Welcome, A.R. Silverberry!

Please welcome, A.R. Silverberry! peter Author Photo 2 198x300He is an accomplished author who, you will see by his guest post below, is incredibly smart. Beyond sheer brains (and jealousy-inducing organizational skills) he tells compelling, plot-driven stories that are chock-full of richly drawn characters. Do not miss the chance to learn more about Silverberry and be sure to buy both his novels…

THE STREAM is his most recent release…

The Stream book cover

Fables, Allegorical Tales, and Filet Mignon
A Guest Post by A. R. Silverberry

 Some of the most endearing stories fall in the category of fables, parables, and allegories, perhaps, because they so powerfully convey the deepest ideas and emotions about the human condition. Aesop’s fables, heard in childhood, sink deep into our psyches and shape our actions. As a writer who works slowly—a chapter from one of my novels took twenty-nine drafts!—The Tortoise and the Hare still brings me comfort. It’s okay to go slow. The Boy Who Cried Wolf carries an undeniable ring of truth. Lose the trust of others, and we lose big time.

Fables don’t have to just be for children, and they don’t have to just include animals, though traditionally the fable is defined that way. For example, the director of the film, Kate and Leopold, described the story as a modern fable about love as a leap into the unknown. A number of modern writers have penned fables for adults. Think of Thurber’s Fables For Our Time and George Orwell’s Animal Farm. The wonder of these tales is how we absorb their message seemingly through our pores. Little thinking is required; understanding is instantaneous.

While the fable delivers a succinct, clear message, the allegorical novel is subtler, telling the story on two levels: literal and figurative. The reader is in for a treat. She can read the story purely for enjoyment, or she can delve into the story’s deeper meaning. Alice and Wonderland is an example of an allegorical novel. For pure fun, it’s the adventure of a girl entering a strange land by going down a rabbit hole. Beneath the adventure is a story replete with symbols and figures of speech, and scholars have found parallels to politics, Victorian culture, and mathematics, to name a few. We’ll never exhaust what can be found in the book!

I think of my novel, The Stream, as both fable and allegorical novel. It can be read purely as an adventure about survival. Beneath that story runs another story, bound up in the metaphor of a stream. The story raises questions about how one finds meaning in life when things constantly change. It raises questions about how to cope with the devastating blows reality throws at us, how to go on, how to build a life. Like many allegorical novels, the characters of the story are also symbols. The hero, Wend, symbolizes the innocent state we’re all in as we enter the flux of life. The stream itself is both a character and symbol: giver and taker, creator and destroyer.

The great thing about fables and allegories is that you don’t have to work if you don’t want to. You can simply sit back and enjoy the ride, let the characters and plot entertain you, and feel the emotional fulfillment the story promises. But if you want to delve for gems, if you want to think and discover, if you want filet mignon rather meatloaf, it’s all there, waiting for your questing mind.

Synopsis of The Stream:

 What if your world was six miles wide and endlessly long?

After a devastating storm kills his parents, five-year-old Wend awakens to the strange world of the Stream. He discovers he can only travel downstream, and dangers lurk at every turn: deadly rapids, ruthless pirates, a mysterious pavilion that lures him into intoxicating fantasies, and rumor of a giant waterfall at the edge of the world. Defenseless, alone, with only courage and his will to survive, Wend begins his quest to become a man. Will tragic loss trap him in a shadow world, or will he enter the Stream, with all its passion and peril?

Part coming-of-age tale, part adventure, part spiritual journey, The Stream is a fable about life, impermanence, and the gifts found in each moment.

 Purchase The Stream:

 Ebook:

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

iTunes: Coming Soon!

Softback:

Amazon

 Purchase Wyndano’s Cloak:

 Ebook:

Amazon

Barnes and Noble

iTunes

Limited first edition Hardback:

 Signed and unsigned copies available only from the author

 Follow A. R. Silverberry:

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About A. R. Silverberry:

A. R. Silverberry writes fiction for adults and children. His novel, WYNDANO’S CLOAK, won multiple awards, including the Benjamin Franklin Award gold medal for Juvenile/Young Adult Fiction. He lives in California, where the majestic coastline, trees, and mountains inspire his writing. THE STREAM is his second novel.

5 thoughts on “Welcome, A.R. Silverberry!

  1. You’re so welcome, A.R.! I love that you can apply these ancient narrative structures to your modern work… I feel like it must be difficult and you do a beautiful job!

  2. Thanks, Kathie, I try! The key is keeping things paired down to the most essential elements, so it doesn’t muck things up, and staying in tune with the story’s theme.

  3. Yes, AR–easier said than done for some!! You do a beautiful job keeping the story tight, but building it from complex, layered “stuff.”

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