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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/sawpub/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114This fall I am excited to be participating for the first time in Christine Smith\u2019s Know the Novel<\/a> linkup!\u00a0This three-part linkup (spanning October, November, and December) features a monthly set of questions designed to give blog readers a sneak peek at the books authors are working on right now.<\/p>\n Each month, I\u2019ll be answering ten questions, complied by Christine, about my newest project: In Quest of a Nameless Sea.<\/em> And so, without further ado\u2026<\/p>\n (drumroll!)<\/em><\/p>\n Watching a documentary about the mapping of the Canadian west, and the search for a north-west passage in the 1800s. Although In Search of a Nameless Sea<\/em> is set two hundred years early, in a different location, the basic themes are the same.<\/p>\n Thirteen-year-old Philip Talbot will do anything to win back his father\u2019s approval\u2014but he could never have guessed that the quest for redemption and acceptance would take him to the furthest boundaries of the known world. Does the tiny, unlabeled sliver of water, at the western edge of the newly-published map of Virginia, represent anything more than a hazy legend? Will a single quartet of daring adventurers succeed in crossing the uncharted wilderness to find out? And if they do, will the nameless sea be able to solve the problems surging in Philip\u2019s own soul?<\/p>\n In Search of a Nameless Sea<\/em> is set in the colony of Virginia, in the 1630s.<\/p>\n Quite honestly, this setting is a step outside my comfort zone: I haven\u2019t done a lot of reading\/research in this era before, so I feel like I don\u2019t have a very rich background of details to draw from. My favorite aspect of the project is that I had the opportunity to visit historic Jamestown on a family trip over a decade ago, and I have loved going back over photos and delving into this time period\/location again while researching for this book.<\/p>\n Philip is a young sailor who finds himself in disgrace with his sea-captain father, after he becomes accidentally responsible for the loss of a valuable navigational instrument. Struggling with discouragement and self-doubt, Philip is astonished when a party of explorers ask him to join their far-fetched expedition in search of the fabled ocean that will connect Europe with the Far East. Philip needs a way to win back his father\u2019s esteem. The explorers need someone who knows how to make maps. It seems like a Providential fit\u2014until Philip begins to discover that this adventure is about a whole lot more than an unnamed ocean on the far edge of the map.<\/p>\n Originally, the antagonist the whole party are facing is the difficult and uncharted terrain they need to cross in search of their nameless sea. As the story builds, however, and the conflicting motivations of the different characters come into play, at least one of the adventurers becomes Philip\u2019s antagonist in a tangible form, while his own self-doubt and struggle for acceptance form the third\u2014and possibly biggest\u2014antagonist inside.<\/p>\n I am going to be trying out the \u201cHero\u2019s Journey\u201d structure for the first time, which I\u2019m definitely looking forward to. I\u2019m also really excited to be finally working on a series that has been tumbling around in my brain, in different forms, for a long time.<\/p>\n (Which leads seamlessly into the next question:)<\/p>\n Yes! In Quest of a Nameless Sea<\/em> is part of a new historical series I am working on. The series still needs a title, but it features clusters of three books (one picture book, one early-chapter book, and one adventure-type novella) set in different eras throughout American history. The books in each cluster are about the same characters, from the same fictional family, but each book is geared towards a different age range.<\/p>\n It’s a model that I think will fit especially well into multi-grade homeschooling history curricula.<\/p>\n The stories portray close-knit, Christ-honouring families throughout history, highlighting the strengths rather than the weaknesses of the Christian testimony in each era.<\/p>\n I am very much a plotting author, although the level of detail for my plotting varies from project to project. In Quest of a Nameless Sea<\/em>, as an adventure story, has more action and fewer character strands, so I\u2019ve left more details up to the inspiration of the moment than I might otherwise have done.<\/p>\n I think the most unique element is the historical cluster model, that ties Philip\u2019s story in with a shorter early-chapter book about his younger sister Jeanie, and a (still-awaiting-first-draft) picture book about his even younger sister Elspeth. Instead of being a stand alone, or a series intended for a single audience, each piece of the Talbots\u2019 story is geared at a different readership within a single reading family.<\/p>\n (A song or full playlist, some aesthetics, a collage, a Pinterest board, a map you\u2019ve made, a special theme you\u2019re going to incorporate, ANYTHING you want to share!).<\/p>\n I decided to share the original map, that started my fictitious adventurers on their quest for a nameless sea. It was published in 1830 by Henricus Hondius, drawing heavily on John Smith\u2019s earlier map of 1612. The Library of Congress copy is in greyscale, but it was also available at the time in full colour.<\/p>\n\n
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