Showing posts with label Michael Adams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Adams. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

GUEST POST with AUSTRALIAN AUTHOR MICHAEL ADAMS - THE LAST TRILOGY - FLYING PIRANHAS, ANCIENT PRAWNS & SERIES SECRETS - ALLEN & UNWIN - YA APOCALPTIC

I would like to welcome Australian Author, Michael Adams to Novels On The Run. 

Michael is the author of the YA trilogy - The Last, published by Allen & Unwin in Australia. 

Michael has a written a guest post for you all to read that I totally dug, sit back and enjoy. An interview I had with Michael also HERE .



Michelle











Flying Piranhas, Ancient Prawns & Series Secrets



It’s The End Of The World But Not As We Know It

In The Last Girl I wanted to create an apocalypse unlike anything I’d ever seen before. Hence, the Snap, in which it’s sudden global telepathy that sees civilisation split apart at the seams. What terrifies me about the idea is that there’d be no defence. People couldn’t band together, raise an army against the zombies, blow up the approaching asteroid or build an ark to ride out the floodwaters. The problem’s inside them and it sets them against themselves and each other. Game over, mofos.

Media Blackout

The Snap also allowed me to do away with the usual scenes in which the media relay what scientists and generals and politicians have discovered about the threat as they tell the population how they’re trying to save the world. The Snap happens so fast there’s no time to get answers. The people in power are as vulnerable as the rest of the population. So we’re with Danby, seeing it from the ground up, with no authority left to explain anything or provide any salvation.

Extraordinary Ordinary People

I’m interested in writing about ordinary people thrown into extraordinary circumstances that force them to do extraordinary things while remaining ordinary. That’s what’s heroic to me. So Danby isn’t the “Chosen One”. Similar stories to hers might be playing out in what remains of Chicago or Copenhagen, but what matters is her corner of the world, where she has to go from suburban teen to survivalist tactician. If she doesn’t act fast, she and her brother will die, but she also can’t just pick up a gun and start dropping one-liners like Arnold Schwarzenegger. Danby’s learning curve is a steep one and it takes a tremendous toll. That’s not me being all deep with a “war is hell” theme. It’s me trying to be realistic about how it’d be for any of us seeing most of our loved ones die – and then being forced to fight for our lives against a vastly superior enemy in a world reduced to rubble.

My Ancient Muse

I was given Pepe for my last birthday. He’s a little shrimp who died about 100 million years ago and got fossilised in sediment so he could wind up on desk duty as a constant reminder of the epic scale of time, life and death. “Don’t take it all so seriously,” this tiny prehistoric pizza topping seems to whisper from his ancient sandstone square whenever I wonder whether what I’m writing is any good. “It’ll probably turn out all right. I mean I thought my destiny was to be Plesiosaur poo – and look at how far I’ve come, baby!”

Everyone Has To Start Somewhere

I’ve got a poster on my study wall for the 1981 film Piranha II: The Flying Killers. I love it because it’s a hugely cheesy piece of movie art but also because at the bottom it reads: “Directed by James Cameron.” So that’s where the creator of The Terminator, Aliens, Titanic and Avatar got his start. Flying freaking piranhas. Who knows what’s leading where?

Think Inside The Box

As much as I love books and film, my major inspiration in the past few years has been… television. More specifically: Breaking Bad and now True Detective. These shows are from writers whose visions feel as much like genre entertainments as they do literary fiction. While we’re intrigued by their premises, what really hooks us are the complexities of character, story and theme. This is what I’ve tried to do in The Last Girl and The Last Shot – create a series that rockets along as an action adventure whose realistic characters face unpredictable events that cause them and us to consider very big questions.

But Don’t Think Inside This Box

Just as I take inspiration from awesome TV, I also look to The Walking Dead as a constant source of inspiration for what not to do. It’s populated by characters that almost always choose the most stupid course of action imaginable – and then wonder things turn out so predictably terrible for them. For example, in a world where one zombie bite can turn you into the most abominable creature possible, why would you get around in singlets and shorts rather than, say, mechanics overalls and body armour? Just freakin’ sayin’. I hate it. And yet I watch every week.

