Showing posts with label Lucky 13s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lucky 13s. Show all posts
Monday, 25 March 2013
ACID Cover Scoop And A Spooktastic Trailer
It's exactly one month until ACID is out in the UK. ONE MONTH. Eep! So to celebrate, I'm over at the Lucky 13s, blogging about the book's cover. Check it out here!
And when you've read that, head over to ReadingTeen, where you can see the spooky trailer for US publisher sibling and fellow Lucky Kit Grindstaff's THE FLAME IN THE MIST (out from Delacorte on 9th April! (You could win a $30 gift card, too!)
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
Good Causes, Exciting Schemes, Book Birthdays And More!
G-Dog was e x h a u s t e d after his stint at blogging last week, so he's let me have the blog back for a while. I thought I'd use this opportunity to tell you about some stuff I and other people have been doing!
ACID is out in 5 weeks and 2 days (not that I'm counting or anything. Ahem)!! And it's featured on DARK DAYS author Kate Ormand's blog today, as part of her 'Sneak Peek' feature. You can find out more here!
RUBY AND GRUB and BUTTERCUP MAGIC author Abi Burlingham would like to know if any picture book or middle grade authors can help Ystruth Primary School in Blaina, South Wales, build a library by donating one of their books. The school is in a very deprived area, where many children have never experienced a library visit, so the school want to set one up to encourage the pupils to read and fall in love with books. However, they have very few resources, and will struggle to do so on their own. Please go and read Abi's post about the project, and if you can help, get in touch with her!
Have you heard about the Patron of Reading scheme? This is another project that's been set up at a school in Wales, Esgob Morgan, by the headteacher Tim Redgrave and author Helena Pielichaty. Authors anywhere in the UK can sign up to be a Patron and have their details added to the school's website, and then schools can browse the list and get in touch with them to see if they'd be a good match. I signed up a while ago and am now talking to a school about becoming their Patron – which is very exciting! For more details about this amazing scheme, see the school's website. You can also tweet Tim at @timredgrave.
There's been LOTS of book birthdays among the Lucky 13s this month. You can now grab yourself Mindee Arnett's THE NIGHTMARE AFFAIR, Tamera Will Wissinger's GONE FISHING, Sarah Skilton's BRUISED, Steven dos Santos's THE CULLING, Debra Driza's MILA 2.0 and Nicole McInne's BRIANNA ON THE BRINK. And Liz Coley's PRETTY GIRL-13 releases in the US today as well! Woo-hoo!
Please also check out Bridget Zinn's POISON, which released on the 12th March. Tragically, Bridget never got to see her book in print, as she died from cancer in 2011. I didn't know her personally, but I used to follow her blog, and like many other people, was shocked and saddened when she lost her fight against her illness. POISON looks like an amazing book, and deserves to do incredibly well!
Finally, I'm involved in a top secret project, along with lots of other AMAZING authors, which I'm hoping I'll be able to tell you about soon! But not yet. Shh.
See you next week (if G-Dog doesn't get here first!)!
ACID is out in 5 weeks and 2 days (not that I'm counting or anything. Ahem)!! And it's featured on DARK DAYS author Kate Ormand's blog today, as part of her 'Sneak Peek' feature. You can find out more here!
RUBY AND GRUB and BUTTERCUP MAGIC author Abi Burlingham would like to know if any picture book or middle grade authors can help Ystruth Primary School in Blaina, South Wales, build a library by donating one of their books. The school is in a very deprived area, where many children have never experienced a library visit, so the school want to set one up to encourage the pupils to read and fall in love with books. However, they have very few resources, and will struggle to do so on their own. Please go and read Abi's post about the project, and if you can help, get in touch with her!
