Pandora Zwieback and the Howling Commandos

Mark your calendars and adjust your Internet radios, ’Warp fans—Saturday, December 29, is the day when I’ll be appearing live on At Ease, the morning program hosted by bestselling author and historian Dwight Jon Zimmerman on the Veterans Radio Network!

The show starts at 9:00 a.m., Eastern Standard Time, and I’m the first scheduled guest. It’s my chance to introduce America’s fighting elite to the adventures of a certain teenaged Goth monster hunter, so let’s hope more than a few veterans listening in will be convinced that the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud, is just the book they should be buying for their kids and grandchildren.

Veterans Radio airs every Saturday morning at 9:00 a.m. Eastern on Ave Marie Radio. 990 AM WDEO, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1440AM WMAX Saginaw, MI and 98.5FM in Naples, Florida. For those of you tuning in via the ’Net, just visit the network’s Programs page and click on the “Listen Live” link.

Radio, Radio

Well, this is different.

Those of you who read my report on this year’s New York Comic Con may remember a visit I had at the StarWarp Concepts booth by Dwight Jon Zimmerman, New York Times bestselling co-author (with political pundit Bill O’Reilly) of Lincoln’s Last Days, a nonfiction examination of the events leading up to Abraham Lincoln’s assassination. Dwight and I go back a ways; in fact, he was my editor on the X-Men: The Chaos Engine Trilogy novels that I wrote in 2000 and 2002.

Anyway, at the con Dwight and I swapped books, with me giving him a copy of the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud. Dwight e-mailed me a few days later to say he’d finished reading it and enjoyed Pan’s story a lot—so much so that he recently contacted me about appearing on his radio show At Ease, which is broadcast on the Veterans Radio network. Of course I said yes!

So on December 29, I’ll be hawking the adventures of a teenaged Goth chick who fights monsters to America’s warriors. Good thing I included a couple of battle scenes in Blood Feud to get their interest, huh?  ;-)

More details to come as the date gets closer.

 

Welcome, New York Comic Con Fans!

Thanks for stopping by, and for your interest in Goth adventuress Pandora Zwieback.

If you’re here because you spoke with me at the StarWarp Concepts booth, then go ahead and download the Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0 e-comic that I showed you; just click on the cover you see to the left and save it as a PDF. Not only is it an introduction to Pan and her world, hosted by Pan herself, but it contains two sample chapters from her first novel, Blood Feud. Give it a read.

If you like what you’ve read in the comic, head on over to the first annual StarWarp Concepts Book Festival to purchase a print copy of Blood Feud, for the same price you would have paid at NYCC (plus postage). And the e-book edition—available in Epub, PDF, and .prc (Kindle compatible) formats—is just $1.99, marked down from its regular $3.99 price tag. But hurry—the festival starts today, but the discounts end on Monday, October 15!

Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1 is the critically acclaimed story of a 16-year-old Goth girl who’s spent the last decade being treated for mental health problems because she can see monsters. It’s only after she meets a shape-shifting monster hunter named Sebastienne Mazarin that Pan discovers she’s never been ill—her so-called “monstervision” is actually a supernatural gift that allows her to see into Gothopolis, the not-so-mythical shadow world that exists right alongside the human world. But before Annie can explain further, Pan and her parents are drawn into a conflict between warring vampire clans that are searching for the key to an ultimate weapon (or so the legend goes)—a key that just so happens to have been delivered to the horror-themed museum owned by Pan’s father.

And don’t forget to Like the Pandora Zwieback page on Facebook, so you can keep up-to-date with all the Pan-related news; that link’s also in the sidebar.

Hey, Brooklyn Book Festival Attendees!

Thanks for stopping by, and for your interest in Goth adventuress Pandora Zwieback.

If you’re here because you spoke with me at the StarWarp Concepts booth, then go ahead and download the Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0 e-comic that I showed you; just click on the cover you see to the left and save it as a PDF. Not only is it an introduction to Pan and her world, hosted by Pan herself, but it contains two sample chapters from her first novel, Blood Feud. Give it a read.

