Showing posts with label The Written Word. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Written Word. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2013

The Written Word - Justified Lawman

Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Legend will be followed by The Legacy of Harthore and finally The Legion of Harthore to complete the imminent Trilogy of Harthore. To follow her coming adventures and writing, check out her blog, The Long-Expected Journey.



Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!

Welcome back to The Written Word after our short break! I'm sorry to announce that after this, TWW will be taking a bit of a hiatus - with a potential continuation in the future. To complete our series, we will be sharing a second Author Spotlight, this time featuring a follower of the YAWA blog - Justified Lawman, by Frindlesmith.


   Frindlesmith is a writer, reader, thinker, and undeserving follower of Jesus. He writes
short stories, juvenile novels, and young adult novels.
   Genre-wise, he writes contemporary, literary, and westerns. Frindlesmith centers his stories on complex characters in complicated situations, trying to make sense of the world. In addition to writing, he enjoys reading theology, novels, and books on writing fiction. When not doing either, he usually ends up lifting weights or doing cardio workouts. Frindlesmith blogs whenever he can at The Wordsmith Alphabetical.


   Tracer Hamilton walked through the grated jail cell’s door. Seeing the low and grimy
ceiling, he replaced his Stetson. A wave of old sweat and dust slapped Tracer in the nose.
There was only a filthy cot on the left wall and an occupied chair in the middle of the room for
furniture. The seated prisoner could only be Burnett Gordon. She wore a plain grey prison gown,
her hair was matted from weeks in the prison, her brown skin was caked with dirt, and she had
eyes that seemed to take in everything they could.

   So she’s the one what stole my little girl, thought Tracer, the blood rushing to his eyes.
His right hand began to sweat as he forced himself not to pull his sidearm and shoot Burnett like
a dog. Even if he didn’t fire, she’d recognize his gun in a minute, then she’d never go anywhere
with him and Tracer would spend another five years hunting for little Liberty.

   “Watch her careful,” whispered Warden Jeffries behind him, “she attacked the last white
man who tried to visit her.”

   Tracer tapped the Colt .45 Lightning in his hip holster. “Thanks, but I’ll be fine.”

   The warden closed the door behind Tracer, leaving the only illumination source the
barred window on the opposite wall.

   Burnett stood up at the sound of the door. She eyed the newcomer with suspicion,
particularly the tin star pinned to his vest. “Who are you?” she asked with a dry throat. “Why do
you look so familiar?”

   Tracer clenched his jaws and tried not to swallow. She recognized him? Without his
beard? And after all these years? He nervously pinched the brim of his hat. “Name’s Hamilton,”
he said, lowering his voice to disguise it, “I’m a sergeant with the Texas Ranger Corps. I am here
to escort you to Fort Jefferson Davies.”

   Burnett began to back away slowly from Tracer. Her breathing sped up. “Warden Jeffries
said I only had another month here, you can’t transfer me.”

   “I ain’t tranferrin’ you.” said Tracer, raising his hands reassuringly.

   Burnett, still staring at the lawman, turned her head to the side unconvinced.

   “I have reason to believe that I shot and killed your brother, Ransom Gordon, around the
Mexican border, but the state needs you to identify the body. After that you may be returned here
to serve the rest of your sentence.” Tracer mentally kicked himself after saying this. No prisoner
would believe that the state of Texas would send a ranger all the way to Montana just to haul
back someone to identify a body. If Burnett didn’t smell something amiss by now. . . .
Burnett stopped backing away, but kept her distance from Tracer. “If you weren’t sure it
was my brother,” she asked slowly, “why’d you shoot him?”

   “Well, there aren’t too many black men ridin’ near the border with a hat brim long
enough to cover their neck.” He waved his hand over the back of his neck.

   “Then you were sure it was my brother you shot?” Burnett’s breathing returned to a
normal pace and her eyes weren’t wide with fear.

   “Of course, I don’t shoot anybody without a reason.”

   Burnett sat on the edge of her cot. “But if you’re sure, why do you need me to tell you if
it’s my brother you shot?”

   The way Burnett emphasized the word you jittered Tracer. Was it a coincidence, or was
she hinting that she knew there were personal benefits for him if she went? “Well,” began
Tracer, pushing his hat back on his head, “I don’t need you to, but the state of Texas won’t take
the bounty off your brother’s head unless it’s clear beyond all doubt that it was your brother I
shot.”

   “I see. How much was on Ransom’s head?”

   Tracer rubbed a callous on his thumb and stared at Burnett. Not a speck of remorse or
sorrow in her. From her face, one would think they were talking about the heat. Just what Tracer
would expect from a kidnapper. “Five hundred dollars.”

