Fang Girl by Helen Keeble
Publication Date: September 11th 2012
Publisher: HarperTeen
Things That Are Destroying Jane Greene’s Undead Social Life Before It Can Even Begin:
1) A twelve-year-old brother who’s convinced she’s a zombie.
2) Parents who are begging her to turn them into vampires.
3) The pet goldfish she accidentally turns instead.
4) Weird superpowers that let her rip the heads off of every other vampire she meets.(Sounds cool, but it doesn’t win you many friends.)
5) A pyschotic vampire creator who’s using her to carry out a plan for world domination.
And finally:
6) A seriously ripped vampire hunter who either wants to stake her or make out with her. Not sure which.
Being an undead, eternally pasty fifteen-year-old isn’t quite the sexy, brooding, angst-fest Jane always imagined....
Helen Keeble’s riotous debut novel combines the humor of Vladimir Tod with Ally Carter’s spot-on teen voice. With a one-of-a-kind vampire mythology and an irresistibly relatable undead heroine, this uproarious page-turner will leave readers bloodthirsty for more.
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What would you
do if you woke up in a coffin and discovered you were a vampire?
Um, probably panic and cry in a very undignified fashion. I’m much less
tough and resourceful than FANG GIRL’s Jane! But once I’d got a grip on myself,
I’d do the same thing that Jane does – phone my family. Who wants to be a
solitary creature of the night when you can go back home where there’s bed,
broadband, and people who love you?
Do you work
with an outline, or just write and go with the flow?
When I first started writing FANG GIRL, I was definitely just going with
the flow. The first draft was actually written in just thirty days, as part of
NaNoWriMo 2008 (National Novel Writing Month – a yearly challenge where people
try to write a whole novel in a month). But given that it took me at least five
drafts and an entire year to turn that rough manuscript into something coherent
(let alone publishable), I’m now a firm convert to outlining.
Plus, of course, these days I have
to outline, because my editor wants to know what I’m going to write before I
write it, so she can decide whether or not to buy it! So my second book, NO
ANGEL, had a fairly detailed outline… not that I stuck to it.
Which came
first – the story or the characters?
I always get a couple of characters first (in this case, Jane and her
family), and then have to figure out what story to tell with them. Then it’s an
iterative development – I create new characters to meet the demands of that
story, but those characters in turn alter the shape of the story so I have to
change that, which may mean I have to tweak the characters again… and round it
goes!
If you could
go to lunch with any author, who would you pick?
I can only have one? Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn, which I have probably read more than any other
book in my life. I, uh, may also have watched the animated film version every
single week between the ages of six and eight.
If I could have lunch with more than one, then I’d want Peter S. Beagle,
Steph Swainston, China Mieville, Dan Abnett, Sarah Rees Brennan, Terry
Pratchett, Ursula Le Guin, Jacqueline Carey, and Cassandra Claire. Now that would be a literary party to
remember!
Is there
anything about you that would surprise your readers?
I may be a writer by night, but in the day I’m a professional engineer,
developing software for industrial controllers. The cool (and terrifying) way
of saying this is: “I design stuff that controls nuclear power plants!” The
more accurate way of describing it is “I sit in a lot of meetings where people
argue about tiny details in C++ code.” But either way, it’s an awesome job!
Can you give
us any hints about book 2?
My next book (out in Fall 2013) is not actually a sequel to FANG GIRL –
it’s another YA paranormal comedy with the same style of humour, but it’s not
about vampires. It’s called NO ANGEL, so you can probably guess what romantic
subgenre I’m poking fun at this time…
I’m working on a sequel to FANG GIRL at the moment, though can’t yet say
when (or if) it’ll be released – whether or not my publisher, HarperTeen,
decide to buy it will depend on how well FANG GIRL does! But I can tell you
that the working title is THANK DOG, and in it Jane meets the inevitable hot
shirtless werewolf… who is not quite
what she’s expecting.
About the Author
Her first novel, a YA vampire comedy called FANG GIRL, is out 11th Sept 2012, from HarperTeen.
She also has another YA paranormal comedy novel (provisionally titled NO ANGEL) scheduled for Sept 2013.
Find the Author
The prize pack includes:
- one signed copy of Fang Girl (can be personalised)
- a voucher for an ARC of Helen's next book NO ANGEL as soon as they are available (likely to be Spring/Summer 2013)
- a cheerful vampire goldfish paperclip
- Fang Girl stickers featuring the cover and quotes from the book
- a voucher for an ARC of Helen's next book NO ANGEL as soon as they are available (likely to be Spring/Summer 2013)
- a cheerful vampire goldfish paperclip
- Fang Girl stickers featuring the cover and quotes from the book
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