Tuesday’s are the days I showcase my own work on this
blog. Today I’d like to talk about my latest novel. In a recent interview by
Bold Strokes Books, I was asked what made The
Plain of Bitter Honey special, at least to me. My answer is below the
blurb:
Blurb:
Twins Aaron and Hayden Swann
are fighting a corrupt government taken over by ultra right-wing Fundamentalist
Christians in 2055 America. Each brother fights in his own way, Aaron with
bullets, Hayden with words. Then one night their world is turned upside down
when they are caught in a government sting and they must both flee north into
the badlands between San Francisco and Canada, where the only safe haven is a
place called The Plain of Bitter Honey, a refuge where heads of the Resistance
operate. But the brothers don’t know that government agents are tracking them
to the hiding place of the Resistance. Can they find the inner strength to
survive?
My Interview
Answer:
The Plain of Bitter
Honey is my first attempt to abandon the romance genre. It is also my first
futuristic novel, so as you can see this book is the result of me breaking out,
escaping the barriers I’ve been a prisoner to for the last decade. It
represents a new and bold direction for my writing.
I believe it is my most creative and daring work. The
premise was partly influenced by Andrew W.M. Beierly’s groundbreaking novel, First Person Plural, where two
brothers—one straight and one gay—share the same body, which has two heads and
two minds. Each head has it’s own personality, but they can’t get away from
each other. They must learn to compromise, understand each other, and grow
emotionally.
In Bitter Honey, I have twins who were born joined at the
head, who after surgery to separate them, still have one consciousness that is
split, one straight and one gay. They, of course, are able to live separately,
but are still connected mentally even over great distances. The brothers must
find their own identity by helping the other brother through the hardship and
danger of fighting a revolutionary war.
This story made me stretch my imagination and my writing
in ways I could not have predicted at the start. It also delves deep into my
personal philosophies. It has forged a new focus in my career, and has
reenergized me at a time when I had begun to lose interest.
An Excerpt
Describing the Brothers:
Aaron and his brother were identical—the same
shoulder-length, burnt-coffee-colored dreadlocks, same six-foot-two athletic
frame and strong-boned facial features, and because they were mixed race, their
skin tones held the warm color of old copper. Twins, their only physical
difference was Aaron carried a bit more weight and definition from martial arts
training, and Hayden’s blue eyes had tiny specks the color of emeralds gleaming
in bright sunlight. Yet on the inside they were earth and sky. Aaron was
serious and stoic--Hayden was a dreamer. He had uncommonly quick reflexes while
Hayden was only quick with a smile. He was a fighter, Hayden’s only weapons
were words and ideas.
It’s why I love him so.
He’s almost everything I crave to be—what
I would have been had we lived in a different time.
Aaron made the stipulation almost everything because Hayden was gay. Aaron accepted his
brother’s sexuality, but he preferred
the company of women in his bed.
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