A new interview series launching in
conjunction with THE STRANGE DEAD, the Nano Interview plugs into the brains of
talented zombie artists and extracts their wit, wisdom and anything else it can
get its teeth into.
That intro aside, we begin with a guy who
himself needs none—monster maestro Jonathan Maberry.
DD:
Thanks
for plugging in, Jonathan! First off, DARKOF NIGHT. The novella ties together the worlds of three successful series: ROT & RUIN, DEAD OF NIGHT and the
Joe Ledger books. What motivated you to bring these series together?
JM:
I’ve
been bringing in elements of my various horror-themed series together for years
now. My four primary series are the Pine Deep Novels (Ghost Road Blues, Dead Man’s Song and Bad Moon Rising), the First Night series (Dead of Night and Fall of
Night), my teen-themed Rot & Ruin series (Rot & Ruin, Dust & Decay, Flesh & Bone, Fire & Ash, and
Bits & Pieces), and the ongoing
Joe Ledger thrillers (of which Patient
Zero was first and Kill Switch is
8th, with more to come). In one way or another all of those series
connect, and it’s often Joe Ledger who serves as the nexus. He is a very tough
man to kill. If any of my characters are likely to survive the zombie
apocalypse, it’ll be Joe. He’s a former cop who now works as a Special Ops
gunslinger for a secret government organization that goes up against terrorists
armed with cutting-edge science weapons. The potential for a catastrophic
outbreak to happen when he’s off the clock has always been a possibility.
That’s what happens in Dead of Night
and we see the effect fourteen years later in the Rot & Ruin series. The dead rose and we fell. By the time we
look in on the world in Rot & Ruin
there are thirty thousand people left and seven billion zombies.
In Rot
& Ruin the kids wonder about ‘First Night’, which is what they call the
night when everything went off the rails. I got so much reader mail –tens of
thousands of requests—for that story, but most of those letters came from the
adults who read the teen books rather than the teens. So I decided to write it
in a single volume, Dead of Night. As
soon as it came out there was a lot of pressure to have me follow it up, to
tell what happened to Pennsylvania rural cop Desdemona ‘Dez’ Fox, and so I
picked up the story five minutes later with Fall
of Night. And I again thought I’d told enough of the story to satisfy me.
But the letters and emails kept coming in. Around the same time Fall came out Simon & Schuster
published the fifth teen book, Bits &
Pieces, which was a collection of short stories that fleshed out the Rot & Ruin world. One of those
stories dealt with a group of cosplayers who survived the apocalypse by
emulating the heroic nature of the superheroes they portrayed. The lead
character was based on a young woman who had been a writing student of mine ten
years ago. She is a serious cosplayer whose group often does performances for
children’s hospitals. Her real name is Rachael Lavin but she cosplays as
Rachael Elle, so that’s the name I used.
When I decided to do a novella –a short
novel—that checks in on Dez Fox and also introduces Joe Ledger to the equation,
I asked Rachael to come in and write with me. I wrote the A and C storylines,
which featured Dez Fox and Joe Ledger, and Rachael wrote the B storyline which
focused on Rachael Elle.
DD:
Were
there any challenges in blending the three mythos?
JM:
No,
they fit together seamlessly. But here’s the weird part, this may only be a
possible future for Joe Ledger. In my recent novel, Kill Switch, Joe experiences a series of traumatic shifts (that may
be hallucinogens or may be him being transported back and forth through his own
timeline) and in one of them he also
meets Dez Fox, but in a different way. And at the resolution of that adventure
he has foreknowledge of the coming pathogenic outbreak that will cause the dead
to rise. The questions then become can he stop it? Which of the futures he’s
seen is real? Are any of them? Or is he doomed to see the world he’s been
fighting to protect crumble as the legions of the dead wave their war of hunger
and death?
As this opens a can of worms I expect
there will be more stories to tell.
Actually, to further complicate the
whole thing, I’m co-editing an anthology with George A. Romero, who created
this entire genre. Our book is Nights of
the Living Dead, and will be out next fall. All of the stories are set in
the 48-hours surrounding the events of that landmark film. George has asked me
to write a story that officially combines Dead
of Night to Night of the Living Dead.
And that, my friend, is a career high.
