Saturday, March 29, 2014

Let's Talk Book to Movie! With Guest Blogger Spencer Blohm


Books have always been inspirations for film. It’s no wonder, since novels have lots of plot and character depth, which means scriptwriters and filmmakers have plenty to work with when creating a movie. Below, you’ll find a recent Movie Adaptation, and the news surrounding it:

Gone Girl By Gillian Flynn - In Theaters October 3, 2014!

On a warm summer morning in North Carthage, Missouri, it is Nick and Amy Dunne's fifth wedding anniversary. Presents are being wrapped and reservations are being made when Nick's clever and beautiful wife disappears from their rented McMansion on the Mississippi River. Husband-of-the-Year Nick isn't doing himself any favors with cringe-worthy daydreams about the slope and shape of his wife's head, but passages from Amy's diary reveal the alpha-girl perfectionist could have put anyone dangerously on edge.

Under mounting pressure from the police and the media--as well as Amy's fiercely doting parents--the town golden boy parades an endless series of lies, deceits, and inappropriate behavior. Nick is oddly evasive, and he's definitely bitter--but is he really a killer? 

As the cops close in, every couple in town is soon wondering how well they know the one that they love. With his twin sister, Margo, at his side, Nick stands by his innocence. Trouble is, if Nick didn't do it, where is that beautiful wife? And what was in that silvery gift box hidden in the back of her bedroom closet?

I have not had the pleasure of reading this book yet! Crazy, I know. It is highly circulated at the library, and I have seen some amazing reviews floating around the blogosphere. Good thing I still have some time before it hits theaters. Media blogger, Spencer Blohm is back to give us all the deets about this highly anticipated book to movie release!

Gone Girl Movie Adaptation

Based on the New York Times Best Selling novel of the same name by Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl tells the story of married couple Nick and Amy Dunne’s fledgling marriage. When Amy goes missing on their fifth anniversary, Nick becomes the prime suspect. In the first part of the book, the reader doesn’t know who to believe or what to think, as it never states what exactly happened to Amy. When the facts do start to come out about both characters, the story becomes much darker than anyone expects. 

What made Gone Girl such a popular book was its ability to cross into many different genres without solidly defining itself. Partially psychological thriller, part crime novel, part suspense, and some of it even literary fiction, no matter how you categorize Gone Girl, it’s a thrilling and intense journey for readers. The main question at this point is which aspect of the genre-less book will the film highlight? 

Part of what is making Gone Girl fans relax a bit about it’s film adaptation is that it is being directed by David Fincher, of Girl With The Dragon Tattoo and The Social Network fame. Both films were beautifully crafted and both critically praised, and share Gone Girl’s unique formula of thriller plus literary features. On top of Fincher’s attachment to the project, author Gillian Flynn adapted the novel to the screenplay, so it will surely stay as true to it’s roots as possible. Reese Witherspoon is also serving as a producer and Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross will be providing the music, a good sign following their Oscar and Golden Globe winning collaboration with Fincher on the soundtrack for The Social Network. 

The cast isn’t a bunch of slackers either: Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike will be playing the couple at the center of the story. Neil Patrick Harris will also star as Desi Collings, Amy’s ex, and Tyler Perry will play Nick’s attorney, along with Missi Pyle playing the Nancy Grace-esque Ellen Abbott and Patrick Fugit and Kim Dickens teaming up to play the detectives investigating Amy’s disappearance. It also includes an appearance by model Emily Ratajkowski, the brunette in the now infamous “Blurred Lines” music video.

Thanks so much for being with us for another Book to Movie talk! 
Hopefully I'll picking this one up in the next few months, so look for my book review, coming soon!

Thursday, March 27, 2014

Indie Author Spotlight: The Miranda Contract By Ben Langdon

Supervillain. Pop Star.
Sometimes the life we're given isn't the life we'd choose for ourselves.

