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Tuesday, April 16, 2013

#Guest Rayne Hall and Storm Dancer

About Rayne:
Rayne Hall has published more than forty books under different pen names with different publishers in different genres, mostly fantasy, horror and non-fiction. Recent books include Storm Dancer (dark epic fantasy novel), Six Scary Tales Vol 1, 2 and 3 (mild horror stories), Six Historical Tales (short stories), Six Quirky Tales (humorous fantasy stories), Writing Fight Scenes, The World-Loss Diet and Writing Scary Scenes (instructions for authors).

She holds a college degree in publishing management and a masters degree in creative writing. Currently, she edits the Ten Tales series of multi-author short story anthologies: Bites: Ten Tales of Vampires, Haunted: Ten Tales of Ghosts, Scared: Ten Tales of Horror, Cutlass: Ten Tales of Pirates, Beltane: Ten Tales of Witchcraft, Spells: Ten Tales of Magic, Undead: Ten Tales of Zombies and more.  

Rayne has lived in Germany, China, Mongolia and Nepal and  has now settled in a small dilapidated town of former Victorian grandeur on the south coast of England.


Twitter  (Twitter is my most active social network)


The Ideas That Haunted Me To Write Storm Dancer

“You're a writer? Wow.” Pause. The next question is almost always,  Where do you find your ideas?”
The truth is, I don't find ideas. Ideas find me. 

Like ghosts, they seek me out, haunt me, and don't let go until the story is written. 

My mind is like a revolving drum filled with hundreds of jigsaw pieces, each representing a story idea. Sometimes two or more pieces click together, and that's when a story takes shape.

The idea for the dark-epic fantasy novel Storm Dancer first came to me in Mongolia. I was on a short-term assignment there, to help launch the country's first-ever women's magazine. I was staying in a ger (yurt) on the edge of the Gobi desert when an idea clawed into my brain and wouldn't let go.

I saw two people hating each other yet needing to become allies to survive. Although they have previously betrayed and harmed each other, they must now learn to trust. 

Next came an image of those two people trapped by devastating storm. By now, my imagination was kindled and burning in bright flames. 

Although I worked on other projects over the years, Storm Dancer kept haunting me, and I returned to it again and again.

One of the characters, Merida, is an expert magician who can change the weather with her dance. Her government sends her on a mission to bring rain to a distant, drought-parched country - the equivalent of a modern development aid worker. My own experiences as development aid worker inspired some of the scenes. For example, I was sent to edit language teaching materials in northeast China. I had been promised a heated, furnished flat with running water. When I arrived, the flat was a ruin, a blizzard was whipping through the broken windows, there was no furniture, no water, no heating at all. I survived the freezing night by piling all my clothes on top of me. When I confronted my employer the next morning, he told me he was too busy to honour promises made in a contract.

So when Merida arrives, she finds that the promised private apartment doesn't exist and she has to sleep in a crowded, dirty dormitory instead. When she complains, the ruler tells her he doesn't have time to keep promises.

I also used my experiences of teaching and performing bellydance for the scenes where Merida bellydances in a tavern. 

The theme  “We're not responsible for what fate deals us, but we're responsible for how we deal with it” inspired much of the plot. 

Dahoud is a troubled hero, possessed by a demon, a djinn that drives him to subdue women with force. The djinns in Storm Dancer are devious spirits. They target young, vulnerable males with the promise to fulfil their deepest desires. Once the human consents to the pact, they twist those needs and drive their host to commit more and more evil deeds. The djinns feed on the evil. The more the human complies, the stronger they grow. When the human tries to resist, they torment him with temptations, desires, and unbearable pain.
Dahoud was a lonely adolescent when the djinn lured him with the promise that he would get female attention. He joined the army and became a feared siege commander. Siege warfare in the Bronze Age offered ways for a man to force female attention - and the djinn in Dahoud thrived on these deeds. When Dahoud matured, he came to understand how wrong it was. As an honourable man, he tried to cease, but it was too late. The djinn had already grown powerful and impossible to defeat.

