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Strangelove
by S.A. Youngman
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Overview


STRANGELOVE is the first installment in a trilogy of novels called The Museum Project that follows the extraordinary rise and calamitous fall of one of the 1980's most prevalent casualties; the one-hit wonder band. Fantage is a pop rock quintet with an abundance of looks and talent embarking on their first national road tour in the hopes of snagging a record deal along the way. Their story is told through the eyes of the band’s hairdresser whose romantic entanglements lead to their personal and professional turmoil, on and off the tour bus, complicated even further by a vengeful sociopath. ***Print copies available through www.sayoungman.com.***

Note: This novel contains the occasional use of strong language and sexual situations.

Read more

Description


In the summer of 1985, Fantage was poised to become the “next big thing” to emerge from the New York music scene. Formed by the brooding bassist and fiery keyboardist, Nigel Thompson and Zach Nichols, and fronted by the libidinous lead singer Leigh Stevens, their abundant good looks and rock-influenced, dance-friendly sound made them a fixture at Cinderblocks, uptown’s newest hotspot owned by their manager and benefactor Frank Monroe.

Meanwhile, hairdresser Shelly Bates was oblivious to anything happening north of her West Village studio. For five years, she had carefully dodged most forms of romance until the sudden reappearance of Lenny Sullivan—“the first man to break her heart and the last she ever wanted to see again"—smashed their worlds together. He had finagled his way into Fantage as their new drummer just as the band was about to embark on their inaugural cross-country club tour with the hopes of scoring an elusive recording contract along the way. However, Lenny’s hopes for a reunion were doused when Shelly became so enchanted by his bandmates and their lifestyle that before she even joined the entourage she had catapulted them toward a destiny no one could have predicted.

Fantage was well aware that the tour was an enormous risk with a slim chance of paying off, especially since the advent of MTV had already begat a boisterous flock of pop music groups competing for the same spotlight. It was the 'style over substance' decade that saw only a handful of bands actually make it big, adding their synthesized flare to arena rock and inciting teenage hysteria wherever they went. Some bands languished in college dorm rooms while others became casualties of their own vices—and thus tabloid fodder—without even meriting a footnote in musical history. Even more prevalent were those bands who flew up the charts with a monstrous megahit that struck a chord with the record-buying, club-hopping public, never suspecting they had simultaneously written their own epitaph as a “one-hit wonder.” That particular trajectory Fantage was determined to avoid, if they even made it that far. As their unconventional mobile commune became riddled with calamities, the only place to hide from the bruised egos, frayed nerves, submerged emotions and severe claustrophobia was onstage…unless you were the hairdresser trying to mend your splintered heart.

Inspired by the song of the same name, STRANGELOVE is the first in a series of novels that unfolds as Shelly becomes an integral part of the band’s chaotic—and at times tragic—journey, on and off the tour bus. Part love story, part thriller and part homage to an unforgettable era of music, fashion and attitude, it is entirely a work of fiction and any similarities between the characters and persons living or dead is mostly coincidental…

Read more

About the author


S.A. Youngman has been a storyteller since grammar school. Her first published work was The Good Kid, a short story featured in 1983’s The Raconteur, her high school's literary magazine. Her second was a semi-autobiographical essay entitled Fluffernutter Sandwiches and Millionaires published in Trenton State College's Lion's Eye in 1985. Since then, she has written radio ads for a New York non-profit organization (for which she received the AAF Crystal Prism Award in 1988) and—while her novels were gestating—she wrote several plays, two of which have been published and performed throughout the United States and in Australia.

A native Jersey Girl, Ms. Youngman spent her formative years working, living and playing in Manhattan, which influenced much of her writing. After earning a B.A. in Commercial Design, she opted instead to fashion a career out of being a cog in the corporate America wheelhouse. She has also been active in community and regional theater in NJ as a director, producer and stage manager since the turn of the century.

STRANGELOVE, the first installment of The Museum Project series, is being adapted for the screen. The second installment, FANTASTIC IMAGES, charts the precipitous rise of Fantage and in the third, TRILOGY, the band faces its mortality at the end of the tumultuous decade (and the meaning behind the series' name is revealed).

You can follow Ms. Youngman on Twitter (@fantage85) and Facebook (S.A. Youngman) for updates on all of her publications.

Other works by the author:

ALMOST HEAVEN @ Playscripts.com

THE LEGEND OF QUASIMODO, REVISITED @ Eldridge Publishing

Thanks for stopping by! 