   “Then you killed him for money?” she asked, turning her eyes toward the wall.

   Tracer swallowed hard. If he said yes, then even someone as cold as Burnett would never
go to Texas with him. If he said no, she’d continue probing until he let something slip.

   “Not just for money,” he said after some thought, “as long as another African devil has
met his maker and all the women and children of the USA can walk the streets, I’m happy.”

   That should work, thought Tracer.

   “His maker,” sneered Burnett contemptibly. Her arms folded and her eyes blew fire at the
wall.

   “What’s that tone for? You don’t believe your brother has one?”

   She shook her head.

   “Don’t you believe in a higher power?”

   “What higher power would that be, Mr. Hamilton?” asked Burnett with more contempt
than before. “A higher power that made my brother a prisoner for defending himself against a
white man, or put me in jail for talking back to my employer? No, Mr. Hamilton, I only believe
in one higher power and Mr. Grant outside carries it loaded on his arm.”


Excerpt from Justified Lawman
by Frindlesmith
(c) 2013

Thursday, August 15, 2013

The Written Word - Gap Week!

Hey there writers!! Kira here. I am currently in the car on the way to my next adventure at college and totally forgot to schedule an edition of TWW for this week in all of the packing craziness!!! Apologies to the other admins and all of our readers. Check back next week for another Author Spotlight!

Thursday, August 8, 2013

The Written Word - Paradox

Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Legend will be followed by The Legacy of Harthore and finally The Legion of Harthore to complete the imminent Trilogy of Harthore. To follow her coming adventures and writing, check out her blog, The Long-Expected Journey.





Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!


Welcome back, writers! On TWW last week, we saw the teaser for admin Sam Graber's WIP Korina of Two Worlds. This week, you all get to see an excerpt from yet another one of our admins, published author Brian McBride.






Brian McBride, sixteen-year-old native to Oregon, is a passionate Christian, writer, and an avid reader. Paradox is his first book in a series of high fantasy novels, The Starcrafters' Saga. When he's not reading or writing, he spends his time hanging out with friends and family, and playing the piano, drums, and the bass guitar. He runs a Christian book blog, Shattering the Darkness, and loves finding new teenage authors like himself.


Brian's writing centers around fantastic thrills, intriguing adventure, and mysterious twists, and ultimately, the destiny that belongs to each and every person on planet Earth.






In the distance, hooves pounded on the dirt trail. Hannah looked toward the source of the sound.
   “You mussst hurry. We haven’t much time…” The voice hissed.
   “I know! It’s not every day that an invisible being tells me to cut myself and give them my blood,” she said. Hannah took a deep breath and pressed the stick against her flesh.
    Hannah grunted. Blood trickled through the small cut that ran across her palm. She tossed the stick to the ground and stared at her bloody hand. “Okay. Now what?”
   “Jussst hold out your hand…” The black mist lunged for Hannah’s hand. To Hannah, it felt as though a leach had attached itself to her hand and was sucking her life away.
    Just then Alicia, David, Jake, and Valar broke through the trees in a full gallop. They came to a stop a few feet from where Hannah was standing.
    “Hannah!” Alicia screamed. “What are you doing?”
    “I’m not needed here. I’m going with them.”
    “Who?” Jake asked, searching for the people she spoke of.
   “It doesn’t matter. They promised me what Trand would not give me.” The gray wisps hissed when she said Trand’s name.
   Suddenly the mist was gone. Hannah looked at her hand, clean of blood. She inspected the cut, but there was nothing to inspect. Then thunder clapped behind her. She spun away from the group and toward the noise.
   Lightning shot through the canopy of trees and stuck the ground ahead of Hannah. She screamed and threw her arms in front of her face. The horses that the others were riding whinnied in fear. They reared and chomped at the bit.
    “Hannah! What have you done?” Valar shouted, terrified.
    Booms of thunder resounded through the air.
   A surge of electric light suddenly coursed through Hannah’s body. She went rigid and fell to her knees. Face in hands. She shook violently, and her mouth released a wretched scream.








Excerpt from Paradox
by Brian McBride
(c) 2013

Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Written Word - Korina of Two Worlds

Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Legend will be followed by The Legacy of Harthore and finally The Legion of Harthore to complete the imminent Trilogy of Harthore. To follow her coming adventures and writing, check out her blog, The Long-Expected Journey.


Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!


Last week's segment of TWW featured an Author Spotlight on Ms. Trixie Hall's WIP The Program and I - be sure to take a look in the blog history if you missed it. This week on YAWA, we bring you another teaser from one of our admins, Sam Graber!