The only way to gain a measure of control over the djinn is to weaken it by depriving it of fodder. Dahoud had to get away from the lures connected with siege warfare. He sacrificed his career, his identity, everything. He faked his own death and built a new life as a lowly labourer. For three years, he has succeeded in resisting the djinn's painful demands. He has won some control over his dark need and is able to live without harming women. 

But the ruler tracks Dahoud down and forces him to once again lead a siege and subdue the people. If Dahoud succumbs to his dark need even once, the djinn will grow to its former strength and unleash unspeakable evil. When the women he protects repay his devotion with betrayal, his control over the djinn breaks.

To what extent is Dahoud responsible for what the demon makes him do? Is the djinn really an external creature, or is it the dark part of Dahoud's own psyche?  By writing about how Dahoud copes with the djinn, I explored how people deal with their demons. The djinn can be a metaphor for  alcoholism, drug addiction, criminal urges and sinful desires. 

Further inspiration came from the places where I've lived and travelled in Central Asia, North Africa and the Middle East, and ancient cultures, especially the Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Hittites and Persians. There are also elements from ancient mythology, and even a story from an apocryphal Bible story of Judith, the heroine who decapitated the enemy general with his own sword. However, these stories are so much changed that few readers will recognise them when they read Storm Dancer.


Blurb:  

Demon-possessed siege commander, Dahoud, atones for his atrocities by hiding his identity and protecting women from war's violence - but can he shield the woman he loves from the evil inside him?

Principled weather magician, Merida, brings rain to a parched desert land. When her magical dance rouses more than storms, she needs to overcome her scruples to escape from danger.

Thrust together, Dahoud and Merida must fight for freedom and survival. But how can they trust each other, when hatred and betrayal burn in their hearts?

'Storm Dancer' is a dark epic fantasy. British spellings. Caution: this book contains some violence and disturbing situations. Not recommended for under-16s.
  

Excerpt:

Even in the shade of the graffiti-carved olive tree, the air sang with heat. Dahoud listened to the hum of voices in the tavern garden, the murmured gossip about royals and rebels. If patrons noticed him, they would only see a young clerk sitting among the lord-satrap's followers, a harmless bureaucrat. Dahoud planned to stay harmless.
 
The tavern bustled with women - whiteseers hanging about in the hope of earning a copper, traders celebrating deals, bellydancers clinking finger cymbals - women who neither backed away from him nor screamed.

The youngest of the entertainers wound her way between the benches towards their table, the tassels on her slender hips bouncing, the rows of copper rings on her sash tinkling with every snaky twist. Since she seemed nervous, as if it was her first show, he sent her an encouraging smile. Ignoring him, she shimmied to Lord Govan.

The djinn slithered inside Dahoud, stirring a stream of fury, whipping his blood into a hot storm. Would she dare to disregard the Black Besieger? What lesson would he teach to punish her insolence?

 Dahoud stared past her sweat-glistening torso, the urge to subdue her washing over him in a boiling wave. For three years, he had battled against the djinn's temptations. To indulge in fantasies would batter his defences and breach his resistance. He focused on the flavours on his tongue, the tart citron juice and the sage-spiced mutton, on the tender texture of the meat. 

Where to Buy:

 

4 comments:

  1. Interesting perspective on Dahoud, Rayne. Nice post!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Liv,
      Since you're the only entrant for the giveaway at this blog stop, you win the prize. It's The Colour of Dishonour: Stories from the Storm Dancer World.
      You have my email; get in touch. If I don't hear from you, I'll email you.
      Rayne

      Delete
  2. Is it what you expected, or does it surprise you?

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'll be drawing the prizes soon - one ebook for each blog stop, and a big prize of several books for the tour. If you wish to enter, you can still leave a comment. However, you need to be quick and do it in the next twelve hours.

    ReplyDelete