DD:
Are
there any totems or muses you keep on your desk? (For example, I have a robot
whose head comes off. He's filled with Zoloft)
JM:
I
am very superstitious person and I always buy something that will act as a good
luck charm for a new project. And I have some weird stuff that’s there only
because it’s weird. On or around my desk, I have the skull of a housecat, a
megalodon tooth, a collection of fighting knives with which I am very
proficient, tiny wind-up robots, a rubber brain, a plastic and blood-spattered
hand, action figures of Dana Scully and Fox Mulder, a statue of Wolverine as a
zombie, stuffed Cthulhu in a Hawaiian shirt and straw hat, a copy of the
shooting script for Night of the Living
Dead signed by George Romero and John Russo, a bobble-head statue of Edgar
Allan Poe, a statue of Godzilla (Japanese version, not the U.S. revisionist
critter), several gargoyles, several statues of the Hindu god Ganesha (I’m not
Hindu, but he’s the patron god of writers), two Steampunk pistols, a Beanie
Baby bat, brass knuckles, a TARDIS coin bank, a statue of Anubis, several
antique Halloween figures, action figures of both the Lon Chaney, Jr. and
Benicio Del Toro versions of The Wolf Man, voodoo dolls, a replica of the
planet Mars on a glass pedestal, several Day of the Dead musicians, a Navajo
storyteller figure, a hand-carved Malaysian bat, a mask from Mardi Gras, a roll of crime scene tape,
fifteen different kinds of rare rocks and crystals, a trophy from my induction
into the Martial Arts Hall of Fame, a wind-up Dalek, a magic 8-Ball I have been
known to consult on serious business issues, a miniature Tom Servo from Mystery Science Theater 3000, an
excellent statue of a lurching zombie, various pairs of nunchankus, five Bram
Stoker Awards, a copy of V-Wars: a Game
of Blood and Betrayal, which is based on my novels and comics, a Hollywood
scene clapboard, four of the Eight Immortals (no idea where the other four have
wandered off to), a miniature Easter Island Maoi,
a zombie Elvis Presley statue, a jack-o-lantern squeezie-ball, a perfect
replica of a human skull, and several glow-in-the-dark zombies. Oh, yeah, and a
whole bunch of multi-colored tentacles sprout from the top of my pen holder,
which also contains a replica of Dumbledore’s wand, a tiny and very sharp
Samurai sword, a hand-carved pewter Gandalf the Gray based on one of my own
drawings, a dish of lucky pennies, and a throwing knife that I use as a letter
opener. So…yeah.
DD:
Have
dreams & nightmares inspired any of your works? Do you keep track of
dreams?
JM:
I
began keeping a dream diary when I was six and kept it faithfully until my
first marriage at age 32. I have ‘sequential dreams’, where my dreams often
pick up where the last one left off, much like chapters in a book. They play
out all the way to the end of the story. And then the next night I dream
something else.
When that relationship crumbled my
soon-to-be-ex burned the diaries, along with most of my photo albums and my
grandmother’s 187-year-old set of hand-painted tarot cards. It was that kind of
breakup.
Anyway, when I meditate since then I
often try to go back and remember old dreams, and the old stories I used to
tell my friends as a kid. And I’ve found some pages that, for whatever reason,
I tore out of the diaries. I recently took a series of those dreams from when I
was in 5th grade and updated and adapted them into a novel, The Orphan Army, Book 1 of The Nightsiders. It was a direct
collaboration between my 58-year old self and my 11-year old self. That kid was
weird, too. The story’s about human and supernatural monster kids teaming up to
fight back against alien invaders. It was published last year and the sequel, Vault of Shadows, debuts August 30.
DD:
Is
there anything you'd like to see more (or less) of in zombiedom?
JM:
Yes,
and from a couple of different perspectives. On one hand it’s getting old
having people say that ‘zombies are so over’ and ‘zombies are dead’, the latter
said with an alarming ignorance of irony. Zombie stories will end when writers
stop having good ideas, and last I checked there were a lot of good ‘fresh’
zombie stories out there. Hell, The
Walking Dead is in its seventh season, and it’s still the #1 show on TV.
That said, I’d like to see more stories
where we see intelligent groups of people working together and using rational
thought to survive rather than sheer defensive brutality. And, yes, it would
even make for compelling storytelling, but at least you’d have heroes you can
root for, rather than waiting to see who survives.
__
Jonathan Maberry is
a NY Times bestselling novelist, five-time Bram Stoker Award winner, and comic
book writer. He writes the Joe Ledger thrillers, the Rot & Ruin series, the
Nightsiders series, the Dead of Night series, as well as standalone novels in
multiple genres. His recent novels include KILL SWITCH, the 8th in
his best-selling Joe Ledger thriller series; VAULT OF SHADOWS, a middle-grade
sf/fantasy mash-up; and MARS ONE, a standalone teen space travel novel. He is
the editor of many anthologies including THE X-FILES, SCARY OUT THERE, OUT OF
TUNE, and V-WARS. His comic book works include, among others, CAPTAIN AMERICA,
the Bram Stoker Award-winning BAD BLOOD, ROT & RUIN, V-WARS, the NY Times
bests-selling MARVEL ZOMBIES RETURN, and others. His books EXTINCTION MACHINE,
V-WARS and MARS ONE are in development for TV/film. A board game version of
V-WARS was released in early 2016. He is the founder of the Writers
Coffeehouse, and the co-founder of The Liars Club. Prior to becoming a
full-time novelist, Jonathan spent twenty-five years as a magazine feature
writer, martial arts instructor and playwright. He was a featured expert on the
History Channel documentary, Zombies: A Living History and a regular expert on
the TV series, True Monsters. He is one third of the very popular and mildly
weird Three Guys With Beards pop-culture podcast. Jonathan lives in Del Mar,
California with his wife, Sara Jo. www.jonathanmaberry.com
What a fun new interview series, and what a great author to start with! Congrats on The Strange Dead as well. I can't wait to read it!
ReplyDeleteThank you Dana!
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