While I was writing The Meaning Wars, my playlist was absolutely indispensable. It’s pretty long, but here are a couple of the most important songs.
“Halls of Sarah,”Neko Case, Hell-on
This song features a protagonist with the same name as one of my main characters, and it’s a haunting, noir-country ballad about a woman oppressed by her society. Given what Sarah goes through over the course of the series, it was a no-brainer as the first track on the playlist.
“Policy
of Truth,” Depeche Mode, Violator
Given that truth, deception, and both personal and systemic violations are big themes in this series, I couldn’t resist this dark New Wave techno jam. My husband introduced me to Depeche Mode, and I definitely go through phases of fixation on their work.
“A
Little Pain,” Margo Price, All American Made
The music video for this song depicts a waitress putting the boots to her sexist, abusive boss, and it’s a delicious watch for anyone who’s had a bad job. The lyrics feature a narrator focused on getting her own happiness, regardless of what men think – and this definitely reminded me of Crystal, the other protagonist, who makes some interesting (and bad) life decisions through the course of the series.
“Rise
Up (With Fists!!),” Jenny Lewis and The Watson Twins, Rabbit Fur Coat
Another alternative-country ballad, this song expresses the exhaustion of existing in a world hostile to one’s being, as well as the difficulties of trying to rebel against an oppressive system.
“This
is Why We Fight,” The Decembrists, The King is Dead
This simple, raw song about fighting back against an oppressive system and trying to resist in the face of impossible odds was a must-listen for this song.
“Strange,” LP, A Night at The McKittrick Hotel
For the last pick from my long, long playlist, I’ve chosen the song we used for the first dance at our wedding – a defiant, triumphant ballad about queerness and being an outsider. Since the characters in this story are mostly non-white, many have disabilities, and are virtually all queer, their common experiences of difference bind them together. The song celebrates uniqueness - joyful, almost bombastic, and surprisingly moving: not a bad match for the style of this book.
Excerpt:
The leaves and trees here were soft shades of blue, ranging all the way to bold indigo. It was a sharp but not unlovely contrast against the pale sky, which looked white or a little yellowish because of the thick, protective atmosphere, shielding them from the insistent blue luminance of the F-class star. They’d seen patches of gold and yellowish plains, and even plenty of familiar Earthly green plants, which grew here quite well, but the native vegetation tended towards navy, periwinkle, and turquoise.
“Good job back there,” said Sarah in a whisper. “I thought you were gonna crack, to be honest.”
“Me too. But I kept thinking, ‘What would Sarah do?’ and I just tried to look bored,” Toby whispered back. He shot her a smile that started a bit wan, but gradually brightened. “Hey, we did it. And now we’re going to rescue someone.”
“Speaking of,” said Paulo, stumping over, “I finally got this shit figured out. Goddamn map was in really poor resolution and didn’t account for this fucking river valley having a flooded area. They sent me archived shit. I just figured out the discrepancies.” He sighed. “Sorry for snapping at both of you. I’m just worried and stressed.”
Sarah inhaled and let out a long breath. “You and me both. It’s not like I’m rescuing someone who’s basically my hero or anything, while caked in mud and preparing to flee for our lives—oh wait, yes I am. This is a nightmare.”
Toby bumped her shoulder and wiggled his feet in his boots, sluicing the mud off. “At least you’re not having this nightmare alone.”
Paulo pointed. “C’mon. Over there. Who knows how long we have before there are guards or a collection force? Those fake identities won’t hold forever.”
A cold pit formed in Sarah’s stomach. What if this was an elaborate trap? She’d seen that letter, sure, but did they know for certain that Patience was still alive? What if the guards had found her already?
“We’re in disguise,” Toby ventured, a tremor in his voice. “Um. Just so you know. That’s why we look like guards. But we’re not.”
There was a rustling. Didn’t sound like anything bigger than a rabbit—if those had even been introduced here.
The two guards circled them both, the person with sideburns keeping their gun trained right at Sarah and Toby’s faces.
“Wait. There’s supposed to be a woman here that Patience talked to,” said the one on the right.
Silently, a third person crept out of a hidey-hole Sarah hadn’t even noticed. Moss and a snarl of brush against the arch of a tree root parted and revealed a rather small woman with dark skin and large, anxious eyes, and a larger gun.
And then, abruptly, Sarah was face-to-face with her—Patience Ngouabi.
For many reasons, she was one of the most beautiful women Sarah had ever met, known, or heard of. Her skin was perhaps duller and less perfectly even in tone than it looked in interviews, but was still the glorious brown of fresh clay, with a hint of rust.
Still, she had the angelic features Sarah had seen in so many interviews: that heart-shaped face, broad, gentle nose, soft cheekbones, and full, plush lips. Her wide, dark eyes searched Sarah’s face in momentary confusion.
She had really been hoping to meet Patience under different circumstances—not while going by a dead woman’s name. If she took Patience’s hand, she thought, Patience would be touching the skin of a dead woman, not Sarah’s.
“I’m Sarah Jean White,” she said, just managing to hold her voice steady, trying to pretend she wasn’t starstruck.
“I’m afraid we’ll have to do the formal introduction later. There are soldiers on the way!” said Patience, without much of her name.
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