Check out the tour for Teardown by William Campbell Powell. You'll want to keep reading for the interview and the prizes! What's up for grabs? William Campbell Powell will be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner. How cool is that? Want more chances to win? Then follow the tour. You can do that here: https://goddessfishpromotions.
TEARDOWN
William Campbell Powell
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Growing up in a dead-end, Thames Valley town like Marden Combe, Kai knows there’s no
escape without a lot of talent, hard work—and luck.
Two weeks before the Clayton Paul Blues Band plans to set out on tour to Germany, their
singer quits, and drummer Kai takes matters in hand. With bandmates Jake and Jamie, they
recruit a talented new singer—the enigmatic Dominique—as the new face of the band and set
out on the road to Berlin in a rickety white van.
Dogged by mishaps and under-rehearsed, the band stumbles through their first shows, zig-
zagging between chaos and brilliance. But as the first gig in Berlin draws near, the band begins
to gel. They’re clicking with their audience, and even the stone-hearted Kai starts to crumble
under the spell, first of Dom and then…of Lars.
As the end of the tour approaches, Kai must make hard choices. Dom? But she’s keeping a
dark secret. Lars? Not after the acrimony of their last parting. The band? Or will that dream
crumble too?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now for the Interview:
1. Describe yourself in three words.
I’m going to take ‘Writer’ as a given. I’m still going to cheat…
Musician, bookish, INTJ
2. Cast your book. Tell us who would play the main characters in a movie and why.
Kai. I first pictured Kai as physically similar to the model Milou van Groesen. On the basis of his
performance in ‘The Danish Girl’ (2015), I’d have to pick Eddie Redmayne. But I was watching a
recent gig by Texas, and when I saw their drummer – Cat Myers – I instantly thought “that’s Kai”.
Dom. I struggled finding a Dom from the film world, though I did find a great photo on
Shutterstock (attached). She doesn’t reveal much of herself, emotionally, though she has a gift for
getting others to talk. As Dom is Belgian, I looked for Francophone actors and recent films, and
chose Anaïs Demoustier (The Count of Monte-Cristo, 2024). But for Dom’s voice, I’d have to
send you to the late, incomparable Eva Cassidy, taken from the world far too soon.
Lars. Lars is the ‘boy next door’, described as having a slightly chubby waist, curly hair, Kai
seems to have a bit of a thing about his backside which ‘deserved to be captured in marble’. He’s
also a dancer, a jiver, so sure-footed and agile. And it’s just come to me – Sean Astin, aka Sam
Gamgee in the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
For the rest of the band, I’ll redirect you to my realisation of the band as Lego figures.
3. What’s your favorite love scene from a movie?
I’m a softie at heart and I like love scenes that are full of emotion. The physicalities, not so much.
So I’d pick Westley’s parting from Buttercup in the Princess Bride (1987), if I hadn’t just
remembered the final scene between Demi Moore and Patrick Swayze in Ghost (1990). It makes
me well up just thinking about it.
4. What’s your wildest fantasy?
(I’m going to let Kai answer this one, in conversation with Dom.)
“Yes,” I whispered. “Yes, we do. But I wish…”
“What? That we could have just one ordinary gig? Where everything goes to plan?”
She knows my heart.
“Yes. That is what I wish.”
“I promise you; it will not come true. Or if it does, you will not like it. Life is change. This tour—it is
new every night. It is exciting. It makes me feel alive.”
5. If you were to lose one of your senses, which would you rather lose and why?
It has to be a process of elimination – what do I definitely want to keep?
Well, I’m a singer and a music lover, and so I must keep my hearing. That’s notwithstanding the
experience of Evelyn Glennie, a Scottish percussionist who is profoundly deaf.
Sight? Not to see the faces of those I love? Nor the beauty of the world. That would be hard.
Taste? I had a good colleague at work who lost his sense of taste because of COVID. It made me
think about how dull eating would become without taste or, indeed, smell.
Yet, to lose the sense of touch? Never to feel the comforting touch of another human being? How
impossibly lonely that would be. (And never mind that I wouldn’t be able to play guitar…)
So I guess it’s taste that has to go. Goodbye coriander. Farewell Jura single malt whisky.