Sam Graber is a homeschool graduate and avid reader and writer. He is a college student, and enjoys both playing and arranging music. Sam recently began a novel entitled Korina of Two Worlds, which he hopes to make his first published novel. You can find his author page on Facebook: Sam Graber, Author.









Born an Anaian, raised a Lithelian, Korina seeks to find where she truly belongs.

   Korina’s mother was killed by an assassin in the pay of a misguided Anaian nobleman just days

after her birth, leaving her in the charge of her godmother, Merilwen of Lithelia. Korina has a hard 

time fitting in in Lithelia, where the people are of the blue-skinned lithus race. Fearing that the same 

assassin would one day find Korina, Merilwen had her trained to beat assassins at their own game.


   Now years later, the council of Lithelia wishes to make use of her skills to protect Lady Roble, an 

Anaian noblewoman who may be the key to Lithelia’s survival. For years, a strong prejudice has 

grown between the humans and lithus. Now the Anaians are on the brink of declaring a war of 

extermination against Lithelia. Only Lady Roble stands in the way, and she may soon be the target of 

assassination by her misguided countrymen. It is up to Korina to protect Lady Roble while in the 

guise of a maid. But Korina, who was raised among the lithus, fears she will never be able to blend 

into the Anaian culture.

Excerpt from Korina of Two Worlds
by Sam Graber
(c) 2013

Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Written Word - The Program and I

Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Her blog, Legend or Legacy, is currently focused on the above's imminent trilogy, but is sure to be invaded by her other WIPs and general writing tidbits.




Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!

Last week on TWW, you saw an excerpt from The Last Farm, a current WIP of our admin Carilyn Anne. This week, we have a special on TWW - an author spotlight.





Trixie Hall writes YA Fiction and curious poems. She grew up in a ghetto suburb and draws inspiration from the real-life characters she's met through various jobs and clubs. Hall has many interests, including coffee, kayaking and Political Science (her major). Once she has procrastinated with everything else she can possibly think of, Hall loves to write even though she sort of hates it. Questions for Trixie? Email her at trixie.paradiseonpaper@gmail.com.







I know everything about your personality.

Yes, you.

Within five minutes of seeing you (usually less), I’ll be able to put it together. your personality will be open to me.

How so?

One betrayal of your personality will trigger my mental databases. Are you a quiet person? Do you ask too many questions? Do you use body gestures more than words?

Oh, and what’s your horoscope?

If I pick up on just one single thing about your personality, you are doomed.

I always find something.

It’s like I can see your cover, talk to you for five minutes, and have read your whole book.

Without ever turning a page, mind you.

If I could see you reading this story (which I probably can), I would be able to figure out your personality.

Yes, check the locks on your doors.

What did you say? Ah, I heard you this time. I’m laughing inwardly at your question.

Do you know your own personality?”

Why, yes. I do. I am analytical. I am cautious; I get this story into the right hands. I am a worker.

That’s how I know what my death will be, with, oh, a ninety-percent accuracy.

I use my skills diligently because I am a worker. I find out what I can about you because you have been targeted by my bosses to join their Program. I report back to them.

What is the program? The program and I catalog information about you to change the course of your history and the world’s history. They control their fates and your fate.

How do they do that? I cannot tell you the answer to that question until you decide to join.

You don’t want to join? Remember, I’m watching you. I know everything about you. Eventually, you’ll join because I’ll know just what weaknesses and strengths of yours to target.

Sort of like how if you search for something on Google, it’ll pop up on your Facebook advertisements. You know about the program now, after reading this far into the story.

Now I will begin to advertise it, quite subtly, in your life.

Back to the death part.

My skills come with a price. I understand other people too well. I work too hard.

Each personality takes a piece of my soul. My mind gets just a bit more full and the Program gets a little bit stronger.

My bosses are eating away at my life.

You see, once the Program is over, they will no longer need me.

I will be a liability.


Excerpt from The Program and I
by Trixie Hall
(c) 2013

Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Written Word - The Last Farm


Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Her blog, Legend or Legacy, is currently focused on the above's imminent trilogy, but is sure to be invaded by her other WIPs and general writing tidbits.


Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!


Last week on TWW, you saw an excerpt from Keeper, a personal WIP of mine. This week, I will introduce you to the work of one of our other incredible admins, Carilyn Anne.