Have you heard about the Patron of Reading scheme? This is another project that's been set up at a school in Wales, Esgob Morgan, by the headteacher Tim Redgrave and author Helena Pielichaty. Authors anywhere in the UK can sign up to be a Patron and have their details added to the school's website, and then schools can browse the list and get in touch with them to see if they'd be a good match. I signed up a while ago and am now talking to a school about becoming their Patron – which is very exciting! For more details about this amazing scheme, see the school's website. You can also tweet Tim at @timredgrave.
There's been LOTS of book birthdays among the Lucky 13s this month. You can now grab yourself Mindee Arnett's THE NIGHTMARE AFFAIR, Tamera Will Wissinger's GONE FISHING, Sarah Skilton's BRUISED, Steven dos Santos's THE CULLING, Debra Driza's MILA 2.0 and Nicole McInne's BRIANNA ON THE BRINK. And Liz Coley's PRETTY GIRL-13 releases in the US today as well! Woo-hoo!
Please also check out Bridget Zinn's POISON, which released on the 12th March. Tragically, Bridget never got to see her book in print, as she died from cancer in 2011. I didn't know her personally, but I used to follow her blog, and like many other people, was shocked and saddened when she lost her fight against her illness. POISON looks like an amazing book, and deserves to do incredibly well!
Finally, I'm involved in a top secret project, along with lots of other AMAZING authors, which I'm hoping I'll be able to tell you about soon! But not yet. Shh.
See you next week (if G-Dog doesn't get here first!)!
Monday, 11 February 2013
Catch Up And A Round Up!
I can't believe it's almost mid-February already. That means it's… *counts on fingers* TEN WEEKS AND THREE DAYS until ACID comes out.
Eeeeep!
And even though the year is only young, tons of exciting things have already been happening. I can hardly keep up. Phew!
First up, fellow Lucky 13 Elsie Chapman had the trailer for her forthcoming YA debut DUALED featured on MTV! I know, how cool is that? You can view it here, and preorder DUALED, out 26th Feb from Random House Kids, here. I was lucky enough to read an ARC of this book, and if you love kick-ass heroines and gritty dystopian settings (which I really, really do), I can't recommend it enough!
Second up, several more Lucky 13s are now published! Huge congrats to Ellen Oh (PROPHECY, Harperteen), Alex Lidell (THE CADET OF TILDOR, Penguin), Lenore Appelhans (LEVEL 2, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers), Erica Lorraine Scheidt (USES FOR BOYS, St. Martin's Press), Kristin Halbrook (NOBODY BUT US, Harperteen), Megan Shepherd (THE MADMAN'S DAUGHTER, Balzer & Bray/Harpercollins), Liz Fichera (HOOKED, HarlequinTEEN), Laurie Boyle Crompton (BLAZE, Sourcebooks Fire), Tim Federle (BETTER NATE THAN EVER, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers), Miriam Forster (CITY OF A THOUSAND DOLLS, Harperteen) and Kasie West (PIVOT POINT, Harperteen - out today!).
Plus!! CJ Flood's INFINITE SKY, a book I'm very excited about, is out from Simon & Schuster on Thursday. Hooray!
Third up, Twitter friend and fellow canine minion Kate Ormand has got an agent - she's now represented by Isobel Atherton at Creative Authors. Kate is so lovely and supportive of her fellow writers, and I couldn't be more thrilled for her. I really hope I'll be getting to celebrate her book deal soon!
Fourth up, Dan Smith has got a cover for his forthcoming children's novel MY FRIEND THE ENEMY, out from Chicken House in July. I'm stealing it and putting it up here 'cause it looks so awesome. I can't wait to read it!
And fifthly and finally, ACID has had its first full-length review on book blogger Bertass's World of Children's Books (click for link). And what a review! They coined the term 'page-turner' specifically for books like this… a book that I couldn't wait to pick up again every time I had to put it down… I'm so thrilled!
So, lovely blog readers, how about you? Is there any good news or exciting book releases that I've missed? Shout about them in the comments below!
Eeeeep!
And even though the year is only young, tons of exciting things have already been happening. I can hardly keep up. Phew!