6. What is the naughtiest thing you did as a kid?
Measured by my own regret, it’s probably getting into a fight with my best friend, Paul Clayton,
when we were both aged 10 or 11. I remember storming off after the fight. I never got a chance to
make up with him – he was killed in a traffic accident a couple of weeks later. And yes, Clayton
Paul in the book is my little In Memoriam of Paul.
Hmm. That was a bit serious and sombre. I hope there’s something a bit lighter coming up…
(peeks at the next questions)
Ah. Some questions for Kai, I think.
Quickies:
Boxers or Briefs?
“I stripped off my dry clothes and pulled on my muddy wet pants and T-shirt.” Best I can do.
Top or Bottom?
“The physicalities simply define how to express desire. Or love. Or both. But not where that
feeling might be bestowed, that is, on whom or when.” (See also Hairy chests…)
Pajamas or nude?
“So I put my own pyjamas on and climbed in next to [redacted]”
Hairy chests or smooth?
“The truth was, I didn’t know how to handle my feelings for either of them. It wasn’t so simple as
preferring girls or not. I could as easily summon up a memory, a vision of Dom, equally nude and
equally beautiful. Equally sexually attractive.” (See also Top or Bottom.)
Alpha or Beta?
“First, he said, ‘Don’t let them put you in one of their boxes’. Then, he said, ‘If you don’t like the
boxes on offer, make one that’s just right for yourself’.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Now for An Excerpt:
The bus stank of commuters. It wasn’t like a night bus, granted, but the mix of sweat and cheap
scent—and the pungency of diesel—was another reminder of how much I hated Marden
Combe.
A Thames Valley town like every other Thames Valley town, Marden Combe had a posh, blingy
bit, where the bankers, footballers, and celebrity chefs lived. The rest ran the spectrum from
dilapidated through demolished to barely affordable modern rabbit hutches. The old town centre
was closing down, and the new shopping centre was gridlock hell.
The bus lurched and swung left, past a school named for a long-dead parliamentarian. Or
possibly a royalist. I ought to know; it had been my old school till I’d turned sixteen. But it had all
seemed irrelevant to the more immediate problem of not getting picked on for being different.
There were a dozen ways and more to be different, whether it was for being too ugly, too geeky,
too slow on the uptake, too shy, too dark, not dark enough, having a funny accent, or a fundy
religion, or being neurodivergent, being too posh, being too poor, liking the wrong music, or
football team, or playing oddball sports, or using last year’s tech; not liking girls, not liking boys,
not liking either, liking both. Plus others, plus combinations. By more than one marker, I was
weird, and I hadn’t always kept my head down. But there’d definitely been no bullying at Sir
Long-Dead-Parliamentarian School. Or Royalist, as the case may be. Oh no.
That didn’t come close to summing up the suffocating, hope-crushing, soul-sucking, shit-brown
hole that is Marden Combe. I needed to escape.
If I had a plan, it was that music would save me…
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author:
William lives in a small Buckinghamshire village in England. By night he writes speculative,
historical, crime and other fiction. His debut novel, EXPIRATION DAY, was published by Tor
Teen in 2014 and won the 2015 Hal Clement Award for better than half-decent science in a YA
novel—the citation actually says "Excellence in Children's Science Fiction Literature".
William’s latest novel - TEARDOWN - was published 10th December 2024, by NineStar Press in
the US; it is an LGBT+ romance/road-trip.
His short fiction has appeared in DreamForge, Metastellar, Abyss & Apex and other outlets.
By day he writes software for a living and in the twilight he sings tenor, plays guitar and writes
songs.
My websites: https://williamcampbellpowell.com/
https://teardownbook.co.uk/
Buy Links: https://teardownbook.co.uk/#where The book will be on sale for $0.99
Social Media:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WillCamPowell/
Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/willcampowell
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/willcampowell.bsky.social
One USP: The book is about a band and contains original songs, for which I have created
demos – see/listen: https://williamcampbellpowell.com/music/music.html
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3 comments:
Hi, and thank you for hosting today's TEARDOWN blog tour. I'm eager to see any comments and reactions here.
Thank you for featuring TEARDOWN and William Campbell Powell today.
What is your favorite space to do your writing?
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