Star Wars The Force Awakens as a Zombie Movie

Force Awakens Zombie MovieThe Force Awakens Zombie Movie [NO SPOILERS]

I’m old enough to remember watching the original Star Wars back in 1977 in the theater. I still have remnants of my childhood love affair with the franchise, mostly in the form of fading stickers and a few trading cards. The rest of my “collectibles” were rode hard and put away wet until I outgrew them. I’ve been through the ups and downs of the Star Wars empire just like many of my fellow travelers from 1977. Naturally nothing short of a Zombie Apocalypse was going to stop me from seeing this new movie.

My one line review of the movie is this; it was as good as the archetypal zombie movie. Cryptic? Well, isn’t that exactly the way every good zombie movie starts? How many Force Awakens zombie movie parallels did you see? Each of these themes can show up in any type of movie, but bunched together they perfectly describe almost any zombie book or movie you can imagine. If you haven’t seen it yet, look for these when you do (again, no spoilers beyond what you might see in the movie trailer).

The Apocalypse: Most every zombie book or movie has that moment where the whole world goes pear-shaped. This is usually, but not always, at the beginning. Imagine the zombie book where the government collapsed overnight. Social services were disrupted. The military was overtaxed. Police were crushed fighting with undesirables and criminals, eventually giving up and ceding much of the landscape to mercenaries, smugglers, and other scavengers. Almost word for word this could describe Episode VII, based on the wreckage of the trailer. In the historical span of Star Wars, the apocalypse took place before Force Awakens. Just in case we have readers who haven’t seen the original six movies, I won’t give away when the collapse happened. If you’ve seen them, it is rather obvious because it happened twice.

Suffice it to say, when a collapse of government takes place, a power vacuum gets created. This is common sense. Those cities and states (or planets) far away from the remaining elements of the government must fend for themselves. The heroes have to depend on themselves to survive until polite society returns (if it ever does). This holds true in real life, galactic empires, or zombie downfalls.

Post-Apocalyptic Landscape: Given the above, the Force Awakens zombie movie would best be described as post-apocalyptic. The disaster had already happened, and those left behind had to find a way to survive. In zombie movies, the easiest way to survive–perhaps the only way unless you are in a well-stocked bunker–is to scavenge for food and supplies. The hero has to go from house to house to find her dinner, encountering who-knows-what in those dark places. Zombies. Criminals. Other scavengers. And sometimes…just sometimes…they meet those destined to join their survival group.

In the new movie (seen in the movie trailer), Rey starts her journey on a sand-blasted planet littered with the carcasses of the government. A great battle took place (Yonkers anyone?), and as in so many zombie books, chaos overcame order. The remains of powerful star destroyers litter the planet, giving symbolic and literal bodies for the survivors to search for loot. This is textbook post-apocalypse.

Inept Government: Zombie books abound with inept government departments, Presidents, science labs, and research teams. If they aren’t spilling toxins on themselves, they are shooting the good guys just as they find the cure. It’s almost a given the government is part of the problem, more than it is part of the solution in zombie lore. And no franchise screams inept big government more than Star Wars.

Where else can a powerful government organization build a huge planet-sized weapon, only to leave a small hatch that has a direct mile-long straight-shot right to the very heart of the thing? Seriously, how dumb do you have to be to build a weapon of doom and then leave it as vulnerable as a seal pup? One would think that when they get around to building a second version, the design flaws would have been worked out? A 10-year-old kid could see them. That is the government for you. They always make things worse. Padme and her lectures on the Senate can take a flying leap. I leave it to the viewer to decide if government in Star Wars recovers from its perfect record of bumbling in The Force Awakens.

In zombie books, government forces are usually only good at picking up the pieces outside their front doors, leaving the rest of the people of the world to fend for themselves. This is best expressed in the Resident Evil:Retribution movie where Alice is on the rooftop of the White House while zombies and other bad guys swirl around the building. It is literally the only piece of real estate the government controls…

In The Force Awakens there are at least two prominent governments in conflict. Both would fit snugly into any zombie book.

