Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Yellowstone Yondering, Kristen Joy Wilks. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Yellowstone Yondering, Kristen Joy Wilks. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2020

#124 Inside the Emotion of Fiction "YELLOWSTONE YONDERING" by Kristen Joy Wilks



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****Krisen Joy Wilks’s YELLOWSTONE YONDERING  is #124 in the never-ending series called INSIDE THE EMOTION OF FICTION where the Chris Rice Cooper Blog (CRC) focuses on one specific excerpt from a fiction genre and how that fiction writer wrote that specific excerpt.  All INSIDE THE EMOTION OF FICTION links are at the end of this piece. 

Name of fiction work? And were there other names you considered that you would like to share with us? Yellowstone Yondering. My working title was Furbaby Foibles or Yellowstone Adventure, but my publisher wanted something more romantic. They suggested Yellowstone Yearning and we compromised with Yellowstone Yondering in the end.

Has this been published? And it is totally fine if the answer is no.   If yes, what publisher and what publication date? Yes! Yellowstone Yondering is  published on January 17th 2020 by Pelican Book Group (
http://pelicanbookgroup.com/) for their Pure Amore imprint (https://www.adamsprgroup.com/pelican-book-group-pure-amore-imprint.html).
What is the date you began writing this piece of fiction and the date when you completely finished the piece of fiction? March 2017 to November 4th 2019. I outlined this story in March of 2017 and then I did the rough draft in April and May of 2017. I spent 509 hours and 54 minutes working on Yellowstone Yondering … if I kept track accurately. I sent it to my critique partner and did revisions according to her input as well as revisions on my own. I sent it to my publisher on August 2, 2018 (Right) and heard back from them on December 22, 2018. They offered me a contract, but only if did not let the grizzly bear eat any dogs! We went through a round of edits and I got my Galleys on October 24th,  2019. After going through the story one more time and making a few changes, I submitted my Galleys ten days later. The book was completely done on November 4th, 2019 (Below Left)

Where did you do most of your writing for this fiction work?  And please describe in detail.  And can you please include a photo? I do most of my writing early in the morning, cuddled up in a big chair-and-a-half in the corner of our living room. There is a reading lamp that isn’t so bright it will wake up the family (our boys often have friends over who sleep on the couch). I wear a snuggy around my shoulders, pull my Star Trek quilt over my legs, and sit sideways in the chair with my computer on a lap desk and a cup of coffee beside me. Sometimes, if friends have stolen her spot on the couch, our Newfoundland, Princess Leia Freyja (Below Right) will steal my chair and I’ll have to bribe her with a dog cookie to get my spot back.

What were your writing habits while writing this work- did you drink something as you wrote, listen to music, write in pen and paper, directly on laptop; specific time of day? 4:00 AM, silence, coffee with half-n-half and no sugar, directly onto my laptop unless I got stuck. If facing writer’s block, I will sometimes write scenes either into a totally blank document or onto paper with a pen.

Can you give the reader just enough information for them to understand what is going on in the excerpt? Well, I write RomComs and so I will go with the underrated emotion of humor. I think I laughed the most as I was writing this scene where my heroine ignores the park rules as she looks for her lost dog, again, and the park ranger hero confronts her.

