YA fantasy author Kathrine LaFleur joins me today to
chat about The Dream Traveler: The
Cardonian Chronicles Book One.
Bio:
Kathrine LaFleur grew up
in the San Francisco Bay Area. Lurking beneath the stairs where her grandmother
kept a small, dusty library is one of her best childhood memories. She has many
years of experience as an elementary school educator and enjoys nurturing a
love of reading and writing in her students. She has written books for a
range of ages from four years to young adult. She hopes that her writing will
empower readers to value their unique qualities and see their own potential to
transform obstacles into opportunities to triumph. She currently lives in
Oakland, CA where she joyfully pursues her passion of writing and publishing
books.
Welcome, Kathrine. Please tell us about your current
release.
Four hundred years ago
everyone in Cardonia Gifted with Telepathy was exiled to the Badlands, a
stretch of unforgiving, unlivable desert. Now the spirits of those who were so
cruelly and unjustly punished have invaded Cardonia, and they are out for
revenge.
With no warning, Raven and
her family are forced to leave home and join their fellow Cardonians on a
journey to the kingdom’s shielded core, four mountain ranges each encircling a
protected space. For once she has bigger worries than the fact that she is the
only one her age still lacking a Gift. When her Gift does emerge, it sets Raven
on a course of action that can either save Cardonia or cause her to lose
everything she holds dear.
What inspired you to write this book?
I’ve always been
fascinated by dreams, and wanted to write a story about two people who were
connected through their dreams. This book turned out to be so much more than that,
which is something I love about writing – the surprise and discovery of what
comes out when you open up and explore different possibilities.
Excerpt from The
Dream Traveler: The Cardonian Chronicles Book One:
The birds were
restless, even for birds. Five of them twittered and fluttered among the old
oak’s leaves, barely settling on one branch before lifting up again and hopping
to another. This made the pigs who lived in the pen below the oak tree nervous,
and Barrett never doubted the word of a pig.
After dumping the
slops, which they ignored, into their trough, Barrett knelt and put his hands
on either side of Mama’s face. Mama was a large pig with black and white
markings across her broad back. She had lived on Baron Tumero’s farm for eleven
years, giving many fine litters during her fertile years, and each year Barrett
had mourned with her when her offspring had grown fat enough to be taken to
slaughter. As an unspoken rule, those with the Gift of Animal Speaking were
strictly vegetarian.
Barrett closed his
eyes and allowed Mama’s knowing to enter his awareness. She was restless,
wanting to find a way out of the pen, but she gave no specific reason.
Barrett thanked Mama
with a gentle pat and rose, trying to tune into the hysterical chirping of the
birds, not an easy task given his own racing heart and sudden rising of anxiety
in his center. Birds had never been his strong suit. He needed physical contact
to get a clear message, and they were so flighty, barely able to piece two
solid ideas together.
A sense of sinister
darkness overcame his mind. He caught fragmented flashes of shadowy wisps,
flailing arms, figures clawing at their own faces, others raging, striking
violent blows, frenzied bloodlust fed even more by anguished screams. The birds
themselves broke the connection by taking flight.
Barrett opened the
pigpen gate and left it open.
Something is very wrong, he told Mama. I
might have to leave for a while.
He made his way to
the cottage, striding quickly at first, then running, pausing only to open more
gates on the way: the chicken coop, the horses’ enclosure, the rabbit pen.
“Violet, Raven!” he
shouted. The girls were inside, cleaning up after lunch.
Raven’s slight form
appeared in the doorway, a grey rag in her hand. A rider came from the south
then, and the ground was rattled by the horse’s hooves. The rider was young,
maybe twenty, Barrett guessed, and his face was panicked, pale.
“Listen, listen,” he
shouted, still some distance away. “You must listen to me!”
Barrett changed
course to run towards the horseman. The horse’s golden sides foamed with sweat.
It danced side to side, unable to still its body after such a frantic gallop.
“Spirits from the
Badlands have escaped,” the rider gasped between gulps of air. “They attacked
my village just before daybreak. There’s no way to contain them.”
Barrett held onto the
bridle and put a hand on the horse’s neck, willing both himself and the horse
to be calm. “Setton Village?”
The man took another
large breath and nodded, then shook his head. “They’re all infected; I’ve never
seen so much blood.” The rider’s face paled even more. He leaned his torso over
to one side, keeping steady with an outstretched hand on his horse’s mane, and
was sick on the path.
“Everyone… Yadira.” Barrett
grasped the young rider’s arm. “A Healer from this village, she went to Setton
to help with the fever. My wife.”
“I’m very sorry.”
“How? How did this
happen?”
