Friday, February 14, 2014

North Carolina author's novel inspires ABC's 'Resurrection'



Maybe you’ve seen the promo for ABC’s “Resurrection,” the new drama series starting March 9. Maybe you’ve heard the haunting background lyrics: I’m coming home. I’m coming home. Tell the world I’m coming home.
The show’s intriguing premise: Dead people all over the world are returning to their loved ones – not as zombies, but as exactly the people they were when they died. 
Here’s the story behind that premise: In 2010, Jason Mott, who lives in Bolton, a small town near Wilmington, had a vivid dream about his mom. She’d been dead for nine years, but he discovered her waiting for him at his kitchen table, wanting to hear about his life since she’d passed. The dream gave him an idea for a novel, about dead people returning to live among their loved ones.
Mott, 35, landed a book deal in 2012. “The Returned” (Harlequin MIRA; $24.95) was published in September 2013 to great reviews. USA Today, for instance, called it “a tense and touching treatise on life, death and life  again.” It hit the New York Times bestseller list. By then, it had already been adapted for television as “Resurrection.” 
Sounds like an overnight success. But Mott's instant success only came after years of hard work.
He earned a BFA in fiction and an MFA in poetry, both from UNC Wilmington. He published two poetry collections, “We Call This Thing Between Us Love” and “…hide behind me…,” both with Charlotte’s Main Street Rag. 
He also worked at a Verizon call center, fielding complaints about malfunctioning cell phones. “Whenever your cell phone breaks and you want to yell at someone,” he explains, “you call me.”
In his free time, however, he wrote. He finished several novels. The first five or so, he says, weren’t good enough to publish. But he never stopped writing. 
Mott left his Verizon job in 2012, soon after he landed the book deal. He got a two-book contract, so he’s now at work on his second, to be published late this year. Like “The Returned,” it has elements of magical realism and it’s set in a small town. Mott says his publisher doesn’t want him to reveal much more.
Mott’s life, in some ways, has changed drastically. He went from being, as he says, “a guy who answers phones,” to a guy with a bestselling book and TV series. On the other hand, it has not changed much.
He won’t be flying to Hollywood for the series release party. Instead, he plans to watch the premiere at a friend’s house, sitting on the couch. “I like to be behind the scenes. I don’t like the attention.” Besides, he says, “I’ve got deadlines I need to be working on.”


3 comments:

Curmudgeon said...

Interesting. I just finished watching a French TV series of the same name, with the same concept. Persons who died reappearing in a small French town just as they were on the day they died and with no explanation.
Exellent tv series. Have to wonder if there is any connection to Mr. Mott's book.

Anonymous said...

There is no connection whatsoever. My son plays the little boy who died and came back. Mr. Mott's work is totally original and came from a dream he had that his deceased mother was sitting in his kitchen having a conversation with him.

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