skip to main |
skip to sidebar
FIGHT CARD WRITER’S CORNER: TERRANCE
MCCAULEY!
UPCOMING FIGHT CARD
AUTHOR TERRENCE MCCAULEY (FIGHT CARD: AGAINST THE ROPES FEBRUARY 2013) HAS A
COOL GUEST BLOG POST TODAY OVER AT ELIZABETH A. WHITE’S BOOK REVIEW BLOG ...
Today Terrence McCauley is here to reflect on the
difference between tenacity and obstinacy in the life of a writer, and how
which one chooses to embrace makes all the difference in the world. It
certainly did for him, as his first novel, the Depression-era gangster yarn Prohibition, was published to great reviews just
last month.
TO READ THE ARTICLE
CLICK HERE
FIGHT CARD: RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE
FIGHT CARD AUTHOR DAVID FOSTER
GIVES US THE LOWDOWN ON FIGHT CARD’S JANUARY 2013 RELEASE, FIGHT CARD RUMBLE IN
THE JUNGLE ...
The Fight Card
books are a blast to write, so when I finished up my first entry in the series,
King of the Outback, I immediately
knew I wanted to write another. However, I thought I had gone as far as I could
with the characters in that story. That is to say, I couldn't write a direct
sequel. So, I had to look for a new tale to tell.
My first thoughts drifted toward a
tale set in the seedy American underworld. But other writers in the Fight Card series – such as Eric Beetner
and Heath Lowrance – had already written fantastic books showcasing boxing,
intermingled with the American underworld. I knew I couldn't walk down that
path, or if I did, all I would be doing was writing a limp pastiche of what had
gone before.
So, to move forward, I knew I had to look for other
ideas and settings. The first flash of inspiration came on the train to work. I
happened to be listening to an audio book of Ian Fleming's Moonraker, and a
passage described how James Bond looked to casual observers. Here's the passage.
And what could
the casual observer think of him, 'Commander James Bond, CMG, RNVSR', also
'something at the Ministry of Defence', the rather saturnine young man in his
middle thirties sitting opposite the Admiral? Something a bit cold and
dangerous in that face. Looks pretty fit. May have been attached to Templer in
Malaya. Or Nairobi. Mau Mau work. Tough looking customer. Doesn't look the sort
of chap one usually sees in Blades. – Moonraker,
Ian Fleming (1956) – Page 28 of the Pan paperback (24th printing, 1969)
Mau Mau work.
The idea of setting the story during the Mau Mau rebellion in Kenya peaked my
interest. It suited the time frame perfectly, as the Fight Card books are almost all set in the 1950s. And on the
surface, the Mau Mau seemed like a ready-made villain. I thought it would be
great to drop a boxer, smack dab into the middle of that conflict.
However, the conflict was far too complex and
multi-faceted to provide an entertaining framework to build a story around. At
least, without spending many thousands of words on lengthy explanations of the
conflict – certainly not suitable for a 25,000 word novelette. Also, history
has changed the perception of the Mau Mau conflict greatly. What was once
considered a violent rebellion is now considered a turning point to Kenyan
democratic freedom. So unlike in Fleming's time, the Mau Mau are now the good
guys.
Instead, I created the fictitious country of Sezanda,
and the villains are not so much the Sezanda Socialist Army (standing in for
the Mau Mau), but a group of neo-Nazis who are behind a similar style of
rebellion.
I was sad to see the Mau Mau go, but if I continued
with the style of story I wanted to write, I would have appeared as a
blinkered, ignorant, racist – which was certainly not my intention. I simply
wanted a conflict as background, to drop my protagonists into. But that's the
thing with any conflict I guess, there is always two sides.
So, I had a setting. Now I needed a hero.
In King of the Outback, Tommy King is a ready-made hero. Right from
the get-go, he has the tools (his fists) and attitude to fight for what's
right. In some ways he is a superman,
albeit one who bleeds – a lot! This time I wanted the main protagonist to be
somewhat more of a reluctant hero.
