Writing: Musical Influences: “Fiend Club”

So, picking up where we left off in the February 27th post, we’ve been discussing influences on the writing of the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud. Last time I talked about how the Horrorpops song “MissFit” became Pan’s anthem. Now we get to the introduction of her gothy friends.

There’s a scene in chapter 21 in which Pan and her friends do a little song-and-dance number for videographer Tim Merrick (whose day job is working as an assistant to David Zwieback, owner of the storefront museum Renfield’s House of Horrors and Mystical Antiquities). When I started writing that scene, the first horror-related tune that popped into my head was Michael Jackson’s “Thriller.” A classic 1980s pop hit, with a good beat and lyrics, and Vincent Price rapping—what better song for Pan to launch into?

Yeah, okay, it was too easy a musical choice, and way too mainstream a tune for Goths, but I was trying to find a way to make a transition between a scene in Renfield’s, during which Pan has lovingly bullied her father into retrieving her makeup kit from his car, and the dance number on the museum’s basement steps. As originally written, it went like this:

The door swung shut behind him, and Pan turned to face Tim. He looked highly amused. “What?”

Tim shrugged. “Just couldn’t help noticing you got him trained well.”

“Of course.” Pan flashed a wicked grin. “And now, Timothy,” she intoned in her deepest, most ominous voice, “at last you know the true power of being Daddy’s Little Girl…”

*          *          *

“ ’Cause this is Thrillllerrrrr!” Pan wailed, head thrown back, as she and the crew sang along with Michael Jackson and danced on the steps leading to the museum’s basement floor.

In movie terminology, I saw the transition as a smash cut: an abrupt jump from one scene to the next—in this case, everyday Pan giving her best sinister smile instantly changing into glammed-up Pan singing her heart out as the “camera” pulls back to show her and her friends on the stairs. (If you’ve been following these posts, you already know how I tend to “see” the scenes I write in cinematic angles.)

But then one night I downloaded the latest episode of Rue Morgue Radio (a great online, F-bomb-loaded radio-style show that stopped broadcasting in January 2012 after seven years, but you should definitely check out their archives). One of the first songs that the host, Tomb Dragomir, played was a track from the Misfits’ 1999 album Famous Monsters: “Fiend Club”—and I suddenly realized that Pan & Co. had a much better song to perform:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n5TgEU4f_eY

We won’t pretend that this is the end
We’re not losers all of the time
We march and we fall
We’re one and for all
It’s just evil all of the time
All the time

We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
Not you! Not you!

You dress so messed up
Your hair is too long
But I’m changing it all of the time
We march and we fall
We’re one and for all
It’s just evil all of the time
All the time
Evil all the time

We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
Not you! Not you!

Evil all the time

We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
We are the fiend club
Not you! Not you!

We are the fiend club

Not exactly a song you can choreograph a dance number to—well, not unless it includes a lot of violent head banging—but I thought, what a great anthem that would make for Pan and her friends: united in their weirdness, and proud of it. So, out went the King of Pop and in came a far more appropriate band (who are horror fans themselves).

FYI: The actual Fiend Club is the Misfits’ fan club. You can find it here.

Blood Feud E-Sales: The Post-Mortem

So, how did StarWarp Concepts do with their $1.00 Blood Feud e-book sale over at Smashwords, during the Read an E-Book Week promotion? Head on over to the SWC blog and read the outcome.

Then come back here later this week, as we get back to discussing the inspirations behind the writing of Pan’s first adventure. It’ll be fiend-tastic!

Blood Feud E-Book Sale

Starting today, March 4, StarWarp Concepts is participating in Smashwords’ annual Read an E-Book Week, and we’re offering the e-version of the first Pandora Zwieback novel for just $1.00! Buy it for your Kindle, Nook, Kobo, iPad, Sony Reader, or your home computer.

Please help spread the word. The sale runs from 12:01 a.m. (Pacific Time) on March 4 until 11:59 p.m. (Pacific Time) on Saturday, March 10. Sign up for a Smashwords account and use the Coupon Code you see in the ad to receive the discount on BLOOD FEUD—it’s available only to Smashwords customers.

Writing: Musical Inspiration: “MissFit”

Last Friday we were discussing the standard question put to writers: “Where do you get your ideas from?” It’s the question every writer has been asked at some point in their career, and one that never has a set single answer. Well, for me, sometimes inspiration can come from the music I listen to while I write…

For instance: in Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1, there’s a scene in chapter 6, in which Pan—rain-soaked after sitting out in a heavy downpour—goes to her bedroom to pull together a change of clothes. To lighten her depressed mood, she turns on her Mac’s iTunes DJ and a song comes on. Pan sings along as she heads off to take a shower.

