Do the threads of your life feel a little worn? Routines a little DULL? Do you ever dream about "livin' large"?
What about living in a different world altogether? Ever think about that? SURE you do.
All of which is why FANTASY is so addictive: it's a portal into a wild, mysterious otherworldliness—life lived as GRAND EPIC—exactly what most of our lives aren't.
Fantasy authors get it—it's why they're scooping up readers by the shovel-load. I'm talkin' about you, Leigh Bardugo.
But here's what really tickles me about fantasy books: the TITLES, their grammatical structure (oh yeah, and "Blood"). Like these—Children of Blood and Bone… or House of Earth and Blood. Here's the format:
(noun) - OF - (noun) - AND - (noun)
Other titles aren't quite so ramped-up; their STRUCTURE is simpler. Still, they manage to pack a punch—as in Shadow and Bone… or Siege and Storm. This is the format:
(noun) - AND - (noun)
So this got me to thinking—what would it take TO REWRITE some actual book titles, fitting them to the routines and irritants that make up our days? Here's my go:
A Song of Ice and Fire (George R.R. Martin)
A Bag of Ice and Cheetos
Children of Blood and Bone (Tomi Adeyemi)
Children of Blood and Boogers
Teens of Mess and Mayhem
Days of Blood and Starlight (Laini Taylor)
Days of Traffic and Potholes
Nights of Tossing and Turning
Song of Blood and Stone (L. Penelope)
Netflix of Blood and Gore
House of Earth and Blood (Sarah J. Maas)
House of Dust and Dirt
Sink of Pots and Pans
Eagles and Empire (Alan Smale)
Pigeons and Poop
Shadow and Bone (Leigh Bardugo)
Sinew and Flab
Siege and Storm (Leigh Bardugo)
Binge and Gorge
Ruin and Rising (Leigh Bardugo)
Bedhead and Biscotti
Book groups could have fun with this, too. See what you come up.