The Awakening: Every zombie book has to have its survivors. The people who make it to the other side of the initial plague only to ask, “What comes next?” This moment is almost literal in Force Awakens. <–The words are right on the tin. My favorite book is the 1949 classic Earth Abides. The hero survives a plague (not zombie-related) and walks out of the forest to find the world ruined. He is left to wonder how it happened and what he can do to survive. This theme is from countless zombie tales, including the recent TV series The Walking Dead where Rick Grimes wakes out of a coma to a world gone mad. It is an easy way to skip over the horror of the Apocalypse.

When the character awakens in the new Star Wars movie, they see the world for what it really is. Good vs. evil. Chaos vs. order. Plants vs. zombies. Everything a good zombie book needs to sustain itself. From that point on, the hero begins to fight the real threat. The zombies!

The zombies: So who are the zombies in Force Awakens? That’s easy. The same as they’ve been for a very long time in the franchise. The Stormtroopers. Genetically modified, grown in test tubes (some of them), and sent like a virus out into the galaxy. When they are lined up nice and neat in their staging areas it is easy to overlook their insidious and messy methods at the tip of the spear. They pour forth like a virus from their ships, always in the vanguard of attacks, often without a discernible strategy beyond brute force, heedless of loss, and seeking to infect anything and everything in their purview. The virus is so perfect in controlling the zombies/troopers it becomes almost a comic punchline if one or two of them has an original thought. It is nearly as impossible as a zombie healing itself to the point it knew it was no longer a zombie. A rarity in the literary world of zed-words.

Zombies are also prone to doing the same things over and over, sometimes for eternity. The methods and protocols of the Stormtroopers seem to repeat themselves movie after movie, making them both the Keystone Cops and the zombies. Remember the dramatic entry in Episode IV where Darth Vader comes through the door of the rebel ship? The Stormtroopers had thrown themselves through that door just moments before. The virus had been injected, and Vader was free to enter the dying host.

The plague: The zombie plague is obvious in the Star Wars universe. The dark side of the force is the source of the infection that continues to fell heroes, destroy societies, kill without regard for age, race, or creed, and spread itself to all points on the galactic map. Instead of a bite, the infection is mostly spread through the end of a blaster, although the most insidious and pure form of the virus is spread in a much more subtle fashion by the masters of the dark side–the Sith. Perhaps an analogy would be biting the brain of their targets (Luke was infected, as was his father). The masters of the dark side–such as the Emperor–have ingested and survived the virus, and through expert manipulation of history are able to expedite its spread through political and social means, sending the disease far and wide much faster than something as pedestrian as biting ever could. The dark side is the plague that spreads not just by blood, but by thought. It’s the only viable way to spread it over an entire galaxy,  making it one of the most potent zombie plagues in the known literary universe.

The Cure: Another easy pitch. The light side of the force is the cure. Unlike the dark side though, it is unable to spread as quickly or as forcefully as the dark side. This is because there is no vector of transmission covering the entire galaxy to instill “light” into those infected by darkness. In zombie books it is akin to the heroes holding a vial of the cure, with no way to give it to the masses. If the Stormtroopers are the zombies, there would have to be a way–perhaps an Independence Day-esque infection of a central computer–where goodness and light are programmed into the stormtroopers galaxy-wide. They would then spread the infection in reverse…

Another staple of zombie literature is the “always over the next hill” nature of the cure. It’s out there, but you and your merry band of survivors have to do ten million things in a row to find it. Sound familiar? As a writer I’m sometimes guilty of this too, though I do it because I–as a reader–demand to know someone is going to be able to cure the broken world. Or at the very least there is hope for the cure. Otherwise, what’s the point? Hope is very powerful, and it is no coincidence A New Hope was the name of the original movie. The cure (the light side) was out there for the plague (the dark side).

Without this hope, it leads to dismal and hopeless worlds like that punch you in the gut, such as the movie The Road. A movie I will never watch again. But fear not, Force Awakens has “the cure” mystery running through the whole thing, putting it on par with the best of “positive” zombie literature.

There are plenty of other elements of zombie books baked into The Force Awakens–mysterious government functionaries, multiple layers of bureaucracy, military hit squads, powerful weapons to fight zombies, shifting alliances, survivor enclaves, human survivors with just the right knowledge to fight the plague, and that far-off horizon where everything promises to turn out all right. I doubt JJ Abrams (or his handlers at Disney) used any zombie books as the basis for his re-imagining of the Star Wars universe, but when I saw his movie I interpreted his vision as if I were watching a zombie book play out on the screen.

