Showing posts with label guide dog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guide dog. Show all posts

Monday, July 10, 2023

Student Artists Interpret "Four Paws To Light My Way"

 My friend and colleague, teacher Tanja Nathanael, includes "Four Paws To Light My Way," my story about a blind swordswoman and her guide dog, in her classes. She asks the students to illustrate it, and has been kind enough to forward some of these amazing drawings to me. Here are some of my favorites.




Jian traced the contours of Amaya's face, the arched brows, the fine-boned nose, the softness of the cheek and lips, the smoothness of the skin. Not a single detectable imperfection marred the feature. Jian had touched enough faces to visualize the one under her fingertips now. She's beautiful, and yet she'd been told that the very sight of her was deadly."



"Four Paws To Light My Way" is available in ebook format from 
Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, and a whole bunch of other online vendors.

and in print from Amazon and Barnes and Noble, Bookshop.org, and many other places.

You can also preview it on Google Books. I hope you'll like it enough to get your own copy!



Monday, April 26, 2021

New! Single Short Fiction Stories

 

Single Short Fiction Stories
 
In the past few years, I've put together collections of my short fiction (Transfusion and Other Tales of Hope; Pearls of Fire, Dreams of Steel; Azkhantian Tales). Now I've embarked on a different project: stand-alone single stories that can be read in a single sitting. The first five have never appeared in a collection, although they are reprints from recent volumes of Sword and Sorceress.
 

The first one, a novelette entitled, "Four Paws To Light My Way," features a blind swordswoman and her guide dog. The inspiration was our last German Shepherd Dog, a retired seeing eye dog named Tajji. Tajji was not only an amazing companion but a teacher, and I learned so much about what seeing eye dogs can do and the freedom and empowerment they bestow upon their humans.
 
Tajji (2004-2016)

I read the opening aloud at a pre-pandemic convention and everyone wanted to hear more. A few clamored for an entire novel about Jian and Dog. "Four Paws To Light My Way" will release on May 1, 2021, and is available now for pre-order. The others will follow at monthly intervals.

Four Paws To Light My Way (May 1, 2021)
The Poisoned Crown (June 1, 2021)
"The Fallen Man" (July 1, 2021)
The Girl From Black Point Rock (August 1, 2021)
Sage Mountain (September 1, 2021 -- not yet available for pre-order)


Eventually, I'll put them all together in a new collection. Stay tuned for further news!

As a special treat, and to launch this project, please enjoy this excerpt from "Four Paws To Light My Way."

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Four Paws To Light My Way (excerpt)

Tajji
Tajji, our retired seeing eye dog, has made such a difference in our (sighted) lives that I wanted to feature a dog like her in a story. Being a fantasy writer, and one who loves strong women characters, I came up with a blind swordswoman and her guide dog. The whole story appears in Sword and Sorceress 30 (in print and ebook editions at Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, other venues). Here's the opening:



Four Paws To Light My Way (excerpt)


The curse lay heavy on the Shining City. Jian could smell it in the dust and the sourness of the leaves of the ginkgo trees that lined the approach to the royal palace. They fluttered unseasonably to the ground and crunched under her feet. Here and there, the paving stones, once so level and smoothly joined that she had felt as if she were walking on glass, had buckled. From time to time, Dog nudged her knee in one direction or tugged on the heavy leash in the other, guiding her along the crowded streets.

Dog didn’t like this place. Jian could tell from the stiffness in his muscles, the staccato tapping of his nails on the stones. He preferred bare earth or the windswept hillsides around their home, where wild cattle grazed. Jian did not allow herself the luxury of an opinion; she came when the Emperor commanded, and she would continue to so until he released her from her oath.

The quality of air and sound changed as they passed the outer gates. Here was naked wall, there the many-times-lacquered wood of the gate, here the density of living flesh. Guards would be posted, watchful and still.

Dog slowed, a slackening of the leash. Jian bowed. The guards did not ask her name. How could there be two of her — a blind woman dressed in patched and faded soldier’s garb, a sword in its battered sheath tucked into her sash, a scarf of imperial silk tied around her neck? At least, they were not so foolhardy as to suggest she leave Dog outside the palace.

“Forward,” she said, and Dog guided her inside.

Footsteps on the raked dirt of the courtyard came nearer, then stopped in front of her. She paused, nostrils flaring even though she lacked Dog’s keen sense of smell. There was something familiar about that stride…but she’d been sighted when she’d last heard it.