First up, fellow Lucky 13 Elsie Chapman had the trailer for her forthcoming YA debut DUALED featured on MTV! I know, how cool is that? You can view it here, and preorder DUALED, out 26th Feb from Random House Kids, here. I was lucky enough to read an ARC of this book, and if you love kick-ass heroines and gritty dystopian settings (which I really, really do), I can't recommend it enough!
Second up, several more Lucky 13s are now published! Huge congrats to Ellen Oh (PROPHECY, Harperteen), Alex Lidell (THE CADET OF TILDOR, Penguin), Lenore Appelhans (LEVEL 2, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers), Erica Lorraine Scheidt (USES FOR BOYS, St. Martin's Press), Kristin Halbrook (NOBODY BUT US, Harperteen), Megan Shepherd (THE MADMAN'S DAUGHTER, Balzer & Bray/Harpercollins), Liz Fichera (HOOKED, HarlequinTEEN), Laurie Boyle Crompton (BLAZE, Sourcebooks Fire), Tim Federle (BETTER NATE THAN EVER, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers), Miriam Forster (CITY OF A THOUSAND DOLLS, Harperteen) and Kasie West (PIVOT POINT, Harperteen - out today!).
Plus!! CJ Flood's INFINITE SKY, a book I'm very excited about, is out from Simon & Schuster on Thursday. Hooray!
Third up, Twitter friend and fellow canine minion Kate Ormand has got an agent - she's now represented by Isobel Atherton at Creative Authors. Kate is so lovely and supportive of her fellow writers, and I couldn't be more thrilled for her. I really hope I'll be getting to celebrate her book deal soon!
Fourth up, Dan Smith has got a cover for his forthcoming children's novel MY FRIEND THE ENEMY, out from Chicken House in July. I'm stealing it and putting it up here 'cause it looks so awesome. I can't wait to read it!
And fifthly and finally, ACID has had its first full-length review on book blogger Bertass's World of Children's Books (click for link). And what a review! They coined the term 'page-turner' specifically for books like this… a book that I couldn't wait to pick up again every time I had to put it down… I'm so thrilled!
So, lovely blog readers, how about you? Is there any good news or exciting book releases that I've missed? Shout about them in the comments below!
Labels:
ACID,
CJ Flood,
Dan Smith,
Elsie Chapman,
Kate Ormand,
Lucky 13s
Tuesday, 22 January 2013
The Lucky Thirteens Tweetchat!
I'm very excited to announce that the Lucky Thirteens, the fab group of debut authors which I'm part of, will be hosting monthly Tweetchats, with the first taking place this week!
Chats will be guided by a moderator and cover a range of topics, which you can see listed below. Most of the chats will take place at 8pm EST (which unfortunately for my non-night-owl self is 1am GMT), but there are also two Saturday chats scheduled for 3pm EST/8pm GMT which I'm hoping to take part in.
If you want to come along and talk to us, all you have to do is follow the Luckies on Twitter or keep an eye on the hashtag #Lucky13s during the scheduled times. We look forward to seeing you there!
The Lucky 13s Tweetchat Schedule and Topics:
Thursday January 24th: Meet the Luckies!
Thursday February 21st: The Boys and Girls We Lurrve: Love Interests and BFFs in our books
Thursday March 21st: Mostly Middle-Grade (Yay! MG!)
Thursday April 18th: Science! And Fiction! Science Fiction!!!: SF and the science in our fiction
May 18th (Saturday Chat, special 3PM EST Start): Worlds Apart: Wordbuilding and our Fictional Worlds
Thursday June 20th: Paranormally Yours: The Strange, Creepy and Otherworldly
Thursday July 18th: Cheers for Contemps: Contemporary Books
Thursday August 22nd: Kicking It Old School: Historicals
Thursday September 19th: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly: Antagonists and Protagonists
October 19th (Saturday Chat, special 3PM EST Start): Before “Once Upon a Time”: Character’s Backstories
Thursday November 21st: Ask Us Anything!