Cluetopia

What I love about Breaking Bad and True Detective (and what you’ll never find in Walking Dead) is that they give attentive viewers a lot to obsess over when it comes to clues pointing to the ultimate outcome. The shows encourage and reward reflection and analysis. I can’t tell you how much I enjoy that from a medium we’ve been brought up to think of as disposable.

I’ve seeded a layer of clues into The Last Girl and The Last Shot. Some shed light on character and others predict events. Some do both. For instance, Jack tells Danby he was singing The End by The Doors when the Snap happened. Okay, so the title of the song’s obvious. But if you know the track, you know it’s the sort of song a brooding douche like Jack would embrace – and the incredibly menacing tone it sets. Then there are also lyrics that describe a landscape where all the children are insane, where a killer wakes before dawn, rides the king’s highway west and wants to murder his father. That’s literally the post-Snap environment and Jack, who, after busking in the first light of day, travels west on Parramatta Road (which was built under mad King George III) in order to do something pretty bad to his dear old dad. The song’s also associated with Apocalypse Now, which was based on Heart Of Darkness, both of which also permeate the series, from helicopter attacks to taking boats upriver. There are a lot of other references like that - some are more obvious, Some are buried so deep I’d be surprised if anyone ever digs them up. You don’t need to get any of them to understand the story and character but it’s possible to “unlock” the books by investigating them. And a few even point to real-world theories about how something like the Snap might happen.


About Author


Michael Adams has worked as writer and editor for newspapers, magazines, websites and television. He presently contributes to YEN, Rolling Stone, Empire and Men's Style.

Michael is the author of two non-fiction books: Showgirls, Teen Wolves and Astro Zombies, a memoir about a year spent watching bad movies, and Shining Lights, which profiled Australian Oscar winners. He lives in the Blue Mountains with his partner and their daughter.



Monday, March 3, 2014

ARC BOOK REVIEW - THE LAST SHOT by MICHAEL ADAMS - THE LAST TRILOGY # 2 - ALLEN & UNWIN - YA APOCALYPTIC

By: Michael Adams
Published By: Allen & Unwin
Released : March 2014
Details: From Publisher for honest review, Paperback 407 Pages

RATING: 4.25 APOCALYPTIC STARS!

Blurb: Goodreads

I glance at my fellow fugitives in the glow of the fire: black-streaked, white-eyed, faces fearful but fierce. Whoever any of us were a week ago, we've now become people we could never have imagined.

After facing the heartbreaking truth in Shadow Valley, Danby is determined to have her revenge on Jack.

With Jack dead, her little brother Evan and hundreds of other Minions will be free of his control. With Jack dead, she and her friend Nathan will be able to revive thousands more from the millions of catatonic Goners.

But what if she's wrong - about everything?

After Danby confronts Jack on a dying stretch of highway, all of her beliefs are turned inside out. Not only are his feelings for her real, he's working against the clock to save lives and rebuild society. To Danby's horror, it's Nathan who appears to threaten the new order.

With her emotions raging and blood on her hands, Danby has to take a side in a deadly battle that'll decide the future of the world. And as allies become enemies and foes turn into friends, she'll have to embrace methods so dark that the price of survival may be her very soul ...


BOOK REVIEW by Michelle:

Michael Adams really puts the A in apocalypse. 

I wrote in my review for The Last Girl that I wanted to read ‘more page turning adventure and action’ in The Last Shot.

I believe Michael delivered this.

There is shiz going down. 

The first hundred plus pages were a more slowed down pace as Michael has us spending time with Danby almost alone, she has Lachie and then Jack enters the picture. Mentally she is spending that time working through her theories. Trying to convince herself of what needs to be done.

Jack became so much more in this book. He is very cleverly written. I had to keep reminding myself of his age because he comes across as such a seasoned villain.

