I'll start. I wrote the pregnant couple, Adam and Stacie Murray, some of Moorecook, Shanna, and all of Oasis. Because Joe and I kind of jumpstarted this thing, I also wrote some of the other characters leading up to all hell breaking loose in the emergency room, and also the opening chapter.
JOE: Yeah, Blake and I came up with the setting, the premise, and the dracula rules and mythos. Then we wrote the first few thousand words, setting it all up, after asking Paul and Jeff what kind of characters they were interested in writing.
After that, I took Jenny as a main character, and then popped into various baddies, including Lanz and Moorecook and Benny.
JEFF: I wrote the point-of-view scenes with Randall the lumberjack (which notably does NOT include the scene where he gets a boner) and the point-of-view scenes with Benny the Clown.
PAUL: I gravitated immediately to the "gun-nut cop." I have a bunch of participants in the repairmanjack.com forum who are into guns--really into guns--and I've learned a lot from them. They're not nuts -- they're enthusiasts and aficionados. Some are gunsmiths. If you've ever held a fine firearm, you might understand and appreciate where these folks are coming from. I came up with the name Clayton Theel and he began to write himself.
BLAKE: Let's talk about how we actually wrote this book.
JOE: It was actually pretty easy. We used a program called DROPBOX which allowed everyone to read each others' sections instantly. The structure was a snap to fit together.
This thing was so simple to write, it's almost laughable. I don't think we had a single disagreement on anything. Everyone was a total professional, turning in great scenes that needed minimal editing.
It was also a lot of fun. There aren't too many balls-to-the-wall monster books being done anymore, so this was a welcome change of pace.
JEFF: Well...there were some disagreements! But never anything heated, and none that weren't resolved quickly, and none that ever involved anybody saying "Dude, you're writing crap! Crap!!!"
JOE: I disagree that there were disagreements. Also, you're writing crap.
JEFF: I forgive you. See how quickly that was resolved?
PAUL: If only all novels were this easy to write. I was fascinated to watch a dynamic of one-upsmanship develop. He's going that far? Hmmm...I could push it a little further. That's how some of the over-the-top scenes developed. For instance, Blake nudged me with the kangaroo mother on the OB floor (you'll know who I mean when you get there) and a situation where Adam was about to be chomped on by Oasis, the little-girl dracula. He'd left it up to me to save him. I couldn't resist ratcheting it up a notch.
BLAKE: Did you guys approach the writing of DRACULAS any differently from the writing of your solo work? For me, because of how fast and spontaneous we wrote, I found that very liberating and would say I didn't approach the writing with such an anal, meticulous eye. I wrote faster, and I don't normally write so fast, so that was interesting to push myself in a way I don't normally.
JOE: I finished my scenes first. My secret was picking the character with the least amount to do, then sending constant emails telling you guys to expand your story arcs.
But seriously, this was one of the quickest, easiest projects I've ever worked on. It came together fast, and was never complicated, difficult, or a chore. I enjoyed writing it, and reading what you guys did as you turned stuff in. It was also ridiculously simple to put all the sections together.
JEFF: I didn't approach the actual writing style any differently than I would in a solo novel, because we all had our own point-of-view characters, so I didn't have to worry about making it sound like something that Joe Konrath/Blake Crouch/F. Paul Wilson would have written. I only had to keep a consistent narrative voice for my characters.
Obviously, there are differences in the process in a collaborative work simply because it's considered unprofessional to scream "No! We're gonna do it my way! My way! My way! Mine! Mine! Mine!" And there were things that I wouldn't have done if I'd had 100% control that ended up working out really well.
JOE: The funny thing is, though, it is extremely difficult for the reader to figure out who wrote what section. The book is pretty seamless. The characters each are unique, but all of our writing wound up being very similar in execution. I don't spot any particular moments where our fans could say, "Oh, FPW must have written that" or "That's 100% Blake Crouch." Each of our parts really contributed to a solid whole.
PAUL: I never let people read my first-drafts, but I felt at home with you guys so I just dumped my pages into Dropbox as they were done. (I went back and tweaked them later.) The idea was to maintain momentum and let everyone else see where you were taking things. We had no outline, just worked from a vague timeline. Mostly we wrote in sequence, but I jumped ahead a couple of times because a scene would pop fully formed into my head. We seemed to develop a sort of hive mind along the way where we kind of knew what everyone else was doing. The only time we needed an outline (and it wasn't much) was the roof scene when all the characters were interacting.
BLAKE: Why release DRACULAS straight to Kindle?
JOE: A few reasons. First is one of publishers and rights. Having four authors collaborate on a book would be a nightmare to sell, because we all have print publishers who might want exclusives. Keeping it indie meant we weren't bound by any preexisting contracts.
Second was speed. Self-publishing on Kindle allowed us to get this up in time for Halloween, whereas regular print would take a year to eighteen months.
Finally, we're all selling well on Kindle, and it made sense to appeal directly to our fan bases.
BLAKE: Next up for me is finalizing a new book I've just finished. My first two novels, DESERT PLACES and LOCKED DOORS also just went up on Kindle for a reasonable $2.99, so I'm jazzed about that. "Serial," which I wrote with Joe, is in the upcoming Shivers VI anthology, and I have a novella called "The Pain of Others" coming soon to Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine.
JOE: I've got two sci-fi ecopunk novels in the TIMECASTER series coming out in 2011 with Ace Berkley, and a few other super secret projects in the works. I'm writing the eighth Jack Daniels novel, called STIRRED, with Blake, which will also be the third in his Andrew Z. Thomas books (DESERT PLACES, LOCKED DOORS.) It's a wrap-up to both of our series.
BLAKE: So we're breaking that news here? Cool. I'm super-psyched to do STIRRED with Joe. The opportunity to work on a full-length novel with him and bring back a set of characters I've really been missing from my first two novels is a project I can't wait to dive into.
JEFF: Next up for me is WOLF HUNT, which does for werewolves what DRACULAS did for vampires, except that I finished WOLF HUNT several months before DRACULAS, so actually it's DRACULAS that does for vampires what WOLF HUNT did for werewolves. WOLF HUNT is funnier, though. My novella KUTTER, which is the heartwarming story (seriously!) about a sadistic serial killer whose life changes when he rescues a Boston Terrier (no, really, I'm serious about the heartwarming part), is going to be part of a two-novella collection called THE MAD & THE MACABRE, which also includes REMAINS by Michael McBride. And I'm working on other stuff.
PAUL: FATAL ERROR, the penultimate Repairman Jack novel, hit the street mid-October. Just finished a draft of THE DARK AT THE END, the (sort of) last Repairman Jack novel. I say "sort of" because the whole series ends with NIGHTWORLD which will come in 2012. Jack is a player in that novel, but the cast is an ensemble from across the Secret History.