If you like what you’ve read in the comic, hit the Buy the Book Button at the top of the sidebar to purchase a copy of Blood Feud. It’ll take you to all the major book-buying links—both print and e-book. And the e-book edition—available for the Kindle and the Nook, as well as from the Apple iBookstore, Kobo, Diesel, and others—is just $3.99!

Blood Feud is the critically acclaimed first novel in the series, which stars a 16-year-old Goth girl who’s spent the last decade being treated for mental health problems because she can see monsters. It’s only after she meets a shape-shifting monster hunter named Sebastienne Mazarin that Pan discovers she’s never been ill—her so-called “monstervision” is actually a supernatural gift that allows her to see into Gothopolis, the not-so-mythical shadow world that exists right alongside the human world. But before Annie can explain further, Pan and her parents are drawn into a conflict between warring vampire clans that are searching for the key to an ultimate weapon (or so the legend goes)—a key that just so happens to have been delivered to the horror-themed museum owned by Pan’s father.

Then be sure to head over to the StarWarp Concepts site, home of Pan’s publisher. From a redheaded succubus battling a cult of Elder Gods worshipers to classic tales by J. Sheridan Le Fanu, Edgar Rice Burroughs, and The Brothers Grimm, The ’Warp works hard to live up its reputation as “a small press publisher that presents itself with nothing but professionalism” (that’s what Severe Magazine said about us).

And don’t forget to Like the Pandora Zwieback page on Facebook, so you can keep up-to-date with all the Pan-related news; that link’s also in the sidebar.

Writing Influences: Hunters and Warriors

In prior installments of this recurring topic, I’ve talked about some of the inspirations that influenced the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud: for example, HorrorPops’ song “MissFit” and Misfits’ “Fiend Club.” (Billy Joel’s “Just the Way You Are” also has its place in Zwieback history, but we don’t need to cover that one today.)

There have been other, nonmusical ones, of course—both the TV series Doctor Who and the comic book character Vampirella have been major influences on Pan and her mentor, Sebastienne “Annie” Mazarin (we’ll cover those in another post)—but for now, let’s focus on these three:

Highlander: Not so much the original Christopher Lambert/Sean Connery film that launched the franchise (let’s just pretend the god-awful sequels that followed never happened), but the 1990s TV series starring Adrian Paul as Duncan MacLeod. Four hundred years old? Warrior and lover? Flashbacks to historical adventures? Yeah, I guess you could say it had a tiny bit of influence on Annie’s immortal status.  :D

 


Kolchak: the Night Stalker: Before Mulder and Scully in The X-Files, there was intrepid-but-luckless reporter and monster hunter Carl Kolchak, created by author Jeff Rice in an unpublished novel titled The Kolchak Papers, and portrayed by fantastic character actor Darren McGavin. Kolchak starred in two early seventies made-for-TV movies (The Night Stalker—adapted from Rice’s manuscript—and The Night Strangler, both written by I Am Legend author Richard Matheson), and then in the one-season TV series that bore his name. From vampires and swamp monsters to Jack the Ripper and seven-foot-tall American Indian spirits, Kolchak chased and killed them all, in pursuit of the one great news story that would make him an A-list journalist. Of course no one ever believed him, and he never got that A-list story, but that didn’t mean Carl stopped trying.

Sonja Blue: Author Nancy A. Collins’s punk-rock vampire who hunts other vampires, introduced in the 1989 novel Sunglasses After Dark and still stalking her kind today in brand-new novellas. In an Anne Rice–influenced horror industry, at a time when just about every publisher was seeking to knock off Interview With the Vampire (or at least its success, as publishers do these days with their Twilight, Hunger Games, and 50 Shades of Grey imitations), Sonja arrived on the scene as the anti-Lestat. There was nothing romantic about vampirism in Sonja’s world—it was brutal and ugly and a curse, and being turned into a blood-drinking corpse only meant that Sonja was able to unleash her full anger to kill every stinking vampire she could find.

