KC Jones
KC Jones is a screenwriter-turned-novelist currently living in western Washington. When not writing, he can be found watching movies, playing video and board games, or enjoying nature—whenever it isn’t raining.
He graduated from the University of Nevada-Las Vegas with a degree in film production. His first published novel, Black Tide, was a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a first novel.
Jones's new novel is White Line Fever.
My Q&A with the author:
How much work does your title do to take readers into the story?Visit KC Jones's website.
White line fever is a colloquialism for highway hypnosis, which is the primary tool with which this malevolent stretch of road confuses, frightens, and ultimately kills people who drive it. The main character, Livia, has also been going through adulthood in her own form of highway hypnosis—until an unexpected turn shocks her out of it, and she suddenly realizes she doesn't recognize her life. Not her husband, her house, even herself. Her journey is not just surviving a trip down a hellish highway, it's reclaiming control instead of just going where the road takes her. To me, though, "highway hypnosis" just didn't quite ring as a title, whereas "white line fever" has a nice punchy cadence, like broken road stripes flashing past, and it's a bit strange, a bit unsettling. I came across the term while researching the psychology behind highway hypnosis, and knew immediately that it had to be the title.
What's in a name?
There's no deep meaning behind any of the character names, besides Livia most often going by the shortened "Liv," which is the thing she's not been doing for as long as she can remember, and will hopefully start doing again by the end. I had a bit more fun with her family name of Rhodes, particularly her father's Rhodes' End junkyard, which comes into play as both a name and place. The "Silver Bullet" campervan is another fictional name that I used pretty intentionally in a wink-wink, nudge-nudge sort of way. The road itself is nicknamed "The Devil's Driveway" for how dangerous it is, but its real name, County Road 951, takes inspiration from a couple of things. One is Road 5 NW, aka White Trail Road, a rural bypass in central Washington that I've driven more times than I could count. 951 comes from the address of a haunted house a childhood friend lived in. They never claimed there were ghosts in 951 (and only ever referred to the house by its street number), just a nebulous "bad magic," which I found far creepier, and thus the combination of numbers has always felt a bit sinister to me.
How surprised would your teenage reader self be by your novel?
Not in the slightest. Scary stories have been my thing since Goosebumps, and many of my formative experiences involved vehicles and creepy roads. I wrotescreenplays prior to novels, and even with books I'm just writing the movie I see in my head. My teenage self would look at this and likely say "that tracks."
Do you find it harder to write beginnings or endings? Which do you change more?
I don't like to start writing a story until I know how it ends. Endings are my lodestar, they help guide everything that comes before. I rewrote this story several times, from screenplay to exploratory novel to first draft to a complete page-one rewrite that more closely resembled the final product. But despite how completely different all of these versions were, the ending was always the same. How do you defeat a road? I knew from the outset, but getting the characters and story to the point where it's even a possibility was a journey of many beginnings.
Do you see much of yourself in your characters? Do they have any connection to your personality, or are they a world apart?
Bits and pieces. Livia's tendency to avoid conflict, of trying to keep everybody together and happy, is definitely me, and shades of Becka's upbringing, and eventual turning away from it, are reflective of my own experience. Morgan and Ash's witnessing a family member slowly succumb to a terrible illness, and the ways that experience informs a lot of their behavior, is probably the most personal connection to myself in this. Personality-wise I'm way more Morgan than Ash (although I do like the "noise" of the kitchen when I need to shut everything else out.)
What non-literary inspirations have influenced your writing?
This is a hard one to distill down, because for me it's just living life. Watching, listening, experiencing. In terms of what paved the way for White Line Fever, my numerous trips down very long, very empty roads, an oddball group of childhood friends, and space. Yeah, the cosmos. I think about it a lot when playing with the more magic elements of stories. Its ability to be both beautiful and terrifying, essential to our existence and utterly hostile, vast beyond imagining and yet always right there, if we only go outside after dark and look up.
The Page 69 Test: White Line Fever.
--Marshal Zeringue