Lisa Paitz Spindler, Danger Gal

Jan 31

Danger Gal Friday: Elise Chase

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This week’s Danger Gal profile is on Elise Chase from Lara Adrian’s third book in the Breed series, MIDNIGHT AWAKENING.

Midnight Awakening, Lara AdrianI picked up the Breed series after Dear Author’s Jane reviewed it in November. Like Jane, I pretty much inhaled this story, reading all three books (about 900 pages total) in seven days. I loved all three of them, but I enjoyed MIDNIGHT AWAKENING the best. The heroines in each novel were strong, independent, and had their own gifts to offer in the quest against the Rogues. Alert: This article contains spoilers.

Briefly, Adrian’s vampires came to Earth from another planet eons ago, but their physiologies could not digest any plant or animal, and so for sustenance they turned to human blood. Threat of the Bloodlust madness is always present, however, and those who have given into it are feral vampires called Rogues. The Brotherhood is determined to eradicate the Rogue threat, even though the civilized vampire communities, called Darkhavens, regard them as vigilantes and have unsuccessfully tried rehabilitation. All of Adrian’s vampires are male, and while they can sustain themselves on any human blood, the blood of a Breedmate is special. Partaking of it creates a lifelong bond, and near immortality for the human lovers. It is only with Breedmates that vampires can procreate. (The consistency of the Breedmate birthmark makes me think that it must be due to either genetic manipulation or some so far unknown shared heritage. Maybe an explanation will show up in future books.)

Both Elise Chase and Tegan have been deeply hurt by death and loss. Unlike Tegan, who has masked his emotions with apathy, Elise turns to revenge. With “a dagger in her hand and vengeance on her mind,” Elise hunts Rogues in the Boston streets using her empathic abilities to track them. Without help, neither Elise or Tegan can continue as they have been, but together they awaken to a life both thought dead to them, and work together to fight the Rogue threat.

Elise defies feminine conventions in her own Darkhaven society as well as in the human one. For years she sat in mourning for her husband, existing in self-inflicted near seclusion from vampires and total seclusion from non-Breedmate humans. It is the death of her son that spurs Elise into action. The notion that only danger to her children will elicit violence from a woman is a bit cliché, but Adrian sets up Elise’s motivations so well that it works: It’s not her femininity that causes Elise to initially withdraw, it’s her Breedmate gift of empathy. If not for the pain she experiences from this gift, I think Elise would have been more engaged from the beginning in the hunt for her missing son, and if not for her gift she would not have felt so helpless. It’s this sense of helplessness that prompts Elise to take matters in the opposite extreme and become a vigilante herself.

Many people have compared Adrian’s vampire brotherhood to J.R. Ward’s, and there are similarities. One of these parallels is the notion of the vampire males being legally allowed to control the women in their lives with a forced seclusion, a kind of house arrest approved by their societies as inflicted for the females’ own protection. Several characters in both vampire worlds consider this option to be not only outdated, but offensive. Elise’s brother-in-law realizes that he legally can stop her from hunting by enforcing seclusion, but can’t bring himself to enact it. Tegan never thinks about it, but it would seem very out of character for him to even consider it. It’s really the only thing that squicks me out about both vampire worlds, and I’d love to see these secret societies abolish it. That does seem to be happening in the Ward vampire-verse with Marissa discovering her Feminist sensibilities, fighting her personal experience with it, and setting up the society’s first women’s shelter. In Adrian’s vampire-verse, the friction between the levels of civilization and ferity — as represented in degrees by the Darkhavens, the Brotherhood and the Rogues — could lead to a focus on this issue from the standpoint of personal freedom. Regardless, I have enjoyed both vampire series and the motif has the potential to add another dimension to these stories.

In closing, when Elise and Tegan meet, both are living austerely, barely existing as real people from one hunt to the next. It was a pleasure to watch these two people help each other put themselves back together again.

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Jan 30

My Thirteen Favorite TV Nerds (The Gals)

(#15)

Last week I listed my thirteen favorite guy nerds, mostly from TV. I promised this week I’d list my favorite gal nerds too. Two of these ladies have been profiled as Danger Gals (see links below). I tried to include a couple young adult characters. We need to look to the Geek Gal future, you know.