For the past five years, Dan Galkin has been lying to everyone about just how ordinary he is. But Dan's the grandson of The Mad Russian: one of the world's most powerful, and insane, supervillains. And Dan has powers too. He's a living battery, able to absorb and discharge electricity with his mind. 
Normally he keeps his powers hidden, but when the old man returns with an offer to make his grandson heir apparent, any chance at an ordinary life is blown apart. 
Miranda Brody thought she wanted to be a pop star, but now she's got the international profile and the entourage, she doesn't recognize the Miranda she has become. After getting caught up in the cross-fire between Dan and his grandfather, Miranda realizes there's more to life than being famous. Staying alive, for example, becomes a high priority. And not falling in love with the pizza boy comes a close second.

Labeled by society, trapped by expectation.
Dan and Miranda might actually be able to change everything.
As long as they don't kill each other first.

To snag your own copy of this superhero adventure, click the link below!

I mostly write speculative fiction, particularly in the superhero or neo-pulp genres, but I also turn my author’s hand to literary and mainstream short stories. Writing is a big part of my life, and one that I really enjoy. As well as writing fiction I’ve also been a freelance columnist for The Age newspaper and the editor and publisher for This Mutant Life, a ‘zine for superhero fiction.

I’m from Portland, Victoria, and when I’m not writing, I teach English and literature at the local high school, grow three children who are my favourite heroes-in-training, and enjoy reading.




Want to keep up with all things Ben Langdon?

NEO-PULP vs. COMIC BOOK
(A journey to writing superhero fiction)
A Guest Post By Ben Langdon 