Man, he is manipulative and evil isn’t the word because in his mind he truly believes he is doing the right thing. Selecting the right people. He has a bigger picture in his head of the world and how he is going to recreate humanity and who he will allow to participate in it.

He is like a Messiah. A God in a teenagers body.

Quite frightening the influence, power he has over his minions.

Can he be trusted with the words he has for Danby?

“Danby,” he says, “I think you’re the only person who can stop a war that really might finish us all.”


Danby also has an ability to get people to help her with Evan, even though he is slowing them all down, could expose them and he is a type of baggage to be lugged about.

Why would they be invested in Evan?

But they all are. For Danby. So she too has her own influence, but it is for the good of humanity. She doesn’t make the types of decisions Jack does. He is filtering out the remaining humans.

It’s such an unfair playing field with Jack the ultimate puppet master and Danby who has a dwindling motely crew of rebels. I will call them rebels because they are rebelling against Jack.

What saddens me is that the people out there aren’t organized because ego and fear and selfishness and all the other species of silliness are still getting in the way.


My concerns are still that I am not feeling a great loss for the dwindling sub characters. I am still looking for that character connection to the reader that has me feeling emotion for these characters, whether it is anger or sadness.

Jack grabbed me so much more in this book. His villainess side is very well played out. He went from obscurity on the planet to something being bestowed upon him that has immense power and responsibility.

Jack nods. “Right--you’re reading, writing, researching, surfing websites, messaging people, talking on the phone, listening to music and watching videos -- whatever. Point is your brain’s multitasking like a mofo and your fingers and arms and muscles and bones are making it all happen seamlessly. You’re not even aware of them. You hardly thinking about any of it. What I’m doing with my guys is like that. Just bigger. Their brainpower and physical energy accounts for ninety-nine point nine-nine per cent of what needs to be done. The other bit’s me, when it needs to be. Does that make sense?’


Danby is surviving. Just. Her motley crew are putting their lives on the line for this tiny group that want to fight the good fight. 

Danby is stronger. In such little time, she has become quite hardened to the life she is living and the lives she must end.

A week ago she wouldn't have been packing a gun.

She has been given no choice.

Kill or be killed.

They are up against an almost impossible to beat villain who has such great resources and mind mojo power.

How do you fight that?

How do you overcome Jack?

Michael really does paint a most vivid picture of an apocalyptic landscape. He won’t let you forget the bodies strewn about the place and the decay and rot that comes with it all.

You can almost smell the stench of death. I don’t think I have read an apocalyptic read that paints such a vivid image in your mind as you are reading.

This takes work.

But again, I can understand why some authors don’t because it slows the story down, but at the same time it feels more real. More in the moment

I am there.

I do like Nathan, but I think I am missing an element from their character’s that connect me so I am more invested in their losses and pain. The parts of Nathan I got, I liked. I felt more endeared towards him in this installment.



“I got you a gift.” Nathan takes something from his jeans pocket. “Cosmetics.”

I laugh when I see he’s holding a little round tin of black shoe polish. “seriously?”

“You whiteys will all need it,” Nathan says with a laugh.



Nathan had his moments where he said what needed to be said and did what needed to be done, but Danby is the leader. Men twice her age and older are looking to her for answers. Leadership.


“Are you retarded?” Nathan’s knuckles are tight around his weapon. My friend is sweet, smart and sensitive but it’d be a mistake to think he’s soft. This is the boy I met seconds after he punched a nail through the skull of a maniac attacking me. “Well, are you?”

Alex swallows hard. “No, no, man, it’s like --“

“You think we’re not scared?” Nathan demands. “That this is something we’ve done before?”


Michael can paint the destruction of humanity very very well, but those main characters leading us on the adventure, I need to be more invested in them.

I really liked the book part titles.

1. Get Set

2. Ready or Not

3. Here I Come.

This was a great ride with a very clever ending.

O.M.G.

What does this mean?

Creepy. Much.



