Wingfeather Tales review

Théa of Little Book, Big Story is at it again—this time, reviewing our new short story collection.

Even with “awesome” as my starting point, I still completely underestimated Wingfeather Tales.

Read her whole review here. And thank you, Théa!


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading the second half of Andrew's Wingfeather Tale, "The Prince of Yorsha Doon." Start on page 24 (in the Kindle, that's right around location 495, with the words "It should have been easy"), and read to the end of the story. Check back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share one of your own!What do you think of Yorsha Doon? Do you think Saana is telling the truth? What's going to happen next? Will Safiki escape the Wormway? Pop over to the forum for some conversation!

Mamada

Welcome to the first official Wingfeather Tales book club excerpt, from Andrew's own story, "The Prince of Yorsha Doon." Yorsha Doon is an old, rich, colorful place, so foreign from the other parts of Aerwiar that I've lived in or visited, and I hope Andrew keeps writing there. The language and customs and even the smells give me "the most exquisite jigglies," as Oskar would say. But I will let you read those descriptive passages for yourself. What I chose this week is a scene between Safiki and his mamada. His mamada is delightful, but what I love about this excerpt is the last line.


There in the heart of Yorsha Doon, somewhere south of Prince Majah’s palace, a boy in black leggings and a billowy blue patchwork shirt climbed barefoot through the second story window of a pleasant white building and woke a wrinkled old woman from her midday nap.“It’s me,” whispered the boy.“Safiki,” the old woman said as she stirred. “Where have you been?”The boy glanced out the window at the dusty city and the spires of the palace. He wouldn’t know where to begin, and he didn’t want to worry her. “All over,” he said, grateful that today she remembered who he was. Some days she greeted him as a total stranger.“You would tell your grandmother if you were in trouble, wouldn’t you?” She lifted her a trembling hand and touched his face. Her white eyes looked in his direction but he knew they couldn’t see a thing. “Have you bathed?”“Yes, Mamada,” he said. What he didn’t say was that it was four days ago and it was only because he had been hiding from the port warden. Surely, he thought, leaping from the deck of a ship and swimming under the pier with his pockets stuffed with plumyums counted as bathing. He had at least entertained a passing thought about his grandmother’s insistence on cleanliness after he had climbed out of the sea and spread out on the roof of the warden’s badaan, listening to the gullbirds and the shouts of the shipmates as they searched hopelessly for him among the many ships. The plumyums had been delicious. “That reminds me,” Safiki said, “I have something for you.” His grandmother grinned, revealing her single tooth and her wonderful rumple of tanned wrinkles made deep and soft after years of smiling. “I brought you this.” He removed a plumyum from one of the folds in his shirt and offered it to her with a bow of his head.“Safiki, my dear one, you are so kind to your mamada!” She took the fruit and smelled it rapturously. “These umamri only feed me soup,” she grumbled with a glance in the direction of the door. “What they don’t know is that I have the most fearsome tooth in all of Yorsha Doon.” She winked a blind eye at Safiki and reached into her mouth, wrenching the old yellow tooth to and fro a few times before removing it altogether with a crunch that made the boy wince even as he stifled a laugh. She wiped the false tooth on her sheets and held it up to Safiki as if he had never seen it before. The bottom end of the tooth had been ground to a point and its edge was sharpened like a blade. “Hah!” she crowed, then she clapped a hand over her mouth and lowered her voice to a whisper. “Your mamada could eat a flank of charred tahala rump if she wanted!”“Then next time I will hide a whole rump of tahala in my shirt.” Safiki laughed as he sat on the edge of the bed and watched her arthritic hands make deft work of the plumyum, slicing it into tiny pieces with the tooth and popping them into her mouth. “Will one be enough?”“Yes, my boy.” She sucked noisily on the fruity chunks. “Whatever you bring me is always enough.”
What was your favorite excerpt this week? Post it in the comments below! Then, pop over to the forum and hang out for awhile. There might be plumyums. :-)

Wingfeather Tales! Let's start reading!

Now is the time and this is the book!We're reading together! Here, here, take a look!

I am not the best poet in Aerwiar (that would be Bornholdt the Wider, in my opinion), but sometimes sheer excitement drives me to rhyming ecstasies. In the words of Oskar N. Reteep, "Reading books is neatest of all," and I would add "especially with people you enjoy."Today is the first day of our new Ban Rona Book Club adventure! We're reading Wingfeather Tales, the first ever collection of short stories from the world of Aerwiar. The first story we'll read was written by Andrew Himself, but I'm certain you will find all six of them to be sufficiently full of wonder and woe, hilarity and heartbreak.If you don't already have your own copy, grab one from the Rabbit Room or Amazon.


