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Showing posts with label lia habel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lia habel. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

|Author Interview| Lia Habel

Upon reading the amazing dystopian book, Dearly, Departed I fell not only in love with the book, but with the author herself for creating such a fantastic world. (My review HERE) So I'm very glad to birng you today an author interview with Lia Habel herself, author of Dearly, Departed!





1. We live in the 21st century with the latest, greatest technology yet. What makes you love Victorian times so much?

Honestly, my love is a very complicated love. When I was a little girl, I think it was more about the prettiness and perceived "goodness" and "innocence" of that age - obviously, I didn't know better! In reality the Victorian period was really just as gritty, dirty, and mean as our time is. And as an adult, capable of understanding shades of gray, I find myself adoring both the beauty and the squalor, the technological advancement and the relative "simplicity," the lords and ladies and the uppity street urchins. It's just such a busy, fabulously engaging time. It offers me a ton of material to work with. (And at heart...I'm still all about the prettiness. The Victorian aesthetic is just in my blood. It's what I respond to.)

2. I tried to wrap my mind around it a few hundred times but I just can't see a connection between the Victorian era and zombies. What inspired your deep love for the undead? Perhaps you have a forbidden love with a Bram fellow of your own? ;D

Yes. I have a corpse I regularly visit. *poker face* Not really. XD But the Victorian age was definitely full of cheap horror fiction - penny dreadfuls were everywhere, Gothic chapbooks. Real Victorian young people were seriously gobbling down stories about vampires and ghosts and teenage suicides and moaning crypts and being buried alive and then hiding the material under their pillows lest their parents find out. I think if someone put D,D in an actual Victorian girl's hand, she'd totally understand at least that part of it.

As for the zombies - I just love monsters! I was raised on horror as a kid, but unlike my mother (from whom I got the bug) I was never frightened by the monsters on the screen, only fascinated by them. I decided to go with zombies to tell my story because they're just really unique monsters, in terms of their humanity - they are us. There's great horror and great tragedy in that.

3. If you were reincarnated, who do you want to come back as? (why I do I have a feeling it might be someone from the Victorian era? haha)

If I were reincarnated...I think I'd want to come back as Lily Elsie (a gorgeous Edwardian actress) or some writer from the Victorian or Edwardian period, like Gaston Leroux. (The Phantom of the Opera is my favorite book ever!)
 
 

4. What are some of your favorite books/movies/TV shows about either zombies or the Victorian era that you think everyone should watch/read?

I read a ton of classics, and a lot of classics are so different from the legacy they've inspired, so I always recommend going back to basics. The Phantom of the Opera, for instance, has a whole cast of amazing side characters that almost never make it into modern interpretations (including strong female characters and characters of color!). Frankenstein (which is Georgian, not Victorian) is partially told from the point of view of the monster himself, and he has such an amazing, heart-breaking voice and story. And of course I love costume dramas.

As for zombies, or other paranormal things to watch - Dark Shadows, definitely. A movie is coming out based on DS in April, and I'm determined that young people everywhere will sample the source material, which was a HUGE inspiration to me in my youth. I used to tape it (yes - cassette tape) every day and rush home after middle and high school to watch it. It's a soap opera from the 1960s, but it was actually gothic/paranormal - after including a vampire, Barnabas Collins, to boost ratings, the show went delightfully insane. Satanic ceremonies, witches, zombies, werewolves, time travel, it's all there. It can be slow-going, because it is a soap opera, but I think it physically shaped my brain growing up. Part of Dearly is definitely in there.

I also love zombie movies like Boy Eats Girl, Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things, and Zombieland.

5. Can you possibly share anything about any future work of yours? Whether it concerns the Gone with the Respiration series or something new. Your fans and are DYING to know!

I'm working on book two right now, and I'm not going to say anything! But I'm also working on some non-zombie things, too, for my own amusement. These projects are unsolicited (meaning no one's seen them, and no one's paid me anything for them), but I always have to have something I write for me. One involves creatures from the deep, and the other involves creatures from deep underground...
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I'm very honored to have had Lia on the blog today, this is such a great interview and she's such a great personality I can't wait for more from her!

Check out more from the lovely Lia Habel on her website LiaHabel.com. Her Twitter: @liahabel and Facebook.

 Purchase the book from: 

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

|Review| Dearly, Departed by Lia Habel

Title: Dearly, Departed
Author: Lia Habel
Published: October 18th 2011 by Del Rey
Series: Gone With the Respiration #1
Rating: ♥♥♥♥
Dearly, Departed (Gone With the Respiration, #1)
Goodreads summary:
Love can never die.

Love conquers all, so they say. But can Cupid’s arrow pierce the hearts of the living and the dead—or rather, the undead? Can a proper young Victorian lady find true love in the arms of a dashing zombie?

