Anyone
who has read my books knows I’m a big fan of inanimate objects
becoming characters in a story. In PHOBIC it was Piper’s haunted
house – a place that literally
interacted
with her and tried to control her. Piper’s house was ALIVE, and it
would lock her in or trap her friends in the psychotic basement
below. In fact, the house, in a sense, was the enemy of the story.
In
SUCH A SECRET PLACE, the inanimate-object-as-a-character is Ambry’s
vial of enchanted tears.
These
tears are the most powerful ever shed. But they don’t just sit
around in Ambry’s pocket. The tears hound her. They throw major
tantrums, burning the hands of anyone else but Ambry who holds them.
And if she doesn’t keep them constantly with her, they let her know
just how they feel about it:
I
hesitate. My hand lowers, the humming pounds harder, and I can swear
the tears say my name, a sort of woozy voice in the form of a feeling
piercing straight into my chest. When my fingers close over the warm
jar, peace washes over me. The heaviness, the headache. Gone.
In
a strange way Ambry becomes attached to the tears as well, feeling as
protective of them as a mother would of her own child. When they’re
stolen from her, she determines to get them back. The fact that they
call to her comes in pretty handy, especially considering how so many
people seem to be after them:
One
hand on the open screen door, he speaks over his shoulder, not even
bothering to face me. “I hope you know how to get home, because I
don’t have time to take you there.”
He
continues to ramble on, something about broken promises and the mess
I’ve made, but the tears rasp a complaint against my spine, and I
rotate.
“They’ve
moved,” I say without thinking. “That way.”
“What?”
“The
tears,” I say, pointing west into the navy blue sky. “They’re
going that way now.”
Talon
shuts the screen door and stares me down. His eyes are deeper in the
darkness. “You’re telling me you can sense them?”
I
gaze at the gumball moon, the valley of Waenton, the houses and
sparse city lights in the distance. “Why aren’t they driving him
crazy? They drove you crazy.”
“I
don’t know. But you’re saying…” He puts a hand on my shoulder
and turns me away from the hum, toward him. His eyes trap my gaze.
“You’re saying you could lead me to them again?”
“You’re
joking, right? You just made it pretty clear you can’t stand me. So
no, I won’t. I’m going home.”
Except
the tears nudge in my gut. Even though I want to, I can’t abandon
them. I don’t understand it, but they need
me.
So
many great stories do this. Another inanimate object-as-a-character
we all loved:
Wilson,
from the movie Cast
Away.
When Tom Hanks gets stranded on that island for four long years, all
he has for company are the packages from the flight that got stranded
with him. We grow to really love Wilson.
Or
how about The
Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants?
The pants don’t do anything but get worn and mailed between the
four friends as they have their summer experiences, but they stand as
something so much more than pants.
Any
other stories you can think of that have objects as characters?
Such A Secret Place by Cortney Pearson
(Stolen Tears #1)Publication date: April 1st 2015
Genres: Fantasy, Young Adult
Raids splatter across the news–Arcaian soldiers are stealing magic left and right, using it against the people they steal it from.
When sixteen-year-old Ambry Csille’s brother gets taken in one of these raids, her utter fear and panic should be enough to invoke tears in any normal world. But for Ambry, tears are a thing of the past.
Because of a spell, people can no longer feel emotion; not enough to cry, and definitely not enough to defend themselves against the tyrannical soldiers stealing her people’s magic. A rare vial of enchanted tears chooses Ambry to reverse the spell, and soon she finds herself the target not only of the Arcaians, but of battle-scarred Talon Haraway, who wants the tears for his own reasons.
All Ambry wants is to rescue her brother, but when her tears get stolen, Ambry determines to work with Talon to get them back. Any day the Arcaians could drink her tears. Any day they’ll succeed at draining her people’s magic completely, and all hope will be gone—not only for her brother, but for her world.
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Tell
us a little bit about The Stolen Tears series, and especially Such
a Secret Place. Where
did you get your idea?
The
idea of a world where tears are magical came to me while I was
jamming out to a song by Shiny Toy Guns. I don’t remember which
song (I wish I did!) but the idea just bulldozed into my brain and
wouldn’t let me go!
The
series is about a girl who finds a vial of magical tears and has to
use them to break a spell. These tears are the most powerful ever
shed, and so naturally many others are after them as well and Ambry
has to protect them while trying to decipher who to trust.
Have
you always wanted to be a writer?
Yes!
I remember drawing pictures and scribbling underneath them before I
even knew *how* to write, then going around to my family members and
telling them my stories.
What
inspires you?
Music,
definitely. I ALWAYS write with music on, and I usually fit it to the
mood of the scene I’m trying to write. Reading stories or watching
movies like mine helps too. I was stumped the other day, but while
watching Divergent
with
some friends inspiration struck and I suddenly knew how to fix a spot
I’d been struggling to write.
Do
you listen to music when you write?
I
do! It helps me block everything else out, strangely enough.
On
that note, what’s your favorite Pandora station/type of music?
Lately
my writing stations are Film Scores radio, Birdy radio (for romantic,
swoony scenes), and I’m really liking Ed Sheeran’s stuff and a
band called Superhumanoids.
Any
other hobbies besides writing?
I
read a lot, mostly. Pretty standard, lol. I also love to play the
clarinet.
Scenario:
It’s the end of the world. Aliens are invading and you have two
minutes to hurry and grab your three favorite things before rushing
off to safety. What do you grab?
Assuming
my family is already coming with me, my top three items would be--
-
The flash drive with all my writing on it
-
My clarinet
-
My copy of Jane Eyre
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