Brutal and ugly vampires—sort of like the way I approached the vampire clans in Blood Feud. Because if there’s one thing you can be certain of in Pan’s world, it’s that the vampires don’t sparkle.  :D

Still, it’s what you do with your influences that makes the final version of any writing project. Annie may take a cue or two from Duncan MacLeod and Sonja Blue, and she and Pan might be descendants of Carl Kolchak, but they’re only spices added to the flavorful stew called The Saga of Pandora Zwieback; the rest of the character ingredients come from me.

Hmm. Cooking analogies. I think maybe I’ve been watching Food Network’s Diners, Drive-Ins & Dives too much. Well, Pan does get her surname from a cookie, so…

And Now For Something Completely Different…

Well, after weeks of staring at this page every time I log on to Safari (it’s my home page, y’see), I’m kinda tired of seeing my face at the top of this blog—how about you?  :D   Here’s something far more attractive. (And I apologize for the lack of posts.)

This is a pencil sketch of Pan that I drew while killing some time at the 2011 Boston Comic Con. After seeing so many Doctor Who fans cosplaying as their favorite characters—the Doctor (many versions of the 10th and 11th incarnations), his companion Amy Pond, and the Doctor’s time machine the TARDIS (usually in the form of women wearing TARDIS dresses, with a flashing lamp worn as a hat)—I decided to do a tribute to old-school Who, back in the days when I became a fan.

Thus: Pan cosplaying as Sarah Jane Smith (played by the late Elisabeth Sladen), journalist and companion to the Third and Fourth Doctors, in the episode “The Hand of Fear.” Eldrad was an alien life force that possessed various people in the story—including Sarah Jane; you knew they were possessed because they’d always start droning, “Eldrad must live!”

As for why Pan would be wearing candy-striped overalls, here’s a screen cap from “The Hand of Fear” so you can see Sarah Jane’s now famous (infamous?) outfit. Hey, don’t you go judging 1970s costume designers!


Writing Comics for a Goth Adventuress

Over at the StarWarp Concepts blog today I talk about the methods by which comic books are scripted—short-story style, shuffling art pages, full scripting, and what’s known as “the Marvel [Comics] Method.” Head over there and give it a read, then come back here for Part 2 of this StarWarp Concepts blogging crossover event. I can wait.

All done? Great! So, like I was saying at SWC, I’m a full-scripting advocate. I enjoy directing the pace of a story. (Here’s a tip I once picked up years ago: think of every right-hand page as a mini-cliffhanger and give the reader a reason for wanting to turn the page.)

What follows is the script for The Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0, the freebie comic that you can get right now by clicking on the “Download the Comic” link in the sidebar. That way you can compare what I wrote to the finished product. (As you’ll see, page 3 especially follows the “mini-cliffhanger” rule.)

(And please excuse the all-cap dialogue and captions; I’m not Internet-screaming. Writing that way makes it easier for designer Mike Rivilis to copy and paste the text into the word balloons and caption boxes when he’s lettering.)

THE SAGA OF PANDORA ZWIEBACK #0

“WELCOME TO GOTHOPOLIS”

Script © 2010 by Steven A. Roman

PAGE 1

SPLASH PAGE: We open on a MID-SHOT of PANDORA ZWIEBACK, dressed in her traditional all-black look of leather jacket, “devil girl” T-shirt, jeans, and thick-soled boots. She’s talking directly to us, and looks quite serious about the subject matter she’s discussing.

 

 

1.
PAN:  HEY, THERE. I’M PANDORA ZWIEBACK

2.
PAN:  AND I’VE GOT A QUESTION FOR YOU.

3.
PAN:  DID YOU KNOW THERE ARE MONSTERS IN THE WORLD?

4.
PAN:  REAL ONES, I MEAN.

5.
PAN:  ’CAUSE IN MY SERIES OF DARK URBAN FANTASY NOVELS FROM STARWARP CONCEPTS

6.
LOGO:            THE SAGA OF PANDORA ZWIEBACK

7.
PAN:  I SEE THEM ALL THE TIME…

PAGE 2

PANEL 1: In the ruins of an old castle, a Japanese Gothic Lolita vampire girl (not the one from the Blood Reign cover, let’s have a new design) faces off against a huge, rabid-looking werewolf. It’s like Underworld—only different!

