If You Like "The O.A." You Might like My Novel (spoilers for the show—not my novel)
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promotional imagery from The O.A. found via google
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Follow Me: Tattered Veils wide image art work created by Jake @ J Caleb Designs
The O.A. : A Netflix show featuring a female protagonist who disappeared years ago and when she resurfaces, the once blind woman can see. Prairie, now referring to herself as the O.A. has been through something traumatic, but she won’t share with the FBI or her adopted family. Instead, she recruits four highschool students and a teacher whom she tells her story to and asks they help her save four other captives she left behind. Teeming with supernatural, scifi, and fantasy elements, the show is a slow burning mystery told at the survivor’s pace.
What does this series and Follow Me: Tattered Veils share?
Follow Me: Tattered Veils and The O.A. season one share a slow burn full of tension. Both stories unfold at the protagonist’s pace instead of the viewer’s desired speed or the speed the surrounding cast may prefer. The O.A. and Roxi make readers wait for it, but the release is all the sweeter because of the building.
Both the O.A. and Roxi have spiritual and esoteric knowledge the world around them doesn’t value. As their respective stories unfold, their knowledge gains value, and becomes the key to their ability to survive their situations.
Both The O.A. and Roxi share stories of strife and survival against all odds. Their antagonists have an insidious obsession with them and even when they break free of these men’s power, the men refuse to leave them alone. Questions of stalking, possession, and the toxicity of the male gaze are rife in the narrative.
Lastly both stories use established myth as a connecting foundation. Even though views consider these myths and not truths in their lives, the audiences' familiarity with the original myth helps to build credibility and a sense of realism to the experiences the O.A. and Roxi go through. Like an urban legend one might debate the validity of because a cousin's friend once said something like that happened to them, these old myths help ground the fantastic and bring it into the realm of possible. The O.A. uses angelic myths and after life experience stories to weave it’s narrative. Follow Me: Tattered Veils uses a collection of Italian, Greek, and Irish mythology to grow its own story.
Did you love The O.A.? Were any of these elements you loved? If so consider picking up Follow Me: Tattered Veils when it releases in February. Check out my website jessicadonegan.com for more details.
promotional imagery from The O.A. found via googleVS
This
Follow Me: Tattered Veils wide image art work created by Jake @ J Caleb Designs
The O.A. : A Netflix show featuring a female protagonist who disappeared years ago and when she resurfaces, the once blind woman can see. Prairie, now referring to herself as the O.A. has been through something traumatic, but she won’t share with the FBI or her adopted family. Instead, she recruits four highschool students and a teacher whom she tells her story to and asks they help her save four other captives she left behind. Teeming with supernatural, scifi, and fantasy elements, the show is a slow burning mystery told at the survivor’s pace.
What does this series and Follow Me: Tattered Veils share?
Follow Me: Tattered Veils and The O.A. season one share a slow burn full of tension. Both stories unfold at the protagonist’s pace instead of the viewer’s desired speed or the speed the surrounding cast may prefer. The O.A. and Roxi make readers wait for it, but the release is all the sweeter because of the building.
Both the O.A. and Roxi have spiritual and esoteric knowledge the world around them doesn’t value. As their respective stories unfold, their knowledge gains value, and becomes the key to their ability to survive their situations.
Both The O.A. and Roxi share stories of strife and survival against all odds. Their antagonists have an insidious obsession with them and even when they break free of these men’s power, the men refuse to leave them alone. Questions of stalking, possession, and the toxicity of the male gaze are rife in the narrative.
Lastly both stories use established myth as a connecting foundation. Even though views consider these myths and not truths in their lives, the audiences' familiarity with the original myth helps to build credibility and a sense of realism to the experiences the O.A. and Roxi go through. Like an urban legend one might debate the validity of because a cousin's friend once said something like that happened to them, these old myths help ground the fantastic and bring it into the realm of possible. The O.A. uses angelic myths and after life experience stories to weave it’s narrative. Follow Me: Tattered Veils uses a collection of Italian, Greek, and Irish mythology to grow its own story.
Did you love The O.A.? Were any of these elements you loved? If so consider picking up Follow Me: Tattered Veils when it releases in February. Check out my website jessicadonegan.com for more details.
Published on February 25, 2020 14:49
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