There's a lot of differences between comic books and superhero fiction, and it's not just about the number of words and pictures. They are bound together in eighty years of tradition, and share origins from even before that time - but they're not the same thing. 
I see comic books as a link to my teenage past. Back then I read stories of mutants and altered humans because I was fascinated with the serial nature of the stories and the way you could just disappear into another world for half an hour or so. You could also pick up a new instalment every month, or twice a month during cross-over events or over the American summer months. There was the obsessive element of collecting 'every single issue' which had me digging in the backs of second-hand bookstores and trawling through stalls at markets and garage sales. At one time I had the complete run of the Uncanny X-Men, albeit with reprints of the very early issues. I displayed the issues on a designated shelf: neat piles of bagged and boarded comics, lovingly read more than once, maybe even ten times on occasion. 
I followed the Uncanny X-Men, mostly, and was immediately sucked in to the soap opera drama of their families and extended families. Everyone was connected in some way - through blood, marriage, bitter feuds, betrayals, teams or alternate realities. The intricate web of characters kept my brain spinning through endless nights, and even today I've got a fair chunk of my brain dedicated to the minutiae of the X-Men. Characters developed powers and backstory, sometimes being ret-conned or replaced. Things seemed always in motion. Every issue followed an arc with cliff-hangers and other direct attempts to hold on to the reader. It worked. I shudder to think about how much money went into my collection. 
But there were problems. It wasn't a perfect world. As I got older I noticed patterns emerging. The characters never got old, never really changed at all. Sure, there was a bit of a fan-developed formula for calculating Marvel Age (something like adding a year for every three years, but even that got too much.), but the X-Men were introduced in 1963 - fifty years later they're still in their thirties at the very most. Storylines also got old, even though each new creative team promised new directions and new interpretations. Stories were recycled, repeated, rehashed. Villains returned with the same plan and were defeated again and again. Creators tried to shock the audience with deaths, but these were rendered pointless with just as many resurrections. In more recent times creators haven't even pretended that deaths are permanent, and large scale death and destruction have been used to grab for sales with limited (or no) success. 
So I became weary. I wanted to explore the stories behind the heroes, not read the same stories told every few years. I was interested in minor characters who only graced the pages for a few months and weren't heard from again for years. Peter David's 'X-Factor' brought back some of the great stories and characters, but even then I hankered for more. And that's when I came across superhero fiction. 
Rob Rogers' 'Devil's Cape' and Austin Grossman's 'Soon I Will Be Invincible' showed me that superhero stories could be told in extended, written forms. I could rely on my imagination for the images (and, seriously, comic art fluctuated in quality quite a lot, especially during the 1990s). Unfortunately there were also some superhero books which were truly cringe-worthy - parodies of the genre or unflinching rip-offs of the comics. For every serious look at a potential superhero world, there seemed to be three or four flimsy and sometimes insulting explorations of the genre. Batman knock-offs, mutant schools and invincible beings with no flaws (and no personality). 
There's a term which captures the essence of good superhero writing. It's neo-pulp, and the best explanation I've come across is from Adam Ford who wrote a manifesto on neo-pulp and its influences. In short, neo-pulp respects the form and the genre - it doesn't present overly serious or dark renditions of the superhero worlds, but it does give them some 'gravity'. Writers create worlds where superheroes may exist, but they don't turn their back on the heritage of comics and the pulps which preceded them. There is a love for the quirky stories and implausible situations, but above all there is a dedication to writing stories with both plausibility and nostalgia. It's looking beyond the capes into the personal stories of heroes and villains, monsters and madmen. 
I like to think of it as looking between the frames of a comic book. 
My short story, 'The Scoundrel's Wife', examined a regular day in the life of a super villain's housebound wife. The comic book histrionics occur off the page as the reader observes the unnamed wife's routine, tinged with sadness and a stifling sense of ennui. I've edited and published two anthologies of neo-pulp fiction: 'This Mutant Life' and 'This Mutant Life: Bad Company' which has brought together nearly 40 authors from across the globe. Each story takes the idea of superheroes or supervillains and brings it into prose. 
Comic books are still providing serialised escapism to thousands of people and there are creators doing amazing things with visual storytelling as well as innovative concepts and approaches. Superhero novels are providing that audience with something more, perhaps filling a need for aging comic book fans (or junkies!) who want to read beyond the surface, who want to follow the characters back to their houses and see what life is like when the punches aren't flying and the villains aren't plotting. 
There is a definite progression from the pulp stories of the early 1900s, the war comics of the Second World War, through to the superhero comic book renaissance of the 1960s-1990s and now into this new world of superhero fiction. When it's done well, comic books and superhero fiction can provide escapism, social commentary, great characterisation and rewarding storylines. 
If you haven't tried a comic book lately, take a look at 'Saga' by Brian K. Vaughan or 'Hawkeye' by Matt Fraction. And if you haven't tried superhero fiction, you'd be crazy not to pick up a copy of my YA novel 'The Miranda Contract'. There's a whole neo-pulp genre out there waiting for new readers.

Look for my review of The Miranda Contract, coming soon!

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Indie Author Spotlight: The Two Worlds By Alisha Howard

"My name is Kathleena Ann McLaughlin, and I am one half of the Akearman Star legend. I am an Awakener, and a supposed savior of my new planet." 

When Kay falls asleep and wakes up on the magical planet Turgor, the last thing she expects is to be thrown into an ongoing war. She learns a few more surprises, too: she's a powerful being called an Awakener and the only hope against fighting an ancient evil race. Now she must team up with her sister, friends and a sulky Death Walker in order to fulfill her destiny before it's too late.


To purchase your own copy of The Two Worlds Book 1 in the Turgor Series click the link below!

AMAZON ~




I'm the author of YA Fantasy/Adventure book The Two Worlds. 

I enjoy reading and reviewing Paranormal Romance and Urban Fantasy books at The Brainy Bookshelf!



