Thursday, April 2, 2015

B is for basketball

Such a humble entry. Don't be fooled though, this simple word is an entry point for big themes within this book series. At least one anyway. For me (the author) a fierce internal debate rages over how much of a reveal this blog series should be. The more I write here, the more plot spoilers are going to pop up. Grrr.

New Grass Growing is about "next steps in life" that the characters begin taking. I have to confess the great bulk of my reading falls in the thriller/adventure/action/suspense genre. In that broad category, action is non-stop as the MCs rush from cliffhanger to world ender to life threatening fight, etc. There's no break and virtually no look into life beyond their current crisis. Fans of this genre are quick to point out that nonstop action is critical to maintaining reader interest. While mostly true, I am asserting that this is not an absolute. Maybe it is for the Mitch Rapp-inspired thriller genre. For me, after a long diet of thrillers and suspense, my mind is wandering a bit, looking for more dimensions to the characters that I like.

In looking back on what I have read over the years, Clive Cussler provides an interesting example of this additional character dimension and complexity. CC provides numerous other examples as well, but my point here is that CC takes his main character, Dirk Pitt, off in other directions as the years pass in Dirk's fictional world. I was somewhat thrilled to realize this as my own world building aged and broadened. If CC does it, then I can too I guess.....

My point? as I wander ever further from it....

Amongst a myriad of other worthy subjects, at the end of River and Ranch, fate lands Cale in Salmon for the year with his new-found daughter, Sabé (btw New Grass Growing picks up where R&R left off). This kid turns out to be an athlete (OK so I revealed one spoiler, but so far am managing to conceal a couple others). She's a ninth grader and quite the basketball player. Ultimately Cale and Lane, now virtually "retired" from their clandestine globe trotting rigors, become the girl's basketball coaches at Salmon High School. Once again do I weave a somewhat tortuous trail, but I do arrive at the word for the day. Basketball serves as a segue for introducing more characters and possibly more themes to the River and Ranch family.

In another digression, I have to give much credit to Sherman Alexie for his writing, of which I have (re)read much, as well as for his thoughts on writing about Native Americans. Indians for short. Mr. Alexie brings up the theme of colonialist writing in referring to white guys like me writing about Indians. His observation (greatly streamlined by me) is that "outside" writers tend towards stereotypic themes when writing about natives. Feather in hair, tall savage, noble, etc. Literature does seem to bear out his observations on this. With Coeur d'Alene/Spokane blood flowing in his veins, his writing, as you might expect, veers well away from these stereotypes. And he does veer. In many big ways. His point about colonial writing is a good one and one that I take with me as I work my way through the new characters and themes in New Grass Growing (hopefully that is merely a hint and not a plot spoiler).

That about wraps up today's rambling discourse. Tune in tomorrow for the letter "C" and more in the ongoing drama that is 26 days of New Grass Growing......

2 comments:

  1. Basketball and other team sports are an excellent way of bringing in new characters. Thanks for sharing!

    Visiting from Untethered Realms

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  2. Very cool. Looking forward to reading more and learning about New Grass Growing.

    --
    Tim Brannan, The Other Side Blog
    2015 A to Z of Vampires
    http://theotherside.timsbrannan.com/

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