Maybe I just have too many zombies on the brain. Perhaps I just see conspiracy and multiple meanings in everything. I saw Episode VII–the highest grossing film of all time, a cultural tour-de-force–as more than a simple hero’s journey, though it is certainly that. The Force Awakens will eventually be seen as the most popular zombie movie in history. All the unique elements of z-lit are there.

Chew on it and see if you agree.

 

EE Isherwood’s Zombie Book Series

Hello and welcome to the home of E.E. Isherwood, New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of the Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse series–a universe filled with ever-evolving zombies, government conspiracies, and an average family stuck in the middle. Click each cover to learn more about this series of zombie books!

What is the Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse series about? Liam Peters is a teen gamer on a real-life quest. He has to save his great grandmother from a city overrun by zombies and figure out what makes her so important to numerous government agencies racing to find a cure. As the series progresses he learns where the plague started and how it can be stopped, but the human race is dwindling while the zombie armies are growing. Will he have enough time to save the world?

Series is on Amazon.

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Zombie Book 1: Since the Sirens

 

sirens-1-final-coverORDER ON KINDLE

What would you do if a mysterious plague begins to take hold in your city and the dead start to bang on doors? As the sole remaining caretaker for your elderly great-grandmother, you know her survival outlook would be bleak. Do you ditch her to give yourself a better chance to live? Would anyone know? Maybe you’d turn her home into a bunker, and hope help arrives before the food runs out? Don’t forget the hordes of looters. Or do you play the hero and bind your fates together out in the collapsing city? You’ll be entering a footrace with zombies, crazies, panicked civilians, and the military—all while supporting a woman who can’t walk ten feet on her own. You can be honest.

Liam Peters is a runner. He knows the odds, but decides to take his chances on the outside with 104-year-old Marty in tow. Since the Sirens tells the story of Liam’s gamble. What used to be a thirty-minute drive to the suburbs becomes an impossible slog. Can he get them through, or are they destined to wash aground on one of the islands of police cordons in the city, left to watch the defenders slowly get chewed up by the zombie plague as the ammo runs out?

As society blows apart, it dawns on Liam why there are no atheists in foxholes.


 

This zombie story is the first in a trilogy of books. Eventually the series will grow beyond three!

Thank you for being a reader. As an aspiring author I truly appreciate your time and hope you’ll share this book with your zombie friends. Reviews appreciated as well–they keep me in business!

E.E. Isherwood

Zombie Book 2: Siren Songs

sirens-2-final-coverThe second zombie book in this trilogy finds Liam and Marty in the suburbs of St. Louis. Far from being a safe space, the zombies explode everywhere. This leaves our heroes with some tough choices about how to survive the plague.

So you’ve just dragged your sweet great-grandmother across a city full of zombies, crazies, and criminals. You think you are safe in the suburbs. At least until the rest of the city folk show up. Liam learns this lesson the hard way. Perhaps there are less people on any given street in the suburban sprawl, but the open lands have their own dangers. Safe fortresses are just an illusion when one bite can lead to mass infection.

This book was released January 17, 2016. Buy on Kindle.

Zombie Book 3: Stop the Sirens

sirens-3-final-coverThe last book of the Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse trilogy attempts to wrap up the mystery of the zombie plague. Liam and his companions are searching for his missing great-grandma…and all clues point them to one particular location.

However, mounting a rescue effort becomes more and more difficult the longer they wait. The mirage of safety is shattered as violent survivalists clash with bands of Boy Scouts. US Marines conduct sweeps of the ruins for dangerous fugitives. In the end, the only way to save Grandma is to ignore all the reasons not to go, and just go.

Liam and Victoria join up for one last journey back into the city they struggled so hard to escape. Now, those who remain are either already dead, or have nefarious reasons for being there. It leaves little room for error as the fate of Grandma is left hanging in the balance.

We also discover more about the philosophical side of this book series. The zombies play the role of the bad guys, but there is also a virtual superhero who is only seen by Grandma when she’s sleeping. The person appears as her deceased husband–someone who passed away decades ago. Who is he? What does he want? Why can he talk to Grandma exclusively? His role becomes a focal point as the story rolls to its conclusion.

The end of the trilogy answers a few questions, but dumps many new ones into the story line, or more precisely reminds the readers that many questions have been left unanswered from the entire trilogy. The genesis of the plague is hinted, and enemies are revealed, but much material is left for future volumes beyond this trilogy. That is by design.

