S.G. Browne

Fate vs Destiny Contest Winners

Thank you to everyone who entered the Fate vs Destiny contest that ran this past Thursday through Sunday. My apologies to those who didn’t get a chance to enter but fear not, I’ll have another contest for a couple of signed copies of Fated coming up again once I get back from Portland and Seattle.

Technically there weren’t any winners or losers since I wasn’t judging the entries. Instead, there were just two people whose names corresponded to the two numbers drawn from the Random Number Generator.

Congratulations to Helen Letournea and Ray Lawrason for drawing the lucky numbers!

I enjoyed reading all of the responses from everyone and the different ways you played with the idea of Fate vs Destiny. While I can’t include all of the responses, below is a sampling:

Destiny: Tina Fey
Fate: Sarah Palin

Destiny: Danny Boyle
Fate: M. Night Shyamalan

Destiny: New Orleans Saints
Fate: Buffalo Bills

Destiny: M*A*S*H
Fate: AfterMASH

Destiny: Medium Rare Steak
Fate: Haggis

Destiny: the iPhone
Fate: The Sham Wow

Destiny: Elizabeth I
Fate: Anne Boleyn

Destiny: Jesus
Fate: Zeus

Destiny: hand-written letter filled with emotion
Fate: text message filled with emoticons

Destiny: America Unites behind Gulf Shore Clean up
Fate: Jersey Shore continues to pollute airways from coast to coast

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Filed under: Contests,Fated — Tags: , , — S.G. Browne @ 8:49 am

Fate vs Destiny Contest

Details on how to enter for a chance to win a personally signed copy of Fated are below. But first, some helpful info…

One of the distinctions I make in Fated is that fate and destiny are, contrary to popular opinion, not one in the same.

As Fate/Fabio points out in the first chapter:

Destiny can’t be forced on someone. If they’re forced into their circumstances, then that’s their fate. And fate has a morbid association with the inevitable, that something ominous is going to happen.

His fate was sealed.
A fatal disease.
A fate worse than death.

Destiny, on the other hand, is divinatory in nature and implies a favorable outcome, which generally carries a much more positive connotation.

Destiny smiled upon him.
She was destined for greatness.
It was her destiny.

After all, you never hear about anyone being “fated for greatness” or suffering “a destiny worse than death.” So it just made sense that there should be a distinction between the two. And that Fate would be overworked and frustrated with his single-term Presidents and one-hit wonders, while Destiny tormented him with her Super Bowl MVPs and Pulitzer Prize winning authors.

Destiny gets The Beatles while Fate gets Vanilla Ice.
She gets Meryl Streep while he gets Lindsay Lohan.

You get the idea.

Now on to the contest…

For a chance to win a personally signed copy of Fated (and perhaps some other goodies), e-mail me at scott@sgbrowne.com with your own example of Fate vs Destiny.  For example:

Destiny: The Beatles
Fate: Vanilla Ice

Feel free to get creative. Sports teams, movies, politicians, TV shows, inventions, food…whatever you think provides a good example of Fate vs Destiny. It’s all fair game.

Once the contest has ended, I’ll do a random drawing from all entries to determine the winners.

  • Open to residents of Canada and the U.S.
  • Contest ends 11:59PM PST on Sunday, October 24.

Any questions?  Feel free to ask.  Good luck!

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Filed under: Fated — Tags: , , — S.G. Browne @ 10:56 am

Fate, Destiny, and the Consumer Culture

In July 2004, I was sitting on a bench at a shopping mall, watching people walk past and wondering what their futures held for them. I started writing some thoughts down about a character who can see what everyone will be like in fifteen or twenty years and went with it. A little while later, I’d scribbled out several pages that would eventually become the opening chapter to Fated.

The novel is narrated by Fate (aka Fabio) who’s in charge of assigning the futures of the 83% of humans who are fated to live ordinary, mediocre lives – most of whom will make bad decisions or fail to achieve anything more than a fleeting encounter with success.

Think single-term Presidents.
Think drug-addicted actors.
Think one-hit wonders.

Destiny, on the other hand, gets the rest of the population who are destined for greatness. Or at least for better things.

Think George Washington.
Think Meryl Streep.
Think The Beatles.

This makes for a frustrated and overwhelmed Fabio, especially since most of his humans are focused on filling their lives with the empty calories of consumer excess rather than a healthy diet of internal happiness. Throw in the fact that he has a five-hundred-year-old grudge with Death and that his best friends are Sloth and Gluttony and what you get is an immortal who’s become a disgruntled employee of the cosmos.

But then Fate falls in love with a mortal woman on the Path of Destiny (which is against the rules) and he starts to get involved in the lives of his humans (another big-no-no), changing their fates and causing some serious cosmic repercussions.

I described my first novel, Breathers, as “A dark comedy about undeath through the eyes of an ordinary zombie” and “Fight Club meets Shaun of the Dead, only with the zombies as the good guys.” Which pretty much gives you a good idea of what to expect. But with Fated, I’ve had a difficult time coming up with a single line or two that succinctly captures what the book is about.

While I describe it as “A dark comedy and social satire about fate, destiny, and the consequences of getting involved with humans,” that doesn’t tell you anything about how the novel is a bit of an indictment of the consumer culture.

Or that Fate and Destiny have a complicated, friends-with-benefits relationship.

