A Savage Generation

A Savage Generation

by David Tallerman
A Savage Generation

A Savage Generation

by David Tallerman

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Overview

Sickness is ravaging America, driving the infected to savagery.

Petty criminal Ben Silensky is determined to get his girlfriend Carlita and son Kyle free of the quarantined city they live in, enough so to risk a foolhardy crime and then to team up with Carlita's equally desperate cop cousin Nando. Once they're out, Nando is certain they'll find a place in the open prison where his uncle works, unbeknownst to him already become a survivalist colony named Funland under the management of entrepreneurial convict Plan John.

In Funland itself, guard Doyle Johnson is shocked when his ex-wife abandons his son Austin into his care. Fearing the vulnerable position he's been placed in, he recruits the help of Katherine Aaronovich, the former prison's doctor. But Aaronovich's traumatic past has left her with vulnerabilities of her own, along with radical theories on the nature of the epidemic that will place all their lives in jeopardy.

As the last vestiges of civilisation crumble, Funland may prove to be the safest or the most dangerous of places, depending on who comes out on top - and what can't be held together will inevitably be torn apart.

FLAME TREE PRESS is the new fiction imprint of Flame Tree Publishing. Launched in 2018 the list brings together brilliant new authors and the more established; the award winners, and exciting, original voices.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787582415
Publisher: Flame Tree Publishing
Publication date: 09/26/2019
Series: Fiction Without Frontiers
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

David Tallerman is the author of the YA fantasy series The Black River Chronicles, which began in 2016 with Level One, the Tales of Easie Damasco series, and the novella Patchwerk. His short fiction has appeared in around eighty markets, including Clarkesworld, Nightmare and Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine.

Interviews

What is the book about?

The book follows a number of characters, some adults, some children, through a world falling apart in the face of an epidemic that, when it isn't proving downright fatal, drives the infected to acts of violent, irrational behaviour. As the situation develops, it becomes increasingly apparent that one of the few remaining safe places is the former low-security prison known as Funland and run by a man nicknamed Plan John, who saw what was coming and prepared accordingly. But Funland is riddled with its own flaws and hazards, and those only grow more out of control as the various members of the cast come into conflict with each other.

What are the underlying themes?

At its heart, A Savage Generation is about generations: about relationships between adults and children, and the ways in which decisions impact and patterns of behaviour transmit down the bloodlines. There are also some big questions in there about survival, both on the individual and the societal level, and whether the characteristics we traditionally associate with that are necessarily the ones that keep us alive in a crisis. I guess the issue of what we lose when we stop listening and abandon compassion is one that's very relevant at the moment, and very hardwired into the book.

Did you base your characters on anyone you knew?

Not so much, but there are always traces that you draw on here and there. On this occasion, as is often the case, I suspect that saying more than that would be sure to offend someone!

Who influenced you most in the writing of the book?

With A Savage Generation, it's tough to say, because it began life as one book and then, some years later, got hammered into a very different shape as I returned to it with fresh eyes and a somewhat different perspective. I read Tim Willocks's Green River Rising and Jimmy Lerner's You Got Nothing Coming as part of my research process, so I'm sure they both contributed a little DNA. Charlie Huston, a crime and horror writer who's nowhere near as well known as he should be, has been a regular influence, and I seem to remember encountering Cormac McCarthy around the time I began the book, so perhaps there's a dash of The Road in there.

Is there any advice you can give someone starting to write?

Start out as a reader, and read as widely as you can, in both fiction and non-fiction. Take the time to learn the intricacies of grammar, because the vast majority of learning writers don't and it invariably shows. Train yourself to write every day, as much as you possibly can - and perhaps even more importantly, train yourself to think about the stories you're telling even when you're away from them. Seek criticism, and prepare for it to hurt; that's how you learn and get better. Understand that writing is a trade, and that it takes years to learn, like any other. Oh, and really do keep a notebook by your bed; there'll come sleepless nights when you'll be glad of it. Be brave, and be resilient.

Where did you write?

This one evolved over a period of close to a decade, so it was begun in one place and finished, some years later, in another. The first draft was written in a flurry in the spare room of a house I rented for a while in North Shields, in the north of England. The rest of the process happened in my office, which has been my permanent workplace since I began writing full time at the end of 2013.

Did you write in silence, or to any particular music?

I write first drafts to music; I have pretty eclectic tastes, so that might mean rock or folk or North-African blues or nineties trance or Japanese heavy metal, depending on the phase I'm going through! For later drafts, I need to concentrate more, and I've also got into the habit of reading out loud, so I'm drifting towards working in silence for those.

Did you find it hard to write? Or harder to edit your own work?

I'm a big planner, so long as I know where I'm going I can write at a steady pace. One of the tough facts about writing is that the closer you get to finishing a book, the less creative the process becomes, and the less fun. So the hardest part, for me, is trying to get work to a point that I'm willing to call finished.

What was it like to be edited by someone else?

Being edited can be a joy or a horror, depending on the editor - and often it's the times when it's a horror that you learn the most! But it's great to get an outside perspective, especially from someone who knows their stuff. One of the most difficult aspects of writing is the tunnel vision that comes with being alone with a project for so long that you start to lose sight of the wood for the trees.

What are you writing now?

I'm midway through Eye of the Beholder, the third book in my ongoing series of fantasy novels, The Black River Chronicles, which began in 2016 with Level One and continued in 2017 with The Ursvaal Exchange - and at the same time, editing up the final draft of my post-apocalyptic superhero noir thriller The Uplifted.

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