Michelle

Sunday, October 6, 2013

BOOK REVIEW - THE LAST GIRL by AUSTRALIAN AUTHOR - MICHAEL ADAMS - THE LAST TRILOGY # 1 - YA APOCALYPTIC THRILLER - ALLEN & UNWIN


By: Michael Adams
Published By: Allen & Unwin
Released: Available Now
Details: Paperback from publisher for honest review, 382 Pages

RATING : 3.75 JACK STARS!

Blurb: Goodreads

The end of the world happened quickly. The sun still shone, there was no explosion - just a tsunami-sized wave of human thought drowning the world in telepathic noise as everyone's inner-most secrets became audible. Everyone's thoughts, that is, except sixteen-year-old Danby.

Everyone looked like bad actors in a poorly dubbed movie. Their expressions didn't match their emotions and their lips didn't sync with what they were saying. But they were all so loud.

God-he-looks-hot-Can't-she's-my-best-friend-How'd-she-lose-that-weight-No-don't-you-dare-Oh-no-please-

The end of the world happens in the blink of an eye.

When The Snap sweeps the globe, everyone can instantly hear everything that everyone else is thinking. As secrets and lies are laid bare, suburbs and cities explode into insanity and violence. What might have been an evolutionary leap instead initiates the apocalypse.

Sixteen-year-old Danby Armstrong's telepathy works very differently. She can tune into other people but they can't tune into her. With only this slender defence, Danby must protect her little brother and reach the safety of her mother's mountain retreat. But it's 100 kilometres away and the highways are blocked by thousands of cars and surrounded by millions of people coming apart at the psychic seams.

Danby's escape is made even more dangerous by another cataclysm that threatens humanity's extinction. And her ability to survive this new world will be tested by a charismatic young man whose power to save lives may be worse than death itself.






BOOK REVIEW by Michelle:

This was a great start to Australian author Michael Adams’s debut YA apocalyptic thriller, set in and around Sydney Australia. I have lived in Sydney for a few years, it brought home the whole apocalyptic feel , even more for me. 

I have read quite a few apocalyptic reads and there is something about being in the head of the few survivors as they work towards a common goal. It can feel quite real.

That is something I loved about The Last Girl, Danby’s character was very real and made very real choices for her age. This apocalypse felt very real with all the fall out. I can tell how much work and thought Michael put into his world.

Danby Armstrong is only sixteen years old, she is a survivor. She has a good heart. She finds herself alone after The Snap has helped to kill off a large portion of the world’s population.

Michael has thought up a very unique idea.

A clever idea.

I have read a lot of zombie apocalyptic stories and even watched movies made about them. I have read about alien apocalyptic stories and we have seen movies made, most notably War of The Worlds. Who can forget that one?

What is The Snap?

Michael brought a refreshing take using instant global telepathy.

You can go to my interview chat I had with Michael and read about his idea. He explains it well. 

http://novelsontherun.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/interview-with-australian-author.html

Michael’s world he has built for the reader has humans being exterminated via, suicide, murder, being in the wrong place at the wrong time because they can hear each other’s thoughts. Imagine hearing what somebody thinks of you, multiplied by many voices. Enough to make you go crazy, jump off a building, turn murderous and kill. Michael will give you many examples and prove his apocalyptic idea, convince you of its deadly outcome.

This I thought was fantastic. Not been done before. We have all read about a character in a paranormal read who is telepathic and can converse with somebody else. But what happens to humanity when everybody can hear every ones thoughts at once?

Some people go into shut down mode. Catatonic. But who wakes these people up before they starve to death, die of dehydration?

What happens when some survivors work out how to revive the catatonic, but you could be reviving a potential killer or a druggie, even a rapist?

Very few people are pure at heart and want to fight for the good guys. People have ulterior motives. People are frightened.

Danby finds herself fighting for her autistic brother’s life and her own life. She must learn to trust and get to her mother’s home, one hundred kilometres away.

Many obstacles lie in her path.

Many threats to her existence.

