Thursday 1 December 2011

Vital Retreats into Smoke & Bone Daughter

Laini Taylor novel to start franchiseWith only one more Twilight film to go to, everyone's searching for the next large paranormal romance to lure the tweens as well as the moms as well as the grandmother into pan-generational emo family cinema activities. At Vital, the top of wish-list looks being Daughter Of Smoke And Bone, Laini Taylor's twisted kids' novel of angels and demons and forbidden love in Prague, the studio is settling to obtain for just about any reported six-figure sum.It, launched in September and intended since the first in the series, involves 17-year-old art student Karou, which has tats and knows kung-fu, and contains truly blue hair (i. e. she doesn't dye it: it evolves blue from her mind). Her background can be a mystery, and he or she remains adopted and elevated by demons - "Chimaera" - who every so often require her to consider errands through sites and collect teeth.Teeth.On one of these brilliant missions she encounters the angel Akiva, who's been designated with putting a stop and the illegal supernatural denture trade, but doesn't kill Karou because she reminds him of his lost love. In addition to their burgeoning affair coincides while using appearance throughout Prague from the black-hands symbol, heralding a war involving the cosmic forces of fine and evil.The book's first lines are "Not such a long time ago, an angel together with a demon fell for one another. It did not finish well." It will less than emerge like Preacher though.Large-canvas stuff then, but grounded in the medieval romance. Which is what spurred Paramount's interest. Deadline think that the studio was ready to fight for your property, due to its "chance of large-scale, visual effects-driven fantasy that could communicate with a young audience", in addition to its potential expansion to franchise size.It doesn't appear as if the sale is extremely done, but it's firmly available. We'll make you stay released. The novel is presently accessible within the Uk in hardcover from Hodder and Stoughton.

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