1.
CAPTION:     PARANOID WEREWOLVES

2.
CAPTION:     –AND “GOTHIC LOLITA” VAMPIRES.

PANEL 2: We’re at a big concert, with the band SARKOPHAGIA on stage wailing away. In true Norwegian death-metal style, most of the band members look like escapees from a Hellraiser film festival—heavy makeup, piercings, fake(?) blood [see reference]. The lone exception is the lead singer, LEANDER FAUST, a dark-haired, shirtless, sculpted Adonis of the black arts.

In the audience is a goblin chewing on a human arm—and the fingers of both the goblin and his meal are bent in the devil-horn symbol made famous by Black Sabbath’s Ronnie James Dio!

3.
CAPTION:     ROCK-STAR DEMONS

4.
CAPTION:     –AND FLESH-EATING GOBLINS.

PANEL 3: Hey, it’s a crossover! We find LORELEI in an alley, sucking the soul out of some loser with a kiss while, in the background, a rotting, business-suited corpse sits on the ground, shoving a handful of stale donuts into his mouth.

5.
CAPTION:     SOUL-STEALING SUCCUBI

6.
CAPTION:     –AND SUGAR-ADDICTED ZOMBIES.

PANEL 4: A kid’s room late at night. Six-year-old Billy looks terrified as he clutches the superhero blanket on his bed—not just by the Bernie Wrightson-esque monsters lurking under his bed, but by the ones starting to creep out of his closet! It doesn’t look good for little Billy…

7.
CAPTION:     ALL THE THINGS THAT GO BUMP IN THE NIGHT–

8.
CAPTION:     –INCLUDING THE ONES HIDING UNDER YOUR BED.

PANEL 5: Pull back to a HIGH ANGLE SHOT of Pan, standing with her arms spread wide to gesture at the world around her. She’s standing on a foggy, cobblestoned city street, done up with all the spooky trappings: gnarled trees, weeds sticking up through the cracks, and “monster” eyes peeping out from a sewer drain. And a full moon in the night sky for added dramatic lighting effect. Wispy images of scary monsters swirl in the mist around her.

9.
PAN:  THE WORLD IS FILLED WITH MONSTERS–

10.
PAN:  –AND ONLY I CAN SEE THEM!

PAGE 3

PANEL 1: ANNIE, Pan’s monster-hunting mentor, steps through the fog in her standard leather-and-lace costume. She looks a little annoyed by the comment Pan just made. Pan, still talking to us, gestures at her.

1.
ANNIE:          EXCUSE ME?

2.
PAN:  Oh, OKAY…ONLY ME–AND SEBASTIENNE MAZARIN.

3.
PAN:  ANNIE’S A MONSTER HUNTER WHO’S TEACHING ME EVERYTHING THERE IS TO KNOW ABOUT FIGHTING GHOULS AND GHOSTS.

PANEL 2: Pan enthusiastically continues her description of Annie, who looks surprised by what she’s telling us—no woman likes to have people discussing her age!

4.
PAN:  SHE’S ALSO A SHAPE-SHIFTERAND OVER FOUR HUNDRED YEARS OLD!

5.
PAN:  FOUR HUNDRED YEARS! ISN’T THAT, LIKE, TOTALLY INSANE?

6.
PAN:  THAT MEANS SHE’S BEEN DOING THIS MONSTER-HUNTING STUFF FOR, LIKE, FOREVER!

PANEL 3: SILENT, BEAT* PANEL. Pan, grinning, looks at Annie, who’s all wide-eyed and horrified with shock at Pan for revealing her age.

[*From TVTropes.org: “A silent panel in sequential art, it approximates the comedic pause before a punch line. Particularly efficient comic artists may copy and paste adjacent panels, since the point of the Beat Panel is usually that the characters are frozen in contemplation.”]