As it happened, I was watching an old Chuck Norris
film, A Force of One (please don't
hold that against me). What struck me, was how much more enjoyable it was than
many of Chuck's later offerings, in which he would play pretty much a superman. In A Force of One, Chuck, despite his formidable skills, refuses to be
drawn into the local police's attempts to track down a karate killer. Chuck
does not want to get involved. But of course, after the bad guys mess with
Chuck's family (bad move), he does become involved, and when that happens there
is a palpable frisson. It is a Hell Yeah!
moment. We know Chuck didn't start the fight, but he is damn well going to
finish it.
In Rumble in the
Jungle, I wanted to use a similar style protagonist. A man who does not
want to fight, but has no other option. In the story, that man is Brendan
O'Toole, a man who has lost everything and wants to be left alone. But as civil
war breaks out in Africa, O'Toole is left with very little choice but to fight.
I am proud of Rumble
in the Jungle. I think it serves up the kind of characters and pugilistic
action fans of the Fight Card series
have come to expect. It contains more action than two full length novels, and
hits harder than a Mack truck. But it also brings something new to the series.
It is a story of love, loss, redemption and ultimately standing up to tyranny
and oppression. I hope you enjoy it.
FIGHT CARD: RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE
Hell’s Kitchen, 1953
Brendan O’Toole is on a downward slide. When his wife
dies in a freak car accident, he quits his job and hits the bottle hard. Half
tanked in the ring, he allows himself to be knocked out, ending his boxing
career.
O’Toole, hits rock bottom. After a night of boozing, he
is brutally mugged and left for dead. But O’Toole has friends, even if he can’t
see it. One of them is Danny Reilly, a barman with a heart of gold. He arranges
for O’Toole to join a construction crew set to work on a hotel being built in
the Central African jungle nation of Sezanda. It’s O’Toole’s last shot at
redemption.
Sezanda, Central Africa, 1954
As things begin to look up for O’Toole, the Sezandan
government is overthrown in a military coup. All foreigners are taken prisoner
and locked in concentration camps. O’Toole is sent to the worst, Hell Camp XXI,
under the control of a brutal ex-Nazi, Kommandant Krieger. Krieger has a
special way of keeping his prisoners under control. In the camp, he has erected
a boxing ring. And anyone who steps out of line is forced to face off against
his man-mountain, wrecking machine, Crator – a man whose sole purpose is to
inflict pain.
Fate has destined Brendan O’Toole to don the gloves one
more time, in a fight not just for his life, but his very soul.
AVAILABLE NOW! FIGHT CARD: RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE!
RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE
Hell’s Kitchen, 1953
Brendan O’Toole is on a downward slide. When his wife dies in a freak car accident, he quits his job and hits the bottle hard. Half tanked in the ring, he allows himself to be knocked out, ending his boxing career.
O’Toole, hits rock bottom. After a night of boozing, he is brutally mugged and left for dead. But O’Toole has friends, even if he can’t see it.
One of them is Danny Reilly, a barman with a heart of gold. He arranges for O’Toole to join a construction crew set to work on a hotel being built in the Central African jungle nation of Sezanda. It’s O’Toole’s last shot at redemption.
Sezanda, Central Africa, 1954
As things begin to look up for O’Toole, the Sezandan government is overthrown in a military coup. All foreigners are taken prisoner and locked in concentration camps. O’Toole is sent to the worst, HELL CAMP XXI, under the control of a brutal ex-Nazi, Kommandant Krieger. Krieger has a special way of keeping his prisoners under control. In the camp, he has erected a boxing ring. And anyone who steps out of line is forced to face off against his man-mountain, wrecking machine, Crator – a man whose sole purpose is to inflict pain.
Fate has destined Brendan O’Toole to don the gloves one more time, in a fight not just for his life, but his very soul.
FIGHT FICTION: LEATHER LARCENY!
A LITTLE FIGHT FICTION FROM PERIL PRESS ... FROM FIGHT STORIES, SPRING 1946 ... LEATHER LARCENY ... BY STAN HOUGH (POSSIBLY A PEN NAME FOR BILL HEUMAN)
Only two warriors with a deep hate could have staged this fracas.
Double-cross fathered the bout. Grudge fanned it to hell’s heat. And nothing but deep, gnawing hate sparked the feud-weary contestants to such red-leather heights.