Carilyn Anne is a writer, follower of Jesus, and homeschool graduate. She has been writing from a young age, and has participated in NaNoWriMo since 2010. She spends time housecleaning, babysitting, chatting on the Go Teen Writers Facebook group, and occasionally watching TV shows (like Doctor Who!) with family members. She blogs over at The Writing Maiden. Her two main WIPs are "Flicker in the Night", a historical fiction set during the Great Awakening, and "The Last Farm" which is futuristic fiction.

"Get what out of me? I don't know anything that could be of interest to you." Xander glared at the man. "I don't know your name, who you represent, why you tied me up." He growled out the last few words. "There is nothing that could possibly make me want to tell you anything."

"Ohhhh, I think there is. Perhaps, something called..." The room grew suddenly silent, and dread filled Xander. This man must be crazy.

Xander's mind raced. How did he even get here? He was with his family in the supermarket one second, and the next, he felt a tiny prick of pain on the back of his leg, and before he could do a thing, everything went from hazy to black and then there was nothing. This man must've been involved somehow...

"Family." The man spit it out harshly, and his eyes were fixed on Xander, steely black and piercing.

The word felt like a dagger into Xander's heart, and he bowed his head to his chest for a second. Then he raised it back up and lifted his chin slightly, watching the man closely. "What do you want?" He said it slowly, evenly, and firmly.

"I want you to admit that you know something."

"Maybe if you could just give me a hint..." Xander tried to think of something clever to say or do that could stall the conversation.

"No!" The man's voice rang out loudly, and echoed against the black walls of the room. "Tell me about those two little 'friends' of yours, and you will be released. But we can't..." the man's voice grew quieter and softer as if he were trying to be nice, and an evil smile tugged at his lips. "But we can't help you, now can we, unless you give us the information we need." The man slid his hand into his pocket and pulled out a piece of paper. "Recognize this?"

 Excerpt from The Last Farm
by Carilyn Anne
(c) 2013

Thursday, July 11, 2013

The Written Word - Keeper


Kira Hellweg is a recent graduate with a passion for music, Jesus Christ, and (oh, yeah) writing. She is the unpublished author of The Legend of Harthore, which is currently in the editorial stage. Her blog, Legend or Legacy, is currently focused on the above's imminent trilogy, but is sure to be invaded by her other WIPs and general writing tidbits.


Welcome to The Written Word (TWW for short) on YAWA. This series (managed by yours truly) on our blog will be focused on the most important thing to the majority of our readers - the actual writing. Every Thursday, we will share an excerpt from someone's writing, published or not. To start, the five admins will feature sections of our own WIPs. We hope you enjoy our writing, and feel free to email us at yawriters.alumni@gmail.com if you'd like to see your own writing featured!

TWW's first entry will be a teaser from one of my own current WIPs, which currently holds the working title Keeper. This novel is Christian fantasy, and is designed to be allegorical. Keep in mind, this is a teaser. It's written to be the introduction, or perhaps even the blurb, for this novel. Nonetheless, I hope it is intriguing and enjoyable for you all.


   We all start as learners, and the old ones are our trainers. The learning lasts for years after we awaken – sometimes only a few, sometimes hundreds. Then there's the change, and we know what our class is. Not class in the sense of high or low - it's more a state of being.
   It's hard to explain, the change. It's not a test. There's no board that decides, or even tells you, what comes next. You just know. Sometimes the change is subtle, like with the Pathfinders. You wouldn't know they'd changed unless they noticed of their own accord – or, I suppose, if you had a need to talk to them about maps. Other changes are terrifying and blatant, like the Seers who suddenly go completely blind.
   No two changes are the same, but my change was utterly different. It happened in the twentieth year after I awoke. I didn't even realize it was happening. I just started to know things that I shouldn't. It was odd, everyone recognized that. But at first, I just assumed that I'd unconsciously overheard those things. Soon, though, the things I knew were things I couldn't possibly have overheard.
   That was when the old ones started to take notice, only they didn't know what was happening to me either. “Gareth is only in the twentieth,” I remember one of them saying in a hushed whisper. “He doesn't need to be changing yet.” But there was no other reasonable explanation, so they took me to see the Elder. That was the most terrifying thing I've ever experienced. At first, I didn't think the Elder would know either. But he did. And the knowing was almost worse.
   You see, I'm not supposed to be awake. My class died out eons ago. The old ones were terrified, but the Elder only smiled. “Welcome back. We have long awaited you,” I heard him say. Only his lips didn't move. I heard his words in my mind. “Long is an understatement,” I whispered in reply, forcing myself to acknowledge the truth that he had told me.
   I am the first Keeper in seven thousand years.

Excerpt from Keeper
by Kira Hellweg
(c) 2013