PANEL 4: EXACT SAME AS PANEL 3, with Pan still grinning, only now Annie lowers her head in exasperation (and embarrassment) to put her head in her hand.

7.
ANNIE: (small)  >sigh.<

8.
ANNIE: (small)  YOU MAKE ME SOUND LIKE SOME OLD HAG

9.
PAN:  Oh, DON’T WORRY ABOUT IT.

10.
PAN:  TRUST ME, ANNIE–YOU LOOK TOTALLY HOT.

11.
PAN:  …FOR AN OLD HAG, I MEAN…

PANEL 5: Pan smiles as she holds up and extends her hand toward us. A friendly invitation to take her hand and join in her adventures.

12.
ANNIE: (small) Hmmf.

13.
PAN:  SO…

14.
PAN:  WANNA SEE WHAT I SEE…?

PAGES 4–5: TWO-PAGE SPREAD [FULL BLEED]

A montage of action scenes. (Feel free to mix up their order as they fit your page layout.)

CENTER IMAGE: Pan and Annie side by side in action poses, around which are grouped:

SCENE 1: Pan in a cemetery, running for her life from one scary MF of a slobbering, psychotic, Howling-style werewolf that’s loping after her.

SCENE 2: A group shot of the Japanese “Elegant Gothic Lolita” vampire clan from Blood Feud. (See GothVamp.doc for descriptions.)

SCENE 3: Rock concert scene with enormous Cthulhu-like monster rearing up behind the stage as Sarkophagia plays and the huge crowd roars its approval.

SCENE 4: Annie and Pan in an underground sewer tunnel, Pan holding a large mirror in a gilded frame. They rear back from the sight of a giant chicken-headed basilisk exploding out of the water behind them.

SCENE 5: Wide shot: Pan has jumped off a building’s roof. We find her in mid-fall, holding a mystical staff as she dives toward a huge, ugly Cloverfield-type monster. It roars as it spots her, and it’s clear this thing has a snaggle-tooth–filled mouth the size of a subway tunnel. Not her wisest decision…

SCENE 6: Annie in a junkyard, facing off against an oversized goblin in a filthy Adidas tracksuit he pulled out of a Goodwill contribution box. She’s in mid-leap, transforming from hot-looking woman to lethal panther along the way, her fangs and claws ready to do some serious damage.

PAGE 6

PANEL 1: LARGE PANEL (so we can fit in the important information about the book). Pan holds up a copy of Blood Feud [a Photoshopped insert of the cover image] next to her head so we can all get a good look at the cover.

1.
PAN:  PRETTY WILD, HUH? AND THE FUN ALL STARTS IN THE FIRST NOVEL:

2.
DISPLAY TYPE:        BLOOD FEUD
THE SAGA OF PANDORA ZWIEBACK, BOOK 1

3.
PAN:  THAT’S WHERE ANNIE AND ME WIND UP IN THE MIDDLE OF A WAR AMONG RIVAL VAMPIRE CLANS, WITH THE SAFETY OF THE WHOLE WORLD AT STAKE! (no pun intended)

4.
PAN:  IT GOES ON SALE [DATE TK].

5.
PAN:  IN THE MEANTIME, YOU CAN ORDER A COPY BY USING THE COUPON ON PAGE 8 OF THIS COMIC, OR BY VISITING MY WEB SITE

6.
DISPLAY TYPE:        WWW.PANDORAZWIEBACK.COM

7.
PAN:  WHERE YOU’LL ALSO FIND ALL THE LATEST NEWS ABOUT MY BOOK SERIES!

PANEL 2: A smaller, inset panel near the bottom right-hand corner of the page. Pan, interrupted in the middle of her sales pitch, looks off-panel at a voice calling to her.

