I always love to know the 'story behind the story' if you will so Stormy has humored us and tells us how she came up with
The Separation !!
The Separation !!
Inspiration
for the book by Stormy Corrin Russell:
In 2011, I
was trying to put myself through college as a portrait photographer. Whenever I
wasn’t involved in school work, I was at the studio. There were all sorts of
clients, but I remember distinctly an appointment I had with a single mom and
her daughter, Charisma. Charisma was six, and at that age, it takes two
parents, a bear tamer, and some serious bribery to get through an hour-long
photoshoot. For her, though, it was totally different. She was the most
well-behaved kid I’d ever worked with, which blew my mind.
“It’s just
her and me,” her mom had told me. And this begged the question: what the heck
do we need men for?!
That led to:
what if there weren’t any? What if it was just us, all the women, secluded to
one side of the world.
And so, The
Separation was born. I originally even named my main character after
Charisma. That is, before I realized that she doesn’t actually possess
much charisma, despite being a strong and deserving role model.
* * * * *
The
Separation
Stormy
Corrin Russell
Evernight Teen, 83k words
Distopian, Sci-Fi, Romance
In a world where men and women live
on separate sides of a massive wall, seventeen year old misfit Eroyn Fairchild
has always been too busy with her broken family to wonder why they live
the way they do.
When a man
from the other side breaks through, Ero holds him hostage, hoping for a ransom
large enough to pay for her Elder Grace’s treatment. Things get more
complicated as the man is followed by two others who make Ero question
everything she’s ever known about her life.
As Ero
searches for the truth, the lines between right and wrong blur, leaving her to
choose between saving her city and saving herself.
Teaser:
One of the
things I love about Grace is that she is the heaviest sleeper I know. So heavy,
in fact, she doesn’t hear me dragging a thrashing body through the front door
at two in the morning. For the first time in my life, I consider it lucky that
we live on the outskirts of the north side. If we didn’t, I would never have
been able to get it this far without attracting attention. A loud,
confused sound starts to come from the net, so I kick it firmly.
“Shut up,” I hiss, looking around nervously. I’m not worried about Grace
rousing, but I don’t want the neighbors waking up and noticing my noisy cargo.
I kick twice more, as hard as I can. Silence, finally. With a sigh, I wipe my
arm across my forehead, getting rid of the sweat beading there. I sink down on
the couch, staring at the large lump inside the net on my living room floor
unblinkingly. Little red flowers are blooming all over the heavy white plastic,
and they grow quickly. It’s blood, I realize with a sick feeling. It’s seeping
through from the inside and leaking onto the clean white carpet of our house.
It can’t be real. It just can’t be.
I see Almond
cut across the room and sniff at the lump with caution. With one movement, I
scoop him up and press him to my chest in horror. For the first time, I realize
the danger of what I've just done. I’ve invited a monster into my house.
I’ve made a horrible, horrible mistake.
It takes
Luna ten minutes to get here five minutes faster than usual but it feels like
hours. She lets herself in the back door quietly, but I rush into the kitchen
to meet her.
“Where’s Grace?” she asks with urgency, dropping her medical bag on the kitchen
table.
“What? No, I … this isn’t about Grace,” I stutter. I open my mouth once, then
again, but it’s no use. Nothing is coming out, so I turn on my heel and tiptoe
into the living room. Luna wordlessly follows, eyeing the netted form. I kneel
next to it, holding my breath. With shaking hands, I slide the knife into the
plastic and pull it upwards slowly. I know what it’s going to reveal when I
pull the plastic away, but it still makes my breath leave my lungs in an
audible whoosh. I can’t seem to inhale again once it’s gone. I hear Luna do the
same next to me.
“Is it a…?” She leaves her sentence unfinished, and I nod. The small slit I cut
in the plastic shows a thick arm under a rolled-up shirt, far too thin for our
recently nasty winter. At the very end of the slit, I glimpse a swollen throat
and a jaw covered in a dark shadow of hair. A chill runs down my spine and my
stomach turns.
“Is he alive?” Luna asks, her voice small.
“I … I think so.” I stare at the floor guiltily. “I kicked him pretty hard to
shut him up.” She scoots closer and with trembling fingers folds back the
plastic to see his side, where most of the blood is coming from.
“Cut the rest of it off him,” she tells me quietly. I stare at her in shock.
“But, he––” She cuts me off with a look.
“He isn’t dead yet, but he will be if I don’t stop the blood loss.”
I swallow hard, and comply.
About the author:
Stormy
Corrin Russell is from Orwell, Pennsylvania where she first started writing
from the moment she could hold a pencil. She still loves to write there
and nearly everywhere else. She loves her family, the outdoors, laughing,
eating, and her kitten/writing partner, Maya.
Social media:
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