I’d been listening to Kiss Kiss, Kill Kill—Danish band Horrorpops’ third album, on which “MissFit” is the second track—while I was writing the scene, not really paying attention to the lyrics; it was just background music to help me get into Pan’s head. Then I heard:

My fist!

In the middle of your face!

My fist!

In the middle of your—

Well, that certainly got my attention, because Pan had punched a mean girl in the jaw two chapters earlier. So I replayed the song—and suddenly realized I was listening to Pan’s “theme song” (lyrics below):

I don’t always tread, don’t always tread careful

Yeah

Most of the time I’m quite annoying

I don’t watch my mouth

Don’t find an out in a fight

I can scream and shout and be a loudmouth!

And I, I’m from the wrong side of town

Now frown

On top of that I’m female!

Nothing, nothing I say is adequate

According to you I’m a MissFit!

What made you my judge and juror?

So I, I don’t care for the common trend

Why is that something I have to defend?

Who made you my judge and juror?

So I carry my fists, I carry my fists high

‘Cause most of the time I know I have to fight

For what I believe, what I believe is right

Even stupid things like keeping my hair dyed

And I, I’m from the wrong side of the town

Now frown

On top of that I’m female!

Nothing, nothing I say is adequate

According to you I’m a MissFit!

What made you my judge and juror?

So I, I don’t care for the common trend

Why is that something I have to defend?

Who made you my judge and juror?

My fist in the middle of your face

My fist in the middle of your—

Nothing, Nothing I say is adequate

According to you I’m a MissFit

What made you my judge and juror?

So I, I don’t care for the common trend

Why is that something I have to defend?

I still stand tall!

Once I focused on the lyrics, I knew “MissFit” was the perfect Pan song and I had to incorporate it into the bedroom scene. Thus, iTunes is turned on, Horrorpops loads up, and Pan exits, yelling “My fist! In the middle of your face!” at the top of her lungs.

Fun fact: Turns out the “My fist” shout-out was itself inspired by a song: the British band Madness’ 1982 pop tune “Our House” (Our house/In the middle of our street/Our house/In the middle of our—).

See? Inspiration can be found everywhere!

Next: Enter: The Fiend Club!

Writing: What Inspires You?

“Where do you get your ideas from?” It’s the question every writer has been asked at some point in their career, and one that never has a set single answer.

I addressed a similar question, “What inspires you to write?”, in a recent interview at the book-review blog Fiction Fascination, explaining the genesis of a couple of scenes in Blood Feud, the first Pandora Zwieback novel: Pan sitting out in a rainstorm; how her dad gave her a DVD copy of the not-suitable-for-little-kids movie Watership Down (“But it had bunnies on the cover!”) for her fifth birthday. Writing inspirations can come from almost anywhere—it can be a book you’ve read, a conversation you overheard, a song that played on the radio…

They can even come from observations of the most mundane events. For example: this scene in the 1999 film American Beauty—written by True Blood creator Alan Ball—in which Wes Bentley’s character Ricky Fitts describes videotaping a plastic bag floating in a breeze:

In an interview conducted in 2000, Ball explained that the scene was inspired by “an encounter I had [in the early 1990s] with a plastic bag one day in front of the World Trade Center.”

One of my short stories, “Laundry Day”—about a group of people trapped while doing their wash on the eve of a zombie uprising—got its start from a toy ring that I bought from a gumball machine in a neighborhood Laundromat. What popped into my head when I first saw the machine full of rings was a scene of a guy presenting this crappy, 25-cent jewelry to his girlfriend as a romantic gesture, knowing they’d never have the chance to get married. The “camera” in my head then pulled back to reveal them huddled inside a Laundromat that had its metal security gates pulled down; beyond the gates was a full-on zombie apocalypse. (Yes, a lot of what I “see” when I write involves Hollywood-style cinematography.)

Initially it was going to be a three-page comic book story, with the zombie reveal on the final page. I never got around to writing it, though, and the toy ring (the one you see in the picture) sat in a drawer for a few years. Then, in 2006, I was invited by editor Vincent Sneed to pitch a story for his upcoming zombie anthology, The Dead Walk Again!—and it just so happened I had this toy ring in a drawer to remind me of something…

By the time I finished the story it had taken on a much darker—some have said incredibly nasty—tone. My rationale was that, in a zombie anthology, there’s no surprise in having your tale end with “And then he became a zombie, too!” and a happy ending would seem like a cheat. Thus, the bleaker tone, and an ending that literally took people by surprise—which is exactly the sort of reaction every writer wants from their audience.