Book 3 was released on February 14, 2016. What a great Valentine’s gift. LOL.

ORDER ON KINDLE

E.E. Isherwood

Author Page for E.E. Isherwood

The author page at Amazon is now live for my pen name E.E. Isherwood. Writing zombie books has been my goal for the past 14 months. Now I’m finally getting somewhere.

It is exciting to see this project moving into the next phase of the publishing process. After a year of writing and editing, I’ll be glad to get my books in front of the public and see if they are loved or hated.

zombie book author page amazon
Photo used for author page on Amazon.

Step one of that journey is getting the material on Kindle, and creating an author page there. While there are hundreds of authors of zombie books, and likely thousands of books about zombies, plagues, and the end of the world, I’m proud to join the group with my very own landing page. I’m honored to be in the same room with so many of the writers I grew up reading.

E.E. Isherwood Amazon Author Page

I’ve already got my introductory short story listed, and part 1 of my Sirens of the Zombie Apocalypse book trilogy. In the next couple weeks I should have all 3 volumes of the series listed. Siren Songs is the second volume. Stop the Sirens is the final book of the first trilogy. Yes, more are planned!

In the meantime I have a day or two to do some final edits on book 1–editing a book is a process that never seems to reach the finish line. I also need to submit the material so I can use print on demand services, and then begin marketing this title everywhere I can.

With a little luck I’ll have the other two books ready to go when the first one launches, so a potential reader could cut through all 3 in the series in one fell swoop. That is how I like to do my reading too.

E.E.

Martinette Peters Interviews E. E. Isherwood

Martinette Peters Interviews E. E. Isherwood

Hello, I’m Martinette Peters. I’m a character in a new series of books called Since The Sirens. I was told we are doing something different here. Instead of being interviewed about my part in the books, I’m supposed to interview the author. So here goes.

1. Marty: I’m old fashioned, as you probably know. I don’t own a computer or have one of those new-fangled tablets. Liam shows me his all the time and I just don’t get it. I get my books from the local library. Do you have any fears about being published only on a computer as opposed to good quality paper?
E.E.: Thank you Marty. Excellent question. I know you think you are too old to start using these things, but many people your age are in fact using tablets and computers so it isn’t something I’m really worried about. I have no doubt if you wanted to do so you would have no problem getting up to speed on digital format. Do I have any desire to be published in print? You bet. It would be great. Who doesn’t want to walk down to the bookstore, or your library, and see their name on the spine of a book sitting on the shelf? But it isn’t something that defines my writing.

2. Marty: How many books do you have planned for Since The Sirens? I really enjoy playing my character. I’m hoping we can do many more books.
E.E.: I have to say, it has been a pleasure working with you Marty. Your character is 104 years old but there is a scene in book I where your character has a vision that suggests she could live to be 120 years old. From a science standpoint, even in 2015, there are advances in medical science which suggest we can greatly extend lifespans in the not too distant future. Perhaps the alternate reality of your character’s world has already advanced some of those sciences? As for how many books are coming, I think that depends a lot on how much I enjoy writing them. I’ve finished book III, as you know, and there are so many questions left open even after writing three books (300,000 words total) I could see another trilogy easily. On the other hand, if the mood struck me to write other material, I’d be happy with just this simple trilogy ending where it does today. But right now I want to push out these first three books and then see what happens.

3. Marty: Oh that is great dear. I hope you keep going. Oh, my next question is how long have you been writing?
E.E.: I’m new to writing, truth be told. My career the past 20 years has been in IT, and I have a Master’s degree in Geography, so naturally writing about zombies was the natural progression of my life. In 2014 I woke up one day and told myself I wanted to write a book about zombies. As you know Marty, your character was based on my own grandmother who passed on last summer.
Marty: I know, I’m so sorry to be based on someone who is deceased, but I also consider it an honor you would select me.
E.E.: Oh, no problem. You play her perfectly. The thing that got me started was writing a short story which later became the first book in Since The Sirens. I finished book I during the NaNoWriMo in 2014 and just keep going with book II and book III. When I was layed off in August 2015 it gave me lots of time to edit all 3 and push them out to Amazon (coming November 2015). During that time I’ve also written several short stories and I have ideas for several other novels in the Since The Sirens world. Not sequels, but parallel stories. Some take place at the beginning, others months or years after the sirens. Lots of material if I can make the time to write them!