Thursday December 19th: Year in Review and What’s Up Next
Chats will be guided by a moderator and cover a range of topics, which you can see listed below. Most of the chats will take place at 8pm EST (which unfortunately for my non-night-owl self is 1am GMT), but there are also two Saturday chats scheduled for 3pm EST/8pm GMT which I'm hoping to take part in.
If you want to come along and talk to us, all you have to do is follow the Luckies on Twitter or keep an eye on the hashtag #Lucky13s during the scheduled times. We look forward to seeing you there!
The Lucky 13s Tweetchat Schedule and Topics:
Thursday January 24th: Meet the Luckies!
Thursday February 21st: The Boys and Girls We Lurrve: Love Interests and BFFs in our books
Thursday March 21st: Mostly Middle-Grade (Yay! MG!)
Thursday April 18th: Science! And Fiction! Science Fiction!!!: SF and the science in our fiction
May 18th (Saturday Chat, special 3PM EST Start): Worlds Apart: Wordbuilding and our Fictional Worlds
Thursday June 20th: Paranormally Yours: The Strange, Creepy and Otherworldly
Thursday July 18th: Cheers for Contemps: Contemporary Books
Thursday August 22nd: Kicking It Old School: Historicals
Thursday September 19th: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly: Antagonists and Protagonists
October 19th (Saturday Chat, special 3PM EST Start): Before “Once Upon a Time”: Character’s Backstories
Thursday November 21st: Ask Us Anything!
Thursday December 19th: Year in Review and What’s Up Next
Labels:
debut authors,
Lucky 13s,
Tweetchat
Thursday, 22 November 2012
Dinos and Jungles and Bear Traps, Oh My!
I'm over at the Lucky 13s today, blogging about my first novel, which contained a suicide, two dino attacks, an explosion, a jeep crash, a near-drowning, an earthquake and a landslip… all by page 115! It also had the most dramatic ending EVAH. Find out more here!
Dinos and Jungles and Bear Traps, Oh My!
Labels:
first novel,
Jurassic Park,
Lucky 13s
Tuesday, 25 September 2012
The Lucky 13s Take Over, Week 4: Amy Tintera - Writing Advice I Ignored
It's my final week in the writing cave before I send my WIP to my editor (eep), so today, Amy Tintera is guest blogging for me. Take it away, Amy!
There’s a lot of good writing advice out
there. So much, in fact, that I’m not going to talk about it. Instead, let’s
talk about the advice I totally disregarded.
(But first, a quick note: Everyone is
different. No one can tell you how best to write. Just because the below didn’t
work for me doesn’t mean it won’t work for you. Try a few of them!)
And now, the Writing Advice I Totally
Ignored:
1. Don’t rush just to get words down. There’s
no point in writing words you know you’ll delete later.
Nope,
sorry, this one doesn’t work for me. I’ve moved away from word count a bit, and
I do focus more on producing quality words, but I still need my messy first
drafts. In fact, they’re not even first drafts. Their messy messy messy rough
drafts I maybe don’t even finish. I
recently wrote 45,000 terrible words of Reboot
book two. It was insanely helpful in figuring out the story.
2. Find a critique group to read your work
as you write it and help motivate you to finish.
Critique
groups that meet weekly (in person or online) are not for me. I can’t have
someone else’s opinion on my work when I don’t even know what I’m doing yet. My
beta readers (basically crit partners who read the finished second draft) are
very, very important. But I like to keep early reads to my agent and my sister
(and even then, on a very limited basis).
3. Read your draft out loud.
This
one will probably come back to haunt me. I’ll probably be standing up in front
of everyone at my book launch, reading from Reboot,
and realize it’s terrible. But still, the idea of reading 80,000 words out loud
sounds exhausting and terrifying. No thank you.
