'Tis spring again, a time when many of us think of the magic of Ireland. I'd like to feature my evergreen novella, To Kiss A Leprechaun, today. It's a love story for all ages, a delightful tale with wizards, witches and plenty of the lore and lure that is Ireland. It reminds us that beauty is not just skin deep, and sometimes we must overcome our fears in order to find the hidden gem of true love.
I just read an article titled The Future of Fiction, by Jacqueline Seewald. It discusses how mashup novels are changing the face of fiction. Jacqueline explains that a ‘mashup’ refers to the blending of two or more genres in fiction writing, such as classical literature and horror. She points out that as the borders are blurred ever more in fiction, the rigid ‘rules’ of how to write a mystery or a romance are dissolving and are being replaced by an ‘anything goes’ type of novel, true to the creative urges of the author.
I tend to see the world around me as interactive. I look
for signs and nudges from the universe in everything I see, so her article
acted as a verification of something I’d been pondering for days.
Story ideas can flood into our minds at the oddest of times. A bizarre skiing holiday with my teen son and some friends this month caused the seed of a very strange story to start building
in my mind.
We drove to a ski resort for a few days of snowboarding. Him, not me. Our friends had found the
ski resort and it was a real bargain, although I’d never heard of it before.
From the moment we arrived, everything was ‘off’ and the
employees were hostile. Every single one of them. The mountain was oppressive,
like it didn’t want us there any more than the employees did. They were all
glazed-eyed zombies (maybe that’s a genre I should throw into the mix!) and had
no interest in communicating. Some looked downright menacing.
There were
abandoned buildings all around the property, the place was falling apart from
total neglect, and at times threatening looking locals drove up the mountain
for a few hours skiing. The restaurant/bar was not filled with chatter and
laughter; a brooding silence filled the packed room.
On the second night my son
awakened to a nightmare where the spirit of a Native American woman who had
died on the mountain hundreds of years earlier begged him to help her free
herself. He did, by the way, discovering an unknown gift he inherited from his
father, but that’s a story for another day.
I had the dilemma of wanting to
leave immediately, but not wanting to spoil everyone’s fun on the slopes. And since
the trip was prepaid, I decided to take it one day at a time.
My mind went into creative mode… it occurred to me that
there is a deep dark secret there, that the entire ski resort is nothing more
than a front for a heroin production and distribution facility. The staff
members are all addicts. A young woman arrives for a weekend holiday and
stumbles into a building she shouldn’t be in, or sees something she shouldn’t
see. Yes, a Gothic ski story is born. The hero might be a rough looking biker
by day and an undercover cop at night… paranormal events abound and she doesn’t
know if they are real or manufactured, or if she can trust the enigmatic but
dark hero who seems to be stalking her. Is he looking out for her or has he
decided she needs to fall off a cliff on the treacherous double diamond run?
It’s a story unlike anything I’ve
written before, and it doesn’t fit in any one genre, or even
two. I’d describe it as a paranormal mystery Gothic romantic suspense thriller….
I was about to set the idea aside until I read Jacqueline’s
article, which I took as a sign from the universe. Maybe I should give it a whirl. The freedom to write the story the way it unfolds, without wondering how many rules I'd be breaking, is alluring. If nothing else, writing such a different story with free creative license could be as liberating as coloring in a coloring book or doing dot-to-dot books for adults. Creative therapy, right?
My muse is celebrating the thought by launching some firecrackers. Maybe there really is a place for
such a strange novella, if I can figure out where that place might be.
Have you ever written such a mashup cross-genre story? Please share your thoughts on how to market one and how
you would list it on Amazon and other platforms. I’d love to hear your
thoughts.
GEMMA JULIANA writes all kinds of love stories,
from contemporary to paranormal. She has a penchant for romantic international
settings. Gemma lives in a cozy cottage in Texas with her very own hero, teen
son, and a spoilt dog who rules them all. Chocolate and coffee nourish her muse
and fuel her creativity. She loves hearing from readers.
amazon.com/author/gemmajuliana
2 comments:
Gemma, I love your idea of a Gothic ski story. Love the picture you painted of this ski resort, so dark and haunted. Go for it! It'll be a great story. I've never done a mashup story but I understand what they are, like Pride & Prejudice & Zombies, the book and the movie.
Wow, this sounds intriguing. Go for it girl. I'd love to read it!!!!
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