Thursday, February 28, 2019

The Scariest Sea Monsters



You can’t have a sea story without sea monsters. Oh, sure, they don’t have to be literal monsters—in the original 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, the most dangerous “monster” turns out to be the submarine Nautilus. But the one people remember is the giant squid—a natural creature that sure seems like monster when it’s overwhelming your crew and ship. Monsters are in the eye of the beholder.




When I set out to write Young Captain Nemo, I knew that the story would revolve around a monster very much in the way 20,000 Leagues did. 


The adventure unfolds because a lot of people— including young Gabriel Nemo—want to investigate a mysterious creature (actually a lot of them) that have been spotted in the Pacific Ocean. The creatures are called Lodgers, crustacean-like beings from the bottom of the Pacific that tend to put on old ships and plane husks as armor the way a hermit crab puts on an old shell.

Something was rising from the waves. Gabriel saw the propeller first, looking like a nose as eyes protruded above. Four wings emerged next, two stacked on each side. The creature whipped its wings and rose, plastic beads and water streaming down it as it took to the air. It was a World War I biplane. For a moment Gabriel was stunned, taking in the strange tentacles hanging from the body of the plane and the faded blue barnacled tail, split into sections and pulsating with strange flesh and tendrils, swishing from side to side as it swooped toward them.

The biplane was approaching swiftly, angrily, flapping its wings in a way biplanes were never meant to do.

And that’s not even the scariest one in the book.


So in honor of those newcomers to the mythical world, I wanted to present a list of the Top 5 Scariest Sea Monsters throughout time 
(excepting the Lodgers in Young Captain Nemo)


Leviathan - This creature gets referenced everywhere from the Bible to Dark Shadows and everywhere in between. Leviathan was considered so dangerous a sea creature that were he to breed, his progeny would destroy the world—thus God killed the only female Leviathan and preserved her body for a future feast.





The Kraken – If you’ve been a kid in the last forty years, the first thing you’ll think of when you hear The Kraken is the big one in Clash of the Titans—as in “Release the Kraken!” 


It’s really a Norse monster—a giant Octopus. But the Kraken’s appearance in Clash never bothered me in slightest, especially because as seen there he’s more a giant fish-monster.




Jörmungandr – On of the great foes of Thor, the Jormungandr is the world-serpent who wraps itself around the entire world and could crush us all at its whim. Technically Thor didn’t fight such an enormous creature, he just had to lift it in a feat of strength. Lift some of it. One of its feet.





The Scylla – The Scylla is one of two monsters that Greek sailors had to carefully avoid, because they were right across from one another in a narrow channel of water. Scylla was a beautiful being transformed into a monster with multiple heads and eyes. She would seize and eat 6 sailors for every ship that passed by. 





The Charibdis - the counterpart of the Scylla, the Charibdis was an angry, flippered monster that controlled a vicious whirlpool.





If you have your own favorite, please share it. Let me know what I left out!


"Armed with his wits, his friends, and his Nemotech submarine, a twelve-year-old descendant of Jules Verne’s famous antihero is determined to help make the ocean a safer place one adventure at a time in Jason Henderson's Young Captain Nemo, first in a new middle-grade series."



Thursday, February 21, 2019

What is the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?

An excerpt from Young Captain Nemo (on sale March 12th) 

“Where were these photos taken?”

Gabriel pulled out a tablet and called up an atlas, then tapped in the coordinates as he spoke. When he was done, he spun the tablet around so they could see the image of the ocean, with the coordinates highlighted. “One hundred thirty-five degrees West . . . thirty-five degrees North.”

“The Eastern Great Pacific Garbage Patch,” Peter whispered.

Misty seemed to be searching her memory banks. “I’ve heard of that.”

Peter spun his fingers in a swirl over the tablet. “There’s a current called the North Pacific Gyre that swirls through the Pacific in a circle. And this, the Eastern Garbage Patch, is a giant whirlpool of plastic trash smack between Hawaii and California.” A large oval representing the gyre glowed and revolved slowly in the middle of the ocean. “A lot of what we throw away breaks down and winds up there.”

“Right.” Misty remembered now. “It’s a disaster for sea life, too. So how big is it?”