This week, Madame Sidler will be reading the first half of "The Prince of Yorsha Doon" by Andrew Peterson, found on pages 1-24 in Wingfeather Tales, as well as Andrew's foreword (pages xiii-xvii). Come back on Friday for an excerpt, and to share your favorite snippet from the week's reading!Want to discuss the story further? Join us in the forum. :-)

Ban Rona Book Club: Wingfeather Tales

Hello dear readers,During my visit to Ban Rona last month, I wandered through the Great Library. Much has changed since my last visit, but there is still a signpost that reads Stories with Bittersweet Endings and True Stories (If You Dare), and just beyond that signpost is a cozy little meeting room where we spent many wonderful hours two years ago, reading through the Wingfeather Saga together.Well, I think it is about time that we give that room a dusting and start reading together again.Next week we'll begin reading through Wingfeather Tales.wingfeather-tales-cover-lightHow does this work? Each Monday I'll post what story (or partial story) I'll be reading during the week. If the story is short, we'll read all of it; if it's longer and there's a good cliffhanger in the middle, we'll split it up. The readings will be anywhere from 12 to 45 pages long. You're welcome to read along with me, or go at your own pace. Then, every Friday, I'll post my favorite snippet from the week's reading, and invite you to post your own in the comments. You can expect to find some lively discussion in the forum, too!Don't have a copy of Wingfeather Tales yet? You can buy it in paperback at the Rabbit Room, Amazon, or Barnes & Noble, or through your favorite bookstore.Grab a friend, a sibling, or a dog, and join us next Monday for the first reading!::vanishes::

2016 and the new year

Look. Look at this beautiful year.
It is incredible to think how full 2016 was. These photos are only a little glimpse. How grateful we are for the wonderful things the Maker did, and for all the art and community we made together!Last January I said, "Around here, we’re dreamers. Heads in the clouds, huge hopes, wild imaginations. And the Maker is also at work. Anything might happen!" When I wrote that, Andrew and Chris and I were already looking ahead to the animated series and hoping it would be given a good start in the world, but what actually happened was more than we asked or imagined. The Kickstarter was a phenomenal success—there was much rejoicing and ugly-crying. And beyond just funds raised, new readers were gained. New friendships were formed. New stories were told.New friendships were formed here in the Great Library, too. I am continually amazed at the conversations happening in the forum. Andrew loves to say that art nourishes community and community nourishes art, and I see that happening here every day. You guys! It is such a privilege to be your librarian.So, what's next? New book club kits. More good conversation. The Animated Series pilot!!!  A Florid Sword comic book! A spring tour, and more touring after that. And, we're guessing, more good things than we can yet anticipate.Here's to 2017. :-)

Leatherbound Wingfeather

Last night Andrew and company wrapped up their last show of the year and trundled home with full hearts, still singing on the tour bus. :-) Andrew was glad to meet so many of you on the tour. One of you brought him something really impressive—a well-loved, scuffy-edged, leather-slipcovered copy of The Warden and the Wolf King! We've often wished we could produce leatherbound copies, and it thrilled Andrew to see that Han, the Village Milliner, made her own. Amazing. Thanks so much for bringing it along, Han. :-)https://www.instagram.com/p/BJ87YE7BqSt


The last show of the tour, December 18 at Warren Baptist Church in Augusta, Georgia, was live-streamed last night, and the church is planning to replay the recording on Christmas Day. If you'd like to watch one of the three showings with your family, click here. You can also invite friends to watch with you, and if you click the little clock button next to your preferred showing, the church will send you a text or email reminder before it starts.Merry Christmas, everyone. :-)

A Wingfeather comic

BTLOG update: Tonight is the second of the Ryman shows—and there are a few tickets left, so if you're near enough to Nashville you might want to investigate. Details here, and check out this promo video a friend of Andrew's made.[embed]https://youtu.be/8N5L2d40Dgw[/embed](There are four more shows in the tour, and Andrew would be glad to see you at any of them. Check out his music site for details.)Now that Kickstarter shipping is finished and the team's minds and efforts are turning to digital rewards and the film production, some of you are wondering what's become of the Florid Sword comic book. It's still in development, and if like me you're waiting more eagerly than patiently, maybe this will tide you over for a bit. Nathan, age 10, drew this delightful comic page.img_6389Isn't it wonderfully well-scripted? Comics have different conventions than books (or movies), and I think he did an excellent job translating from one medium to another. Thanks, Nathan! If you draw any more, send them over. :-)