Author Update: Chris Stevenson
Don't you love return guests? So do I! That's why I'm glad to
announce that author Chris Stevenson is back to chat with us. He's got a
new book coming out, so let's learn more about it.
http://www.bookstrand.com/the-wolfen-strain
http://www.amazon.com/The-Wolfen-Strain-ebook/dp/B008G0PE2U/ref=sr_1_4?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1341685785&sr=1-4
Welcome back, Chris! Tell us about THE WOLFEN STRAIN. What’s the story about?
Tagline/Hook:
Seth Anson, a
lovelorn forest ranger, never thought that he would shoot the first
eligible woman he met after his divorce. Nor did he think that he would
fall in love with her after nursing her back to health. But he certainly
isn’t prepared to find out that she is the result of a DNA cloning
experiment gone horribly wrong and, is in fact, a hybrid wolf/human. To
complicate matters, she also has no idea of her true identity.
Seth
finds out early on that Melina Salinger is a handful. He mistakenly
believes that she suffers from hypertrichosis (werewolf syndrome), and
that she has escaped from a care facility. She confesses later that she
has been confined in an underground missile silo by her geneticist
father, Davis Salinger, and the only thing she knows about everyday life
has been gleaned from video movies and television. Now she wants to be
a normal girl.
It isn’t easy
trying to indoctrinate a woman into society who pants, growls and thinks
that Emerald City is a real place somewhere over the rainbow. The
ritual shavings and skin maintenance are enough to drive him crazy.
Moreover, when she goes into a feverish estrus cycle, sex and passion
seem like blunt-force trauma.
Just when Seth
thinks he has things under control, Melina becomes deathly ill. Her
mysterious father shows up to offer aid, and then shockingly confesses
that she carries ancient wolf DNA. After recovering, Melina, shamed and
traumatized by this knowledge, becomes suicidal and runs away. Only her
father left out the part about her other litter mate – a grotesque
monster, Romulus, has just broken out of the silo compound. Romulus is
bent on finding her for the purpose of mating and will kill anyone who
gets in his way.
Seth has to use
his skills as a ranger to find Melina in the Wyoming wilderness. He has
Romulus out in front of him, the National Guard, the sheriff’s office, a
maniac cryptozoologist, and every monster-hunting vigilante in the
state hot on his heels. He has to decide if it is guilt that drives him
on his quest to find Melina, or that somehow, this wild and beautiful
female was destined to be the love of his life.
The Wolfen Strain examines the lurid morality issues that are dealt with in The Island of Doctor Moreau. Yet the predominant theme is that of forbidden love, found in Beauty and the Beast, only with the gender rolls reversed.
How did the idea of the story come to you?
When my second
agent went to the BEA a few years back, he did so with the express
purpose of asking each editor he met what (exactly) they were looking
for as pertains to the next big thing. He made a lot of face to face
contact and scribbled voluminous notes. One publisher, the small black
and white bird from the Antarctic, replied that they would love to see a
new spin on a werewolf tale. My agent queried me and asked if I was up
to the task. I said I was, and that I had conditions. The conditions
were, that I would not follow the general trope—howlings, full moon,
Lycanthropy and silver bullets. If they wanted a unique concept, I would
really give it to them. I thought about what Michael Crichton had done
with Jurassic Park, and thought about the current Thylacine Project, and
how ancient DNA was being processed to resurrect extinct, hybrid
animals. So I devised a way to find and reproduce the genome in an ice age
dire wolf. But this dire wolf was a man-eater. When the scientist
performs the experiment, his protocol serum somehow replicates the human
gene, which gives birth to a human/wolf hybrid. In addition, two other
litter mates are spawned: a true ice age dire wolf and a grotesque
monster. Of course, with this three-pack combination, all hell breaks
lose.
Without giving too much away, what's your favorite part of the book?
Melina Salinger is
just the strangest female creature that Seth Anson has ever seen. He
has a lot of trouble teaching her about ladylike behavior and what is
expected of a woman in today's society. The funniest part is when she
enters an estrus cycle and chases Seth around the tower room, demanding a
mating ritual. He more or less gets raped when she overpowers him. It's
an awkward, but memorable scene.
Best time of day to write?
I try to get in a
major chunk of writing during the morning hours. That's when I have most
of my energy. Then I have to do my farm chores, which might take about
three to four hours. I'll come back to the house, shower, and attempt to
pull another stint at the keyboard. I steal as much time as I can
during the day, and have been known to writer into the late, wee hours
of the night and early morning.
Who are your top three favorite characters from books by other authors?
Ethan Fortune, in
Alan Dean Foster's book, Icerigger, is a favorite character of mine.
He's stranded on an ice world with a race of furry giants, and just
can't seem to get with the program, without embarrassing himself or
breaking some kind of cultural law. Skua September (from the same book),
is the opposite of Ethan—he's brash, reckless and a fighter, who
doesn't really care who's cultural laws he steps on. Philo Skinner, from
the book, Black Marble, is an unforgettable rogue who schemes his way
through every hour of the day, taking advantage of anyone who crosses
his path. He's disgusting, smokes three packs of cigarettes a day, and
gags so frequently that he cannot speak at times. He cries often, and
wonders why life has dealt him such a terrible lot.
Where can we find your new book online?
As of this writing, The Wolfen Strain is not up on Amazon yet. But it will be this month, after June 26th.
You have only to Google it in the Kindle section. A trade paperback
will be released two months after the ebook release. You can find it
also from the publisher's website here:
http://www.bookstrand.com/the-wolfen-strain
ETA: THE WOLFEN STRAIN HAS JUST HIT AMAZON KINDLE AT THE TIME OF THIS NOTATION. FIND IT HERE:
http://www.amazon.com/The-Wolfen-Strain-ebook/dp/B008G0PE2U/ref=sr_1_4?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1341685785&sr=1-4
Thanks for updating us, Chris. Good luck with your new book!