“About the size of Texas,” Gabriel said. “Three hundred thousand square miles. Give or take.”

“Yeah, so that’s . . . big.” Peter looked off. Gabriel could see him running calculations in his head, and then he looked back and laughed. “It would take the Obscure thirty hours just to get to the edge of that thing.”

*****

“Gabe? We’re reaching the Garbage Patch.”

“Really?” 

Gabriel reached the bridge a minute or two ahead of Misty, who rubbed her face and shook off whatever sleep she’d had as she reached her console. The Obscure was running along the surface as Gabriel gazed at the view screen, which still showed endless Pacific blue ahead.

“Yep.” Peter threw the sonar up and it took over half the screen. As the sonar line swept around the clocklike circles, countless speckles flickered dully. “It covers the ocean up ahead. And it’ll keep going.”

A new ping appeared at the top edge of the sonar screen—a thick mass that indicated something with a lot of weight. “Hello,” Gabriel said. “What’s that?”

Peter touched his headphones. “It’s not making any noise. If it’s a craft, it’s not running.
In fact it’s not moving.” 

“Could it be a fishing vessel?” Gabriel asked. “Maybe they’re anchored.”

“If so, I’d be hearing all kinds of things. Tools, machinery, generators.”

“Besides,” added Misty, “would a fishing boat be all the way out here?”


Gabriel shrugged. “Could it be a whale?”

Gabriel felt the ship rising as water rushed out of the walls and tanks, and something caught his ear. “What’s that noise?”

*****

According to National Geographic, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a "collection of marine debris in the North Pacific Ocean. Marine debris is litter that ends up in the ocean, seas, and other large bodies of water." This marine debris is mostly plastic, as you can see from the photos below.




In Young Captain Nemo, the characters, including the descendent of Jules Vernes's famous character Captain Nemo, have to work to save the ocean.

"Armed with his wits, his friends, and his Nemotech submarine, a twelve-year-old descendant of Jules Verne’s famous antihero is determined to help make the ocean a safer place one adventure at a time in Jason Henderson's Young Captain Nemo, first in a new middle-grade series."



Captain Nemo's Origin Story

I’ve been thinking a lot about the immortal Captain Nemo, the central figure in Jules Verne’s work 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and its sequel Mysterious Island.

Ever since I was a kid and read my first young reader’s edition of 20000 Leagues, I have been entranced by the vision of Captain Nemo. Considering how much of the book he appears in and how much he drives that book – the story is about a professor out to discover the truth behind a number of attacks on ships, leading to a journey aboard Nemo’s ship Nautilus— the figure of Nemo is a great mystery.

Nemo comes across in Verne’s book as a driven man who speaks many languages and who doesn’t care to explain himself. He has a tendency to lock up the narrator, Professor Arronax, when he senses that he’ll have to explain his actions too much. He is a master scientist and sailor who has invented an amazing creation in the wondrous 18th-century submarine. He stands up for the abused, rescuing workers and donating fortunes to the downtrodden.

Gradually across the two books we learn Nemo’s origin story.

Chapter 16 of Mysterious Island gives us most of it: “Nemo” is of course an adopted name—originally, the man who would be Nemo was Prince Dakkar, the son of a Raja in the Bundelkhand region of India.

Educated in Europe from a young age, the young Prince traveled the world and in Verne’s words,


“endowed by Nature with her richest gifts of intellect, accumulated knowledge of every kind, and in science, literature, and art his researches were extensive and profound…. he was ever grave--somber even--devoured by an unquenchable thirst for knowledge, and cherishing in the recesses of his heart the hope that he might become a great and powerful ruler of a free and enlightened people.”

He married “a noble Indian lady” and had two children, and then was drawn into a violent uprising the British Empire and took to the sea. With a price on his head and his family dead at the hands of the ruling British, Dakkar turned away from the world of men.
Where, then, did he seek that liberty denied him upon the inhabited earth? Under the waves, in the depths of the ocean, where none could follow.


