by Stephanie
R. Sorensen
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Today I have Stephanie R. Sorensen as a guest. She will tell us about how she discovered and made use of steampunk in her new novel Tour: Wayfarer returns.
Guest post: Pushing the Boundaries of Steampunk by Stephanie R. Sorensen
I stumbled into steampunk as a movement and literary genre
purely accidentally, when I Googled “Victorian dress” to find something to wear
to a local Victorian dress ball here in Leadville, Colorado. Up came these
amazing outfits, with gears and goggles and corsets. I was entranced. One thing
led to another and I wound up giving an hour-long presentation to my neighbors
on Steampunks, Neo-Victorian Futurism and the Maker Movement and shocking
and/or offending them by informing them they were accidental steampunks, as it
is our local custom to dress up in full Victorian gear several times a year for
local festivals.
Along the way, I read several dozen steampunk novels, from
the works by the “founding fathers” of steampunk literature like Tim Powers,
K.W. Jeters and James P. Blaylock to more recent works like Cherie Priest’s
Clockwork Century. I dabbled in gaslight romances, steampunk action-adventure
and steampunk alternate histories. Along the way, I came to a couple of
conclusions about steampunk as literature.
First, most was set in Victorian England or the American Wild
West. While this is perfectly understandable, I found it confining as a writer,
for it was very well-trodden territory. One of the first questions I asked
myself was “Why does a steampunk novel have to be written from the point of
view of the British and Americans? What about the rest of the wide, wide world?”
Once that thought sprouted in my brain, my personal history
took over. Years ago, I spent several years living in Japan, learning to speak
and read Japanese, living with Japanese families and working with Japanese
colleagues. I love Japan, and with a passionate but clear-eyed love that sees
both faults and virtues in their unique and fascinating culture. Once I thought
of setting my story in Japan, I grew very excited. The latter half of the
nineteenth century was also a period of tremendous change and transformation
for Japan, so a great setting for a steampunk novel, with lots of room for
adventures and battles and all that good stuff.
Second, steampunk as a literary genre has evolved into
something very diverse and increasingly hard to categorize. Steampunk romance,
steampunk action-adventure, steampunk fantasy, steampunk alternate history…all
these different flavors create very different reading experiences. This is
liberating in one sense, for one might suppose that “anything goes.” It’s a
treacherous liberty, though, because the writer needs to ensure the reader gets
what they hope for when they open the pages of a new story. Where is that line
between steampunk and something else?
I attempted to define the boundaries of steampunk literature,
and came up with the following elements and conventions. Steam technology,
whether realistic or fantastical. Mechanical beings and devices and gadgets,
the more the better. An emphasis on a more formal and class-defined time, where
formality and manners were part of the culture but could be subverted and
rebelled against by putting modern female and non-white players into roles they
could not have played during the real 19th century. Cool outfits and
gadgets and furnishings of course, retro-19th century fashion with
futuristic elements. Optimism, too. As mentioned above, a British or American
setting. Adventurous derring-do. An elusive quality of concreteness, tangible
materiality, social and formal constraint and simplicity that we long for and
cannot find in our modern world with its virtual realities, shifting social
mores and lack of rules to live by. Even the “Dress for Success” bibles of the
1980s seem hopelessly outdated and silly to us now; the constrictive corset is
a wonderful metaphor for the opposite of “anything goes” that we live by today.
I could list more, but these are some of the main elements in steampunk novels
of whatever sub-genre.
I wanted to bring something new to steampunk, to renew these
conventional elements. One could imagine, for example, inverting steampunk’s
optimism to write a dystopian steampunk novel, where all
the lovely technology and gadgets are used to oppress and enslave and brave
freedom fighters must overthrow the oppressors. Great idea—for another writer,
not me. I’m an optimist, so dystopian steampunk must be left to another.
I found my opening in changing up the setting and the
culture, putting my heroes on the other side of the steampunk
technology-and-imperialist divide. My heroes are neither British nor American,
but Japanese samurai, who must build their steampunk technology from ideas and
plans. They are constrained not so much by corsets but by courtesy and class
and tradition, and their lives and freedom depend on breaking through the
constraints that have held their country in stasis for 250 years.
As a new author, I must admit it was scary going out with a
steampunk book that lacked the American or British setting and culture that
most steampunk books share. Who am I to tear down the boundary walls of
steampunk?!!
After it was too late to retreat, when the book was already published, I
was overjoyed and relieved when I came across other fellow pioneers at the multicultural
boundary, authors who were also building steampunk stories set in Asia or with
Asian characters, leaving behind the British and American settings. These
authors include famed science fiction novelist and translator Ken Liu’s “silk
punk” epic fantasy “The
Grace of Kings” series, set in a mythical Asian-flavored past and featuring
marvelous gadgets and dirigible battles. See also award-winning historical
romance novelist Jeannie Lin’s foray into steampunk “Gunpowder Alchemy”
set in the same time and battling many of the same imperialist adversaries as
my Tōru, but in a Chinese rather than Japanese setting. I also enjoyed
discovering fellow Colorado indie novelist Quincy J. Allen’s “Blood Ties”
which features Asian characters in a Weird Wild West steampunk setting. I can
heartily recommend these as well-written steampunk novels that test the
boundaries just as my “Tōru: Wayfarer Returns” tests the boundaries of steampunk literature. So
do a little boundary-busting and try something different today, steampunk with
samurai heroes in “Tōru: Wayfarer Returns.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
A nation
encircled by enemies
A
noblewoman with everything to lose
A
fisherman with everything to prove and a nation to save.