4. Publish a short story first.
This
is really great advice for people who write short stories. But I don’t. I write
novels. Short stories sound very, very, hard to me. You have way less words to
build character arcs and your story. (Although, I would consider writing a
novella. But I haven’t tried that either. Yet.)
5. Get a professional editor to look at
your manuscript before querying agents.
I
actually saw this advice on an agent’s submission guidelines and I don’t like
it. I think writers do need outside people to read their work - critique
groups, beta readers, your (honest) friends - but I do not think you need to
pay a professional before even submitting to agents. (This, of course, does not
apply to self-publishing. If you’re self-publishing I think you really do need
a professional freelance editor.)
6. Print out your manuscript when it’s time
to edit. It will make it easier to catch mistakes.
It
might be easier on my eyes, but that sounds like a waste of paper and ink to
me. And I’m really bad about replacing my paper and ink. Let’s not make my life
more difficult.
7. Write first thing in the morning, before
you go to work or start your day.
DUDE
IF YOU WANT TO GET UP AT 5AM TO WRITE THAT’S COOL. I’M JUST GOING TO BE OVER
HERE SLEEPING.
8. Don’t plot the ending in advance. You
have to earn it.
I
can’t remember where I read this piece of advice, but it’s always stuck with me
because it provoked a major WHAAAAAAT response. Of course you have to earn your
ending. But for me, I need to know where I’m headed in order to figure out how
to get there.
9. Keep a diary or a journal.
Spending
that much time with myself sounds terrifying. I’d much rather hang out in my
character’s heads.
10. Don’t start out writing novels.
Why
not?
Amy Tintera is a full-time writer living in
Los Angeles, CA. HarperTeen will publish her debut novel, REBOOT, in Summer
2013. Visit her website and blog: amytintera.com or
follow her on Twitter: @amytintera
Labels:
Amy Tintera,
Lucky 13s,
REBOOT
Wednesday, 19 September 2012
The Lucky 13s Take Over, Week 3: Mindy McGinnis - Sex in YA - You Know You Want It
While I'm in the writing cave
finishing my WIP, some of my fellow Lucky 13s are stepping in to guest
blog for me. This week, I'm handing over to Mindy McGinnis.
"... and you know you want me to give it to you." Biff's words to Lorraine in Back to the Future had me totally flummoxed for a looong time. What was it? How could Biff give it to
her? And why was he trying to touch her panties in the front seat of
the car during the dance? Why was Lorriane talking about Marty's Calvin
Klein's in their meeting scene? What's the fixation with underwear?
I remained in the dark about these topics for awhile. I knew sex
existed, but I didn't have the whole Tab A, Slot B mechanics of the
dance figured out until er... well... later. Not so today's teens. Blame
it on the media, blame it on the culture, blame on parenting, blame it
on the rain (how many 80's references can I get in here?) Let's just set
blame aside and focus on the fact that it simply IS. My opinion - kids
aren't having more sex, or earlier than before - it's simply no longer a
taboo subject.
So, because it's not taboo, because they do know the mechanics - what do we write about it? Do we write about it?
It's
up to you. I've read some really graphic sex scenes in YA. I don't find
them offensive. I have a hard time believing there's anything in there
that the average teen hasn't already been exposed to. However, I do
monitor content in the books that I give out to junior high students -
not necessarily because I think they're about to have their minds
deflowered - but because their parents DO believe that, and they might
have my ass in a sling. And I need my ass. I use it everyday.
My own philosophy runs thus; I have always believed that less is more. Why does Jaws work?
'Cause you don't see the shark. I typically refrain from physically
describing my characters because I want my readers to fill in their hot guy, their hallway bitch, themselves as
the MC. So when it comes to those backseat moments, or when my MC
invites a guy over to "watch a movie," (yeah right, I have yet to see
the end of Ferris Bueller's Day Off), I want them to fill in slot
B on their own. Something happened. Unless it's imperative to the plot,
does it matter what? Do they need the description? Do they need to see
that shark?