1. Willow Rosenberg, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Alyson Hannigan)
2. Col. Samantha Carter, Stagate: SG1 and Stargate: Atlantis (Amanda Tapping)
3. Hermione Granger, HARRY POTTER series by J.K. Rowling (Emma Watson, movie)
4. Diana Hughes, Jake 2.0 (Keegan Tracy)
5. Leslie, Big Bang Theory (Sara Gilbert)
6. Sam the Girl Hacker, Moonlight (Sleeping Beauty episode, Alice Greczyn)
7. Dr. Jeannie McKay, Stargate: Atlantis (Kate Hewlett)
8. Dr. Temperance Brennan, Bones (Emily Dechanel)
9. Liz Lemon, 30 Rock (Tina Fey)
10. Lisa Simpson, The Simpsons
11. Chloe O’Brian, 24 (Mary Lynn Rajskub)
12. Millicent Min, from MILLICENT MIN, GIRL GENIUS by Lisa Yee
13. Miranda Bloom, from GEEK HIGH by Piper Banks

Nerd Gals

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Jan 30

Ask An Agent, Today at Writers At Play

Published in Books, Romance | 0 comments

The special guest today over at my group blog, Writers At Play, is Christina Hogrebe of the Jane Rotrosen Agency. Hogrebe will be fielding questions on what she looks for before offering literary representation, what may or not be “hot”, or any other questions you may have. This is your chance to Ask An Agent, and as a special added bonus, Christina will be giving away a free copy of “WILL WRITE FOR SHOES: How To Write A Chick-Lit Novel” by Cathy Yardley to one special commenter.

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Jan 29

Take the Official GRIMSPACE Quiz

Published in Books | one comment

I mentioned in an earlier post how I want to read Ann Aguirre’s new novel GRIMSPACE.

GrimspaceAguirre has a fun online promo going on, which is a quiz to see what kind of character you would be in her book — and she’s offering prizes. Seriously, she’s offering a Grand Prize $100 gift card from Barnes and Noble and a First Runner Up $50 gift certificate from Amazon, among other prizes. Check out the rest of the prizes.

My results (my interstellar royalty status shouldn’t surprise anyone who really knows me. Yar!):

Your Result: Jumper
Grimspace navigator? Dude, you’re like interstellar royalty. You’re charismatic and possess a forceful personality. You’re used to having power and you don’t hesitate to use it. You also love to take risks. If it has danger attached, you’re first in line, and no, you’re not wearing a safety helmet. You live for the thrills, don’t care about life expectancy, and expect to go out with a bang.

KICK-BUTT CONTEST! Answer five questions, earn chances to win fabulous prizes.

The official GRIMSPACE quiz*



Ever wondered what job you’d hold down on a star ship?

Yes!

Uhm, no… *shifty look*

Banana Hammock!




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Jan 29

Weekly Roundup

Published in Weekly Roundup | 3 comments »

–The ALA has come out with its Romance Essentials list and its 2007 recommended reading list for several genres, including Science Fiction. I’d love to see their Science Fiction Essentials list if anyone has access to it. I haven’t been able to find it.

–Might the Dresden Files return to the SciFi Channel? One letter writer outlines why the stars are in just the right alignment.

Dear Author reviews GRIMSPACE by Ann Aguirre I’ve had this book on my wish list for a while, but it’s another month before its release. The premise sort of reminds me of a favorite of mine, Kay Kenyon’s SEEDS OF TIME.

Cthulhu vs. Cloverfield. (Is that like Alien vs. Predator?) You know He-Who-Shall-Not-Be-Named is gonna win (oh please, not Voldemort). Just accept it.

STARGATE’s Replicators among us? U.S. researchers are developing a shape-shifting robot that forms from a magnetic swarm.

Seasonal Affective Disorder Mood Ring Potential: Scientists at the University of Zurich in Switzerland have discovered that “the brain’s circadian clock causes a gene called Bmal1 to be more active in the body’s other cells during the daytime” and they infused firefly cells into human skin cells via a virus. The result? The skin cells glowed in a 24-hour cycle.

Radio GaGa: Radio-controlled sperm ‘tap’ turns off vasectomies. This is one remote control a man will never let anyone else use.

