Their fantasy is her reality.
Tune in Tomorrow
by Randee Dawn
Genre: Humorous Pop-Culture Fantasy
A funny, thrilling and mysterious adventure into the
world of alternate reality television... Perfect for fans of Jasper Fforde and
Christopher Moore.
She’s just a small town girl, with big mythic dreams.
Starr Weatherby came to New York to become… well, a star.
But after ten years and no luck, she’s offered a big role – on a show no one
has ever heard of. And there’s a reason for that. It’s a ‘reality’ show beyond
the Veil, human drama, performed for the entertainment of the Fae.
But as Starr shifts from astounded newcomer to rising fan
favorite, she learns about the show’s dark underbelly – and mysterious
disappearance of her predecessor. She’ll do whatever it takes to keep her dream
job – though she might just bring down the show in the process.
Can you, for those who don't know you already, tell something about yourself and how you became an author?
I've been a writer almost as long as I've been a reader – I always like to say that I started writing stories about the adventures my stuffed animals had when I was still of stuffed animal age! As for becoming an author – I tend to differentiate (if only in my mind) the difference between writer and author. Writing and being a writer is something anyone can do; you become an author once you get some of your work published – including if you publish it yourself. There's a psychological leap anyone who wants to be an author has to take in which you move your stories, your writing, your whatever – to the public. When you start showing it around, and offering it up for payment or judgment by people who don't have your emotional well-being in mind. That takes courage, and for many years I didn't have it. I had a few things published (short poems, mostly) in the high school literary journal, but I spent a long, long time trying to find my voice – and then a safe space to share it in.
That safe space turned out to be in the world of fan fiction, actually. While I did get two short stories published in my 20s and 30s that weren't fanfic related, I drew an audience of admirers who really wanted to hear what I was working on next once I started writing fan fic for a favorite TV show. That took up a lot of the writing time I could have been doing composing completely original work but it also served as a way for me to make my writing better, respond to an audience, and feel comfortable sharing it in the world. Along the way I had embarrassing experiences in writers' groups, and eventually fell into the speculative fiction crowd – a place full of aspiring authors who wrote on a lot of topics, for a lot of platforms, and I saw the world open up much wider. I could be a part of this community, and I could write stories I loved that – hopefully – they would love, too. That was when I really became an author, I think: Once I found my people, and my audience. That's what helped me find my voice.
Tune in Tomorrow, by Randee Dawn
They twisted and turned so much Starr lost track of where she was, and Jason's strange mixture of delight and nervousness was starting to make her feel anxious. At last, she came to a hard halt in the middle of a hallway.
Jason tilted his head.
"Look, I get it. You're like a big VFX warehouse or something. I'm guessing Tune in Tomorrow is some kind of space opera on the web. But your showing me every nook and cranny and door hinge doesn't give me a clue about what's going on. What is this place?"
Jason took a dramatic pause and his green eyes lit up, "Tune in Tomorrow is many things to so many mythics. We are the longest-running, most-viewed reality TV show ever made in any dimension. We are made by mythics, for mythics—but starring humans. "
"Reality?" Starr twitched. "With dragon puppets and robots?"
Jason started to speak, took a breath and paced up and down. Raised a finger, lowered it, then stopped in front of her. Cleared his throat. "It's been some time since I had to explain this to a human. Bear with me." He pushed open another door and gestured inside.
Starr planted her feet in the doorway. "Jason, this is a toilet."
"Yes, well, needs must. I don't have any other handy water."
He was speaking in riddles—and disappearing into a bathroom with a near-stranger was awkward at best, creepy at worst. Still, she didn't sense Jason was up to no good. He practically vibrated with excitement, or nerves, or both. Swallowing, Starr took the risk and stepped inside. The bathroom door swung closed behind them.
Jason turned on all four sinks in the room. Water cascaded from three; butterflies burst from the fourth. Starr gaped. Jason quickly shut that one off with a sheepish grin and turned his back on the sink. The butterflies disintegrated.
Starr blinked.
"You see," he raised his sing-song voice over the noise of the remaining water, "we adore human to'ings and fro'ings. We are the original fans of stories-without-end. Some hundreds of years ago when the Seelie came up with the idea of telling stories to mythics, they were known as Stories Of All Purpose, or for short –"
"SOAP," Starr realized. The room was starting to heat up and the mirrors fogged; Jason had apparently turned on only the hot water. She wondered where he was going with all this; the fantastical elements of his story were fanciful and charming, but silly. Maybe he was just being very method about the show. "You're making a soap opera?"
"Shh!" he quieted her, glancing around. "Yes—and no. That's how we started. But most mythics are self-cleaning. Bathing is a hobby, not a practice. SOAPs fell a bit out of fashion. Mythics wanted real human stories. Finally, once humans on your side of the Veil began writing their own TV shows, one of us—me, in fact—infiltrated a few writing rooms and discovered that you were doing what we'd been doing for years and calling it 'reality TV.' That fit us perfectly . Our viewers tune in because they believe we are telling real stories, and that's what keeps us going."