Michael can paint a visually frightening panoramic view of Danby’s surroundings. He uses what I call floating characters that are there to show the reader examples of why humanity is not safe when trying to wipe the slate clean and start a new world.

Nathan Kapur is a great character. He becomes somebody Danby is forced to trust, she needs his knowledge. But, is he totally trustworthy?

For me personally the book got real interesting when Jack’s character came into play. There is something that has you staying wary of him. It’s a natural reaction, he has power among the people. 

‘I’m serious,’ he protested. ‘With great power comes great responsibility and all that.’

I felt the last section of the book was the liveliest for me.

Michael does take his time showing us around the streets of Sydney and its suburbs, cementing his world in our minds. This book is written from ground zero. We watch The Snap happen and that takes time.

This book is well written but for me personally I am looking forward to The Last Shot, book # 2, I want to feel a connection between myself and the main characters. I want more focus on them. The bigger picture is always massive in any apocalypse but can slow a book down. 

Something Jack does at the end of this book, I felt like I needed more of a connection during his section of the book for it to be believable for me. It came out of the blue , I felt. I read a lot of books of all genres and age brackets and I kept looking for this connectivity. I think I needed more time spent with a couple characters. I’m trying not to do any spoiling. I want to say more, but I won’t.

All the questions I asked myself when reading this book, Michael eventually answered. This I liked. He really thought about consequences of things his characters did. They are intelligent characters.

I did feel the book couldn’t help but slow down in parts as Michael had to do the world building for the reader. This is a new type of apocalypse , it isn’t as self explanatory as an alien apocalypse or a zombie apocalypse.

It’s new, it needs time to be set up in the readers mind.

I am looking forward to the next book. I know Michael can write, he visually has me looking around his streets and the carnage left behind by The Snap in much description, but I want to see in book # 2 more dialogue and more connecting with characters so that I am rooting for their survival and having more page turning adventure and action. I want to care more about being betrayed and want to scream at Michael for being so hard on his characters.

Don’t get me wrong, Michael gave me a full viewing of humanity and how it can be quite vile towards others. He showed me tough choices have to be made, you can’t save everyone.

I want the fight for good to be explosive. I want to feel torn up at what the characters are doing. I want to see hurt in characters eyes, feel their pain, feel their outrage.

I recommend reading The Last Girl the first in a three book series.

Michelle

Monday, September 30, 2013

INTERVIEW with AUSTRALIAN AUTHOR - MICHAEL ADAMS - THE LAST GIRL - YA APOCALYPTIC THRILLER - ALLEN & UNWIN

INTERVIEW 
with
 AUSTRALIAN AUTHOR 
MICHAEL ADAMS


I would like to welcome Michael Adams to Novels On The Run for a Q & A session and thank him for taking the time to answer my questions.

His debut apocalyptic YA book, The Last Girl,  released 25th September 2013. This is quite a thought provoking read. What if?

My review will be following shortly.


My pleasure, Michelle – thanks for having me.


Michelle:  What five words describe Michael Adams the AUTHOR?

Michael:  Idea-catcher-feeder-breeder-freer

Michelle:  What five words describe Michael Adams the man behind the writer?

Michael: Write-a-holic needs a right-ol’-holiday

Michelle:  What ten words would you use to describe The Last Girl?

Michael: Action-packed cerebral near-future apocalyptic thriller with satiric touches.

Michelle:  The Last Girl is set in an apocalyptic Australia, where a 16-year-old girl Danby is fighting to keep her little brother Evan safe and get them both to her mother 100 km’s away. Where were you and what were you doing when you came up with the idea of communications and technology turning on the people who created them?

Michael:  It’s not so much communications technology turning on people as it is our minds instantaneously evolving to the point where we no longer need Facebook or Twitter or Instagram to know what other people are thinking and doing as they’re thinking and doing it.

The Last Girl is a riff on the fear that we’re very rapidly doing away with privacy and it imagines how horrible a world without privacy would be. But that thematic link didn’t come to me until long after the initial idea and well into the writing process.

