I was looking for
something else entirely when I stumbled across this article, which went up on
LiveJournal way back in 2012--not long after I finished writing Coming
Attractions. I'd entered a writing competition back then, and put up the
novel for voting. It made it through the first round, then ... that was it.
The manuscript at the
time was much, much different from what ended up being published--in fact, some
parts are totally changed. Better, I hope! But the article’s interesting,
especially when compared to one I wrote just a few days ago, before I
remembered this one. Maybe I’ll post that newer one later, when I’ve forgotten
this one again.
- Oct. 5th, 2012 at 6:35 PM
When I tell people about
my new novel, Coming Attractions, one of the first things they ask is
how I came up with the idea of a romantic comedy about a drive-in movie
theater.
The answer is not how,
but where: At the drive-in, of course.
Just as I came up with Storm
Chaser by looking to the skies, I came up with Coming Attractions by
looking to the screen – the silver screen. But this book isn’t brand new: I
came up with the concept years ago, when I started taking my kids to the
Auburn-Garrett drive-in. Sadly, that’s the only one left anywhere near my home,
although when I was a kid the Hi-Vue was closer.
There was a third near
the limits of a reasonable drive, but toward the end it started showing X-rated
flicks, back at a time when you couldn’t get them at the video store … back
before the internet made that all passé.
At the time (this would
be decades ago) the Hi-Vue where where you would go for family friendly fare:
Their screen faced the highway, so they couldn’t show R rated stuff. The
Auburn-Garrett sometimes showed racier movies, but the Hi-Vue was closer and I
was a kid, so you can guess where I ended up.
But by the time I had
kids of my own, the Auburn-Garrett was the only game around. I was a single
father, the drive-in was cheap, and we all loved movies, so I introduced my
girls to one of my best childhood memories.
If you wanted a good
spot, you got there early. (The good spot is in the middle, near the restrooms.)
So I pulled out a notebook, and while we waited for the sun to set, my
daughters and I brainstormed the idea for a new novel – an idea that was as
close as the big screen before us.
Of course, the story
isn’t really about a drive-in, any more than a story is about a tornado, or an
airplane, or a war. Stories are about people. Over time Charis and Jillian,
with the help of a laptop, notebook, and various reference books we bought
along, helped invent the characters, the plot, and … well, the atmosphere kind
of took care of itself.
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Don’t forget you can
order Coming Attractions, and all our
other books, on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/Mark-R-Hunter/e/B0058CL6OO
Not to mention everything but our newest book is up at http://markrhunter.com/, and Coming Attractions will be there soon, too … or just search
for “Mark R Hunter books” on that newfangled interwebs thingy. No, I don’t run
Molson Coors Brewing Company.
I may have been to a drive in once or twice as a kid. Surprisingly there are still some around in Canada.
ReplyDeleteSeems like the viewing season would be short up there!
DeleteDrive-ins were big when I was a teenager. Would you believe I was with a group of girls that didn't have enough money for all of us to get in and then all buy something from the snack shack. So--a couple of us hid under a blanket. An hour later two ushers (both young men) were there wanting to see our tickets. Somehow the girls in the front kept them distracted enough that we passed the ticket stubs around once the were handed back. They apologized and left after they had taken (and returned) a stub to all of us. Oh, I think it was the Elvis movie, Jailhouse Rock. By the way, since that was a family affair, have your children (now adults) asked for a share of the royalties?
ReplyDeleteNo they haven't, but don't go giving them any ideas! Maybe they just realize that I haven't been doing so great in the royalties area.
DeleteI know people who sneaked into the drive-in similarly, and I remember seeing the ushers, but I don't think they have them anymore. I was once sneaked into an R rated movie by sitting on a stack of books--I would have been about fifteen at the time.