That's a bit difficult to answer without giving away major plot points, so, SPOILER ALERT: The original idea was “What if someone was attacked by jackals every day of their lives?” The story was then extended in either direction from there—i.e. I had to build the story to explain how that situation came to exist, and then I had to extend the story to explain the ramifications of such a situation.
This is actually my second novel—my first novel, which is untitled and unfinished, was built in a similar way, except the cental idea behind that one is: “What if someone’s cat told them to f**k off?” That central idea also leads to a cavalcade of darkness, insanity, and killings.
My only goal as a writer is to tell an interesting story. I am not interested in drawing parallels to modern society or having a moral. I think that's why Alice In Wonderland is such an influence. I don't want people to learn from the story. The only rule I have for myself when writing is “No research.” Research is for PhDs.
Smudgy in Monsterland is genre indefinable, combining elements
of dystopian science fiction, demonic horror, and then some. How did you end up
combining elements of all these different genres?
I had the basic idea of this novel in my mind for years and
started writing it about five times, but it never took.
That all changed with one drunken conversation with my
brother Nicholas Rasche (who is also a writer—google him). I was talking about
how my favourite movie genres were Nazi Occult (e.g. Outpost, Hellboy) and
Space Madness (e.g. Pandorum, Event Horizon). We speculated about a
combination of these two genres. That’s where the idea came from—it’s Nazi
Occult Space Madness. The book has all four of these elements.
Before then, the story was set on Earth, in the modern day.
The main character, Odo, is a 12-year-old boy, but this book is
decidedly not aimed at children (unless you’re trying to scare them). Why did
you choose a child as your protagonist?
Well, it had to be set in an orphanage, so my hand was
forced. The main character had to be in an utterly hopeless situation, and
things had to keep getting worse for him. He had to be innocent, lost, scared,
confused by the world, so that when things start getting supernatural, he just
accepts it as another thing he doesn't understand. There was never any “choice”
to make Odo a young boy—it just had to be that way.
I feel like the book is aimed at a young adult market. There
is a lot of violence and scary things in there, but there's no sex or swearing.
I read a lot of Stephen King when I was Odo's age and I turned out juuuuuust
fine.
Are there any stories behind the naming of your characters?
I had Lambchop chosen as a name years ago. Some other names
are from my real life—Suki is the nickname of my wife's car, Straker is my
neighbour's surname. Spider-Legs was the nickname a friend of mine gave to a
romantic rival. Other names, like Cruor Muli, as phrases that have just stuck
with me over the years.
Other names I had to come up with as I wrote them. A lot of
them I got by googling “German first names.” It took a long time to settle on
Odo. I also took years before thinking of “Smudgy.” He used to be called Oopsy,
Pinky—all sorts of things that never sounded right. When Smudgy popped into my
mind, I knew it was perfect.
With the orphans, there's a band I like called “Does It
Offend You Yeah.” I heard they got their name by turning on the TV and using
the first phrase that came on. I don't know if that's true, but I liked the
idea. All of those orphans were just named on the spot, as I wrote. I also had
to come up with a lot of place names—they were all just named on the spot as
well, except for Runemagick, which is the name of my favourite band (old-school
Swedish Death Metal). I listened to them on permanent repeat while I wrote this
book (in order to keep the mood right), so I thought they deserved some
recognition.
The title of this book refers to a cartoon series that became a
cultural phenomenon in the story’s universe, as well as the center of Odo’s
world. Why did you choose to feature a cartoon so prominently?
Featuring the cartoon like that was an organic decision. I
always prefer stories that are set in one location—in this case that was
originally the Monsterland amusement park. So, I had to figure out what
Monsterland was and why Odo would want to go there so much. Later on, when I
decided to set the book 1000 years in the Nazi future, I had to figure out how
to integrate that into the existing “Monsterland” concept. I think it all just
came to me as I wrote it. Smudgy had to be central to Odo's mind AND to the outside
world at the same time, so making him world-famous was a good way to accomplish
that.
Were there any parts of the book you particularly enjoyed writing?
My favourite part of writing this was coming up with the
different attractions of Monsterland, like the Fork Fields or the Inky Maze. In
terms of actual plot points of the book, my favourite part is when Odo is
wielding Pillow, fighting the undead angels on the rooftop of the Haunted
Mansion.
Do you have any particular writing habits? Locations you prefer? Snacks
that help you keep going?
I wrote this in three main locations: on the couch, in bed,
or at work. Once I started, I couldn't stop, I was writing thousands and
thousands of words a day. The hardest thing is to get started. I just reminded
myself that it didn't have to be the world's greatest novel—I just wanted
something that could turn up in a second-hand bookshop for $2.
Are you working on anything new?
Of course—a sequel! I have the first part plotted out
already. Literally millions of people are killed in the first chapter. A lot of
the under-used characters from the first book are featured more prominently—like
the Uberhexe, who is only mentioned in passing—people like that.
I love sequels in which the only goal is to outdo the
original, and end up being completely nuts in the process. I'm thinking Die
Hard 2, Superman 2, Final Destination 2 here. I just want it to be completely
nuts.
Smudgy in Monsterland is available at: Amazon US (Kindle e-book), Amazon UK (Kindle e-book), Lulu Marketplace (iTunes e-book), Lulu Marketplace (hardcover)
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