UPDATE: I forgot to mention that I inadvertently started a meme. Yes, I have web progeny now. The Vintage Reader was so inspired by my Thursday Thirteen geek post that she came up with her own list. And she’s not even a TTeener. I mention in the comments a few I neglected to list originally and to that I’d add Alton Brown. Oh AB, please forgive me for leaving you off the original list.

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Jan 28

Monday Music: Evanescence, Going Under

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Jan 25

Sithentology

Published in Movies | 0 comments

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Jan 24

My Thirteen Favorite TV Nerds (The Guys)

(#14)

Glam.com has put together their list of TV Nerds We’d Like to Date, so I decided to put my own list together of my favorite TV nerds (geeks, dorks etc.), just the guys. Next week I’ll cover who my favorite Girl Geeks are.

1. Dr. John Dorian, Scrubs (Zach Braff)
2. Sheldon, The Big Bang Theory (Jim Parsons)
3. Dr. Daniel Jackson, Stargate: SG-1 (Michael Shanks)
4. Dr. Meredith Rodney McKay, Stargate: Atlantis (David Hewlett)
5. Dr. Ross Gellar, Friends (David Schwimmer)
6. Xander Harris, Buffy the Vampire Slayer (Nicholas Brendon)
7. Fez, That 70s Show (Wilmer Valderrama)
8. Hiro Nakamura, Heroes (Masi Oka)
9. Beaker, The Muppets (Beaker)
10. Skippy Handelman, Family Ties (Marc Price)
11. Dr. Cooper Freedman, Private Practice (Paul Adelstein)
12. Chuck Bartowski, Chuck (Zachary Levi)
13. Marshall Eriksen, How I Met Your Mother (Jason Segal)

I Heart Nerds

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Jan 22

Weekly Roundup

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–WIRED’s Clive Thompson thinks that “Science fiction is the last great literature of ideas.” Maybe because the root of the genre is innovation? Or because Science Fiction uses technology to examine possible futures and analyze the present? Thompson also makes the point that “many of sci-fi’s most famous authors — like Robert Heinlein and Philip K. Dick — have positively deranged notions about the inner lives of women.” I’d love to know what he thinks about the SF/R spectrum at the cross-section of Science Fiction and Romance, where most of the writers are female. I’ve wondered if the popularity of the character-driven novel in the Romance genre influenced other genres. Science Fiction then transformed from a plot-based emphasis (the one guy in a rocket ship trying not to burn up on re-entry scenario) to a character-driven one, which opened the door for Romance elements to appear. Ta da! Now we have Science Fiction and Romance novels wrapped up in a Literary style of writing. “It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.”

Jezebel points out that women are making inroads into Hollywood as writers, but they’re still hitting that glass ceiling when it comes to directing: “…the Best Original Screenplay category was female-dominated, with 4 out of the 5 nominated films boasting women writers…”

–Show Me SciFi has a nice screencap up from Friday’s Stargate: Atlantis episode “Quarantine,” where Ronon and Dr. Keller nearly hook up. The writers have done a great job of juxtaposing Ronon’s extroverted personality with a grief that he holds close and private. I thought this mix of Science Fiction and Romance was handled better than the issue of Sheppard and Larrin in Travelers. What has really been interesting is how the writers have dealt with Teyla’s pregnancy in the last few episodes. They’ve dealt with her going on a temporary hiatus from missions, but at the same time showing how Teyla has become a more valuable member of the team since her pregnancy. Her Wraith powers have increased, she can control Wraith technology better than before. She hasn’t just become a walking incubator like some other SF characters I know.

–There will be no more episodes of Moonlight until the writers strike is over. SFScope gives its usual weighty review as does The Recapist. I loved the episode, but am left wondering if Lance is so creepy smelling because he’s an old vamp, why doesn’t Coraline have the same parfum if she’s his sibling? At least now we know how Coraline survived that fire. I also would have loved to have seen Mick play guitar hero at Logan’s apartment.

–What am I reading this week? BLOOD PRICE by Tanya Huff (which is the basis for the now defunct Blood Ties TV show) and SPIN CONTROL by Chris Moriarty.

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Jan 21

Monday Music: Cake, I Will Survive

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