Let me make something clear: I'm not a huge fan of scary books. Serial killers, psychotic/vengeful ghosts, gratuitous violence a la Quentin Tarantino: not really for me. I'm a weenie who gets spooked by Stephen King novels, and I have trouble reading them even though I know they're written by a master of his genre. But while Robert Kent's
All Together Now is a suspenseful book within a horror-type genre, it doesn't deter me in the same way. It's full of zombies, and those things aren't actively trying to be evil~ they're just...zombies.
Ever since reading Seth Grahame-Smith’s
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, I've gotten the occasional hankering for a zombie novel. It’s a curiosity thing now, because Smith’s book shattered my preconceptions about the genre. His take on Jane Austen’s classic was, in my opinion, clever with a wonderfully Austen-ish voice. Likewise, Robert Kent’s
All Together Now: A Zombie Story is a cleverly-constructed and skillfully-paced young adult novel with depth.
Let me make something else clear: this
is a pretty disgusting and violent book, as in, it has lots of gore. But it also has heart and character development.
What's that? You're "just not a zombie novel fan"? Give Robert Kent's All Together Now a read anyway because YOU WILL LEARN SOMETHING ABOUT WRITING (and with
a Kindle price of $.99, it's an easy purchase choice). And you can read the first chapters
HERE for free!
Okay, interview time (
Leave a comment on this post to be entered in the paperback giveaway)
~~
1 How did you come up with your protagonist,
Ricky, and tap into his unique young adult voice and perspective?
Every character requires a slightly unique process just as
every story has its own unique challenges, or if you prefer, opportunities for
solution:) Typically the way I work is I start with an interesting situation
and figure out the right character to put in that situation. The more ordinary
the situation, the more extreme I make the character to interest the reader. A
driver’s license exam is boring unless the person taking it is drunk or blind
or both, whereas a crashing plane is interesting whoever’s onboard. In the case
of All Together Now, the zombie
apocalypse is such an extreme situation that I made the characters as ordinary
as I could so, hopefully, the reader relates to them even if they don’t relate
to being chased by shambling corpses.
The first character that came to me was Chuck as something
about a 6-year-old zombie boy broke my heart. To work, the book needed to be
written as a journal and I wanted to write about a setting I knew to tell as
much truth as I could since zombies are an obvious lie:) Therefore, I needed a
character that believably cared for Chuck, was a good writer so the journal
entries didn’t suck, and who lived in small-town Indiana and would be enough of
an everyman to gain the empathy of readers.
Roger Ebert once said of The Exorcist that the characters were interesting because they
didn’t want to be in a horror story and I’ve never forgotten that. Characters
waiting around for zombies to attack aren’t three-dimensional. So I put Ricky
and Chuck in an already bad situation by having their mom leave before the
start of the story. From a plot perspective, there’s no reason for me to do
this, but I thought complicating their lives before the zombies came would make
them more believable and empathetic once they were being chased.
That’s the basics anyway. From there, I let the characters
act on their own so that they reveal themselves to me through their actions in
the story. For this reason, I never plot too tightly as that would force the
characters and I like it when they call the shots (even if it leads to extra
chapters I hadn’t planned on). After about 60-70 pages together, I had a pretty
good sense of who Ricky was, so I finished the book, then rewrote those first
pages:)
2. In addition to a high-stakes,
action-based plot and plenty of zombie gore, there is a philosophical bent to
the novel that debates whether it is to be better healthy and alone, or to give
in to the very human need to be “all together now.” Where did the title come from and
what does it mean to you?
Well, since you asked such a
direct question, I’ll give you the honest answer: the title came from a
copyright issue:) I always wanted the philosophical bent because for me that’s
what separates zombie stories from each other and keeps the genre interesting.
When I read a zombie book, I want lots of zombie action as that’s what I paid
for, but I’m hoping the author will use zombies as a metaphor for something
more as that’s largely what makes a story distinct—otherwise, why not just play
Dead Island instead of reading a
story?
I always knew the ending and I
always knew I wanted the book to be about my own fear of conformity.
Originally, in a key scene in the book, I had a congregation of Christians sing
“Where No One Stands Alone” as that song is particularly manipulative and
creepy as it’s all about true believers longing to be together in death. Well,
it turns out that of all the hymns I reference in the book, that one’s copyrighted
and I couldn’t get permission to use the song, even though I’d written arguably
the most crucial scene in the book around it.
I couldn’t find a public domain
song that worked as well as that one (the lyrics include quotable gems such as “I don’t know a thing in
this whole wide world that’s worse than being alone” and “Oh Lord, don’t hide
your face from me”). So the simplest solution was to write my own hymn and I
could make it as on point as I liked. Having my congregation sing “after we’ve died,
left our mortal coil behind, we’ll rise up and not be alone” is perhaps too on
the nose, but I liked “All Together Now” as an imaginary song so much I changed
the title of the book. It didn't hurt knowing that my friend Mike Mullin’s book
Ashfall ends up at the top of a lot of lists because it begins with an ‘A’:)
3. There is no doubt that this is a
young adult novel that really deals with Ricky being on that vulnerable teenage
line between childhood and adulthood. His inner thoughts, him taking responsibility
for zombie-fied brother Chuck, his attraction to his co-escapee, the flashbacks
to family issues….it’s just done so well (in fact, I got in touch with Robert
when I was halfway through this book to tell him that I’d be buying the
paperback of this book for my 16-year-old stepson, who will love it). Why did you choose to make this a
young adult novel?