Raves for the book:
"I thought I’d seen everything in the galaxy of reality
TV, until Randee's book!" – Andy Cohen, Host / Executive Producer, Watch
What Happens Live with Andy Cohen and New York Times bestselling author
"Randee Dawn has single-handedly created a glittering
new genre: the Backstage Comedy Fantasy Romance — and I want more!" –
Ellen Kushner, World Fantasy Award-winning author of Thomas the Rhymer and
Swordspoint
"Randee Dawn's Tune in Tomorrow is a wild ride through
the world of reality TV, Faerie style. It’s a satire and a romance (of a sort)
and a fairytale and a mystery, full of characters I loved (and loved to hate)
and situations that had me biting my nails. It’s also hilariously funny."
– World Fantasy Award nominee Delia Sherman, author of The Porcelain Dove and
The Evil Wizard Smallbone
"Tune in Tomorrow is a joyride. It takes you on a
journey into the make believe world of a soap opera. It dives in and out of
what could possibly be fantasy or in fact is reality. As with the sands of
time, as you Search for Tomorrow, or you are feeling Young and Restless, get
lost in the adventures of Starr and be taken over by all that is Tune in
Tomorrow." – Emmy-nominated actor Gregory Zarian
"Dawn's Tune in Tomorrow is a ton of fun with a lot of
heart, charming characters, and devilish foes. And it's funny as hell." –
Zin E. Rocklyn, author of Flowers for the Sea
"Few authors can open the door to another world as
easily as you might turn on the TV, but Randee Dawn has the key and the remote
control firmly in her hand. Flip through the fae and the grindylows, let her be
your TV guide and psychopomp. You will find yourself howling at the gate for a
rerun." – Meg Elison, author of Number One Fan
"This book is a BOUNCY CASTLE! This book is like a
candy store and a screwball comedy had a fling in fairyland and the result was
a mythic soap opera! There was no predicting it, there was only riding this
dragon all the way to its rollicking rollercoaster conclusion. How dear and
joyous it is, how satisfying, and how worthy of praise!" – World Fantasy
Award-winning author of Saint Death's Daughter C.S.E. Cooney
"Dawn balances over-the-top drama and comedy with
genuine intrigue to create a fun story with plenty of heart. Fans of Douglas
Adams and Terry Pratchett will want to snatch this up." – Publishers
Weekly
"Tune in Tomorrow is a hilariously well-constructed
story with surprising complexity, and one that uses its reality TV premise not
as a destination, but as a jumping off point to create something uniquely
interesting that stays entertaining the entire way through." – Lightspeed
Magazine
"Dawn’s witty take on society’s fascination with
peering at life through a camera lens spotlights the sometimes-blurred
intersection between fantasy and reality, all captured on video. Her playful
narrative propels readers into the realm of alternate possibilities while
questioning what is real and what is make-believe, and if we can even tell the
difference." – BookTrib
Amazon * B&N * Bookbub * Goodreads
Book Links:
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Tune-Tomorrow-Randee-Dawn/dp/1786186306
B&N: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/tune-in-tomorrow-randee-dawn/1140376607?ean=9781786186317
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/books/tune-in-tomorrow-by-randee-dawn
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/59365823-tune-in-tomorrow
About the Author
Randee Dawn is an author, journalist, and lucky denizen of
Brooklyn. Her first novel, the humorous pop-culture fantasy Tune in Tomorrow,
published in August 2022 (Solaris/Rebellion).
Randee's short fiction has appeared in publications and
podcasts including 3AM Magazine ("The View of My Brother's Profile in the
Rear-View Mirror," 2001; "Warm, In Your Coat," 2004) and
Well-Told Tales ("Home for the Holidays," 2015; "Can't Keep a
Dead Man Down," 2017).
Dawn's stories have appeared in anthologies including Where
We May Wag ("The Last Dog," Writing Piazza Press, 2018), Children of
a Different Sky ("Can't Find My Way Home," Kos Books, 2018), Magic
for Beginners ("Queen Zoe and the Spinning Game," Fantasia Divinity,
2019), Dim Shores Presents ("Rough Beast, Slouching," 2021), Another
World: Stories of Portal Fantasy ("The Way Is Clear," SummerStorm
Press, 2021), and Horror for the Throne: One-Sitting Reads ("Cat
Person").
She has a short collection of dark speculative fiction short
stories, "Home for the Holidays" (2014) and co-authored "The Law
& Order: SVU Unofficial Companion" (BenBella Books, 2009). She
co-edited the speculative fiction anthology of "what if" stories
about The Beatles, "Across the Universe: Tales of Alternative
Beatles" (Fantastic Books, 2019).
When not making stuff up, Randee publishes entertainment
profiles, reviews, and think pieces regularly in outlets including Variety, The
Los Angeles Times, Today.com and Emmy Magazine, and writes trivia for BigBrain.
She can be found at RandeeDawn.com and @RandeeDawn (on
Twitter).
Website * Facebook
* X * Instagram * Bookbub
* Amazon * Goodreads
Author Links
Website: https://randeedawn.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorRandeeDawn
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/randeedawn
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/randee-dawn
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Randee-Dawn/author/B002F1BDJO
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6568202.Randee_Dawn
Giveaway
$20 Amazon
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I enjoyed the post. Sounds like an entertaining story.
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