Bekka of Thorns
by Steve
Shilstone
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
On the fantasy world of Boad, Bekka and Karro of Thorns, a pair of
10-year-old bramble hedge-dwelling maidens, dare to leave the tunnels and
bowers of home to seek adventure, a rare occurrence among members of their
clan, who stick close to the hedge and fear open spaces. Bekka and Karro consider themselves to be
misfits and are bonded as dearest friends.
They speculate about the identity of their parents, a piece of knowledge
kept hidden from all hedge-dwellers.
Karro is known throughout the hedge as a silly clown. Bekka, ever watchful, never chatty, is called
Silent Bekka by all. Bekka, who narrates
the story, is determined to find the lost underground city of Rumin and to meet
her share of mythical creatures, but she is afraid to go alone. She talks Karro into accompanying her. When they step outside the hedge, they have
no idea that their adventure traveling through the Woeful Wanderers’ Wasteland
will uncover a wonderful secret about one of them.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt
We went to
the shop where we apprenticed, repairing tambourines. Zinna, our teacher and Mistress of
Construction and Repair, left a note telling us she was off forging chanks in
the tunnel foundry beneath the hedge.
Kar and I got to work. I
assembled chanks on pin dowels and attached ‘em to the rims. Kar stretched the membranes, tucking and
fastening. Later on we would gloss and
ribbon. As we worked we talked like
this:
“Tell me
now. Did you really? Out to the Roamer hut?”
“I did. All the way!
Outside the hedge! The
books! I got ‘em! I read parts.
How to make the ink, the purple ink, was there. The oat parchment
recipe! I saw it. The other book… It had the language of the
world down the Well. Roamer Harpo’s book
straight from the Gwer drollek story! He
held it in his hands! He learned how to
write the Chronicles … Roamer Lace learned.
I will, too! I’m going to learn
it!”
“How? Why?
When?”
“I’ll carry
‘em with us when we go to adventure.”
“Go?”
“We’re going,
you and I are going into the W’s Three.
We will search for Rumin!”
“Leave the
hedge?”
“Yes, of
course leave the hedge. We’ll be like
Bandy of Legend. We’ll go and find a
story and bring it back and I’ll write it down in the secret language!”
“I can’t
leave the hedge. Bendo dreen don’t leave
the hedge.”
“Bandy
did. Aren’t you always doing what nobody
ever did? Hopping in circles and
reciting tales backward? Didn’t you just
a nince ago suck chewed thorns up your nose?
Remember when you knitted stockings to wear OVER your highboots?”
“But those
things were in the hedge. I’m not
brave. I’m a cracked melon. You are the one who went to the hut. I’m the one who pretends to faint. If I went outside the hedge, I would not be
pretending. I would faint for true.”
“Look here,
what if I tell you this? We might find
our way to the Wide Great Sea. And if we
do find our way to the Wide Great Sea, we might in some sort of way get across
it to the Island of Acrotwist Clowns.”
That was when
I knew. Truth, I captured her to my dream.
Karro’s most favorite stories of all of ‘em were stories like The Repair
of Fan Wa’s Clock or The Ledgemoon, stories with Acrotwist Clowns in ‘em, so to
say. I knew Kar’s most treasured hope
was to see an Acrotwist Clown, even more to BE one, thusly such a better
truth. She got quiet when I said
“Acrotwist Clowns” and stopped tucking the membrane she was working. It snapped away from the rim and hung limply.
“No one has
ever walked into the W’s Three with highboots on the wrong feet and four
tambourines sewn to the back of her jacket … No, five … The fifth chonka not
sewn, but worn as a hat with ribbons tied under the chin to hold it in place. It has to be held in place, you know,
otherwise it will fall off. And wouldn’t
that look silly? I could walk on my
hands up hills and have room to practice cartwheels without crashing into briar
walls. I could hang my red gloves from
my ears. Ear gloves. No one ever did that in the W’s Three, I bet
…”
I let her go
on and on and on. I just nodded and
smiled.
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Bio
Steve
Shilstone is a benign elderly hippie lite loon living in Northern California.
He fancies himself to be a prosemaker and a dadaist with a small d who enjoys
hanging out at the intersection of Humor and Nonsense. In times ago, he was a
youth baseball coach for 25 years, a distributor of mail for the United States
Postal Service, a stock associate employed by a no longer with us department
store, a cartoonist of little note, a painter of littler note, and an
anthropology student at UCLA.
Links
Email:
steve@steveshilstone.com
Website:
http://steveshilstone.com/
eBook Blog:
http://bekkaofthorns.com/
dada Humor
Blog: http://dochortonsloondiary.com/
Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Steve-Shilstone/e/B001K8PI0S/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2?qid=1364570861&sr=8-2
Goodreads:
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/878076.Steve_Shilstone
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/SteveShilstone
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/steveshilstone
G+:
https://plus.google.com/106099026541084889139/
Purchase
Steve’s Books from Wild Child:
http://www.wildchildpublishing.com/index.php?main_page=advanced_search_result&search_in_description=1&keyword=steve+shilstone
My review:
This was a feel good read about family and mystery. It reminded me of a journey home, and when you get there everyone is waiting for you. There were not any parts that I didn't like, nor were there parts that JUMPED out at me. However I was left in a feel good mood. It reminded me how much easier a trial is faced when you have good friends to help. I am giving this book a 4/5. I was given a copy to review, however all opinions are my own.
Steve will be awarding a $10 GC to Wild Child Publishing to a randomly drawn commenter during the tour.
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning. The tour dates can be found here:
Thank you for hosting
ReplyDeleteOn behalf of Bekka and Karro, thanks so much for reading and reviewing Bekka of thorns.
ReplyDeleteThis looks interesting and a bit different from my usual reads. will have to check it out! thanks! kamclauc AT gmail DOT com
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing. It looks like a great book.
ReplyDelete