4. Marty: What are some of your favorite books, outside of your own?
E.E.: Oh don’t be silly about my books! One of my favorite books is Earth Abides by George R. Stewart. Written in the late 40’s it takes place after a massive plague wipes out the world, it is one of the earliest examples of the type of story I like to read. The thing that makes it different is that it documents the breakdown both of society and the world in general. As a geographer I can relate with the main character who also fancies himself as a geographer. It does a great job of world building and is something I aspire to emulate in my writing. Earth Abides seeps into my Since The Sirens books in a few important ways. My way of saluting that title. Other books I’ve enjoyed lately; Fahrenheit 451. The Stand. Zombie Fallout. I’ve also perused Cthulhu literature.

5. Marty: Why name it Since The Sirens?
E.E.: Oh, this is easy. I started a short story last year with words something along the lines of “It has been 15 years since the sirens…” and I had the “ah-ha!” moment at how the name could fit well to describe the entire world I was creating. I try to start every story in this world with the line “X days/months/years since the sirens.” It is a visual clue to my world.

6. Marty: Do you know how the zombie plague really got started? I’ve wondered that every day I’ve been working on this project with you.
E.E.: Ah, that’s the big question isn’t it? Was it caused by the government? By an evil corporation? A religious cult? Do I as the writer need to know the answer to this question? I hope not, because even I’m not sure EXACTLY how it happened. You know, I feel like it works better if I don’t have all the answers because then I don’t get too far down the tunnel which will reveal everything. Maybe I’d give away clues that I otherwise wouldn’t if I didn’t know. After book III I have some threads out there which could lead to an answer, but there are many possibilities left to explore. And no Marty, as much as I love you, I’m not going to tell you.
Marty: Oh, I’d never ask…(giggles)

7. Marty: Last question for now. Can you tell the readers what other projects you are working on? Any other genres?
E.E.: I have two books in mind–I mentioned them earlier–for parallel stories in the STS world. One book covers the months before the world collapsed. Unlike the cause of the plague, I have a very clear idea how the world worked just prior to the collapse. I know the people most responsible for letting it all get out of hand. The other book takes place a couple years after the collapse. There is a period of time where humanity teeters on the brink of extinction after the collapse, disease, war, famine, and of course the zombies.  It makes me wonder if humanity actually could survive long term after the zombies spill out into the world. I may pick one of these to do for NaNoWriMo 2015. Not sure I’m interested in other genres yet. Zombies and worldwide collapse are eternally fascinating to me. I don’t think I’d translate well to something lighter, although I admit I do have some ideas for children’s books (happy books, not dark stuff).

Marty: Thank you for your time Mr. Isherwood. We wish you continued success and if I may be so bold I hope to see more books in the Since The Sirens world.

 

 

 

 

Interview with Liam and Victoria

Interview with Liam and Victoria

Last week the Since The Sirens production team had the opportunity to sit down with the two youngsters featured in the Since The Sirens trilogy. Liam Peters has a leading role as the great-grandson of Martinette Peters (the third main character). He is almost 16, soon to be a high school senior, and has a penchant for listening to classic rock. 17-year-old Victoria Hennessy plays opposite Liam as his evolving love interest, which can be dicey during the Zombie Apocalypse. We hit them with 7 questions about their role in the book series, other things they enjoy doing, and where they plan to go from here.

1. STS Team: It’s a real pleasure to catch up to you Mr. Peters. Can you tell us a little about your character in the books so our readers have a better understanding of your role?
Liam: Please, don’t call me Mr. Peters. That makes me think of my dad. (laughter). My role? When they called me back for this role I was really thrilled to have this opportunity. I’ve been a fan of zombie books all my life. There are so many great books out there right now I can’t keep up. It is a real honor to be a part of this culture. When I learned Liam would be a real teenager, dealing with his elderly grandmother, I felt this was something special. As much as I love shooting guns, this story isn’t about simply stacking up a body count — although shootings do happen of course — but instead it follows Liam as he struggles to get his aged grandmother to safety. Seeing that process unfold was very rewarding.