Please include just one excerpt and include page numbers as reference.  This one excerpt can be as short or as long as you prefer.  Kayla tried to whistle but nothing came out. She drank two more juice boxes and tried again. Nothing. Her pulse stuttered against her throat as she stared at the zigzagging line of tracks. There was no helping it. Ainsley had braved the thermal zone. If she wanted him back, Kayla would have to follow.
She glanced at the mom clutching her children close as they leaned out for a better look at a steam vent. Kayla was certain the woman would risk anything for them. Ainsley was the only family she had, could she do any less? With a dry gulp, Kayla stepped off the boardwalk.
The tracks grew fainter the farther out she crept. The ground was dry and sandy, only retaining a few of Ainsley’s paw prints scattered here and there where he’d stepped off the rock. Would there be enough tracks for her to locate her boy?
A familiar baritone stopped Kayla in her tracks.
“And remember folks, twenty park visitors have met their doom in Yellowstone’s magnificent hot springs and pools due to accidental tragedy or simply their own epic foolishness. Much like the young woman to your left who appears to be risking life and limb in an ill-considered ramble across the fragile thermal ground. One must wonder,” Ranger Brandt’s lecturing tone cracked slightly with anger or perhaps even a tiny amount of fear, “how she could have failed to read this enormous sign?”
Kayla took another step, following the faint tracks. The tourists crowded around Mr. Brandt all gasped. Kayla ignored them and pressed on, although she did address the ranger even as she crept after the faint tracks.
“Oh, yes. I found out that the Norris Geyser Basin is the hottest and most changeable thermal area in Yellowstone.”
“Not that sign. This one.” Ranger Alexander Brandt gestured emphatically toward a large illustrated billboard that showed a small child succumbing to a terrible burst of burning steam.
“Oh, that sign.” Kayla took another step. “I didn’t finish that one because of the horrible picture. It’s just too awful to contemplate so I skimmed. But I get the gist of it. Visitors should rescue any children or small dogs wandering the thermal area immediately because the ground is fragile and incredibly hot.”
She glanced back at him and scowled, pausing a moment to peer closer. ‚Is that glitter in your hair?”
“You’ve got to read the signs! How many times do I have to say that this summer?” The ranger’s eyes looked just a wee bit crazed. “Read the signs. Read the signs!”
“I think you’re avoiding the question. Glitter and … pink? Is that pink?”
While Ranger Brandt did indeed have a bit of color and sparkle in his perfectly styled blond hair, he wore it stiffly. Back ramrod straight, his eyes were icy blue and intent.
“It was rainbow colored, and I do not wish to discuss it further. Now, the sign.”
“I think I summed it up nicely.” Kayla snagged her camera and snapped a few photos of the colorfully bedecked Ranger scowling and indicating the surrounding dangers with an intensity that models in Ranger uniforms were rarely able to fabricate. My goodness, these photos would be perfect for writers of vacation safety blogs! Mr. Brandt gave her a long, cold stare before he began to read.
“Dangerous Ground.” He glanced up, making sure that Kayla was paying attention. “In thermal areas the ground may only be a thin crust above boiling hot springs or scalding mud. There is no way to guess a safe path: new hazards can bubble up overnight, and some pools are acidic enough to burn through boots. More than a dozen people have been scalded to death and hundreds badly burned and scarred.”
“Thank you, Ranger Brandt. I believe someone should update that sign.”
“If it had said twenty visitors, would you have read more slowly and then chosen to forego your perilous search?”
Kayla sighed and bit her lip. Ranger Brandt was not going to like her answer, but she would be honest nonetheless. “I’m afraid my course would be the same. This information provides all the more reason for me to find Ainsley quickly to ensure that he does not fall through or get snorked down by some rabid, dog-hungry grizzly.”
“The grizzlies here in the park are hardly ‘dog-hungry,’ much less rabid. They eat any number of non-canine items, although, wandering pets do most certainly attract bears.”
Kayla eased forward another step.
Alexander flinched. “Miss Dineen. How much does your dog weigh?”
Kayla glanced back, pretty sure where this was going and not liking it. “Twenty pounds.”
“And how much do you weigh?”
“A hundred and thirty-five.” She looked warily down at her feet.
“How do you think your Ainsley will feel if we find him safe and sound, then must send him to the pound because you were burned to a crisp right next to a huge sign warning you of the dangers?”
Kayla met his stern gaze. Oh, my. Surely, these boiling pools could not be smoldering any more than the dark blue eyes that were boring into hers with such fearsome intensity. Yikes, the man looked pretty mad. Perhaps it was safer out here among the thermal hazards.
“But someone saw him and these are his tracks. Ainsley’s here, somewhere close.”
Ranger Brandt glanced down at the place where Kayla had left the boardwalk. “Could you possibly be talking about these week-old coyote tracks?”
“No, I only saw the one set of tracks.”
“That’s because there is only one set of tracks. A coyote walked through here a week ago, right after our last soaking rain. Nothing makes tracks in this area when the ground is dry. Look down.”
Kayla looked.
“You outweigh Ainsley by one hundred and fifteen pounds. Did you make any tracks?”
“No, but I was careful. You know, because of all the terrifying signs.”
Ranger Brandt mumbled something that Kayla couldn’t quite catch. With a shaking finger, he pointed at her and then down at the boardwalk.
Kayla glanced at the windswept beauty around her, noticing the rising steam in the distance and the charred remains of a grove of trees whose roots had been scorched when a new thermal area appeared. Yeah, the infuriating man was probably right. She should get back to the boardwalk. But he didn’t have to be so rude.
“I’m coming, just hold your horses.” Creeping along on tiptoe, trying to stay mostly on the rocky sections that looked more solid, Kayla made her way back toward the glowering form of Alexander Brandt and his wide-eyed tour group.
OK, so perhaps Ainsley had not made those tracks. It was an honest mistake. She paused for one more close-up of the thermal area. The earth beneath her left foot crunched slightly. Kayla gasped and her camera snapped several pictures as she gripped it in terror. She glimpsed a tiny tendril of steam rising from a break in the ground as her foot fell through.
Strong arms yanked her forward and Kayla found herself propelled onto the boardwalk with great force. She hit the weathered planks and rolled, taking photos all the while, narrowly keeping from going off the other side.
Her arm ached and her shoulder throbbed, but the foot she’d almost steamed was remarkably pain free. She pried her fingers off her camera and turned to tell Ranger Brandt exactly how much his newest rescue hurt when she heard a groan.
A cry went up among the tourists and Kayla rolled to her feet. Ranger Brandt must have twisted and fallen forward, off the boardwalk, when he lunged for her. He lay across the very thermal area he had warned her so strongly to avoid, one hand cradled against his side. She rushed toward him and he shook his head vehemently.
“Don’t you dare, Miss Dineen. I just got you out of here.”
She paused, knelt at the edge of the boardwalk and reached toward him. He crawled across the rocky ground, muttering through gritted teeth. His hand was indeed burned badly, bright red in places and white in others, with blisters rising across the heel of his palm. Kayla helped the man stand and he leaned against her, shuddering slightly with the pain.
Before she could apologize or scold him or burst into tears, he simply wrapped his good arm around her for an instant, looked into her eyes, and whispered, “By all that is holy, stay on the boardwalk.” Then he stumbled off to his SUV where another ranger eased him into the back seat, saying something about first aid.
Not sure what to do, Kayla fell back on her default. She slowly lifted her camera from where it dangled around her neck and took another photo. She glanced down at the digital image. Oh, my. Ranger Brandt looked less than enthused. Her stomach rolled over as Kayla realized that the man had not only rescued her again, but had been horribly burned for his efforts. Standing in the middle of the shocked crowd as she watched the other ranger driving Alexander Brandt away, Kayla had never felt smaller or more alone in all her twenty-seven years.




