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Showing posts with label Dogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dogs. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 May 2014

Exploring Character and Place in A Seared Sky #3

The 3rd in a series of pieces on characters and places featured in Joinings: A Seared Sky. This is background information, not covered in the book, but intended to enhance the reading experience. For some of my people, there’ll be a character drawing, supplied by Alice Taylor, maybe a video interview, and accompanying script. I may do short pieces of fiction, deepening knowledge of certain minor characters as well.
For the places, I’ll use sections of the map, to indicate location, along with a description of the place, as I see it, and, where appropriate, linking it with characters. Perhaps indicate life there with a short anecdote or story. I won’t reveal any of the story, either as already published or as written into the series, merely enhance readers’ enjoyment of the trilogy by providing more information. I hope this gives pleasure to those who’ve bought the book and, perhaps, persuades others to take that step.

Pronunciation hints:
Shaulah – shaw-lah
Okkyntalah – ock-in-tar-lah
Tumalind – tum-a-lind
Character’s names are pronounced phonetically.
My take on the names; how I hear them in my head. You may pronounce them any way you wish; reading is, after all, an active rather than a passive occupation.

Here’s a short piece about the only named animal character in the series.

Shaulah, a hunting dog:

Okkyntalah, a major player through the series, is a hunter by trade. He raised his hunting dog, Shaulah, from a pup, taken from the litter of a farming neighbour. Dogs are not common on the island of Muhnilahm, generally used either as hunting companions or by farmers eager to keep marauding beasts away from their stock. Pet animals are not part of the custom or tradition of the islanders.
Shaulah is as much at home in water as on land. Obedient, loyal and devoted to her master, she makes an ideal companion. From his point of view, the fact that she also adores his beloved, Tumalind, is a bonus.
She lives outside. A working companion and beneficial tool of Okkyntalah’s occupation, Shaulah’s part in the tale is surprisingly important. She is intelligent, trustworthy and silent unless required to alert her master to danger.
She appears fairly early in the narrative and you can follow her progress through the story as she travels with her master on his quest.
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Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Bête noire

The Hound of the BaskervillesImage via Wikipedia
Bête noire: noun phrase – French; literally means ‘black beast’; bane of a person’s life; someone or something insufferable, an object causing aversion.

‘Rather appropriately, the hound in ‘The Hound of the Baskervilles’ could be described as the ‘bête noire’ of the piece.’

‘Along with many authors of renown, Hemingway found his bête noire was excessive drinking.’


1 June 1946 – TV licences were first introduced into the UK. For those who don’t know, the British Broadcasting Corporation isn’t allowed to use advertising to raise revenue (long may it remain so) and has to rely on the income accrued by issuing a licence for viewers and listeners to its services. This has long been a bone of contention for those who believe in the supremacy of the free market. But, for those of us who prefer not to have our entertainment, education and information constantly interrupted by banal pleas for our money, the licence system allows the BBC to provide a broadcasting service second to none, which remains respected the World over.

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