The idea of instant global telepathy came while I was having dinner one night with my partner. It was 2008 and we were in the restaurant at The American Hotel in Sag Harbor in New York. We were having a great time, enjoying the food and wine and chatting to an interesting couple who’d survived the New Orleans floods. But I noticed a couple at another table literally hadn’t said a thing to each other all night. I wondered what on earth they’d each been thinking that whole time. Were they sad? Having affairs? Ready to divorce? Hiding terrible secrets? That made me wonder how they’d react if – bam! just like that! - they could each hear what the other was thinking and feeling. Then I imagined it spiralling out, the effect consuming the restaurant, Sag Harbor, New York, the United States, the world. Who has an inner self so pure that others wouldn’t be taken aback if every thought and feeling were laid bare? It’d lead to instant and irrevocable chaos.

I’ve been a fan of the apocalyptic genre since I was a kid, starting with movies like Night Of The Living Dead, The Omega Man, and Mad Max, and novels such as The Stand, Z for Zachariah and The White Plague – and I’d never seen or read a telepathic plague scenario before. So it seemed an original way to end the world. But it also appealed because it spoke to the idea that bad thoughts are the real source of our real-life problems because surely war, poverty, hunger, racism, sexism, injustice, pollution and everything else wrong with the world starts with negative thoughts - or could at least be solved by people thinking positively and then acting constructively.

Anyway, I loved the idea. The big problem was, how to write so many overlapping thoughts and still provide a narrative focus?

Michelle: Why it happened in the first place I am interested to understand.  A very unique idea.

Michael: The idea just sprang into mind – and it gripped me because it was hugely laden with possibilities and I was reasonably sure it’d never been done before.

As a lifetime horror and sci-fi fan, I know how difficult it is to come up with something new, whether it’s a monster or a scenario. I love zombies and vampires and werewolves and alien invasion and global cataclysm stories but they’ve all been done so many times and so well it’s hard to add much new.

So a global telepathic outbreak offered a similar outcome as a superflu virus or zombie outbreak or asteroid impact – rapid and widespread destruction – but with a whole new set of challenges for the characters and for me as a writer.

What I really liked about “The Snap”, which is what Danby comes to call it in the book, is that it’s instantaneous and global. It strikes those in power as quickly and surely as it does the average person. There is no government left to restore order, no scientific or media establishment left to explain things. In most apocalypse stories, you have those scenes where characters turn on the TV and sense is made of the problem and a possible solution is proposed, whether it’s a rag-tag fighter jet force facing down the ET mothership or a brave space shuttle crew trying to deflect the meteor.

I wanted to do away with that, make it a ground-up armageddon, which we experience minute-by-minute as it unfolds. We only know what Danby knows – and because the media’s destroyed within minutes, she only knows what she sees through her own eyes and through other characters’ minds. As a protagonist, she has to be proactive because no-one else is going to look after her or her little brother. As a writer, the telepathic premise afforded me a rare opportunity to have the book told in first person but also be able to write limited third-person scenes from other viewpoints as they’re channeled by Danby.

The Snap fits into Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s “Black Swan” theory, which basically has it that hugely significant events are often unexpected and unpredictable. We know all the potential real-life world-enders – asteroids, global warming, nuclear war, deadly viral outbreaks, supervolcanoes blowing apart continents – but what if what killed us off was totally beyond our comprehension? That’s the scariest prospect -- what that Donald Rumsfeld famously called the “unknown unknowns”.

As for what I think caused The Snap, my bet’s on the theory put forward by characters in the book. They reckon constant connectivity literally rewired our brains, manifested the collective mind, jump-started our telepathic evolution long before we were able to handle it. But whatever caused it, the destruction in the novel all originates in how people think.

How we think defines how we act towards each other and the world – so, quite literally, whether we live or die as a species will depend on what's in our heads. I’m pretty sure we could conquer any local or global problem if we put our minds to it. But history’s shown we’re only good at that half of the time. The other half of the time we’re thinking up ways to create new problems.

