroscope.blogspot.com.
Wednesdays: An inside look at my novels (such as Daughters of Darkwana, which you can now find on Kindle) at Darkwana.blogspot.com
Thursdays: Tips to improve your fiction at FictionFormula.blogspot.com


Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Who are Wally and Baxter?

I want you to meet the characters from my novels. I want to tell you all about their flaws, their hopes, their fears, and their unusual abilities.
I don’t want to spoil too much, though. It proves an act of balance to describe my characters in partial detail.
My series, Diaries of Darkwana, offers a massive roll call. It seems appropriate to begin introductions with my protagonist, Wally Cook, from the first book in the series, Daughters of Darkwana.
I will tell you that Wally never shows up again. Daughters offers his only appearance in the entire series. I will not, at this time, spoil the reason why (assume nothing).
Wally Cook seems, at first glance, a slob and a hermit. He writes novels and hides, alone, in his cabin in the middle of nowhere.
A troubled past haunts Wally. I won’t spoil that past here, as it provides a big surprise that puts together, for the reader, many of the puzzle pieces found in Daughters.
will tell you that Wally wants redemption for a “wrong” he committed (whether or not he honestly stands guilty of anything will remain the readers’ call).
Wally fails to grasp that he cannot accept redemption until he first forgives himself.
Daughters follows Wally’s journey to discover this truth—and save Earth and another world called Darkwana from an evil dictator and his army of supernatural assassins via the aid of a clan of magical, anthropomorphic foxes blah, blah, blah.
Wally possesses a unique talent. He enters, when he sleeps, the dream worlds of other people. Wally even possesses the power to bring people and things from those dreams into the real world.
All worlds in Diaries exist as the dream world of someone called a Dreamer. While most of us dream scattered nonsense with little to no correlation between sessions, Dreamers always return to the same dreamscape, which evolves even in the Dreamer’s absence, while that Dream remains awake.
Special Agent Baxter of the FBI, the antagonist for Daughters, exists as a Dreamer.
Baxter, in his dream world, Darkwana (filled with creatures, objects, and characters from Japanese mythology), serves the tyrannical and terrifying dictator, Vasuki.
I will not tell you anything about Vasuki or his queen. Big surprises, there.
When Baxter realizes what Wally can do, he kidnaps him and forces them both into a chemically induced coma—so that Baxter may present Wally to Vasuki as a Gateway through which Vasuki may move his army (the Merchants of Chaos) from Darkwana onto Earth.
If Baxter succeeds, Vasuki will enslave humanity.
Baxter foresees a future in which humanity destroys itself. He believes that to save us, he must enslave us. Only Vasuki’s “leadership” will prevent our destruction.
Baxter tells Wally that countries will not wage war once they all cower beneath the same flag.
Wally, on his own quest to redeem himself for his past mistake, escapes Vasuki’s castle (constructed of golden gears and smog-spewing pipes) and wanders into the heart of Darkwana with a plan that anyone else would recognize as foolish.
Baxter afterwards hires a team of supernatural assassins to hunt Wally and return him to Vasuki's castle.
However, Wally makes allies . . .
I will, over the next few weeks, introduce Wally’s new allies and enemies.


Thanks for reading.
Daughters of Darkwana received a sweet, succinct review, which you can read here, http://www.thebookeaters.co.uk/daughters-of-darkwana-by-martin-wolt-jr/


I publish my blogs as follows:
Sundays: Movie reviews at moviesmartinwolt.blogspot.com
Mondays: Short stories at martinwolt.blogspot.com
Tuesdays: A look at the politics of the entertainment world at EntertainmentMicroscope.blogspot.com.
Wednesdays: An inside look at my novels (such as Daughters of Darkwana, which you can now find on Kindle) at Darkwana.blogspot.com



Thursdays: Tips to improve your fiction at FictionFormula.blogspot.com

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Who are Bagheera, Minerva, and Tenko?

I shall, as promised, discuss three characters that show up in volume two (books four through eight) of my novel series, Diaries of Darkwana.
Each of these characters arrives at Inari House as a recruit sent from another kitsune clan (see earlier post, “Zenko, Inari, and Shinto Clans of Darkwana).

