Dear
Ms. Smith,
Jon
Doe Zane (aka J.D.) wants to get a real life. He’s spent his first sixteen
years living in the shadows of an older brother who killed himself on the day
J.D. was born, leaving J.D.’s mother catatonically depressed, and his father…
well, if he knew where his father was, life would likely be very different.
When
a card arrives in the mail three days after Christmas, J.D. finally has a clue
as to where dear old Dad has been hiding. If J.D. can track him down, and if
his father is ready to come home, maybe J.D.’s dream of going off to college
and living outside of the shadows isn’t so entirely stupid after all.
Jason,
also sixteen, wants to end his life. He no longer fits into Happy Family Land;
not since last year when he met his rock idol, Kurt Cobain, at an airport--three
days before Cobain blew his own brains out with a shotgun. Now Jason can’t help
but wonder: what if he’d done something differently that day at the airport?
What if he hadn’t treated Cobain like a freak celebrity? What if he’d managed
the simple word ‘hello’? Would Cobain still be dead?
All
the what-if’s in the world won’t change the fact that Jason didn’t say
anything, and Cobain did die. And now Jason’s moods swing wildly between a
manic need to visit Cobain’s hometown one moment and a crushing desire to jump
off the nearest bridge the next.
Both
guys grab their closest “friends” and take to the road, each hoping to outrun
the long-term side effects of suicide. When their two worlds collide in the
middle, nothing turns out as expected.
Told
in alternating points of view, Potholes on the Road to Nirvana is a
dark, YA, road-trip comedy with rock & roll flare and an unexpected twist.
It is complete at 63,000 words, and I would love to send the full manuscript
for your consideration. Please find the first 250 words pasted below per the
contest entry guidelines.
Given
your interest in contemporary YA, I believe Potholes on the Road to Nirvana
could be a good fit for your list. I look forward to your response!
Sincerely,
N.M.
POTHOLES
ON THE ROAD TO NIRVANA
Mom
was awake, if you could call it that. The sun had barely broken over the
roof of our trailer, but from where I stood in the yard, I could see her
through the kitchen window gearing up for another busy day. She sat at the
table with her ratty nightgown on, her a** planted squarely in her usual chair.
She was breathing, not only in but also out. Yep. That was one packed schedule
she was working on for sure.
I
immediately closed my eyes and shook my head. I couldn’t allow this stupid
sarcasm to follow me into the house. It wouldn’t help. And besides, I’d sworn
to myself just this morning I was going to be a better person than that. If I’d
broken my promise already, I was even more hopeless than I thought.
I
climbed the steps to the porch, shifted the grocery sacks to one side, and then
fumbled with the lock.
“Mom,
I’m--” Before I could get the rest of the sentence out, the toe of my boot
caught on the loose threshold I’d been meaning to fix for ages. With all the
grace of a two-legged giraffe, I stumbled into the living room, slamming my
elbow hard against the wall in the process. Three boxes of mac and cheese
tumbled out of one of the overstuffed sacks, but I somehow managed to stay
upright without dropping the eggs or smashing the bread.
“--home,”
I finished with a manly whimper, kicking the door closed behind me.
Very interesting. A tempting read.
ReplyDeleteQuery: Wow--very intriguing concept. I felt it was well-written and to the point.
ReplyDelete250: I liked the voice. First para: I was confused how the boy could see his mom sitting at a table through the kitchen window if he was standing in his yard. Aren't trailer windows fairly small and pretty high? The breathing in and out sentence was a little awkward.
All in all, I got a good sense of the boy and his mom from this short snippet. :)
What an awesome premise! Is it considered contemporary if it takes place in the 90s? I was initially expecting present time until I read about Kurt Cobain. And why is "friends" in quotes. Maybe a little background about who they are taking--it has the potential to add more character conflict that way (IMHO).
ReplyDeleteYour sample definitely makes me want to keep reading! I truly adore road trip books, and this one is very unique.
Just popping in to say this was one of the few entries I remembered after I formatted them all. That could just be because my WIP also deals with suicide, but I suspect it has something to do with the fact that you have a FANTASTIC premise.
ReplyDeleteI'm not as familiar with Kurt Cobain, so I didn't realize that reference immediately dated your project until I read Susan's comment. I imagine every agent and editor will feel differently about where this fits genre-wise, but I'll let them worry about that:)
I thought the first page did a great job of setting the scene and introducing us to J.D. I related to his sarcasm but also to his desire to be a better person. In other words, I'm already rooting for him.
Good, good luck with this. I think this is a story a lot of YA readers would relate to.
Oh, one last thought: The query was really heavy, so I was surprised to see you describe it as a dark comedy. I'd either call it something else or give us a better sense of the dark humor earlier on.
This is a great way to introduce dual narrators. You’ve effectively described both of their personalities and both of their situations, juxtaposing them to illuminate similarities and differences. What I’d like to see is a little bit more of what happens when they collide. It sounds like that’s where the real story starts: can you give me just a hint of what happens in the plot? And why is “friends” in scare quotes?
ReplyDeleteI like the sample, too: I like that you twist that teenage sarcasm – overdone in YA, in my opinion – into something different. This is, on the whole, a very strong entry.