Genre: Literary Fiction
About ZenMonkeyLocation: Los Angeles, CA Home Region: Age:36 Website: http://newly-nerfed.net Favorite novels: Cat's Eye, L.A. Confidential, The Godfather, Good Omens, American Pastoral, The Shining, Galapagos Favorite writers: Margaret Atwood, John Irving, Philip Roth, Chaim Potok, Carol Shields, James Ellroy, Edith Wharton, J.K. Rowling, Kurt Vonnegut, Stephen King Favorite music: Jazz or movie scores, apparently Non-noveling interests: Movies, the New York Times crossword, videogames, skepticism, cross-stitching, geeky stuff |
Joined: September 19, 2009 This Year: Official Participant NaNoWriMo History: NaNoWriMo posts: 27 NaNoWriMo buddies: 11
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Brief Author Bio: I'm a geek gal living in Los Angeles with my husband and two Burmese cats. Prior to becoming disabled by chronic illness, I was a sign language interpreter in the college setting, and later taught English grammar and writing to underprepared deaf college students. I am not a novelist or even a short story writer; my undergraduate degree is in dramatic writing and I had a short, pointless "career" as a screenwriter. But I have this longtime story idea, and something just told me to give it a go at NaNoWriMo. |
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Synopsis: The Hotline
The stories of a group of people who work at a suicide hotline in San Francisco.
Excerpt: The Hotline
There was undeniably something about the Golden Gate Bridge. It was often cited the number one location for suicides in the world, and Mike supposed that as the mystique persisted, it only continued to grow. Certainly when a jumper was reported in the news, there was a spike in hotline traffic, or at least a spike in anxiety among a lot of callers. The bridge hotline got a few more calls than usual as well. Mike first learned about this phenomenon when, on his second or third shift out of training, his partner had walked in and plopped the Chronicle down on Mike’s desk, pointing to a story about a jumper the previous day.
“Watch out,” the guy had said. “Here they come.”
Some of them just wanted to discuss it, as suicidal topics seemed to be their hobby. Some were truly upset by it. On very rare occasions someone even got unhinged over it, usually one of their persistents, who were a very sensitive lot as a rule.
But this was nothing compared to what happened that October.
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