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Dead Run
Sam wants to win, no matter what it takes. Bicycle racing is his sport and he has a gift for it-but his attitude keeps getting in the way. After his teammates give up on him, Sam is offered a fresh opportunity. Viktor, an aging Olympic racer, will coach him and maybe give him what he needs to be a winner. But there's a catch: Sam has to work as a bike courier at Viktor's company. The work is dangerous and intense, fighting traffic in the inner city to make deliveries at breakneck speeds. Then Sam is assigned by Viktor to the mysterious dead run, delivering untraceable packages for an unknown client. Soon Sam is racing away from the law--and risks losing everything.
Where did the idea for Dead Run come from?
First, a quick synopsis of the book in case you havenāt read it. Sam, the hero, is a young man who believes he can be a champion bike racer. He has a ton of raw talent, and he has motivation: his home life is pretty crappy and racing offers a way out for him. But Sam is also arrogant and pretty self-centered. The book begins when Samās teammates dump him because of this bad attitude. So Sam goes in search of a new coach. He finds Viktor, an aging ex-Olympic champion who now owns a bike courier company. They make deal. Viktor will train Sam and in return Sam will deliver packages for Viktor. Special packages, on a ādead runā. Thereās no paper trail, no signature. These deliveries are completely off the radar. The thing is, it becomes increasingly clear to Sam that what heās delivering isnāt legal. Then things spiral out of control.
So where did the idea for this book come from? It wasnāt a flash of inspiration out of blue. Instead, it came out of some pretty wildly different ingredients
The starting point was my own experience. I think young adult authors often strip-mine their own adolescence for their books. And it provides a really rich vein. Teenagers feel these titanic ā often conflicting - emotions that are compressed and heightened as they grow up.
I knew from the outset that I wanted to play with a particular set of conflicting emotions that many teens experience: the urge to leave the safety of your family behind, to get away and fly free. At the same, the opposite urge to stay where itās safe and comfortable. As a teenager, youāre smart enough to know that the world is terrifying place, but you also want to get out there and explore despite the risks.
Like Sam, as a teenager I saw the freedom that cycling could bring. Like Sam, I wanted to get out of my small part of the world and see what was out there. And thatās where the real core of the book comes from.
That alone isnāt enough, of course. What I needed next was an interesting setting. I like writing about sub-cultures, ones that exist all around us but often hidden from our daily lives. About this time, I was commuting on the bus to work and I stumbled on a magazine article about bike couriers. I realized that the world of bike couriers was perfect for my story. There were all sorts of cool details that made it fun to write about them. At the same time, I read a book about the war in Yugoslavia and the subsequent rise of Eastern European mafia ā fascinating, terrifying stuff. That gave me my bad guys and my conflicted anti-hero, Viktor the coach. His character was also influenced by the story of a bicycle thief in Toronto named Kenk. Thereās an excellent graphic novel about him, telling his story in comic book form. Ā Ā Ā
At this point, I had a lead character with some emotional motivation. And I had a setting: bike couriers, with a dash of Serbian criminals for good measure. Now I needed some plot. And that came from a bunch of movies from my childhood.
For some reason, around this time I had been thinking a lot about old 1970s thrillers. Movies that I had first watched with dad as a teenager. Three Days of the Condor. The French Connection. Diva. I loved the way these films created a sense of āthe chase.ā Paranoia. Being on the run. Not having anyone to turn to. I started to build a plot with that feeling in mind. These movies also gave, I hope, a cinematic feel to the book, especially with the chase sequences. I tried to capture the momentum and energy of the movies in my writing.
Watch this scene, from Diva, to see what I was going for. I actually wrote a similar sequence where Sam rides down into the subway, then had to cut it because the book was getting too long. While you're at it, watch this explanation of the big chase sequence in the French Connection. Seriously, they don't make movies like that anymore. In fact, they can't. It's illegal.
By the way, I tucked a few references to the movies in Dead Run. Thereās a scene with a baby carriage that I kind of borrowed from the French Connection. And the destination for Samās dead run is the office of āFive Continents Importsā - which is also the address of Robert Redfordās spy agency in Three Days of the Condor. Ā
So where did the idea for Dead Run came from? As you can tell, it definitely was not a neat, tidy little package that popped into my head. For me, writing is more like cookingĀ ā and not following a recipe. Instead, you use what you find, adapt as you go along. Throwing in a little of whatās in the cupboard, a dash of this and that on the fly.Ā My own experiences, magazine articles, comic books, old movies ā it all combined to create one single book that, I hope, entertains and thrills the reader.
āFeatures short, punchy sentences, brisk character development, and a touch of romance. The emphasis is on the thrill of bicycle racing and being a courier. Readers, particularly those who enjoy action novels, will like the fast pace and vivid descriptions, including scenes of Sam dodging perilous traffic.ā ā Booklist - November 1, 2012 A good, fast-paced introduction to two worlds (bicycle racing and bike couriers) that are rarely explored in fiction. ā CM Magazine - October 17, 2012 The trip through this fast and furious 120-page book keeps you on the edge of your seat, always wondering what's around the next corner... This book has definite appeal for male readers, especially if they are into cycling. An excellent selection for a public or school library collection. Highly Recommended: 4 out of 4 stars ā The Deakin Review of Children's Literature (Vol 3, No 2, 2012)