Read more

Book details

Genre:FICTION

Subgenre:Romance / Suspense

Language:English

Series title:The Museum Project

Series Number:1

Pages:277

eBook ISBN:9781483533292


Overview


STRANGELOVE is the first installment in a trilogy of novels called The Museum Project that follows the extraordinary rise and calamitous fall of one of the 1980's most prevalent casualties; the one-hit wonder band. Fantage is a pop rock quintet with an abundance of looks and talent embarking on their first national road tour in the hopes of snagging a record deal along the way. Their story is told through the eyes of the band’s hairdresser whose romantic entanglements lead to their personal and professional turmoil, on and off the tour bus, complicated even further by a vengeful sociopath. ***Print copies available through www.sayoungman.com.***

Note: This novel contains the occasional use of strong language and sexual situations.

Read more

Description


In the summer of 1985, Fantage was poised to become the “next big thing” to emerge from the New York music scene. Formed by the brooding bassist and fiery keyboardist, Nigel Thompson and Zach Nichols, and fronted by the libidinous lead singer Leigh Stevens, their abundant good looks and rock-influenced, dance-friendly sound made them a fixture at Cinderblocks, uptown’s newest hotspot owned by their manager and benefactor Frank Monroe.

Meanwhile, hairdresser Shelly Bates was oblivious to anything happening north of her West Village studio. For five years, she had carefully dodged most forms of romance until the sudden reappearance of Lenny Sullivan—“the first man to break her heart and the last she ever wanted to see again"—smashed their worlds together. He had finagled his way into Fantage as their new drummer just as the band was about to embark on their inaugural cross-country club tour with the hopes of scoring an elusive recording contract along the way. However, Lenny’s hopes for a reunion were doused when Shelly became so enchanted by his bandmates and their lifestyle that before she even joined the entourage she had catapulted them toward a destiny no one could have predicted.

Fantage was well aware that the tour was an enormous risk with a slim chance of paying off, especially since the advent of MTV had already begat a boisterous flock of pop music groups competing for the same spotlight. It was the 'style over substance' decade that saw only a handful of bands actually make it big, adding their synthesized flare to arena rock and inciting teenage hysteria wherever they went. Some bands languished in college dorm rooms while others became casualties of their own vices—and thus tabloid fodder—without even meriting a footnote in musical history. Even more prevalent were those bands who flew up the charts with a monstrous megahit that struck a chord with the record-buying, club-hopping public, never suspecting they had simultaneously written their own epitaph as a “one-hit wonder.” That particular trajectory Fantage was determined to avoid, if they even made it that far. As their unconventional mobile commune became riddled with calamities, the only place to hide from the bruised egos, frayed nerves, submerged emotions and severe claustrophobia was onstage…unless you were the hairdresser trying to mend your splintered heart.

Inspired by the song of the same name, STRANGELOVE is the first in a series of novels that unfolds as Shelly becomes an integral part of the band’s chaotic—and at times tragic—journey, on and off the tour bus. Part love story, part thriller and part homage to an unforgettable era of music, fashion and attitude, it is entirely a work of fiction and any similarities between the characters and persons living or dead is mostly coincidental…

Read more

About the author


S.A. Youngman has been a storyteller since grammar school. Her first published work was The Good Kid, a short story featured in 1983’s The Raconteur, her high school's literary magazine. Her second was a semi-autobiographical essay entitled Fluffernutter Sandwiches and Millionaires published in Trenton State College's Lion's Eye in 1985. Since then, she has written radio ads for a New York non-profit organization (for which she received the AAF Crystal Prism Award in 1988) and—while her novels were gestating—she wrote several plays, two of which have been published and performed throughout the United States and in Australia.

A native Jersey Girl, Ms. Youngman spent her formative years working, living and playing in Manhattan, which influenced much of her writing. After earning a B.A. in Commercial Design, she opted instead to fashion a career out of being a cog in the corporate America wheelhouse. She has also been active in community and regional theater in NJ as a director, producer and stage manager since the turn of the century.

STRANGELOVE, the first installment of The Museum Project series, is being adapted for the screen. The second installment, FANTASTIC IMAGES, charts the precipitous rise of Fantage and in the third, TRILOGY, the band faces its mortality at the end of the tumultuous decade (and the meaning behind the series' name is revealed).

You can follow Ms. Youngman on Twitter (@fantage85) and Facebook (S.A. Youngman) for updates on all of her publications.

Other works by the author:

ALMOST HEAVEN @ Playscripts.com

THE LEGEND OF QUASIMODO, REVISITED @ Eldridge Publishing

Thanks for stopping by! 

Read more

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