“A rip in the Shield-
”
“Dad!” Raven called
to him from the house and began to run forward.
“Stay there,” he
commanded, holding out one hand. She stomped her foot and whirled back into the
house.
“Please,” the rider
spoke. “What this does to people… It’s mindless killing. This morning my
closest friend lay dead on the floor of his home. His stomach had been ripped
open,” he swallowed hard and Barrett thought he would be sick again, but the
rider continued. “I saw the iron poker in his wife’s hand. She was dead as
well. Her head was crushed, and she was sitting on the fire. The mantle above
her was so bloody, I think it’s where she...”
Barrett noticed there
were bruises on one side of the man’s face, and a weeping cut on one hand
looked as though it traveled upwards beneath his sleeve.
“You were attacked as
well?”
“Darren, he owns our
supply store. He’s a gentle, soft spoken sort. He was. He came at me in a rage.
And it wasn’t just him. People I see every day… . If you want to survive you
have to leave here now.”
“And go where?”
“North. The Core
Mountains are full of Shielding and will create a safe haven. All Shielders
know about it. The Fortress Basin will be the closest for you. Messages have
already been cast. They’ll set up camps along the way. We’ll keep as many safe
as possible.”
“And you?”
“My Gift is only
strong enough to shield myself plus one or two others. I’ll alert as many as I
can before the spirits attack, then move on to the next village.”
“Would you take me
back to Setton? If there’s a chance that my wife is still alive...”
The young man shook
his head, trying to erase the image of his friend lying on the floor, blood and
entrails spilling from a vicious gash below his stomach. “You didn’t see how
bad it was. I’m sorry to say her mind has already been infected, and she is
certainly dead, if not by her own doing then by someone else’s.”
“Please.”
“I’m sorry. I need to
save those who can still be saved.”
Barrett was silent
for a moment, torn between ensuring the safety of his daughters and desperate
hope for Yadira. He glanced toward the cottage and saw his elder daughter,
Violet, watching him, worried. He turned back to the rider and gave a slight
nod.
“Your horse can’t run
any farther. He can rest while we prepare and I’ll bring him with us.”
Barrett pointed to
the western field, where a black mare pawed the grass beneath a twisted apple
tree. “Bella is our fastest and strongest.”
He was already
unfastening the rider’s saddle and whistling a beckoning call to Bella. The
rider staggered to the ground.
“If she’ll let me
saddle her, you should go,” the man said.
Barrett nodded and
turned to Bella, who arrived with her neck arched, already sensing trouble.
Barrett pulled her head low and whispered into her ear. Bella moved to stand
beside the rider, who handed the reins of his own horse to Barrett.
Barrett nodded toward
the house on the far end of the field. Even from this distance its size was
notable, spreading across space enough for ten of his own small cottage. “I’ll
inform the baron and household there. Good luck to you and thank you,” he told
the man.
“You’ll need to
hurry. The spirits will be here soon, perhaps within the hour, and while they
can’t attack until nightfall, their presence itself will make you want to crawl
out of your skin.”
Barrett nodded and
ran to the cottage where both his daughters now stood in the doorway.
“Pack up what you
can. We’re leaving. Now.”
What exciting story are you working on next?
Book three of the
Cardonian Chronicles is in the works, and I hope to it release this summer. I’m
excited to share the growth of certain characters from the first two books and
introduce new ones.
When did you first consider yourself a writer?
I was a closet writer
until my late twenties, when I finally faced fears of failure, made a
commitment to writing, and learned to call myself a writer, even in front of
other people.
Do you write full-time? If so, what's your work day
like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to
write?
I do not write full time…
yet! Currently I also teach elementary school. In between teaching and tending
to a household that includes three dogs I take about an hour and a half at a
local café to enjoy some very quiet, peaceful reading and writing time.
What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I have a thing for pens;
I’m extremely picky about what kind of pen I use. I tried out several different
kinds and finally chose a Parker refillable because I love their gel ink. The
pen itself, though, doesn’t have the comfy grip I was looking for, so I keep a
squishy pencil grip on it. I also have conversations with my characters, but I
have a feeling both of those quirks could be pretty common for other writers,
too. At least, I hope so!
As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
I wanted to be a
veterinarian, a dancer, and an author.
Anything additional you want to share with the
readers?
Cardonia is a place where
everyone has a special supernatural Gift, and I’m always curious to know what
Gift people would have if they lived there. I think I’d either be an Empath, Dream
Traveler, or Animal Speaker. I’d like to invite readers to check out the
Cardonian Gifts on my website and share with me on Facebook or Twitter which
best fits them, or suggest one that isn’t listed.
Links:
Thank you for being here today, Kathrine.
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