Why is this excerpt so emotional for you as a writer to write?  And can you describe your own emotional experience of writing this specific excerpt? As you can imagine, there are several funny scenes in this book, including one where my heroine runs straight into a herd of bison after her dog. But I think I enjoyed writing this one so much because of Ranger Brandt’s snarky comment when he added her to his tour lecture, when she explained that she skipped reading the pertinent sign because of how terrifying the illustration was, and of course the reversal of how the character who always follows the rules got hurt even though the reckless character was the one who tiptoed out into the thermal area.
Other works you have published? I have seventeen book manuscripts sitting on my computer, but have only published romantic comedies. One for teens called The Volk Advent, and four others which were all published by Pelican Book Group. They are Copenhagen Cozenage, Athens Ambuscade, Spider Gap, and of course Yellowstone Yondering. I also have various articles, devotionals, and magazine stories published.


Anything you would like to add? Although not typical of Christian romance, my books have gotten a couple of awards. Copenhagen Cozenage took third place in the 2016 International Digital Awards, Athens Ambuscade took first in 2018, and Spider Gap took first in 2019. Spider Gap also won first in the OCW Cascade Awards for contemporary fiction.

Kristen Joy Wilks lives in the beautiful Cascade Mountains with her camp director husband, three fierce sons, and a large and slobbery Newfoundland dog. She has blow-dried a chicken, fought epic Nerf battles instead of washing dishes, transported a gallon bag of cooked bacon inside her purse, and discovered a smuggled gardener snake in her sons’ bubble bath. 
         
          Her stories, devotionals, and articles have appeared in Nature Friend, Clubhouse, Thriving Family, Keys for Kids, The Christian Journal, Splickety, Spark, and Havok. She writes romantic comedies for Pelican Book Group, including Copenhagen Cozenage, The Volk Advent, Athens Ambuscade, Spider Gap, and Yellowstone Yondering

          Kristen loves to write about the humor and Grace that can be found amidst the detritus of life. Much like the shiny quarter one member of their household swallowed and then found in the pot four days later. If God is good enough to grant us these gems, she figures that someone should be putting them to the page. Kristen can be found tucked under a tattered quilt in an overstuffed chair at 4:00am writing a wide variety of implausible tales, or at : http://www.kristenjoywilks.com/
XXX
If you would rather enjoy photos of charging bison, Newfoundland dogs, and attacking squid then by all means visit her “What I’m Writing About” board on Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/kristenjwilks7/what-im-writing-about/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/booksdogskissesandfrogs/


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