In the same period that humanity was wiping smallpox off the face of the earth, we were creating the massive stockpile of nuclear weapons that's still capable of wiping us off the face of the earth. We’re a funny bunch of mofos.

Michelle:  Why do you think the idea of humanity’s extinction appeals to readers?

Michael:  From global warming and asteroid impact to disease outbreak and alien invasion, there are plenty of real and imaginary Armageddon scenarios for us to place ourselves in. I think it’s natural to wonder what we’d do if we were faced with The End. What’s funny is that we all see ourselves as among the few survivors – not as one of the billions of people burned up in nuclear blasts or turned into ravenous zombies. That’s because we’re all the main characters in our real-life stories. We can’t die – because then the tale is over.

So when we read apocalyptic books or movies, we get to live that fantasy through the main characters while also assessing ourselves against those people. Would I do what they do? Would I take the car when the roads are jammed? What supplies do I take from my house? How long do I hang around trying to save my friends? They’re all questions we hope we’ll never have to answer in real life but they make for exciting fiction because the stakes are life-and-death minute-to-minute.

The other appealing part of apocalyptic stories is that they usually deal with what comes after The End. Is it best to retreat to the mountains and become a hermit? Hole up with other survivors and get some retail therapy in a shopping centre? Try to set up civil order in a small town and curb those who’d become dictators? I think we like the idea that’d we’d get to decide the shape of the new society and perhaps be called on to defend it from the mistakes of the past.

There’s also a fantastic sense of freedom in the apocalypse. All the little worries melt away. No-one has to worry about school or work or bills or diets or in-laws visiting when there’s an anti-zombie fortress to construct.

So, The End is the beginning of one huge series of do-or-die what ifs.

Michelle:  Danby is your 16-year-old survivor. She just keeps getting back up and doing what she needs to do. What ten words would you use to describe Danby?

Michael: Smart, determined, funny, resourceful, empathetic, brave, desperate and shit-scared.

Michelle:  The Last Shot is the next book in the series. How many books will be in this series and can you give me a non-spoiler quote from book 2, please?

Michael: The Last Shot is the second book and the third and final book will be called The Last Place.

Here’s a quote from The Last Shot, which is out in March 2014.

“I glance at my fellow fugitives in the glow of the fire: black-streaked, white-eyed, faces fierce and fearful. Whoever any of us were a week ago, we’ve now become people we could never have imagined.”

You can also read the first chapter of The Last Shot in the back of The Last Girl.

Michelle:  What would you personally pack in your backpack if you only had a few minutes to escape an impending apocalypse?

Michael:  I guess it depends on the apocalypse. Giant asteroid about to wipe out life on Earth? I wouldn’t pack anything. I’d pour a beer, put the Repo Man soundtrack on the stereo, turn the volume up to 11 and take a beanbag onto the lawn for a better view. Zombie outbreak? Well, I guess I’d pack a machete – they never need to be reloaded and they never jam – and ball bearings and marbles because I’ve always thought the undead could be toppled slapstick-style by rolling those at their feet. For your more generic apocalypses, I’d go with the sensible options - First Aid kit, flashlight, radio, cash… and tinned tuna because you’ve got to keep up your Omega-3s. I’ve got a few survival guidebooks so I’d pack them because it’d be good to know how to MacGyver a bazooka out of a Zippo lighter, a leaf blower and a cricket ball. Also: pens and paper. I’d want to be able to write it all down.

Michelle:  You have chosen New South Wales, Australia for your setting. You are an Australian author, and you chose not to set the book in the U.S. Apart from it being familiar, why else did you choose Australia?

Michael:  Australia doesn’t get nearly enough end-of-the-world action. So I wanted to rectify that. From a practical point of view, if the events depicted in the book were to take place, I imagine Australia would be one of the few places it’d be possible to survive. We have the benefit of a relatively small population living on a huge island land mass. It’s easier to run, hide, get lost and survive here than it would be in the United States or China or India. Some scenes feature big Australian landmarks but I wanted to set the book in areas I know well but that aren’t depicted that often in local film, TV shows and books. So, rather than go with Sydney, the inner city or eastern suburbs, I’ve gone with Parramatta, the western suburbs and the lower Blue Mountains. That said, I also made it a mix of real and fictional locations. Smaller places I’ve fictionalised because I didn’t want readers to say, “Hey, that’s my house – is that me dead on the lawn?”