“The warrior became the man of science. Upon a deserted island of the Pacific he established his dockyard, and there a submarine vessel was constructed from his designs. By methods which will at some future day be revealed he had rendered subservient the illimitable forces of electricity, which, extracted from inexhaustible sources, was employed for all the requirements of his floating equipage, as a moving, lighting, and heating agent. The sea, with its countless treasures, its myriads of fish, its numberless wrecks, its enormous mammalia, and not only all that nature supplied, but also all that man had lost in its depths, sufficed for every want of the prince and his crew--and thus was his most ardent desire accomplished, never again to hold communication with the earth. He named his submarine vessel the "Nautilus," called himself simply Captain Nemo, and disappeared beneath the seas.”

I mean... what a story! To an American reader like me this was straight out of a Marvel Comic, or better yet Aquaman. Witness this amazing speech when he destroys a ship in 20,000 Leagues:

I’m the law, I’m the tribunal!  I’m the oppressed, and there are my oppressors! Thanks to them, I’ve witnessed the destruction of everything I loved, cherished, and venerated–homeland, wife, children, father, and mother! There lies everything I hate! Not another word out of you!

So naturally I started seeking out Nemo wherever I could find him, especially in movies. There are a few really great movie Nemos:


  1. James Mason in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954). Although Mason is Irish rather than Indian, he really captures the cold arrogance of Nemo in ever line of dialogue. It’s a great part.
    Image result for James Mason in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
  2. Herbert Lom in Mysterious Island (1961). One of my favorites is this, Herbert Lom's turn as Nemo in the exciting 1961 Mysterious Island. This might be the performance that first made me aware of the mysteries of Nemo. Still not Indian, though.
  3. “Mark Nemo” in The Undersea Adventures of Captain Nemo. This educational children’s show from Canada was actually a lot of fun, though the Indian Nemo was transformed into the blond, blue-eyed ocean adventurer Mark Nemo. As with Young Captain Nemo, the goal was to teach ocean lessons in every episode. A lot of Americans will remember the show from Captain Kangaroo.
  4. Robert Ryan in Captain Nemo and the Underwater City (1969). American Robert Ryan is a strange Captain Nemo-- Ryan plays the mysterious captain as a somewhat surly, militaristic American (probably) expatriate. It's a very natural performance, far different from the poetic soul James Mason portrayed. I like Ryan a lot.

  5. Naseeruddin Shah in The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (2003). Western Audiences got their first wide-release Indian Nemo in the film based on Alan Moore’s amazing comic, which posits a sort of all-star band of famous literary characters (Tom Sawyer, Mina Harker of Dracula, etc). Fans of the comic weren’t thrilled by the movie with all the liberties it took, but Nemo is played with great seriousness. I feel he gets lost in the shuffle, mainly because he’s supporting player. 
I can’t say which one I actually carried with me—in my head Nemo became a mish-mash of all the versions I’d seen and that amazing character in the books.

Getting into Nemo’s world with my own work wasn't just something that I kind of wanted to do, it was something that I burned to do. To create a submarine and go off on adventures with my friends. And because I don't live in the world of my books, I live in the world where I type them, that dream translated into Young Captain Nemo, the story of Gabriel Nemo and his mysterious ship, the Nemoship Obscure. Gabriel, a twelve-year-old descendent, is from a family that has grown to include members from India and throughout Europe isn’t the only active Nemo: he has an older sister, a tough, brilliant strategist who commands a much larger and much more dangerous ship than Gabriel’s—Nerissa Nemo’s Nemoship Nebula with its hundreds of crew. I hope you’ll check it out.

"Armed with his wits, his friends, and his Nemotech submarine, a twelve-year-old descendant of Jules Verne’s famous antihero is determined to help make the ocean a safer place one adventure at a time in Jason Henderson's Young Captain Nemo, first in a new middle-grade series."

Monday, February 18, 2019

Finished the Percy Jackson Series? Here's what to read next.

It can be disorienting to suddenly finish a series of books and have no idea what to do—for me it feels like I’m a trapeze artist, letting go of a run and sailing into thin air, is there anything there and what will it be?


So today I’m going to give my humble suggestion for what to read if you find yourself casting about after making your way through Rick Riordan’s award-winning Percy Jackson series from the Lightning Thief to The Last Olympian, and the many Legacy series.

And no...! I don’t mean you should read my own Young Captain Nemo. Because it’s not even out yet. (Although if you liked Percy's adventures, you will probably like Young Captain Nemo's as well.)

