Archive

How to Tap into a Vision

January 31, 2013

I recently watched an interview with one of my writing heroes, Canadian folk musician Gordon Lightfoot.  He said that he never heard anyone do a cover of one of his songs that he didn’t like.  “Every time someone covers one of your songs, they’re doing you a favor,” he said.

I suppose an arrogant or insecure musician might believe that no one else could do justice to his work, yet Lightfoot’s comment makes a kind of fundamental sense.  If someone else chooses to pick up your work and do they own thing with it, it’s because your work has touched that person.  In the case of a song, they wouldn’t cover it unless they had tapped into the power and feeling and meaning of it for themselves. Their cover is a testament to that fact.

Writing a sequel to someone else’s story has its challenges.  Diving into a world created by a team of writers and visionaries multiplies those challenges.  But as I’ve worked with the Children of the Wells staff and read their writing, I’ve admired their perspective on faith and imagination.  I consider them to have an approach to storytelling that is richer than the perspective many of my writing teachers have had. (more…)

The Well’s Orphan, Coming Soon!

The third novella in the Bron & Calea plotline begins in February.

The Well's Orphan

Thyrion is ruined, and so is Calea.

Shattered by the discovery that magic is gone even in Thyrion, Calea is left to pick up the pieces of her life. With nowhere else to go, she enters the city with Bron and Nyasha, broken and searching for some thread of purpose. But is there anything for a crippled woman in a crippled city? Or shall she, too, go the way of magic?

Controlled Falling

By Natasha Hayden
January 24, 2014

I’ve been blackmailed and coerced–I mean, encouraged and motivated–to write a short story for Children of the Wells. It isn’t for one of the main plotlines, but it does connect in a small way to The Doctor’s Assistant and to another short story for CotW. Both these stories, among others, will be revealed later this year. Keep an eye out. 

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Forgetting the Bigger Picture

By Timothy Deal
January 10, 2013

Sometimes I worry our culture completely misses the point of some stories while fixating on some random quirk. The Lord of the Rings becomes about that cute elf Legolas. Insightful, dystopian YA fiction like The Hunger Games turns into the very media spectacle the book is critiquing.

Or even more recently, the wrong song in a musical gets all the attention. See, I’m a bit conflicted about “Let it Go” becoming the breakout hit song from Frozen. It’s receiving critical acclaim, early movie award buzz, and seems to be the most talked-about song from the movie around the interwebs. (Spoilers aplenty ahead.) (more…)

A Moment of Closure

By Laura Fischer
December 28, 2013

My grandparents’ house has been in the family for generations. Every Christmas that I’ve been alive, we’ve gone back there to Roanoke, Illinois, where my parents grew up, met, and were married, to celebrate the holidays with my mom’s side of the family. We also visit frequently on other occasions, and when I was a kid I got to travel out there for summer visits for two weeks at a time. It’s a rambling old farmhouse, not without its problems, but roomy and comfortable and saturated with memories of fun and family.

Not long ago, my grandparents sold that house. They’re moving into a condo in the town, where they won’t have to deal with all the issues of owning a country property with a huge yard and the remnants of old outbuildings. It’s a good move for them, and I know they’ll be comfortable and happy in their new home. I look forward to visiting them there, just like I’ve always looked forward to visiting them.

But I’ll miss the old house. This last weekend, my family went out to Illinois for one more visit. Many items had already been moved out of the house, but it still felt the same as always, warm and welcoming and home. (more…)

Father of the Brainchildren

steve-martin

Not Nathan Marchand. From imdb

by Nathan Marchand
December 13, 2013

I’m not a father; I don’t have any children. However, I have many brainchildren, including the characters of my first CotW novella, The Fall of the House of Kyzer. For writers, their creations are like kids. They don’t like being told they’re “ugly” (i.e. bad) and they’re quick to defend and protect them. Some also may be hard-pressed to choose which their favorite is.

While I’ve worked on serialized fiction before with many of the people on this saga’s creative team, I’ve re-learned in the last few months that, like a father does when his kids get married, I have to “let go” of my “children” and entrust them to other people. For the last month, John Bahler has been continuing Jaysynn’s story in The Rules Change, and while I love this story, he’s done things with Jaysynn I may have not done—or things I’d have rather done myself. Torture Jaysynn? That’s my job! (Ever wonder if writers are closet sadists, considering how much they abuse their characters?) (more…)

Left Hand, Meet Right Hand

by Nick Hayden
December 6, 2013

One thing we here at Children of the Wells looked forward to doing when we started this world was exploring several different plotlines at once. Back in the planning stages, when all was bright colors and lollipops and rainbows, we wanted to have three parallel storylines proceeding simultaneously.

That turned out to be too many for us to manage. It’s hard enough running a continuing story if there’s only one person involved. When you have a half dozen authors, each with his own ideas and each with his own day job, well…you can imagine.

But even with a measly two parallel plotlines, we’re experimenting with ways to make the whole greater than the sum of its parts. (more…)

One Thousand Gifts: Received

by Natasha Hayden
November 29, 2013

Disclaimer: In accordance with Thanksgiving, this blog will be a bit more of a personal reflection and have less to do with Children of the Wells, though anything personal serves to give our readers a glance at the person behind the mask, and that has everything to do with what we are creating here.

Over the past year, I have been keeping a journal of Gifts. I was inspired by the book 1000 Gifts, by Ann Voskamp, which I highly recommend. I capitalize Gifts because these aren’t just birthday or Christmas gifts or any nice little thing somebody gives me. The Gifts I’ve been recording are the kind that come unexpectedly on any given day. They are beautiful. They are meaningful. Some are simple. Some are physical. Many are intangible. All remind me of the ultimate Gift-giver: Jesus Christ. In fact, I consider each one to be a Gift from him. (more…)

Remembering C.S. Lewis

By Nathan Marchand
November 22, 2013

This blog was also posted on the author’s website.

I realized the other day that this is a week of noteworthy anniversaries. November 19 was the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address. Today, November 22, is a day loaded with significance. Fifty years ago today several events, both joyous and tragic, occurred. On the bright side, the British science fiction TV show Doctor Who first aired. But today is also remembered for the deaths of three great men: President John F. Kennedy, author Aldous Huxley, and theologian C.S. Lewis. (more…)

Watching the Rules Change

by Nick Hayden
November 8, 2013

Absolutely Nothing is Allowed Here

Not these rules…
Vicki & Chuck Rogers via Compfight

I hope you’re enjoying the beginning of The Rules Change. I certainly enjoyed it first time I opened the document on my computer. (I still  think the opening chapter is wonderful at setting the stage.)

While our new author, John Bahler, is busy finishing up future chapters, I’d like to focus on one particular aspect of this novella that really stands out in my mind. (more…)