In Japan
of 1852, the peace imposed by the Tokugawa Shoguns has lasted 250 years. Peace
has turned to stagnation, however, as commoners grow impoverished and their
lords restless. Swords rust. Martial values decay. Foreign barbarians circle
the island nation’s closed borders like vultures.
Tōru, a
shipwrecked young fisherman rescued by traders and taken to America, defies the
Shogun’s ban on returning to Japan, determined to save his homeland from
foreign invasion. Can he rouse his countrymen in time? Or will the cruel Shogun
carry out his vow to execute all who set foot in Japan after traveling abroad?
Armed only with his will, a few books, dirigible plans and dangerous ideas,
Tōru must transform the Emperor’s realm before the Black Ships come.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT:
“Omae wa dare da? Who are you? Whose ship is that?
Why are you here?”
They forced Tōru to his knees.
He bowed down to the sand and spoke in the rough
unhewn Japanese of a fisherman.
“Noble sirs, I am Tōru, of the village Iwamatsu,
some days’ travel north of here. I was fishing with my father. A terrible storm
destroyed our boat and cast us all into the sea. My father gave me a piece of
wreckage to cling to as everything sank.”
Tōru struggled a moment, the words and flow of his
native language catching on his lips after more than two years without a soul
to speak with in Japanese. The memory of the storm and his last memory of his
father that night rose up before him.
He steadied himself as the men listened intently,
their swords never wavering from his throat, nor their gaze from his face.
He chose his next words carefully.
“That night was the last I saw my father. I was
picked up by an American ship and taken to America.”
He bowed down to the sand again, easing between the
blades.
“This night I am returning, to look after my
mother. She has no other child to care for her, and no husband to feed her. The
Americans brought me home, so I might do my duty by my mother and my people. I
beg you, forgive me any crimes I may have committed by landing on your lord’s
shore, and allow me please to return to my home.”
As he looked up into their eyes, he saw they would
permit no such thing.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Stephanie
is a writer based in the Victorian mining town of Leadville, Colorado, where
she lives at 10,251 feet with her husband, five chickens, two bantam English
game hens and one Cavalier King Charles Spaniel. After a former life in big
cities-New York City, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Boston, Mexico City, Atlanta, Los
Angeles and Santa Fe-she now enjoys the birdsong and quiet writing time she
finds in Leadville. Her first novel draws on her experience living and working
in Japan; her next historical novel is set in Mexico where she also lived for
several years. As a Leadville local, she likes her Victorian attire spiced with
a little neo-Victorian futurism and the biggest bustle possible.
Recognition
for "Toru: Wayfarer Returns"
--
Finalist, Fantasy category, 2016 Next Generation Indie Book Awards
--
Bronze Medal Award, Multicultural Fiction category, 2016 eLit Book Awards
LINKS:
Author
website http://stephaniersorensen.com/
Author
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100011148014463
Publisher
website http://palantirpress.com/
Publisher
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/people/Sassa-Margot/100010457895534
Publisher
Twitter https://twitter.com/SassaMargot
Sell
sheet PDF http://palantirpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Toru-Sell-Sheet.pdf
Historical
Novel Society review
https://historicalnovelsociety.org/reviews/toru-wayfarer-returns-sakura-steam-series-book-1/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION
One randomly chosen winner
via rafflecopter will win a $50 Amazon/BN.com gift card.
Be sure to visit the other tour sites for additional information and chances to win.
January 30: Welcome to My World of Dreams
January 31: The Silver Dagger Scriptorium
January 31: Lampshade Reader
February 1: Unabridged Andra
February 1: Author Deborah A Bailey
February 2: Edgar's Books
February 3: Christine Young
February 3: T's Stuff
February 6: Reviews by Crystal
February 7: Kit 'N Kabookle
February 7: Mixed Book Bag
February 8: Megan Morgan
February 9: Book Giveaways
February 10: Book Lover Promo
February 10: Fabulous and Brunette
February 13: CBY Book Club
February 13: Rainy Day Reviews
February 14: The Avid Reader
February 15: BooksChatter
February 15: EskieMama and Dragon Lady Reads
February 16: Author C.A.Milson
February 17: Queen of All She Reads
February 17: Illuminite Caliginosus
February 20: Cafinated Reads
February 21: bookworm1102
February 21: Laurie's Thoughts and Reviews
February 22: Sapphyria's Book Reviews
February 23: Lorana Hoopes
February 23: Reader Girls
February 24: Long and Short Reviews
I enjoyed your post on Steampunk and how you decided to use it.
ReplyDeleteSteampunk definitely intrigues me!
ReplyDelete--Trix
I love Steampunk! I can't wait to read this!!
ReplyDeletecongrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
ReplyDeleteReally great excerpt, thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for hosting my tour today and letting me share my discovery of steampunk with your followers. Good luck to everyone who is entering the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteStephanie
Hey everyone,
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to let you know I'm putting "Toru" on a $0.99 price promotion through the end of my book tour, so pop over to Amazon and snag your copy now. I am working on getting the price dropped on Nook, Kobo and iBooks as well. I hope you'll read it, and if you like it, post a review!
Thanks,
Stephanie