You can find Alisha around the web:




~ Excerpt from Chapter One ~

The day I found Turgor I learned three things: grass can talk, the sun can frown and there is life on other planets.
Let me explain.
I was just an average seventeen-year-old that happened to take a nap in science class. The day hadn’t started out the way I would have planned. I was running late, had missed my bus, and my grandmother Mary wouldn’t budge on letting me take her old Oldsmobile out of the garage.
This meant I had to cough up bus money and brave the horrible public transportation that Jackson offered.
It was the middle of August, and the humidity bored down on me as I trekked up our massive hill to the main street where the bus stop beckoned. When I finally made it there, my sandy brown hair was standing on end from the heat and my carefully placed eyeliner was starting to run. Perfect.
“You look like hell,” my sister, Nia, greeted me as I stalked into the school towards my locker. “What happened?”
“Alarm clock,” I grumbled, opening the locker a bit too hard. It bounced back with a claaaaang. Nia winced. She had been awake enough to take the school bus that stopped at our house every morning.
“Late night?”
“Forgot I had a book report for English that’s due,” I sighed. “Had to pull an all-nighter.”
“That sucks,” Nia sympathized, falling into step with me. I smirked to myself. She didn’t have a clue what I was talking about. Nia’s straight a, teacher’s pet record was untarnished.
We walked in silence for a few moments before Nia perked. “So guess who asked me out this morning at breakfast?”
I quirked an eyebrow. Guys were always asking Nia out, and who could blame them? With long legs, honey-brown skin and big brown eyes, Nia was irresistible to any high school male. She was also picky. “Another jock?”
“Yeah, but not just any jock. Lamar Delucca.”
I raised my other eyebrow. Lamar was the stereotypical popular jock—All American, rich, and great looking. But for some reason, he never had a girlfriend. Rumor around school was that he preferred the same sex, but his clout with everyone made him immune to harassment.
“Didn’t know he was interested in your type,” I quipped, chuckling.
Nia threw me a glare. “He’s not gay.” She sighed. “He’s just shy. Anyway, he asked me out, and I said yes.”
“When’s the date?”
“This Friday. We’re going to see Kill It Before It Dies.”
“Sounds fun.”
Nia sighed again, happy with herself. I rolled my eyes before we went our separate ways, off to class. The first stop for me was dreaded science. Shuffling in, I avoided looking at the small brown human with skin like a prune sitting at the front of the class, preferring to look at the clock instead. Only forty more minutes left. “Good afternoon,” the small prune screeched.
“Good afternoon,” came the deadened response.
The human prune stood up and turned to the chalkboard. “Today, we’re learning about osmosis.” She turned to the class and looked down her nose. “So pay attention. Open your book to page one eighteen.”
As Mrs. Temely droned on, I pulled out my notebook and started to draw nothing in particular. Soon, though, a small elf emerged. It was staring up at me with a crooked grin. I grinned back and used a colored pen to give it fiery red hair.
“Ms. McLaughlin?” it said. I frowned. Elves weren’t supposed to talk.
“MS. MCLAUGHLIN?” I jumped and looked up. Mrs. Temely was looking at me with a very disapproving and shrunken face.
“Yes, Mrs. Temely?”
“What have I told you about daydreaming?”
“I wasn’t daydreaming. I was—”
“Not paying attention.” The class snickered. “Now, if I catch you doodling again, I’ll send you to detention. Got it?” I nodded and stared at the chalkboard, my mind wandering. I thought back to Nia’s conversation about Lamar and felt a snippet of envy. Nia and I were complete opposites. Where she was popular, I was an utter failure. Unfortunately, I was a C student at best, and despite my efforts, I could never dance as well as she could. She made the cheerleading team the first time she tried out, and the cheerleaders’ laughter at my tryouts was still ringing in my ears. I directed my stare at the clock.
Taunting me, it stared back, refusing to move. I gave a smothered sigh and looked back down at my desk. My eyelids were feeling heavy, and I closed them for a moment, promising myself to open them on the count of five. Of course, that didn’t happen.
 Look for my review of The Two Worlds, coming soon! And don't forget to visit Alisha on the web to stay up to date with The Turgor Series.