No: what you need to be checking out is the Garza Twins series from David Bowles. It’s not my first time recommending this—I’m quoted on the cover of the middle book, a A Kingdom Beneath the Waves, as saying, “if you’re looking for the LatinX Percy Jackson, this is it.”

It's so true! Who are the Garza Twins? They’re a brother-sister pair in South Texas who discover they have inherited magical shapeshifting powers. T

he books are amazing because they bring you all new mythology readers might be unfamiliar with, doing for Mexican lore what Percy Jackson did for Greece. I’m always amazed at David Bowles’s cleverness with plot, action and language.

Want to find them? Here are the details.


Once a millennium, twins are born with the ability to shapeshift and to wield the might of savage magic. When Carol and Johnny Garza discover their powers, they find themselves fighting to save their family...and the world itself. Book 1: The Smoking Mirror. Carol and Johnny Garza are 12-year-old twins whose lives in a small Texas town are forever changed by their mother’s unexplained disappearance. Shipped off to relatives in Mexico by their grieving father, the twins soon learn that their mother is a nagual, a shapeshifter, and that they have inherited her powers. In order to rescue her, they will have to descend into the Aztec underworld and face the dangers that await them.



Book 2: The Kingdom Beneath the Waves. The Garza family’s Christmas vacation in Mexico is cut short by the appearance of Pingo, one of the elfish tzapame. The news is grim: a rogue prince from an ancient undersea kingdom is seeking the Shadow Stone, a device he will use to flood the world and wipe out humanity. Now Carol and Johnny must join a group of merfolk and travel into the deepest chasms of the Pacific Ocean to stop the prince and his monstrous army with their savage magic.
Book 3: The Hidden City. When Carol and Johnny learn of the Ollamat—an ancient stone that can channel savage magic—they convince their parents to take them to the cloud forests of Oaxaca. With Pingo’s help, they search for the legendary city where it has protected for a thousand years. But the twins aren’t the only ones hunting for the Ollamat. After it is stolen, they must travel through an emerald mirror into the beautiful yet dangerous Tlalocan: the paradise of the rain god. To retrieve the stone, they have to face talking apes and forest elementals, rock wyrms and vicious elves, demons of lighting and something even more unexpected: the souls of people they have watched die. As always, they are aided by allies old and new, though nothing can quite prepare them for the biggest foe of all—a member of their very family.

Check out this “LatinX Percy Jackson!”
And, of course, you can pre-order Young Captain Nemo! And you should, especially if you or someone you love liked the Percy Jackson series. Keep the adventure going!
"Armed with his wits, his friends, and his Nemotech submarine, a twelve-year-old descendant of Jules Verne’s famous antihero is determined to help make the ocean a safer place one adventure at a time in Jason Henderson's Young Captain Nemo, first in a new middle-grade series."

Sunday, February 10, 2019

THE GOOD SON: The Evil Child Retrospective


We continue our 2019 retrospective on evil children with the 1993 film THE GOOD SON, about a child very like the one seen in THE BAD SEED—in this case Henry played by Macaulay Culkin.


Check out this episode!

Thursday, February 7, 2019

CASTLE TALK: Kelly Meding, author of Stray Moon


Kelly Meding’s STRAY MOON from Harper Voyager is a follow-up to her book Stray Magic which about one Shiloh Harrison and her team of Paranormal Marshals who are once again put between upholding the law and doing what is right. Werewolves are going missing and it’s up to Shiloh to help. We talk about dark fantasy, paranormal, and Meding's writing process.


Check out this episode!

Top 5 Books I loved When I Was 12 - Reading Nostalgia



I was thinking more about the question of "Top Books for 12-Year-Old Boys," because of my recent post on great contemporary reads for tween boys.  

I loved discovering the books that have come out in the last couple of years. But the moment I heard the question I felt compelled to think about the books that I loved when I was that age — or around there, 10 to 13. Hey, it wasn't that long ago! 

This requires some real thinking. A trip down memory lane. But I was able to come up with the Top 5 Books I loved when I was 12.

