Life
Resembles Art
Or sometimes, TV resembles something
I’ve written.
Earlier this week, I was flipping
channels and landed on a TV show featuring a de-fanged vampire. There was a
horrible scene of blood dripping out of the blood-sucker’s mouth, and some really
great camera shots showcasing big empty sockets where his canines had been.
Make that “ex-blood-sucker”. Apparently in this show’s world-building, no
canines = starving to death. They never grow back and without them, the vampire
can’t feed.
I’d actually thought of this scenario a
couple of years ago, only with 100% less death! In my world, there’s another
body fluid on which a de-fanged vampire can survive. Happily.
I let this premise percolate in the back
of my mind for a long time, then I started thinking “under what circumstances
would a vampire lose his teeth?” followed by, “And how will I make this a sexy
love story?”
I made a few notes, opened my GMC*
template, and then suddenly, I’d written an m/m romance about a vampire and his
dentist. Don’t you just love it when that happens?
___
NOTE: *GMC = Goals,
Motivation and Conflict, a fabulous book by Debra Dixon with a simple
formula for writing character-driven fiction. I use this in conjunction with
Blake Snyder’s Save the Cat story
structure for plot-driven fiction. Together, they’re all you need to plan a
book.
Here's the blurb:
No greater love has a vampire than for his
dentist.
Deeply in debt to a loan shark, oversexed
dentist Cary Drewel lives in fear of foreclosure and bodily harm. His new
practice is missing one rather crucial element: patients. Which, terrifyingly enough,
is the one thing his creditors also don’t have.
Pierce Sharpe, a powerful vampire with a
drinking problem—or, more accurately, a problem drinking—can’t feed through the
pain in his damaged eye teeth. In danger of losing his standing in the vampire community,
Pierce seeks Cary's dental services. When Cary extracts his canines, Pierce
must turn to other bodily fluids for sustenance.
Together, Cary and Pierce find a mutually
pleasurable solution to both their problems. Turns out, though, there’s more to
this dentist-patient relationship than simple suction, and what began with raw
hunger from each of them might just end in love.
Click the title to
read an excerpt and purchase Sucks and Blows.
Visit Storm's website.
8 comments:
nice blurb on storm grant's suck and blows...
jessica
jessica_klang(at)hotmail(dot)com
THis is on my must have list; I can't wait to read Sucks & Blows.
Thanks,
Tracey D
booklover0226 at gmail dot com
Oooh, I like the references. Thanks for those. =)
Adara
adara adaraohare com
I read the blurb abd the excerpt. It strikes me as quite humorous. Is it meant to be? Did you have that in mind when writing?
catherinelee100[at]gmail[dot]com
I LOVE the sound of this book, so unique in its premise! And I think I saw that show that inspired you.
joderjo402 AT gmail DOT com
I really liked S&B :-) Can't wait for more!
smaccall AT comcast.net
Thanks to everyone for commenting. Yes, Catharine, it's supposed to be funny. (I hope it's funny. ;-D )
I also hope everyone is having a great holiday season.
Thanks, again,
~ Storm / Gina
Wow! I love the story behind the book! *now how to forget that visual* :D
japoki at inbox dot lv
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