Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Blog Tour: TEARDOWN by William Campbell Powell

 

TEARDOWN

William Campbell Powell

 

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GENRE
:  

LGBT+ Romance

 

 

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BLURB:

 

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?

 

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Excerpt Two:

 

 

So I pulled the mic stand around to the side of the kit, set it up so it didn’t get in the way of the hi-hat, and we gave it a go. I picked ‘I Come from the Blues’, which was one of Clay’s compositions. It had fallen out of the set sometime in the last six months, but I loved Clay’s soft, jazzy butterscotch vocals on it. If it had been up to me, it would still be in the set, but Clay had said he wanted to move on.

 

Where did I come from? I come from the blues.

Where am I going? I’m going to lose.

Where is my future? I’m sure I have none.

Where is my hope? My hope is all gone.

 

I’ve always sung along—off-mic and under my breath—so I didn’t have any trouble fitting the words in the right places. And I’ve got decent pitch and rhythm. So I think I did all right.

 

Now, Jamie wouldn’t meet my eye.

 

“What?” I demanded. “What was wrong with that?”

 

He mumbled something.

 

“I can’t hear you, bro. What did he say, Jake?”

 

Jake looked away. He didn’t want to get involved in any squall between me and my brother. Besides, he’d used up all his words for the day.

 

“I’m not sure how to put this, Kai. You’ve got a good voice. It’s, well…not very, well, rock’n’roll. No…grit. Too pure. Sorry.”

 

“I see.”

 

“Look, we’ll ask around our friends. Social media. There’s got to be something online.”

 

I didn’t say anything. I was thinking lots though. About how I’d discovered that this was something I really wanted to do.

 

 

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 Topic: What was your writing routine like when writing this book?

 

Teardown wasn’t a quick book to write. I got the idea for the book around June 2014, a couple of months after my debut novel – Expiration Day – got published. But that’s all it was – an idea. A couple of lines in my “Ideas Bucket”. Writing-wise I was busy promoting Expiration Day, then suddenly work went sour and I was spat out in a mass redundancy in April 2015. I can see the first couple of pages were written in early May 2015.

 

I have a rule when writing a new novel. If I can get to 8,000 words, then it’s OK to continue, If I lose the will, or can’t find the inspiration to get that far, then the idea goes in the trunk. In that phase, there’s no routine – I just write when I have the inspiration.

 

I reached that magic 8,000 words about 3 months later. I also had a new job, so the routine shifted to ‘After midnight’ (when all the family were in bed), finishing around 2am or when I’d written 1,000 words, whichever happened first. Uh, research (by which I mean googling the etiquette of German saunas, or finding videos of how to make an origami swan) also counts.

 

I think this was also the novel where I switched to Scrivener and stopped using Microsoft Word. It was a decision I’ve never regretted, and it’s made a huge difference to keeping a writing project coherent. The immediate benefit was that whenever I wrote something about a character – like their age, height, hair eyes (but also their mannerisms, motivations) – it could all go into a character profile, and I wouldn’t inadvertently write something conflicting. And all the research can be kept together in a project folder.

 

Then there was a hiatus of about a year, because I was writing a sequel to Expiration Day, and then rewriting a fantasy novel that had got some agent interest. Neither got accepted. (The Expiration Day sequel was probably the right outcome, but I still have hopes for the fantasy novel.) Along the way I was also writing and submitting short stories, and I got my first short story sale around that time. So up to mid-2016 I was mostly working on other projects. It took a whole year to get Teardown to first full draft (to mid-2017) and a year of editing (in collaboration with professional editors) to get to something that was – I hoped – submission ready in mid-2018.

 

That’s become the pattern of my writing life – there’s always a current project on the go, but interleaved with that there are older projects being revised, others out on submission or out with an editor. Everything competing for that two hour window of time.

 

And then at the start of 2024 Teardown found its home with NineStar Press. But that didn’t mean the writing was done – I went through another 2 or 3 intense 2-week rounds of editing with Elizabetta at NineStar, filling plot holes and polishing. Hard work – evenings and weekends solid editing – but also a joy, because Elizabetta has such a flair for inspiring creativity.

 

I’ve left one of the more unusual aspects of writing Teardown to last, which was the songwriting. Having been a musician from an early age, it was both natural and necessary (for copyright reasons) for me to write original songs for Teardown. Lyrics and music were both required. The songs themselves need to be stories in miniature, with a theme and a progression. Sometimes the tune wouldn’t come right away, but as snippets came, I’d hum or sing them into my phone. It was an opportunity to push my songwriting skills as much as my writing skills, to experiment with more adventurous chord progressions, getting a little jazzy at times.

 

When I thought I had matching words and music, I’d then capture the whole thing with just guitar and vocal on a digital recorder (better sound quality than my phone). Towards the later stages of the NineStar edit process, I started to create fuller demos of each of the songs, using multi-track recording software. Those demos are up at https://bit.ly/TeardownMusic for readers to listen to.

 

I was songwriting pretty much up to the wire – Elizabetta and I were working on tightening-up one of the central questions – why Dom joined Kai’s band. Writing a new song and weaving that into the narrative was one of the last significant edits I undertook.

 

And then it was done.

 

Thank you for following through to this point – I hope you found it interesting (and not too technical).

 



AUTHOR Bio and Links:

 

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

 

 

My comps for the book:

 

The novel combines elements of LGBTQIA+ romance with Road Trip fiction, and - with its focus on music - might sit alongside Taylor Jenkins Reid’s ‘Daisy Jones and the Six’ (2016) or Dawnie Walton’s ‘The Final Revival of Opal & Nev’ (2022), or - with its focus on (Kai's) gender-ambiguity and relationships - near Camille Perry’s ‘When Katie Met Cassidy’ (2018) or Beth O’Leary’s ‘The Road Trip’ (2022).

 

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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GIVEAWAY 

William Campbell Powellwill be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner.


11 comments:

  1. Good morning! Thank you for hosting TEARDOWN's virtual book tour today. I'm looking forward to seeing what questions and reactions come up.

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  2. Thank you so much for featuring TEARDOWN today - it's appreciated.

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  3. This is the perfect gift for a friend of mine...

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  4. I like the cover!

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    1. Me too! The artist was Jaycee DeLorenzo, who is on the team at NineStar. A small but striking palette of colours, and some subtle details. Thank you, Jaycee!!

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  5. The book sounds like a fun read. Thanks!

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  6. Question for Author--What inspired you to become a writer?

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    1. What an unusual question - or at least, it's one that I haven't been asked before. I had to look back to see which was the first book I wrote, which was a retelling of the early life of the biblical King David, which I started back in 1999. I had an interest in military history, and the great generals like Hannibal and Alexander the Great. I'd just read Mary Renault's Alexander Trilogy (Fire From Heaven, The Persian Boy and Funeral Games), and I was looking for something similar for King David. I wanted to go beyond the two stories that everyone knows - his defeat of Goliath and his adultery with Bathsheba. But there was nothing out there that I could find, so I determined to write that story. I finished it - it came to two volumes - but it was never published. Probably that's for the best - when I look back on it now, it's very stilted and awkward. Nevertheless, I was hooked on writing from that time.

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  7. I liked what I read in the excerpt.

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