When I was in middle school I was a voracious reader of adventures, as you can see from the list. Luckily most of these are available today in new paperbacks or Kindle.
  • The House with the Clock in its Walls (Bellairs) — now with a cool cover that matches the movie, which was something I never thought would happen.
  • The Three Investigators and the Mystery of the Green Ghost (Arthur) — really I would read *any* of these fun short books about a gang of middle graders who solve mysteries.
  • Ice Station Zebra (Maclean) — if it was exciting enough I definitely read adult books, and this one — about a submarine at the top of the world! — was a favorite.
  • Creepshow (King) — this was an amazing graphic novel adapation of the then-recent 1983 horror anthology from Stephen King.
  • Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (Schwartz) — Always, always the most awesome. I love story collections — and this is one of the best, soon to be, as they used to say, a major motion picture.


We are just one month from the release of Young Captain Nemo, and a whole new wave of great books for boys—pre-order it today!

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

CASTLE TALK: Daniel Farrands Shows Us The Horror Of The 1970s Nuclear Family in The Amityville Murders


Daniel Farrands chats about his new film THE AMITYVILLE MURDERS, which tells the story of Ronald "Butch" DeFeo, who one sleepy day in 1974 murdered his entire family in Amityville, Long Island.  We talk about the pluses and minuses of life in that analog era and the horrors that can hide in a house. Farrands also shares news on his other priod piece, the upcoming THE HAUNTING OF SHARON TATE.


Check out this episode!

CASTLE TALK: Darren Lynn Bousman on Scary St. Agatha


St. Agatha is a brand-new psychological horror film (but don't worry, it gets intense and sometimes gory) about a young con woman (Sabrina Kern) in the 1950s who, finding herself broke and pregnant, joins a convent only to find herself trapped by an evil Mother Superior (Carolyn Hennessy.) It's an amazingly powerful performance from both, and we chat with director Darren Lynn Bousman on bringing this dark, pulse-pounding tale to life.


Check out this episode!

The Best Books for 12 Year Old Boys


Talking to parents and educators around the country, I know they're always hungry to find books that boys love. 

According to statistics in a 2016 Psychology Today article, boys have a much harder time than girls finding books that they like. So for all the parents and teachers out there who are looking to unlock the magic of reading for the boys in their lives, here are some of the top books for 12 year old boys. 

As Psychology Today reported back in 2016: 

On Scholastic’s 2016 survey of over 2000 U.S. children, ages 6-17, only 52% of boys (versus 72% of girls) said they liked reading books over the summer, while only 27% of boys (versus 37% of girls) said they read books for fun at least 5 days a week. Forty-five percent of boys (versus only 36% of girls) said they often have trouble finding books they like.

There's nothing like getting lost in a book, and we all want our kids to know that joy and spark their creativity. 

Of course, as a father of daughters, I write for boys AND girls. Young Captain Nemo is the story of the descendent of Jules Verne's famous Captain Nemo from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. Gabriel Nemo is a 12-year old boy, and his sister, Captain Nerissa, is an adventure-seeking, smart and powerful girl. Together, their adventures may save the oceans. 

If you're looking for the top books for 12 year old boys, here are a few suggestions that I love and that lead in sales—and of course if you preorder Young Captain Nemo now, you'll be able to give your reader a brand new experience on March 12th.  

The Best Books for 12-Year Old Boys: 
  1. Young Captain Nemo, by me, Jason Henderson (2019)
  2. Holes, Sachar and Radunsky (2011)
  3. Lawn Boy, Paulsen (2008)
  4. Tales of a Fifth-Grade Knight, Gibson (2015)
  5. The Indian in the Cupboard, Banks (2010)
  6. Turtles all the Way Down, John Green (2017)
  7. The Last Kids on Earth and the Cosmic Beyond, Brallier and Holgate (2018)
  8. Fish in a Tree, Hunt (2015)
If you’ve got an 11-year-old, you can go with these suggestions as well. For 10 year olds, here are a few others that are great reads!
  1. Wonder, Palacio (2012)
  2. The Giver, Lowry (1993)
  3. The Phantom Tollbooth, Juster and Feiffer (2011)

We are just one month from the release of Young Captain Nemo, and a whole new wave of great books for boys—pre-order it today!