Let’s meet Bagheera, first (Yes, I named her after the panther from The Jungle Book. Because why not?).
Bagheera, like all three characters that I mention here, exists as a young, female, kitsune, full breed. If you scratch your head in wonder what that means, I invite you to read a few of the earlier posts for this blog.
Bagheera possesses yellow-and-black fur in a pattern swirled across her body.
She wears a duty shirt and dustier blue jeans. She stands as one of the few kitsunes with human hair, in her case long, black dreadlocks.
Bagheera arrived at Inari House from the Shklaf Clan (see last week’s post).
She arrived with a bit of backstory that I explained over several flashbacks spread across several novels. I present here the Cliff’s Notes (read: Spoiler Alert).
Bagheera’s parents gave birth to her shortly after the revolution that earned the Shklaf Clan their freedom from the tengu (see earlier post, “Creatures of Darkwana”).
Her parents trained her in the martial art that their clan invented, in which their wrists remained shackled together.
Bagheera possessed an unusual ability to melt, reorganize, and regrow her bones.
The nomadic Shklaf Clan decided to send Bagheera to compete for admittance into the Inari Clan.
She, at the age of ten, faced a long hike across Darkwana to get from the mountainous region in which she grew to the tundra in which Inari House stood.
She, along her journey, discovered a village held hostage by a tengu-human half-breed. She fought and defeated this creature, and earned two rewards.
First, she received a revolver that bound itself to her. No one could remove this revolver’s bullets, nor could someone add more bullets to it. Each bullet packed enough punch to bring down a skyscraper.
No one, save Bagheera, could fire this revolver.
Once she fires its final round, she will die.
Second, she earned her first battle scar, the savage removal of her muzzle. Her voice consequently sounds ugly and gravely. She used her special ability to secrete a bone mask over the lower half of her face to hide the ghastly sight of her injury.
Bagheera (before her battle with this tengu-human ended) evolved her second tail, and with it doubled her power.
She shortly thereafter arrived at Inari House, where her den mother assigned her to House Mother Kyoto’s team.
We, the readers, meet her about three years later, while she and her teammates prepare to take the deadly exams that determine whether they continue as members of the Inari clan . . . or face banishment.

Minerva arrived at Inari House from the Yama-bito clan.
As I mentioned in last week’s post, all kitsunes from the Yama-bito clan carry a virus that will instantly kill anyone not from the Yama-bito clan.
A person can contract the virus through childbirth, sex, direct contact with infected blood, or even a kiss.
Minerva, a young, blue-furred kitsune, soon started a relationship with a kitsune-human half-breed. They could not, of course, do much about it physically (think Gambit and Rogue).

Tenko, as a former member of the Kiko clan, challenged and killed her father with her bare hands and claws. This two-tailed kitsune grew up in a society where a child holds no rights until she challenges and kills a parent or legal guardian.
The more family members a kitsune in this clan fights and kills (all fights remain to-the-death), the more freedom that kitsune earns.
All other kitsune clans frown deeply upon the Kiko clan for these practices.
Tenko, at the age of seven, killed both her parents, and her sisters, and her brother, and her uncles, and her grandmother, and her nephew.
Tenko wears green fur with a thick, white stripe that runs backwards from between her eyes to the back of her skull.
Tenko owns a very special Rubik’s Cube. I won’t spoil the surprise of what wonders that cube can perform.
When Tenko first arrived at Inari House, her den mother assigned her to House Mother Yukari’s team.
Again, I don’t want to spoil too much here, but I will tell you that Tenko becomes a major villain in the second volume (books four through eight) of this series—especially after she discovers a way to steal other characters’ abilities.

Next week: I’ll introduce the characters that you meet from the start of my series (book one: Daughters of Darkwana).

As always, thanks for reading!


Thanks for reading.
You probably noticed that I went about a week without a blog entry. I apologize for that. The creation of the prototype for my card game, Duelists of Darkwana (based on my novel series, Diaries of Darkwana), managed to eat up a lot of my time.
I also need to explain, on that note, where the heck the third novel for that series went. It sits done and ready to publish on Kindle.
At the moment, my wonderful cover artist deals with a few distractions. I promise that as soon as I get the completed cover art from her (if not sooner), I shall publish the third novel in my series.
OH! Also, Daughters of Darkwana received a sweet, succinct review, which you can read here, http://www.thebookeaters.co.uk/daughters-of-darkwana-by-martin-wolt-jr/


I publish my blogs as follows:
Sundays: Movie reviews at moviesmartinwolt.blogspot.com
Mondays: Short stories at martinwolt.blogspot.com
Tuesdays: A look at the politics of the entertainment world at EntertainmentMicroscope.blogspot.com.
Wednesdays: An inside look at my novels (such as Daughters of Darkwana, which you can now find on Kindle) at Darkwana.blogspot.com
Thursdays: Tips to improve your fiction at FictionFormula.blogspot.com