Nancy Raven Smith is an award-winning screenwriting who
novelized one of her scripts. To her surprise, she discovered a passion for
writing mysteries. Learn more about her and her writing at her website.
Hi, Anastasia. Thank you for
inviting me to Killer Crafts and Crafty Killers on Travel Day. I’m
delighted to talk about Sumatra, but I should start with an admission. I’ve
never had the pleasure of going there.
What I have done is research
it with serious interest. I think one of the truly fun aspects of writing is
studying an area thoroughly enough so that you can actually feel the location.
Of course an actual visit would be even better.
My interest in Sumatra
started when I wrote a screenplay about identity theft several years ago. At
that time Thailand, Indonesia, and Myanmar were known as the Golden Triangle
and were famous as an early area for credit card counterfeiting. Since then,
there’s been an explosion of credit card counterfeiters found anywhere in the
world. But my fascination with Indonesia never stopped, and I used it as the
location for Land Sharks – A Swindle in Sumatra.
Sumatra is the third largest
of the 13,677 islands that make up Indonesia and the sixth largest in the
world. It’s similar in size, shape, and population to California and full of
wild beauty. The capital, Medan, is found on the northeastern side of the
island.
The length of the western
side of the island is lined from one end to the other with ninety-three
volcanoes, which drop steeply into the Indian Ocean. The Sumatran name for this
area is Burkit Barisan, which means Parade of Mountains. According to one
source, fifteen of the volcanoes are active.
You may have heard of the
latest eruptions of Sumatra’s 8,070-foot Mount Sinabung. It’s a stratovolcano,
as was Krakatoa and Mount Saint Helens, and has been spewing gas and ash clouds
as well as lava for the last two years with no sign of stopping. It’s located
approximately twenty-five miles North of Lake Toba, which is a super volcano
like Yellowstone.
When you include all the
islands of Indonesia, there are on average ten major volcano eruptions per
year. The infamous Krakatoa is located off the southern tip of Sumatra on a
separate island. Sumatra and its surrounding smaller islands are the western most
point of the “Ring of Fire,” the area which surrounds the Pacific Ocean in an
upside-down horseshoe shape and is known for earthquakes and volcanic
eruptions. The entire western United States coastline is included in the “Ring
of Fire.”
The
Eastern side of Sumatra parallels the Strait of Malacca, which separates it
from Malaysia and Singapore. Rainforests, marsh and shallow rivers cover a
third of the entire island and dominate the topography on this side.
As arresting as the
topography is, I think it’s the flora and fauna that intrigue me the most.
There are over 35,000 known plant species in Indonesia. It’s home of the
infamous corpse plant which smells like putrefaction, and Rafflesia which
produces the world’s largest bloom. Hibiscus, jasmine, bougainvillea, lotus,
and frangipani are common. Sumatra’s rainforest trees grow over sixty meters
tall.
And there are unique animals – 176 different mammals, including Sumatran tigers,rhinoceros, and elephants,
both smaller physically than their cousins elsewhere, but just as fierce. Other
animals include sun bears, clouded leopards, large tapirs, and goat antelope.
One of the special animals
that interest me is the orangutan. They exist only in Sumatra and neighboring
Borneo. Sadly there are only about a thousand left in the Sumatran jungle. As
the Orangutan’s habitat decreases, so do their numbers. In an effort to protect
them, the Sumatran government has established a rehabilitation center in the
Northern part of the island near Burkit Lawang. There they are studied and
tourists visit to see them in the wild.
Orangutans are peaceful
animals. The mother raises her young until they reach about thirteen years old.
The lessons she carefully teaches them include how to make sturdy nests high in
the trees and how to use ‘tools’ made from sticks and other natural materials.
The name orangutan means man of the forest. That’s very appropriate since they
have 98% of the same DNA as humans. So even the use of tools is not surprising.
Reptiles, insects, and
aquatic life are just as varied as the mammals. Luckily the fierce Komodo
dragons live a fair distance away on a different island. The rare and colorful
bird species number 523 including Birds of Paradise, Black Ibis, Sunbirds,
pheasants, owls, nightjars, parrots, hornbills, cuckoos, hawks. The bird
population alone fills volumes of books.
The
people of the island are as diversified as everything else. Although there are
a large number of ethnicities, more than eighty-six percent of the population
is Muslim. Christians are the next largest group at a distant second, followed
by Buddhists and Hindus.
I couldn’t resist setting a
story in such an exotic place. Going on a photo-shooting safari in Sumatra
would be fabulous. But as of now Sumatra is a bit off the beaten tourist path,
unlike its northern neighbor Thailand. Tours are only beginning to be offered.
Bird watching is one of the major attractions.
Another interesting thing I
learned is about the boogey man. It’s a name used everywhere to scare small
children. The expression came from Indonesia where, in the past, Buganese gypsy
pirates traveled in ships with black sails on the monsoon winds every year.
They pillaged and plundered the inhabitants living on other islands and were
greatly feared. Buganese was shortened to Bugi, hence the bugi men. Some
historians debate this origin of ‘boogey men,’ but no one has any other
historical context to offer.
Unfortunately,
like many other emerging countries, Sumatra has a large low-income population.
There is a war going on between the need for its people to support themselves
and the need to save the unique environment. Major export items such as palm
oil, oil, rubber, coffee, gas, tea, mining, and tobacco all contribute daily to
the loss of rainforest. There are over a hundred-fifty state wildlife reserves,
but poachers, farmers, and foreign exploitation continue to destroy with
impunity the very things that would attract the tourist dollar in the future to
this wonderful location.
I hope you’ve enjoyed our
mini tour and I’ve piqued your interest in Sumatra.
Land Sharks – A Swindle in
Sumatra
A fall
from grace costs Lexi a position at a top New York financial institution. She
ends up in a job at a small private bank in Beverly Hills. But that’s okay, she
still gets to work in her favorite field – catching white collar crooks. At
least that’s what she tells herself.
But when
Karista, the daughter of one of the bank's principal investors, runs into
danger while traveling in Indonesia, Lexi's job comes to depend on her ability
to save her. Even worse, Lexi will have to babysit Steve, her boss'
well-meaning but spoiled son, while going undercover to reach the heiress.
Lexi’s
cushy tropical assignment soon spirals into chaos as she has to outrun
fashion-forward Batak natives, outwit an arrogant FBI agent, help Steve find
his stolen Air Yeezy sneakers, and figure out why her ardent former lover and
debonair gentleman thief, Andre, is staying at the same resort.
Lexi will
have to be very good or very lucky to survive it all.
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6 comments:
Amazing! Thanks for the post!!
You're most welcome. It's a fascinating place. Mt Sinabung is a definite threat at the moment. The volcano eruptions were so bad a couple weeks ago, that the immediate area was evacuated. Currently people are returning as it's quieted a bit. Let's hope it stays that way.
Another dream destination for my bucket list. Sounds fabulous. And the book sounds very funny. I'll put that on another list!
Thanks for the post.
I think Sumatra would be a great destination for a bucket list. It's on mine, too!
Sound beautiful. I'm intrigued by both Sumatra and your book!
Thank you, Ellen. If you'd like to learn more and can watch a VHS tape, there's a 2007 set of 4 tapes on Indonesia as a whole from two brothers, Lawrence and Lorne Blair who traveled from island to island across Indonesia. It's older but truly interesting. It's called Ring of Fire, An Indonesian Odyssey. I believe there's a book too. More recently Nature did a TV segment as did several other adventure travel shows and they're on DVD. Amazon also has several good books on the subject. If you do read Land Sharks - A Swindle in Sumatra I hope you enjoy it.
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