The apocryphal soundtracks to some of my books


It’s no secret that music is a big part of many of my novels, from inspiring the titles to influencing the plots to being part of the story itself. I’m not alone in this, I’m sure. Recently my friends at Facebook’s Heroic Fiction League, Nathan Long and John R. Fultz, posted “playlists” of YouTube videos, songs that either their heroes would like, or that captured the mood of their books.


My playlist is a little different.  This is the music I wish would play when a reader first opens some of my books.


For my most recent novel, the Eddie LaCrosse pirate tale Wake of the Bloody Angel, I’d love it if readers were blasted with this upon cracking the covers:


 





 


For another Eddie LaCrosse tale, Burn Me Deadly, if you consider chapter one as a “teaser,” this would the perfect music to play between chapters one and two:


 





 


For Blood Groove, my tale of an Old World vampire unleashed in the Seventies, I’d begin with this under chapter one:


 





 


Then, at the moment you finished chapter one:


 





 


And finally, the theme for my Firefly Witch e-book chapbooks, the tune the main characters Ry and Tanna would call “their song” and that, in a perfect world, would play whenever you called it up on your e-reader of choice:


 





 


(I know, it’s the Atlanta Rhythm Section version and not the original Classics IV, but technically this is the first version I ever heard, and about half the Atlanta Rhythm Section was made up of former members of the Classics IV, so it’s not as heretical as it might seem.)


Any suggestions for some of my other books?


 

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Published on November 10, 2012 01:51
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message 1: by Roger (new)

Roger Caramanica Cool post. The last scene in chapter 28 and into 29 of The Sword-Edged Blonde totally had me thinking of Led Zepplins Going to California playing in the background.. an instrumental version at the least.....


message 2: by Alex (new)

Alex Bledsoe Thanks, Roger. Hadn't thought of that, but that's a good idea, too. Maybe that's the next step in ebooks: embedding music.


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