8.
PAN:  AND DON’T FORGET TO VISIT MY PUBLISHER’S SITE, STARWARPCONCEPTS.COM, TO CHECK OUT THEIR OTHER PROJ–

9.
SHEENA: (off-panel)  HEY, ATTENTION WHORE!

PAGE 7

PANEL 1: Pan looks to the side, where we find her best friend, SHEENA McCARTHY, and Pan’s boyfriend, JAVIER MALDONADO, working behind the scenes on this “shoot.” Sheena is an Irish, blue-haired, 16-year-old full-on Goth chick (black clothes and heavy makeup) with a “Rubenesque” figure (in other words, plump but curvy and not your typical comics hottie); she’s working the fans and fog machines used to create the spooky atmosphere—and she doesn’t look happy about it.

Right beside her, Javi is wearing the shaggy fur costume for one of the monsters we saw lurking in the fog, but he’s scratching himself like the costume’s infested with bugs. Javi is a 16-year-old Puerto Rican, dark-haired, handsome, muscular (he plays high school baseball and is a top-level base stealer), and clean-shaven (color-wise, give him a light tan to distinguish him from the white chicks).

1.
SHEENA:       YOU ABOUT DONE PIMPIN’ YOUR BOOKS?

2.
SHEENA:       THIS FOG MACHINE IS GIVIN’ ME HELLACIOUS CHILLS!

3.
JAVIER:         YEAH, AND THIS STUPID MONSTER COSTUME’S MAKIN’ ME ITCHY.

4.
JAVIER: (small)  I THINK IT’S GOT BEDBUGS OR SOMETHING…

PANEL 2: Pan grins at us as she jerks her thumb toward her friends. Sheena looks pissed.

5.
PAN:  DON’T MIND THE DRAMA QUEENS.

6
PAN:  THAT’S JUST MY BOYFRIEND, JAVIER MALDONADO, AND MY BEST FRIEND, SHEENA McCARTHY.

7.
PAN:  THEY’RE WHAT YOU CALL “SUPPORTING CHARACTERS”–KINDA LIKE MY BUMBLING COMEDIC SIDEKICKS.

8.
PAN:  WELL…AT LEAST SHEEN IS…

9.
SHEENA:  HEY! I’M STANDIN’ RIGHT HERE!

PANEL 3: Pan continues speaking to us, while Sheena and Javier join Annie behind her. Annie gazes at Sheena like she can’t believe what Pan is saying; Sheena just shrugs.

10.
PAN:  SO, THAT’S IT. BUT I HOPE YOU’LL JOIN US ON BOARD THE FUN HEARSE WHEN IT REVS UP IN OCTOBER 2010.

11.
ANNIE:          THE “FUN HEARSE”?

12.
ANNIE:          REALLY?

13.
SHEENA:       Ah, FORGET IT, ANNIE–SHE’S ON A ROLL…

PANEL 4: CLOSE-UP of Pan, smiling a sinister little smile.

14.
PAN:  IN THE MEANTIME…

15.
PAN: (in creepy font) PLEASANT SCREAMS

16.
DESIGN TYPE:         THE END…?

(The Saga of Pandora Zwieback: Welcome to Gothopolis script © 2010 Steven A. Roman.)

Pandora Zwieback Celebrates Free Comic Book Day

—Press Release

This Saturday, May 5, 2012, will be a cause for celebration as comic shops around the world mark the tenth annual Free Comic Book Day. Independent publishing house StarWarp Concepts joins the occasion with a pair of free e-comics that will be available for download from the SWC Web site that day—comics that tie directly to its critically acclaimed young adult, dark-urban-fantasy novel series The Saga of Pandora Zwieback.

The Saga of Pandora Zwieback #0: Introducing 16-year-old Goth adventuress Pandora Zwieback! Pan is a girl with the ability to see the monsters that regular humans can’t, and with the help of a 400-year-old monster hunter named Sebastienne “Annie” Mazarin, she’s going to protect the world from danger—and maybe even have some fun while doing it.

Written by series author Steven A. Roman (X-Men: The Chaos Engine Trilogy) and drawn by Eliseu Gouveia (The Phantom), this 16-page, full-color comic book is hosted by Pandora and includes two preview chapters from Book 1: Blood Feud, in which rival vampire clans search for the key to an ultimate weapon—a key that’s been delivered to the horror museum owned by Pan’s father!

