Building a better female action heroine, with Russell Blake
Today I have the privilege of welcoming Russell Blake to my blog. Russell Blake is the author of eighteen novels,
including Fatal Exchange, The Geronimo Breach, the Zero Sum trilogy, The Delphi Chronicle trilogy, the Assassin series (Night of the Assassin, King of Swords,
Revenge of the Assassin, Return of the Assassin), The Voynich Cypher, Silver
Justice, JET and JET II - Betrayal,
as well as the non-fiction tomes An Angel
With Fur, and How To Sell A Gazillion
eBooks In No Time (even if drunk, high or incarcerated). His ramblings can
be found at his blog, at http://RussellBlake.com, and his entire catalog of
work at his author page on Amazon. http://www.amazon.com/Russell-Blake/e/B005OKCOLE
Russell Blake's latest books, JET and JET II Betrayal, star a great new female action heroine, so read on and find out more about where she came from. Over to you Russell, and thank you for visiting my blog.
Building a Better Female Action Heroine
There are few things more fun and exciting for an
author than creating a new protagonist. The infinite possibility that the blank
page holds is both daunting and exhilarating. What will he/she be like? What character
traits, strengths and flaws will he/she have? How will he/she view the world?
What dark secrets does his/her heart hold?
I recently launched my second female protagonist-driven
thriller, and it's done pretty well - Silver Justice. That protag, Silver
Cassidy, is an FBI team leader who specializes in serial killers. She's a
single mom struggling to make it in a male-dominated career, with a lousy ex
who's trying to put the screws to her while she contends with a pressure cooker
situation as a killer goes on a savage killing spree...basically, a woman who
is keeping her head above water, but upon whom the effects of the mounting
demands are taking their toll.
About three quarters through writing Silver, I had
an idea for a completely different kind of action heroine. When I first
conceptualized this new creation, I had four words that I used to tell my
friends what my next book would be like: Kill Bill meets Bourne. From that
vague idea came my latest, JET, and JET II - Betrayal, about an ex-Mossad operative
who faked her own death to get out of the game, but whose past has come back to
haunt her.
Whereas Silver was a reality-based FBI agent
grappling with the rigors of running an investigation in Manhattan, I wanted
JET to have no rules, no limits, no accountability except to herself. I wanted
a mad rush of a book that would take the reader's breath away from the first
few pages, and leave them gasping by the end. I used words like relentless and
unapologetic to describe what I was thinking. I conceptualized a female Jack
Bauer crossed with James Bond, with some Lizbeth Salander sprinkled on top for
seasoning. A two-fisted brawler of a heroine that could be Kate Beckinsale in
Underworld - just a serious heaping of female ass-kicking who could take anything
you threw at her and spit the bullets back in your face.
Out of that idea came JET. Twenty-eight years old.
Living under an assumed identity on a small island as far from her old life as
you can get without going into orbit. Trying to be normal, to bury her ugly
past, and fit in. Then, bam, you're at page two, and the poop's already hitting
the fan, and it doesn't let up until you turn the final page - and even then,
it didn't really stop. I wanted to redefine what an action/adventure thriller
could be - both in terms of the characters, the pacing, but also the language.
It's odd, because JET is by far the fastest-paced book I've ever penned (or
read, for that matter), and yet it's written in a manner that some have
described as a kind of odd literary fiction. My editor and a few authors said
it's almost a new genre. The descriptions are vivid, but more than that,
there's a musicality to the cadence, a certain art, that took me completely by
surprise, as page after page of it poured forth.
I'm releasing JET, and its sequel, JET II -
Betrayal, at once, on Oct. 5, and am hard at work on JET III as I write this
blog. I'm extremely excited by these books - more than I've been in a very long
time. Jet is a once-in-a-lifetime character, and the plots are...well, let's
just say that there should be enough twists and unexpected turns to satisfy
even the most jaded thriller fans and keep them guessing.
If you only read one Russell Blake book in your
life, I'd say pick up a copy of JET and give it half an hour. If it isn't clear
by then, I failed. Hopefully you'll enjoy reading JET as much as I enjoyed
writing it, and if you do, you'll tell a friend.
I hope you'll find that I did mine.
Thanks Russell. And, readers, did you notice, October 5th is today, so look out for the release of Jet, Jet II, and a great new action heroine.
Comments
Sheila, I can't wait till you read it. I think it's some of my best work.
Anderson, if you want a big helping of no-rules kick-ass, Jet's your lady. I guarantee it.