Or that Karma is an alcoholic.

When it came to populating Fated with characters, I had a lot of fun taking abstract concepts like Fate, Destiny, Karma, and Death and giving them starring roles – not to mention cameos by Lady Luck, Honesty, Failure, Love, Secrecy, Truth, Wisdom, and most of the Deadly Sins. Just to name a few.

I also enjoyed taking a look at what it means to be human through the eyes of someone who is not human but who is in charge of our futures. Or most of them. I enjoyed seeing how Fate’s relationship with humans changed as the story unfolded and what happened when he started breaking the rules. Like his humans, I was interested in seeing how Fate’s decisions ultimately affected his own future.

Rule #1: Don’t get involved.

That’s how the novel opens and, obviously, it’s set up for Fate to break that rule. Though it’s not an all-encompassing directive from Jerry (aka God). While Fate, Destiny, and Death aren’t supposed to get involved in the lives of humans, the rule doesn’t apply to other immortals like Lady Luck or Fear or Anger. After all, you can’t be an Intangible or an Emotive or one of the Deadly Sins without having some kind of an impact on humans. That’s part of the job description, getting involved. But it all comes down to what humans do with their luck or their fear or their anger that determines their eventual outcome.

Now I just have to figure out how to fit all of that into the tag line.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Filed under: Fated — Tags: — S.G. Browne @ 6:30 am

Fated – 2010 West Coast Book Tour

We’re at the one month mark before the official release of my second novel, Fated, though I did receive my first copy of the book in the mail the other day, which you can tell I’m just a little happy about. The picture doesn’t do the cover justice, which is a matte coating with an overlay that gives it a great texture. And the colors, especially the spine, really pop.

Once I receive my author copies I’ll be having some contests for giveaways, so stay tuned.

In the meantime, if you live in Oregon, Washington, or California, below are the dates and general info for my 2010 West Coast Tour.

Things kick off on November 2nd with the official release at Powell’s Books in Beaverton, OR. I’ll be reading, talking, signing, and hopefully doing some audience participation giveaways. So if you’re in the neighborhood, come on out and play!

While up in the Pacific Northwest, I’ll also be doing signings in Seattle (11/3) and Lake Forest Park (11/4) before returning to California for the San Francisco Book Launch Party at Borderlands Books (11/6), followed by signings in Capitola (11/8), Fremont (11/10), San Francisco again (11/12), Pleasanton (11/13), Roseville (11/16), Campbell (11/20), Santa Barbara (12/3), Burbank (12/4), San Diego (12/11), and Pleasanton again (12/18). A full list of details can be found by checking out my Events Calendar.

I’m also planning trips in 2011 to states east of California, including Florida, Texas, and New York, among others, and will post updates on my web site and via this e-mail newsletter once I have more information.

As always, thanks for the support. I hope I get a chance to see and meet all of you at one of my upcoming signings.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Filed under: Fated,The Writing Life — Tags: — S.G. Browne @ 11:04 am

The Writing Life: Fated

The idea for Fated started out as something completely different than what it eventually became. Actually, it was almost an accident. An idea born out of another idea that ended up being somewhat less brilliant than when I initially started writing it down.

Late in the evening of September 10, 2003 (it was actually 10PM – I have the entry in one of my journals), I sat down to write out an idea for a short story that had popped into my head. The entry starts out:

“Story about a man in his late thirties who has spent his life avoiding risks until some supernatural event intervenes.”

This brilliant idea goes on for almost a full page until I realized, and actually wrote down, that the idea sounded much better in my head before I watched SportsCenter on ESPN to see if the Giants beat the Padres. (They did, 7-1.)

At that point, I had no idea where I was going with the original idea. But not wanting to give up on whatever it was that prompted me to sit down and write in the first place, I kept journaling, coming up with an occasional “maybe this” and a few “maybe thats” until I stumbled upon the idea that my main character lived in Manhattan and had first hand knowledge about certain events because he’s Fate. I even had him aspiring to be a writer so that he could tell the truth about the fact that no one, not even fictional characters, control their own fate.

I rambled on a bit with that, trying to figure out if he was human, if he had a childhood, if he socialized with humans, if he went out on dates – throwing out ideas that at the time didn’t really go anywhere but that’s what writers do. Throw things at a target and hope something sticks. Then I turned on the TV and watched the rest of SportsCenter.

The following July, I was sitting on a bench at an outdoor shopping mall, watching people walk past and wondering what their futures held for them. I hadn’t pursued the idea about Fate from the previous September, but as I started writing, I realized the ideas were connected. Five minutes later, I’d scribbled out a narrative on a page of a yellow-lined notepad about a character who can see what everyone will be like in fifteen or twenty years. This would eventually become the opening chapter to Fated.

I didn’t actually start working on the novel until more than two years later, in December 2006, after I’d moved to San Francisco. I wrote the first half of Fated (40,000 words) in three months, struggled for another nine months to squeeze out the next 20,000 words, then pumped out the last quarter of it (another 20,000 words) in January 2008. I finished the first draft of Fated on February 2, 2008, the day before the New York Giants upset the previously undefeated New England Patriots 17-14 in Super Bowl XLII.

I guess they were fated to lose.

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmail
Filed under: Fated,The Writing Life — Tags: — S.G. Browne @ 6:44 am