The year is 2195. The place is New Victoria—a high-tech nation modeled on the manners, mores, and fashions of an antique era. A teenager in high society, Nora Dearly is far more interested in military history and her country’s political unrest than in tea parties and debutante balls. But after her beloved parents die, Nora is left at the mercy of her domineering aunt, a social-climbing spendthrift who has squandered the family fortune and now plans to marry her niece off for money. For Nora, no fate could be more horrible—until she’s nearly kidnapped by an army of walking corpses.

But fate is just getting started with Nora. Catapulted from her world of drawing-room civility, she’s suddenly gunning down ravenous zombies alongside mysterious black-clad commandos and confronting “The Laz,” a fatal virus that raises the dead—and hell along with them. Hardly ideal circumstances. Then Nora meets Bram Griswold, a young soldier who is brave, handsome, noble . . . and dead. But as is the case with the rest of his special undead unit, luck and modern science have enabled Bram to hold on to his mind, his manners, and his body parts. And when his bond of trust with Nora turns to tenderness, there’s no turning back. Eventually, they know, the disease will win, separating the star-crossed lovers forever. But until then, beating or not, their hearts will have what they desire.

In Dearly, Departed, romance meets walking-dead thriller, spawning a madly imaginative novel of rip-roaring adventure, spine-tingling suspense, and macabre comedy that forever redefines the concept of undying love.
Racquel's thoughts:
Question of the century: could a book set in NEW Victorian times, with GOOD and BAD zombies prove to be a great read? Yes, yes it sure does!

Lia Habel has an imagination that can rivals Spongebob's (that is a compliment FYI!) Her dystopian world is unlike anything I have ever seen/read about before and I knew just from the summary of the book that I would love this world! One thing about me, I feel very strongly about society/civilization/government, I believe that the dystopian worlds authors write about can actually happen any... minute. History proves that every great civilization has collapsed and what makes today's society immune? The idea of society advancing by regressing is not far from realistic, in a state of panic and depression anything is possible and the explanation of how this New Victorian society came to be is highly believable and I didn't question it once.

I also really loved this world. The etiquette, decorum and style of life is beyond fascinating and seeing it combined with advanced technology is a great mix. Onto the paranormal aspects of the book: ZOMBIES! It actually felt more sci-fi then paranormal to me because everything was backed up by science which again, I love because it made everything more believable for the reader.

One thing that bothers me much about paranormal books is if the MC stumbles into an unnatural world and doesn't question it or react properly, Nora (the MC) on the other hand did not magically accept the walking dead only after two paragraphs of finding out about them. She was genuinely shocked to the bone and again, despite the obvious unreal zombies, her reaction realistic! I also liked how Nora didn't immediately become a warrior. She was a girl who albeit knew more about combat and fighting then she should, but she was still raised with decorum drilled in her but upon learning about the zombies she didn't suddenly acquire superman hero skills to defend everyone. Nora knew what was too much for her and when she did, she left matters to the real fighters. Some people might see that as unheroic but I see it as a realistic portrayal of a girl who knows her limits.  I love this about Lia Habel's writing, no matter how crazy the world of Dearly, Departed is, she still made me believe it!

This also proves right with the relationship between Bram (the good undead zombie) and Nora. Oh Bram, Bram, Bram, do they sell zombies at Amazon because I want me a Bram!! I loved the pacing of the romance and I can kiss Habel for avoiding the wrecking mistakes of making the main character along with her guy of interest fall in love from the third chapter. I cannot explain the sweet feeling the blossoming this romance gave me, my heart was fluttering! Lia Habel, once again, well done!

Something I noticed that put a lot of people off is the 5 different 1st person narrating voices. I love alternating POV's especially when its between the love interests but I also did not mind the added 3 other POV's. They gave an added insight that otherwise could have been achieved and while I will admit that sometimes I did get confused on who's narrating, it wasn't a big deal to me.

Rating: 4 hearts~ Lia Habel has made a loyal fan out of me! Her dystopian world is one of a kind and I will eagerly and anxiously await more information on Dearly, Beloved the second novel to Lia Habel's fantastically amazing debut- this is a must read!
First:
 I was buried alive.
Favorite:
"Baldwin put your head on. You're scaring her!"
Teaser:
... I was up way past my bedtime, biologically speaking.
 Check out the UK cover of Dearly, Departed! While I just LOVE love the US cover (so beautiful!) this one is pretty damn awesome too! You can see a gray (bad zombie) in the back and Bram & Nora... SWOON! I love how Bram is wearing his 'sexy suit' ;D (read the book to find out!) and the 'Tall, Dark And... Dead?" at the top. So cool. This looks more like a movie posted though so I still think the US one is better cover for a book.