Actually, I originally attempted
this one as a middle grade book, which now strikes me as an insane notion. A
couple chapters in, I realized I wanted to write about truly violent zombies
and I couldn't figure out how to make
that work in a kid-friendly book, but I still wanted to take on the zombie
apocalypse from a younger perspective. YA authors can pretty well get away with
anything, though I think I’m testing that limit with the content of this novel.
And teenagers are the perfect characters for a story about fear of conformity.
No one is more aware of their forced socialization than a teen stuck in high
school.
4. In some action-based stories,
character development can take a backseat to plot, which results in a highly
entertaining book with two-dimensional characters. That’s not the case in All Together Now, which has well-rounded
characters. How did you go about fleshing out Ricky, Michelle, and Levi (‘fleshing’ out?
Get it? Ah, zombie humor) when they were in such a tense situation?
I believe people in real life
show us who they are through their actions more than they what they say about
themselves. I try to take the same
approach with my characters. So when I start any story, I usually have some
idea of the beginning, middle, and end, which predetermines some character
attributes (gotta have a hero), but I let the characters dictate how we get
there as much as possible. Their decisions and the reasons they make them tell
me who they really are, despite who they may think they are.
I keep some character notes, but
I’ve never believed in writing out a character outline ahead of time for the
simple reason that if I met Ricky in real life, I wouldn’t have those notes and
I wouldn’t know anything about him until he told me (assuming he was honest) or
I saw him act in a certain way. I could spend forever telling the reader who I
think Michelle is, but I feel it’s best to just tell the story and let them
pick up on the character clues and form their own impression the same way they
might do if they met Michelle somewhere.
That being said, I did more than
20 full revisions to All Together Now
and sought out a lot of feedback from early readers, my critique group, my
agent, and multiple editors, which gave me time to smooth a lot of rough edges.
5. Talk
a little bit about the novel’s approach of journal entries and how you used it
to increase tension.
The nice thing about journal
entries is they allowed me to jump around in time so I could reveal details
from the story’s future in the flashbacks. We know Chuck is destined to become
a zombie from the second chapter on, but I never say how he became a zombie,
which was a lot of fun in the flashback scenes in which he’s still alive. I put
him in harm's way frequently because the reader knows I have to kill him sooner
or later. Having Ricky write the journal in real time also allowed me to break
up the past with tidbits about the present to keep suspense going in multiple
timelines. I doubt this is an approach I’ll try again as it got a little
complicated, but I think I pulled it off this one time:)
6. What,
if any, zombie novels or movies did you draw inspiration from?
For this novel, I drew a great
deal of inspiration from Stephen King’s Home
Delivery, which is my favorite short story of all time, zombified or
otherwise, and Robert Kirkman’s The
Walking Dead (naturally). The TV show is great, but I’ve reread the graphic
novels four or five times through and I never get tired of them.
I actually modeled the plot after
the series run of Lost. There’s no
smoke monster and we’re not on an island, but the story starts in the present
surrounded by tension and mystery, flashes backward intermittently to inform
the present, and towards the end flashes forward to build suspense in the
present. J.J. Abrams may use one too many lens flares, but the man knows how
to tell a compelling story:)
7. Okay,
the zombie apocalypse is upon us: give us a rundown of your best personal defense
(key locations for survival, weapons-of-choice, etc.)
First, I’d head to a liquor store
and get plenty of whiskey, some potato chips, and a pack of cigarettes (I quit
long ago, but if zombies attack I’m no longer worried about cancer).
Second, I’d head to a library or
a quiet place where I can charge my kindle. Then I’d eat, drink, and be merry
rereading my favorite books until the zombies found me, at which point, I’d
hopefully be feeling good enough not to mind dying so much:)
8.
What
are you working on now?
I’m polishing a novella called Pizza Delivery, which is another horror
story that will be available by May, and I’m halfway through a rough draft of All Right Now, which is a companion
novella to All Together Now to be
available sometime before October. And this summer, I’ll be releasing my first
middle grade novel. Oh, and if my schedule allows, I’m also planning to release
a western in the coming months:)
Thank you, Robert!
LEAVE A COMMENT FOR ROBERT/ME TO BE ENTERED TO WIN A PAPERBACK COPY OF ALL TOGETHER NOW! The winner will be emailed on Tuesday, March 11th. *UPDATE: The winner is KIMBERLY!! Congrats!
ALL TOGETHER NOW: A ZOMBIE STORY-
Fifteen-year-old Ricky Genero is writing a journal of the zombie apocalypse. His high school has burned to the ground, his friends are all either dead or shambling corpses roaming the earth in search of human flesh, and his best friend died saving his six-year-old brother Chuck from a zombie horde. When Chuck is bitten and infected with the zombie virus, Ricky must travel among the walking dead in search of a cure.
Robert Kent holds
a Bachelor of Arts in English from Indiana University and lives in Indianapolis, Indiana. He's a member of a writers group called the YA Cannibals and he runs the popular and mega-informative blog Middle Grade Ninja, which has tons of agent/editor/author interviews.