(“Laundry Day,” by the way, was reprinted in 2010, in another walking dead anthology: Best New Zombie Tales 2, published by Books of the Dead Press. Warning: it’s not a story—or a book—for younger readers. The stories are gory as hell, and in “Laundry Day” I drop F-bombs so frequently you’d think I picked them up at a discount at Costco.)

Next week, we’ll look at some of the inspirations that worked their way into the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud. Feel free to sing along with them…


Chatting About a Goth Adventuress

Today at the book-review blog Fiction Fascination you’ll find an interview with me, conducted by the site’s owner, Carly. It’s one more part in my ongoing effort to make fans of dark urban fantasies aware of the exciting world of Goth adventuress Pandora Zwieback, starting with her first novel, Blood Feud. And since Carly is a major fan of Ms. Zwieback’s, how could I say no to a chance to talk about her?  😉

Carly and I cover such topics as my favorite books, my personal quirks, and what some of my writing inspirations are (a topic I’ll be discussing further at the Pandora Zwieback blog in the days to come). And then there’s this:

“At some point I became obsessed with a TV show on the Food Network called Diners, Drive-Ins, and Dives, and I’ve been experimenting with recipes. I haven’t killed anyone yet…”

Not expecting a comment like that in an interview about a monster-hunting teen, were you? Hey, it can’t all be about gun-toting vampires and heroic Goth chicks, y’know!  😀

In addition to the interview, we’re giving away a signed copy of Blood Feud (still on sale in print and e-book editions). If you haven’t gotten around to picking up a copy, here’s your chance to get one for free!

Read the interview, and find out more details on the giveaway, by clicking on the Fiction Fascination logo.

Wonder Goth Powers… Activate!

Why, lookee here—it’s the latest positive review of Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1, this time courtesy of the online fantasy-themed magazine Black Gate and its resident Goth Chick, Sue Granquist:

“Now you may assume that it was simply the cover art and the promise of a story with a Goth chick heroine that ultimately got me, but you’d be wrong. Actually, it was the first chapter that got me; and then the next, and then the next…”

So, it’s true, then: Zwieback is highly addictive…  😉

Read the entire review by clicking on the logo above.

A Monstrous Appetite for Zwieback

And so we close out January 2012 with another enthusiastic recommendation of Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1, courtesy of reviewer Sheila Shedd and the site Monster Librarian:

“Blood Feud is a roller coaster read; the action never lets up…. Highly recommended for ages 15 and up for complexity of plot and violence.”

Read the entire review by clicking on the logo above. And hey, all you librarians out there, how about adding Blood Feud to your YA sections and introducing your readers to a certain Goth adventuress? You never know—they might really enjoy meeting Pan!

StarWarp Concepts Webstore Opens!

It’s true— the SWC webstore is finally up and running! Now you can spare yourself the frustration of hunting down Pan’s adventures, and order them—as well as other StarWarp Concepts titles—directly from her publisher.

Currently available are print editions of Blood Feud, the classic vampire tale Carmilla (with illustrations by Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0 comic artist Eliseu Gouveia), and The Bob Larkin Sketchbook (which features Pan on the cover). And since the sketchbook is an SWC exclusive not available in stores, the webstore’s the only place you’ll be able to get it—not counting when we sell it at conventions, of course.

Also:

The official Pandora Zwieback T-shirt! You asked for it (repeatedly) and now you’ve got it! Available in both men’s and women’s sizes, it’s the same devil-girl T that Pan wears on the cover of Blood Feud, and an essential piece of clothing for every budding Goth adventuress.

The Blood Feud Art Print! It’s Bob Larkin’s cover art for the first Pan novel—as you should be well familiar with by now—presented on 11” x 17” cardstock without text, and limited to 100 copies.

So, head on over to the StarWarp Concepts site and start ordering already—I gotta clear some space in this office!  😉

Fascinated With a Fictional Goth Adventuress

D’oh! Here’s a review I missed—another positive one, of course!—from back in November (sorry, Carly!), courtesy of the blog Fiction Fascination:

“Pan is such a strong in-depth character, which I instantly liked and related to…. All in all a 5-star read.”

Read the entire review by clicking on the logo above.