2. STS Team: Victoria, welcome and thank you. Same question. Can you tell our readers a little about your role in ‘Sirens?
Victoria: Thanks for having me. Liam hit on some great points, mainly the part about how interesting it was to work with Grandma Marty and see how Liam and I struggled to help her keep one step ahead of the zombies. But for me, I play a good Christian girl who accidentally gets involved with Liam and Marty while we are all trying to rest inside a refugee camp in downtown St. Louis. As you can imagine, the two teens are put into high stress situations again and again in very close proximity and find themselves attracted to each other. Without giving it away though, Victoria has  a past which makes her leery about jumping into anything. It doesn’t help that death swirls around them–that can really put the damper on teenage escapades (laughter).

3. STS Team: Liam do you have any experience acting outside of Since The Sirens? How did you get involved with this project?
Liam: That is kind of funny. I’ve never done anything in acting, not even a grade school play. I actually have terrible stage fright so doing anything like that never crossed my mind. In this case it was my dad who pushed me in this direction. I was practicing driving with my dad and I was getting yelled at somewhere in the city when I saw a sign in a yard which mentioned they were looking for someone to play a role in a zombie book. I joked to my dad about it, but he got strangely quiet when he saw that. Later, after we got home and the stress of driving went away for us both, he came into my room to talk about it. He had done a web search on Since The Sirens, saw the characters they were looking for, and he pointed to the role of the teenage boy that I eventually signed up to play. I’m fortunate I had some good scene readings during the audition and I guess it was good enough to get me the role. The rest as they say is history.

4. STS Team: I have to ask, does anyone call you “phonograph”?
Liam: Um, what?
STS Team: You know, your initials are LP. Like the records? I just thought…
Liam: No, no one ever calls me LP, much less anything music related.
STS Team: Fair enough. We’ll shelf the Victrola question for Victoria.
Victoria: (laughter) You won’t believe this, but I do know what a Victrola is. My grandma has a house full of junk, and weirdly she has a couple Victrola’s on her shelves. She is very proud of them. And no, no one has ever called me that.

5. STS Team: Despite our effort at humor, it makes us wonder about the role of technology in the Since The Sirens world. We live in a period of time where no one even knows how to repair a toaster. How are people going to survive a world with little or no way to repair even these basic things?
Victoria: I’ll take this one. When I read the script for this book I wasn’t very focused on questions of this nature, but as we got into books II and III I really began to see this firsthand. Cars stopped working. Food was scarce. Power was gone. And yeah, how could people survive in such a world after losing access to their phones, refrigerators, and other creature comforts? I believe it depends on the type of person you are before society ends. If you look at the Liam character, he was a Boy Scout and had experience in the woods building fires, whittling spears, and things like that. Someone like him would have a much easier time making the transition to a world without all the fringe goodies than an insurance adjuster who spends all his life in a high rise. The books address this in some ways by showing the strange things people do when they are floating around without the structure of society. The Victoria character isn’t quite as prepared to live in the new world as Liam, but he helps her along (giggles).

6. STS Team: You’ve both done three books now. Do you think there will be future books, and where might the story go?
Liam: Wow. Speaking for myself I haven’t had time to look ahead. We are wrapping up production of book III, doing editing and so forth–it keeps me completely consumed. Do I think there will be more books? Absolutely. I won’t give it away, but there are so many open questions at the end of book III there is almost no way there couldn’t be more books. Will I be a part of future projects? We’ll see what my agent says.
Victoria: Oh Liam you are so goofy. Of course he would do more books. Tell your agent to stuff it! I would love to do more books. Victoria has a colorful back story that really needs to be told in more detail. She has a family out there in the zombie world, and she needs to find them and find their fate. Maybe Victoria could be the main character in her own book–hint hint!
Liam: Pffft.
[Victoria slaps Liam.]
Liam: You know I’m just joshing you!

