[Do you have an idea for a future Mind Meld? Let us know!]
Love In the midst of apocalypse…whether it be an apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic scenario, or a dystopian one, such as in The Hunger Games, or just amidst things blowing up...
[Do you have an idea for a future Mind Meld? Let us know!]
Love In the midst of apocalypse…whether it be an apocalyptic or post-apocalyptic scenario, or a dystopian one, such as in The Hunger Games, or just amidst things blowing up, etc, our need to find a partner to share the angst is still a strong one. So, we asked our panel…
Q: What are a few of your favorite fictional couples that fell in love in an extreme situation? Why do you think this type of story is so popular?
Here’s what they said…
Jaye Wells
Jaye Wells is a USA Today-bestselling author of urban fantasy and speculative crime fiction. Raised by booksellers, she loved reading books from a very young ago. That gateway drug eventually led to a full-blown writing addiction. When she’s not chasing the word dragon, she loves to travel, drink good bourbon and do things that scare her so she can put them in her books. Jaye lives in Texas with her husband and son. For more about her books, go to jayewells.com.
Love during the apocalypse is powerful because it is the ultimate act of hope. It’s such an optimistic emotion, isn’t it? When the world’s gone to hell, when you don’t know if you’ll live another hour or week or month or, God willing, years, it takes an enormous amount of courage to open your heart when the risk of it breaking is so great.
Dystopia and post-apocalypse fiction also explores the idea that love in all forms takes on more weight when society has fallen apart. Whether it’s romantic love or the love a mother has for her child or the circumstantial love strangers create from nothing simply through the act of going through hell together. Everything takes on more meaning when future isn’t guaranteed.
In my novella, MERIDIAN SIX, a woman who has only the memory of love–that of her mother, long dead–finds a new kind of family in a group of complete strangers. It’s a dysfunctional family to be sure, but it’s better than the early death of complete isolation in an unforgiving world.
Jesse Petersen
Jesse Petersen is the author of the Living With the Dead series (Married With Zombies, Flip This Zombie, Eat Slay Love, The Zombie Whisperer) and an upcoming monster series which begins April 29 with Club Monstrosity. She lives in Tucson with her awesome husband and two cats.
Um, as a geek, I would say Han Solo and Princess Leia would be my favorite “love under pressure” couple. They’re trying to defeat the evil empire, people and she has really complicated hair, so there’s a LOT going on there. I think the draw of love in dire circumstances is that in those darkest moments of our lives, we don’t want to be alone. It’s in our nature as humans to share our feelings and fears. Plus, heroes can look so cute running and covered in blood. I think I read a statistic where those kinds of “under pressure” relationships didn’t last in real life once the danger was lifted, but who cares? I write books, I don’t concern myself with reality.
Amanda Bonilla
Amanda Bonilla lives in rural Idaho with her husband and two kids. She’s a part-time pet wrangler, a full-time sun worshipper, and only goes out into the cold when coerced. She loves the outdoors, black clothes, pink appliances and thinks junk food should be a recognized food group. In the summer, she can be found sitting by the lake, enjoying the view from her dock.
Love amidst chaos is a trope that’s often seen in fantasy, action/adventure, and apocalyptic stories alike. Whether it’s the adrenaline-infused high or the threat of death, romance blossoms at an accelerated pace when you’re living day-to-day in dangerous situations not knowing when your number might be up. And with the popularity of screen adaptations of novels and graphic novels such as The Walking Dead, and World War Z, and The Hunger Games, it’s obvious that we’re crazy for end of the world scenarios and the compl