Here's a great example from Harry Potter & the Order of the Phoenix: (I
know you're saying "What! An HP makeout scene?") Oh yeah... it's
there. A meeting of Dumbledore's Army has just ended. Everyone has filed
out except for Cho and Harry, who are kinda hanging out there in the
Room of Requirement... and who didn't guess that thing had multiple uses? pg. 456-457:
"I really like you Harry."
He could not think. A tingling sensation was spreading throughout him, paralyzing his arms, legs and brain.
She was much too close. He could see every tear clinging to her eyelashes...
*PAGE BREAK*
He returned to the common room half an hour later to find Hermione and Ron..."
Hey! Wait a second!! Half an hour later? Gee...
what were they doing? Now, obviously Rowling had a duty to her young
readers to keep it clean, and to her older readers to keep it
interesting. Not so for all writers, certainly. But I think it's a good
example of letting the reader take it to their own level - of comfort,
of familiarity, without being told what happened.
My own writing gives a little more detail than this highly gratuitous page break, but you get the idea.
One last thought - what do you want your readers to take away from your book? I haven't read Breaking Dawn,
but I know that Edward and Bella break the headboard, cause that's all
anyone wanted to talk about. Other than that - zero clue what the plot
is about.
I'd love some feedback! What are your thoughts? Show the shark, or keep him underwater? :)
Mindy McGinnis is a YA author and librarian. Her debut dystopian, NOT A DROP TO DRINK, will be available from Katherine Tegen / Harper Collins Fall, 2013. She blogs at Writer, Writer Pants on Fire. You can also find her on Twitter and Facebook.
Labels:
Lucky 13s,
Mindy McGinnis,
NOT A DROP TO DRINK
Wednesday, 12 September 2012
The Lucky 13s Take Over, Week Two: April Tucholke - The Mystery Notebook
While I'm in the writing cave finishing my WIP, some of my fellow Lucky 13s are stepping in to guest blog for me. This week, I'm handing over to April Tucholke.
When I was 14 I flew to CA to visit my cousins. I read a lot, a lot, of Agatha Christie that year, and made a MYSTERY NOTEBOOK to put clues in. It was just a regular lined notebook that I wrote MYSTERY NOTEBOOK on. I took the notebook with on my trip, fully expecting to find, and solve, many crimes with it. Um...yeah.

Wednesday, 5 September 2012
The Lucky 13s Take Over, Week One: Ellen Oh - Swan vs Eagle
While I'm in the writing cave finishing my WIP, some of my fellow Lucky 13s are stepping in to guest blog for me. This week, I'm handing over to Ellen Oh.
So since Emma invited me to share
something with her blog readers, I thought I’d share a story about my Mom and
how she kept me sane during the time I was querying PROPHECY. I had just left
my previous agent and was in that phase of wondering if I’d ever get
representation again and I was a nervous wreck. I stressed about everything, I
checked my email box hundreds of times, I stalked agents online, wondering
whether or not they were reading my MS, I second guessed myself all the time. I was not rational. And it didn’t help that it seemed like all my
writer friends were getting book deals while I still labored in the trenches. I
couldn’t see clearly. Until my Mom gave me the smackdown.
My folks came down for a visit during the height of my submission craze. They'd known that I'd been under a lot of stress and were worried about me. The first thing my Mom said was to turn off the laptop. "All that computer does is give you stress. Turn it off and come sit down and talk."
I turned off the computer and sat down, heart sinking for the lecture that I knew was coming. It won't matter if I'm 60 years old, my parents will always lecture me. That's life.
"Ellen, why are you so stressed about this book?" my Mom asked. "Why don't you forget about it already."
"That's impossible, Mom. I just can't forget it."
