Collared -- The Story Behind
the Story
I was raised in central West Virginia and I still go back
several times each year to visit my family. Although my parents now live in the
next county over (light years and entire universes away from my old stomping grounds),
I still run into and hear from/about old friends occasionally. Collared came to be after I bumped into
one of those friends. We'll call him Jack. That isn't his real name, but close
enough.
Back in high school, Jack was brilliant. He was funny and fun to be around. A much heavier
partier than I was (and I was no lightweight). We were bored kids stuck out in
the country. We had to drive half an hour to get to a restaurant chain and
another hour beyond that to see a movie. Of
course we were going to get into trouble. And Jack was excellent at it. So
good, in fact, that (like me) he managed to put his party on and maintain the
high GPA that was his ticket out of the county and into civilization.
For Jack, though, the train derailed. Never use something
that will end up using YOU, compadres. Jack got a powerful monkey on his back
in college, dropped out, blew around the party-fest communes back home and
finally settled in a shack deep in the woods -- deep enough to dissuade the
cops from looking for his crops, if you see what I'm saying.
So anyway, I run into Jack many years (and several lifetimes
later) and he's still the fun guy he always was, but wow, does he have a whole
treasure trove of conspiracy theories. Really crazy stuff. I love the guy to death,
though, and you know what? He's still brilliant. Nuckin futs, yeah, but
brilliant. One of the many theories he'd cooked up was an elaborate scenario in
which the government was doping the masses (that'd be you and me, pal) with hormones
injected into our meat and bio-engineered crops. Whoa. Awesome.
But it got me to thinking...What if behavior could be
modified by altering the food supply? What might that look like? How would we,
as a society, respond? I thought about an old grade B horror flick in which
animals went super-aggressive for some bizarre reason (scared the shit out of
me as a 10yo) so I had an idea for what direction I'd go in (though dominance
instead, not aggression of the homicidal bent). Then, weirdly enough, I thought
about 911, how the horror and grief of that event provoked us (individually and
nationally) to act impulsively and at times irrationally -- sometimes for the
good and sometimes for the very, very bad.
From that soup of what if's, Collared was born. Everyone's brain chemistry is changing and
that's causing us to act in extreme and (sometimes) irrational ways, both
individually (for my characters) and as a nation (the political/legal
environment). My heroes struggle with who they were, who they want to be and
who they are becoming -- juxtaposed against the setting of a world in flux.
Nothing makes sense, not how they feel, not how the new environment is coming
into shape...It doesn't work. The world they live, breathe and move in does not work. It needs fixing and so
do my characters. They're trying. They're fighting to adapt to the changes, to
accept their new normal and to make that new normal better. They make mistakes.
We, as a society, make mistakes too. But we never stop fighting to make life
better. This is Connor's, Emmett's and David's story -- their struggle to find
their balance, each other and a way to make a world gone mad work.
Here's the blurb:
Trans-Global IT director Connor
Witt is a rare and prized anomaly: the aggression centers in his brain have
been suppressed rather than stimulated by the mutated crops that so recently
took over the world’s food supply. Bewildered by his physical changes and
terrified of a world growing more and more predatory, Connor risks harassment
and worse until Trans-Global CEO David Martin collars Connor to protect him
against men like security consultant Emmett Drake. Men who stalk Connor as
sweet, sexy prey. Men to whom the newly submissive Connor feels irresistibly
drawn.
But David can’t be Connor’s
master; David’s straight. He promises to find a worthy man, though. One willing
to court and appreciate Connor as more than just some rich man’s toy.
While the world adapts to the
biological disaster and new laws strip away Connor’s rights, David’s resolve to
protect his boy slowly grows into something more. But can his new desires keep
pace with Emmett’s determination to claim Connor?
One man
offers safety; the other is a safer bet. Problem is, Connor’s never sure which
is which. The one thing he does know?
He wants them both.
Click the title to read an excerpt and purchase Collared.
Visit Kari's website
for more information on all her work.
9 comments:
I'm still waiting for the sequel to this! (And I might want In The Red more--I'll have to let you know--but this one still gets one!! =)
Adara
adara adaraohare com
Definitely an interesting theory to go on. Love where you went with it. Can't wait for a sequel.
-Sabrina
sabrinayala at gmail dot com
I LOVE discovering how stories come about. So excited with the possibility of a sequel to this book since I'm really drawn to the setting and theme of Collared.
joderjo402 AT gmail DOT com
I enjoyed the post; it was interesting. It's enjoyable to read how novels are created.
Thanks,
Tracey D
booklover0226 at gmail dot com
As a librarian and reader, I enjoy reading the backstory of works. Thanks for sharing.
catherinelee100[at]gmail[dot]com
Thanks for sharing the behind-the-scenes story :-) I'm always interested in where authors get their ideas.
smaccall AT comcast.net
nice blurb... and love how u got ur inspiration... kari...
jessica
jessica_klang(at)hotmail(dot)com
LOL... loved the post. That really is one hell of an interesting way to develop a story. but i love it!
I can hardly wait to read.
Judi
arella3173_loveless(at)yahoo(dot)com
Yeah, the source of inspiration makes you stop and think for awhile. Would love to read this story, too. :)
japoki at inbox dot lv
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