7. STS Team: For our last question I want each of you to describe one scene in book I that you really enjoyed.
Liam: I had a lot of great scenes with Victoria so I feel bad not mentioning any of those since she is sitting here next to me. But my favorite scene is when my character reaches his great-grandma after struggling so hard to get into her house to protect her. He is overjoyed to see her, but she is so exhausted she can’t even reply to him. Instead, she just goes back to sleep and Liam is left to take care of her while the world burns outside. It was kind of poignant and a good kick off to their adventure showing how Liam moves from helpless teen to her primary caretaker.
Victoria: Figures. He doesn’t mention any of my scenes! Well two can play at that–no no no, I’m just kidding. Liam is great and we had a lot of fun scenes together.  My favorite scene is actually the first where Liam and Victoria sort of run into each other. It gives a great look at how Liam and Victoria deal with their teenage attraction–at least Liam anyway–and how they are both dealing with the collapse of society as it happens around them. I find it hard to imagine this myself, so it was interesting to me to both see how two kids would handle these very mature themes of survival. Their first meeting resonates throughout the books, so I’m happy to call this my favorite scene from the lead book.

STS Team: Very sorry but we are out of time. Thank you both for your time and good luck finishing up book III and we wish you great success with the release of book I!

 

Zombie Trilogy Completed

Zombie Trilogy Completed

Book 3 is done! It has been almost a year since I had the concept for book 1 and started my writing journey, but I’ve been able to write 3 complete books, each over 90,000 words. I feel like I’ve climbed Everest, though it was much more enjoyable. Now I have a trilogy of books about the Zombie Apocalypse that I wouldn’t be ashamed to let people read. Granted, they are still in the draft phase, but my next step is to go back through all 3 and tie up any loose ends, fix any structural problems, and generally make them flow better from page 1 of book 1 to the last page of book 3.

I guess one thing that stands out after writing this much information is how many questions are left unanswered, even to me as the author. I could probably write 10 books and still be exploring this world. That has made it enjoyable to write–I never knew quite what was around the next corner. I hope readers find it as enjoyable to experience once I get it polished up.

I should have something for my beta readers in the next couple weeks.

Let’s see what we’ve got.

Book 1: Since The Sirens

Synopsis:

When 15-year-old Liam goes to stay with his ancient great-grandmother for the summer, he immediately becomes bored around the frail and elderly woman. He spends most of his time at the library texting friends or reading dark novels. But one morning stroll changes everything as the zombie apocalypse unloads itself directly into his life. Now he and his 104-year-old guardian must survive the journey out of the collapsing city of St. Louis while zombies, plague, and desperate survivors swirl around them.

Book 2: Since The Sirens: Siren Songs

Synopsis:

After escaping the chaos of the collapsing city, teens Liam and Victoria are faced with a difficult choice. Do they try to find Liam’s parents or defend their suburban home from refugees and the infected? They find new allies to hold things together, even as the government appears increasingly impotent in the face of a mutating virus.  And why is a representative of the CDC trying to enlist Liam’s 104-year-old grandma to his cause?

Book 3: Since The Sirens: Sirens’ Silence

Synopsis:

Liam and his parents are reunited at last, but the matriarch of their family has been taken to a covert CDC location for medical experiments. Liam wants to mount a rescue operation, but they must first reach a refuge, endure warring government agencies, and learn Grandma’s location – not to mention survive a world awash in zombies. With Victoria at his side, Liam finds his fortitude bolstered by her faith. Together they begin to unravel the mystery of the zombie plague.

I know how the world ends

I know how the world ends

Writing is a wonderful experience. Ideas can strike anywhere, anytime – you have to be alert for them.

On a whim I started writing a short story based on a new Congresswoman just entering the halls of power in Washington D.C. While wide-eyed with enthusiasm for her life-long dream of representing her family, friends, and neighbors in Congress, she is just jaded enough to be prepared for the corruption she knows is lurking within those halls. But what she learns is that it is all a lie. A lie so big its exposure would likely end the world.

I wrote the whole thing — 3,000 words — and was happily sitting there enjoying what I thought was a done deal. It struck me the story I just told was a perfect fit into the Since the Sirens world. It wasn’t intentional, but I just found the genesis for all the terror that comes after the sirens sound. There is plenty of material for a future book or two — prequels — to explore this person as the lie unfolds around her, as well as the mysterious two-weeks before the sirens when the trucks stopped delivering food, the oil stopped being refined, and the world finally realized something was terribly wrong. The lie did not die without a fight…

I wonder what other mysteries I can solve? The origin of the plague? The cure? What if the answers are never revealed? Sometimes life is messy. All this material became possible because I put pen to paper so-to-speak. The secret to writing, for me, is that I’m exploring the world just as readers would. That keeps it fresh for all of us!