(For those who can’t wait until Saturday, the comic is available right now here at the Pan site—just click on the “Download Free Comic” link in the sidebar and start reading today!)

Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1 (ISBN 978-0-9841741-0-2) is available in both print and e-book editions from such retailers as Amazon.com, Barnes & Noble, Kobo.com, Smashwords, and DriveThru Fiction.

Heartstopper: The Legend of La Bella Tenebrosa #1: In 1994, Sebastienne Mazarin made her debut in this short-lived Mature Readers series from Millennium Publications. Now, for the first time in almost two decades, StarWarp Concepts re-presents this long-lost comics adventure of the monster hunter known as La Bella Tenebrosa (“the beautiful dark one”).

A nefarious heavy metal band has arrived in New York City, and its lead singer is more than just a sex magnet for his female fans—he’s an incubus! Will Annie put an end to his plans for worldwide chaos, or fall prey to his supernatural charms?

Written by Roman, with art by co-creator Uriel Caton (JSA Annual 2000) and Alan Larsen, this 32-page, full-color comic offers a rare look into the past of the immortal shape-shifter, long before she became mentor to Pandora Zwieback.

After May 5, the comics will remain accessible on the StarWarp Concepts Web site’s “Free Comics” page. For more information on the company and its projects, please visit www.StarwarpConcepts.com and www.PandoraZwieback.com.

The 13.5 Days of Pan-demonium

Here’s the story of a hidden gem.

Last year, this site hosted “The 13 Days of Pan-demonium”: a promotional event used to help launch the first Pandora Zwieback novel, Blood Feud. It involved thirteen artists (including me) doing interpretations of Pan and her monster-hunting mentor, Annie. (As you can see from the navigation bar up top, there’s a separate page that warehouses all the images, for your viewing pleasure.)

One of those artists was Dave Hoover, an artist who’d worked for Marvel and DC Comics in the 1990s on superhero projects such as Starman, Fantastic Four Unlimited, and Captain America, and as an animator on films and TV shows including Fire and Ice, He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, and Men in Black: The Series. In 2011, he’d just finished a run as the penciler of Zenescope Entertainment’s comic series Charmed, based on the popular TV show.

When I started making plans for the 13 Days, I contacted Dave through his DeviantArt page and asked if he’d be interested in drawing my teen Goth heroine. He was, we negotiated a price, and the result was a spectacular illustration of Pan and Annie that I used for Day Four.

The big surprise, however, was when I received the actual 11” x 17” art. I’d been dealing with so many digital artists by this point that I’d assumed his pinup existed only as a Photoshop file—but no! When I tore open the package—one Dave had never told me he was sending—I found the hand-colored final piece inside. I was thrilled beyond belief!

Sadly, Dave passed away on September 4, 2011, at the age of 56. When I heard the news, I pulled the illustration from the art drawer and just sat awhile, admiring it. Such a fantastic artist, and now I’d never have a chance to collaborate with him again. I started to put the drawing away and did something I’d never thought of doing in the three or four months I’d had the art: I turned it over.


What you’re looking at is Dave’s original blue-pencil sketch, before he came up with what he no doubt considered a better composition. Still, as great as the final art is, I think this one would’ve made a helluva pinup, too.

Thanks, Dave.

A Monstrous Appetite for Zwieback

And so we close out January 2012 with another enthusiastic recommendation of Blood Feud: The Saga of Pandora Zwieback, Book 1, courtesy of reviewer Sheila Shedd and the site Monster Librarian:

“Blood Feud is a roller coaster read; the action never lets up…. Highly recommended for ages 15 and up for complexity of plot and violence.”

Read the entire review by clicking on the logo above. And hey, all you librarians out there, how about adding Blood Feud to your YA sections and introducing your readers to a certain Goth adventuress? You never know—they might really enjoy meeting Pan!