Word Count: 30,586
Page Count: 56
Would you like to know what I’m actually writing about? I
suppose I can wonder the same thing! Today is day twenty of the NaNoWriMo
challenge, and I thought today’s better than never to tell you about the story
that’s been on my mind all month.
I am writing a modernized fairytale. Before you roll your
eyes at such a cliché move to make, I’m sure you haven’t actually heard of this
fairytale: "The Wild Swans."
Thanks to my Danish heritage, I have an obsession for anything
Danish—H.C. Andersen being top of my list. He’s the one who wrote “The Little
Mermaid,” “The Ugly Duckling,” and “The Snow Queen.” Did you actually know that
Disney’s new movie Frozen is based
off of that story? You better read up before you go see it.
But back to this NaNo nonsense. I really liked this story,
but like many other fairytales, I thought a lot of crucial details were
missing. Here’s an excerpt of my book where my main character, Lotte,
summarizes the story for you:
"Once upon a time, there was a beautiful little princess and she had seven—or was it eleven?—older
brothers. Her mother of course died, and so she got a new one, an evil
stepmother that didn’t like her brood of stepchildren. So much in fact, she turned the strapping young lads into swans and
turned the little princess out—which sounds nice compared to almost killing her
in a bathtub.
The little beautiful princess sure was sad, and all she
wanted to do was save her older brothers. In a few dreams, she found out that
in order to save her band of brothers, she had to sew them shirts out of the
prickliest nettles growing in the woods and she couldn’t talk. How she got the
dreams, I have no idea, but she of course went right to work on a project that
took her years on years to accomplish.
And what happens to this quiet little teenager in the woods?
Why, the king happens to ride by, and thinks she’s so beautiful, that he whisks her away to his handsome castle and
she becomes his bride. Some first date, huh?
Well to make a quaint story short, the archbishop thinks
she’s a witch, so she is sentenced to burn at the stake—and she obviously can’t
vouch for herself; one word spoken would kill her swan brothers. Just in time
before the flames rise up, a bunch of swans swoop down (the swans obviously the
princes in disguise) and the little princess throws the shirts up at them, and
they try the prickly shirts on for size and poof! they become princes again and
the curse is broken! The princess is innocent and she gets to still be queen.
The end."
For the non-snarky version of the story, click here.
So how
do I possibly write a modernized fairytale about a princess who sews little
nettle shirts for her swan brothers? With lots and lots of imagination, no
doubt.
Like my
main character, Lotte, when I read this story, I wanted to know all the
in-between details. Like, how do you fall in love with someone who can’t talk?
And I mean, did the princess know how to write or anything? How was the king
able to love a person he met in the forest without even being able to ask her
name?
I
decided to put those details in myself through a modern retelling of this
story. Liselotte (Lotte) Nielsen starts out as a high school senior and she
gets out of a complicated relationship with Chris, her ex. She breaks up with
him because she’s tired of feeling like he’s being overly manipulative and
condescending. He’s obviously not happy with that, but Lotte doesn’t expect
that he would curse her for it.
The
curse goes something like this: if she says a word, laughs, or even scoffs, her
brothers grow feathers. And it hurts. She’s worried that if she talks too much something
very weird will happen to them, so she stops talking so she doesn’t cause harm
or discomfort for her five (yes count ‘em) brothers.
Throughout
the book, she has to come to terms with the fact that Chris somehow has magic
and she pretends that she lost her voice from an accident instead of telling
people what really happened.
But she’s
not about to spend the rest of her life writing little messages on her
whiteboard. Her brothers help her figure out how to free them of the curse for
good and in the meantime, Lotte goes off to college and tries to live without
her voice. She takes it a step further and learns sign language so she can at
least express herself somehow. During that time of learning ASL, she meets Dan*
who’s in her class . . . and you’ll just have to find out the rest of it, of
course!
I’ve had
this idea for a couple of years now and it’s exciting to finally put it all
down. Hopefully it fills 50,000 words! Anyway,
have a great week and read up on some great fairytales.
*I’m
still on the fence as to whether or not I like that name.