Michelle:  What has been the most memorable book signing event for another author or a book event you have attended, and why?

Michael: I love David Sedaris’s books and was fortunate enough to interview him. Later that day I saw him read and talk to one thousand people at the State Theatre. He was as warm and funny and conversational on stage as he had been that afternoon. It’s quite the skill.

Michelle:  What has been the best advice you have picked up along the way when in regards to writing a novel?

Michael: Write to rewrite. This applies to all writing. You have to write something otherwise you’ve got nothing. D’uh. But do that with the realisation that what you write first will probably be a whole lot of terrible flecked with a few glimmers of goodness. That’s okay. It’s how it’s supposed to be. It’s warming up your brain. The real creativity comes when you begin rewriting. Embellishing ideas. Ditching clichés. Trying to make descriptions original. Upping the narrative stakes constantly with more conflict and more drama. Breathing life into characters who were just names and notions. Cutting the fancypants bits and pieces you’ve put in to make yourself sound clever. That’s all in the rewriting. It’s way beyond giving your first draft a spit and polish. You have to redraft over and over. Or, at least, I do. My first draft of The Last Girl was 111,000 words. The final book came in at about 87,000. If I counted every word written and deleted and rewritten, I reckon the final book emerged from maybe 500,000 words. On my very last edit, I spent two hours rewriting a five-paragraph sentence. A paragraph that had already been written and rewritten however many times over two years. I guess if it now has the precise effect I wanted, it was worthwhile. If not, well, it’s at least a better paragraph than when I first wrote it.

Michelle: What quote best describes you or means something important to you?

Michael:  “Wherever you go, there you are.” – Buckaroo Banzai.

Michelle: Thank you Michael for your time, and best wishes with your first novel.

Michael: Thank you, Michelle. A pleasure.




By: Michael Adams
Published by: Allen & Unwin
Released : 25th September 2013

Blurb: Goodreads

The end of the world happened quickly. The sun still shone, there was no explosion - just a tsunami-sized wave of human thought drowning the world in telepathic noise as everyone's inner-most secrets became audible. Everyone's thoughts, that is, except sixteen-year-old Danby.

Everyone looked like bad actors in a poorly dubbed movie. Their expressions didn't match their emotions and their lips didn't sync with what they were saying. But they were all so loud.

God-he-looks-hot-Can't-she's-my-best-friend-How'd-she-lose-that-weight-No-don't-you-dare-Oh-no-please-

The end of the world happens in the blink of an eye.

When The Snap sweeps the globe, everyone can instantly hear everything that everyone else is thinking. As secrets and lies are laid bare, suburbs and cities explode into insanity and violence. What might have been an evolutionary leap instead initiates the apocalypse.

Sixteen-year-old Danby Armstrong's telepathy works very differently. She can tune into other people but they can't tune into her. With only this slender defence, Danby must protect her little brother and reach the safety of her mother's mountain retreat. But it's 100 kilometres away and the highways are blocked by thousands of cars and surrounded by millions of people coming apart at the psychic seams.

Danby's escape is made even more dangerous by another cataclysm that threatens humanity's extinction. And her ability to survive this new world will be tested by a charismatic young man whose power to save lives may be worse than death itself.


About Author

Michael Adams has worked as writer and editor for newspapers, magazines, websites and television. He presently contributes to YEN, Rolling Stone, Empire and Men's Style

Michael is the author of two non-fiction books: Showgirls, Teen Wolves and Astro Zombies, a memoir about a year spent watching bad movies, and Shining Lights, which profiled Australian Oscar winners. He lives in the Blue Mountains with his partner and their daughter.