The Hummingbird's Daughter II
5/27/2006
Good morning. It's Saturday. As promised, I have begun The Hummingbird's Daughter II. Of course, it's not called that. So far, my editor and I are sticking with The Queen of America. This title comes from a couple of inspirations. She was actually called The Queen of the Yaquis. Though the Yaquis, of course, had no queens. That's a romantic conquest fantasy--like the Cherokee Princess we hear about in the U.S. all the time. As in, "I have a grandma who was a Cherokee princee." Also, Teresita's greatest powers surged here in strange ways, and her followers did indeed go to war in Mexico chanting, "Viva Santa Teresita!" It was a kind of pre- revolution, and for a time, she was the warrior queen, albeit reluctantly. And, the most fun part of the story, is that Teresita entered a beauty competition in New York City--and she won! For a brief moment, she was crowned Queen of New York. So there you have it.

I began the novel this morning. After lots of hemming and hawing and worry and doubt, I just cracked a new notebook and started writing. (Yeah, perts of the books are hand-written, but when the crunch comes, I revert to the speedier word processor.) The first section of the book is called "The Devil-Monkey Desert." Let me tell you where that title comes from.

When my child, the mad Chayo, Queen of All She Surveys, was two, she was convinced a "devil-monkey" lived in her closet and came out when I turned off the light. It was a devil-monkey bigger than the whole house! I kept trying to reason with her that if it was bigger than the house, it coudn't fit inside the house. But, you know, you can't reason with magic. Now, a fan of Hummingbird's Daughter sent me an email about her family's ranching history near Tubac, AZ. (Where the new novel begins.) I didn't know this--I am learning hundreds of amazing small details about teresita as I go--but she had a pet coatimundi there. They look like a cross between a raccoon and a lemur. Apparently, she found a wounded coati in the desert and nursed it back to health. But of course she did. She was Teresita! Anyway, this happy creature followed her aoround. Nowadays, the real old-timers in the area, when they see a coati, say "Teresita must be around." Isn't that great. She's still this close. You can almost touch her.

Needless to say, Don Tomas, her father, is less than thrilled to be in the AZ desert having lost all his great wealth, and he is not disposed to appreciate the coati--the "devil-monkey." That's the scenario at the start of the book.

Here is the first line of the novel: "The Saint of Cabora could no longer speak to the dead."

All right. We have begun. I said I'd keep you apprised of the work, so here's the first installment. Consider it a novelist's journal of the writing. Hope you enjoy the journey with me.

Let's have some coffee--L


News, Developments, Details, Turkeys
5/24/2006
Home. Tour over. Sort of.

Those of you who have followed these blogs know about the wild turkeys in my yard. Well, I am happy to report that mom turkey is leading around 15 babies. At the same time, a mother racoon is sneaking around behind my hammock with a little one of her own. I have come hom to the zoo. If they have babies in your naighborhood, are they still wild? Oh! But you wanted to know about the book tour and the movie and that stuff.

I kept a Wastelander's Notebook of the entire tour. I think I'll ask the website captain to archive all this other stuff before I try to put it on, though. It's long. Though I'll edit, of course. But you'll get a first hand account of what it's like to go out there and do the thing. I think you'll like it.

NEWS: at last, it can be told! I signed the movie contracts for Hummingbird today. Putting them in the mail right now! Overnight!

The director will be Luis Mandoki. He directed The White Palace, Gaby, When a Man Loves a Woman, Innocent Voices, Angel Eyes and some other movies you might have seen. He's at Cannes in a yacht drumming up more $$$ right now. I will keep you posted, loyal readers, about what happens all down the line. He has already been at work on a script with a great screenwriter I'll tell you about when I can. And we have talked quite a bit about casting. Just wait!

MORE NEWS: I am doing, for all you folks who asked by the dozen on this trip, the audio book! Yes! We'll be recording a 15 hour unabridged Hummingbird before Cinderella and I head out for the summer. Little,Brown will make this a download first, all right? So all you iPod freaks and cd-burners can get the whole deal and put it in your machines. We'll see if the recording (by yrs truly) goes as well as I think it will...then they can sell 'em later in bookstores. Oh, and I've asked Shawn Phillips to maybe come up with a guitar theme for the recording. He was there to see me start this journey as a writer (see the old Shawn blog, below)--I hope he will join me from his North American tour for this amazing new chapter.

Since I am now moving into writing the Hummingbird sequel, which we are calling The Queen of America between my editor and me, I will switch this blog into more active composing mode. You and I will engage in a workout--I'll give you a running peek into the process. And I'll take the laptop along on the journeys. I hope you get a kick out of being my partners in the work on book 2. Not to mention other projects I have up my sleeve. I think we are moving into a period of maximum productivity and creativity around here. Come along for the ride.

Watch this space for the Notebooks.

Love & kisses, & kissese, & kisses...L


Home again, home again, jiggity-jig
5/03/2006
Ah, home.... We're back to get our underwear washed before heading out again for Atlanta and Houston. Cinderella has been with me for a bunch of the tour so far. I've been on the road for thirteen days straight. You wouldn't believe the journey so far. I hung out with Mexican masked wrestlers in Las Cruces, visited Teresita's house in El Paso, was attacked be angry bees in Albuquerque, had a flat on I-25 and heard a phantom atomic bomb go off in the distance--it actually shook the earth. I had Mayor Wynn of Austin declare it Luis Urrea Day. I went on CNN twice--once in Spanish. I stayed in a hotel with the biggest bathroom I ever saw. We made many friends. Have read with a bunch of authors. Became big buds with Carole Radziwill, which seems unlikely, but that's why it's so cool. At Duke, I spied on Tom Wolfe--he really does wear spats! Much to tell, and much more to come. I'll be blasting out of here on Friday for the next legs of the tour. Somehow, I have to do final grades! Oh yeah, the day job. Huh. I forgot all about it. In Richmond, VA, speaking for the Junior League banquet, we met 1275 readers. I have been keeping a Wastelander's Notebook of it all, and I promise to post it as soon as I get a minute. You'll want to see pictures of me wearing my Lucha Libre mask! I'll look for you in Atlanta, Houston, Boston, NYC, DC, Albuquerque, San Jose/SF, Tucson, Aspen and Fishtrap. But right now, I'm going to sleep because my head is whirling and I'm so tired I am not even excited that the turkeys have now apparently brought wild ducks into our yard to argue with our cat. Go out and read Debra Dean's Madonnas of Leningrad--it's worth your money. ----L


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