From Domingue's conversation at Border Crossing:
Border Crossing: The Plague Diaries begins with a prophecy. The narrator, Secret Riven, has been given a choice to bring darkness or light:Learn more about the book and author at Ronlyn Domingue's website, Facebook page, and Twitter perch.I thought I had a choice to accept neither. I wanted no part of a prophecy, though my blood and bones knew it to be true. Foolish, because I’d read enough myth, lore, and fairy tales to know when one receives a call–hold a candle to a sleeping monster lover, search the world for a lost daughter, take a basket to Grandmother’s house, spin straw into gold–one must heed it.Secret Riven is a particular archetype of heroine: a reluctant one, easily distracted. Could you talk about Secret’s struggle to accept her fate, and your reasons for writing such a reluctant heroine in our current age?
Ronlyn Domingue: From the moment she comes into the world, Secret is not ordinary. Birds have a council in the room soon after she’s born. Her mother is from a kingdom far away; Secret resembles the people of that region—black hair and tawny skin—and she also has eyes the colors of night and day. She doesn’t speak until she’s seven years old, and before that, she realizes she has the ability to communicate with creatures and plants. She copes by trying to hide her abilities and, literally, herself.
As she gets older, she suspects there’s something ahead for her. She gets attention she doesn’t want for...[read on]
The Page 69 Test: The Mapmaker's War.
My Book, The Movie: The Mapmaker's War.
The Page 69 Test: The Chronicle of Secret Riven.
My Book, The Movie: The Plague Diaries.
The Page 69 Test: The Plague Diaries.
--Marshal Zeringue