Today author Stephanie R. Sorensen takes over our blog to tell us about her latest novel, Toru: Wayfarer Returns (16 February 2016, Palantir Press, 276 pages), an Historical Steampunk novel, book one of Sakura Steam series.
|| Synopsis || Teaser: KCR Preview || Guest Post by the Author || About the Author || Giveaway & Tour Stops ||
|| Synopsis || Teaser: KCR Preview || Guest Post by the Author || About the Author || Giveaway & Tour Stops ||
If I’d Never Heard of Me, Would I Read My Book?
Of course! Especially if you are a reader who reads to experience a life, a time, a place different from your own, for that is what I have created for you in “Tōru: Wayfarer Returns.”
As a book-gobbling reader myself, I find I am drawn, in fiction, to the books that take me elsewhere in time and place, whether it be to the stars in science fiction, to Viking raids or English court life in historical fiction, or realms of dragons and elves and magicians in fantasy. After reading the Narnia series as a child, I carefully searched the backs of closets and jumped into promising puddles hoping against hope that I might find a strange land I could visit and experience myself. I knew it was fantasy, but the yearning to go elsewhere has always burned strong in me.
As a high school student, I no longer searched through closets for overlooked fantasy realms, but rather pored over exchange student brochures looking for a way to get overseas. I wanted to go to Norway, where my Viking ancestors hailed from, or France, where Eleanor of Aquitaine had galloped across the countryside fleeing her enemies, or Japan, where the noble samurai lived. As you can see, I probably needed a time machine as well, to get to the interesting times as well as places.
I was fortunate enough to win a scholarship to live in Japan for a year, studying at a Japanese high school and living with Japanese families. (Thank you, Rotary Club!) I returned to Japan after college and worked there for several years as well, for although the samurai I had once sought were not running around anymore, I had fallen in love with the people, culture and history of Japan as it is today in modern times.
I believe writers create what they most love to read, and so I have created for you what I love, which is a story that takes you to a different time and place and experience of the world. Specifically, a way to visit the Japan I love without all the stress and expense of travel. A Japan as it might have been, if steampunk dirigibles had been available to the samurai charged with defending Japan from foreign invasion. A Japan where loyalty and duty and sacrifice and tradition meet innovation and rebellion and vision. A Japan set in the 1850s, but which deals with not only the struggles and challenges of that time but also our own time.
Now, perhaps you simply are not interested in Japan.
My best friend and fellow writer is not interested in Japan, so I know this is possible. I can, with difficulty, imagine this possibility for other people as well, that you would not be interested in learning more about a unique country whose people are descended from the Sun Goddess. Whose royal family has ruled, without interruption, for over 1,500 years, as the oldest continuous hereditary monarchy in the world. A people who found the will and strength to go from an agrarian and feudal society to an industrialized imperial power in a single generation when they collided with the West in the 19th century. Whose samurai ethos has inspired a thousand stories of loyalty and duty and noble sacrifice. Whose ancient arts and poetry inspired our own artists a hundred years ago, and whose modern technology, fashion, design and literature have touched our own culture in so many ways in recent decades. I suppose this is possible. Maybe. Sad, very sad, but possible.
Then leave aside Japan for a moment, since you insist it interests you not. Do you like stories about heroes who must somehow achieve the impossible, because everything depends on it? Have you ever been the young man hoping to live up to the impossible expectations of a demanding father and wondered if you could possibly do so, like Tōru? Or been a young woman told you cannot do something because you are a girl, like Masuyo? Or been the young man without education or rank who discovers he is a gifted leader and brave fighter, like Jiro? Have you ever loved someone you cannot have? These are universal human stories, found in every culture and time, and they are found as well in the characters and stories of “Tōru: Wayfarer Returns.”
This author does not matter a bit, whether you know of Stephanie R. Sorensen or not, but stories and experiences do. So if you love universal human stories and an opportunity to explore a different time, place and culture, give “Tōru: Wayfarer Returns” a try.
Thanks for hosting!
ReplyDeleteCongrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for hosting my guest column today and letting me tell your readers about "Toru." I had to laugh because you picked my "author in the wild" picture up from the very bottom of my blog posts, hidden away, not my beautiful glamour shot at the opera. That's okay--'tis a truer picture of yours truly. I wear that hat around town in Leadville, Colorado (elevation 10,000 feet) from November to May as I slog through snow up to my waist. Thanks again!
ReplyDeleteLiving in Japan must have been very cool!
ReplyDelete--Trix
This book sounds wonderful! Thanks for hosting.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.
ReplyDelete