"Not forget forever. Just for a little while," my Mom said. "Listen, don't be stuck on your book. Let it go and be happy. When you are happy, really happy, then go back to it. Nothing works when your brain is filled with stress." She rubbed at the crease between my eyebrows. "Your brain is all filled with worry and stress and miserableness. Why you want to put that in your book? You put that in your book - who will want to read it? Happiness makes you healthy. Healthy makes your brain happy. Then you write your book."
I nodded and sighed. "It's not that easy..."
"Of course it's not easy." My Mom shook her head at me. "You and your sister got your writing gene from your Dad. He's a great writer. Great newspaper columnist (my Dad had a column in the national Korean American paper for years). But then he writed 3 books and they don't do good. He's depressed and gives up writing. That's why he's worried about you girls. But I'm not worried. I know one day people will applaud me just for being your mother. You will be great one day. But don't rush it. You don't have to. I will live until I am 110! You have plenty of time. Don't rush."
I began to laugh. "Thanks Mom. Maybe one day then it'll all work out for me. It's just hard when I see all my friends succeed and I wonder when it will happen to me."
My folks came down for a visit during the height of my submission craze. They'd known that I'd been under a lot of stress and were worried about me. The first thing my Mom said was to turn off the laptop. "All that computer does is give you stress. Turn it off and come sit down and talk."
I turned off the computer and sat down, heart sinking for the lecture that I knew was coming. It won't matter if I'm 60 years old, my parents will always lecture me. That's life.
"Ellen, why are you so stressed about this book?" my Mom asked. "Why don't you forget about it already."
"That's impossible, Mom. I just can't forget it."
"Not forget forever. Just for a little while," my Mom said. "Listen, don't be stuck on your book. Let it go and be happy. When you are happy, really happy, then go back to it. Nothing works when your brain is filled with stress." She rubbed at the crease between my eyebrows. "Your brain is all filled with worry and stress and miserableness. Why you want to put that in your book? You put that in your book - who will want to read it? Happiness makes you healthy. Healthy makes your brain happy. Then you write your book."
I nodded and sighed. "It's not that easy..."
"Of course it's not easy." My Mom shook her head at me. "You and your sister got your writing gene from your Dad. He's a great writer. Great newspaper columnist (my Dad had a column in the national Korean American paper for years). But then he writed 3 books and they don't do good. He's depressed and gives up writing. That's why he's worried about you girls. But I'm not worried. I know one day people will applaud me just for being your mother. You will be great one day. But don't rush it. You don't have to. I will live until I am 110! You have plenty of time. Don't rush."
I began to laugh. "Thanks Mom. Maybe one day then it'll all work out for me. It's just hard when I see all my friends succeed and I wonder when it will happen to me."
My Mom smiled and grabbed my hands. "What kind of writer will you be? Some writers will write 10 books that are all forgettable. You will be the writer that writes one book, but it will be unforgettable. I believe in you. Some people lay eggs that turn into chickens - others lay eggs that turn into eagles. You are no chicken. You are an Eagle. One day you will soar."
"Funny - I thought you were going to say swan, but I like the eagle analogy better," I said.
"Swan, BAH! Only look good on outside. Open its mouth and the ugliest sound come out. Eagle is better. Look strong, look powerful, be strong, be powerful."
"Thanks Mom, you're right."
"Of course. I'm almost always right."
Ellen Oh's debut novel, PROPHECY, will be released January 2nd, 2013 by HarperTeen. Visit her at ellenoh.com, like her Prophecy Series Facebook Page or follow her on Twitter -
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
In Two Places At Once, Plus More Books for 2012
I'm in two places at once today! As well as
being here, you can find me interviewing Sangu Mandanna about her
awesome dystopian debut THE LOST GIRL over at The Lucky 13s. THE LOST GIRL released yesterday and is a gripping tale of love, loss
and life with a unique dystopian twist. I absolutely love it and I'm hoping to
have Sangu on this blog for a chat when TLG releases with Random House in the
UK early next year (publisher siblings, yay!).
I reckon it's time for some more 20 Books
for 2012 now, so here are the next three I'm adding to the list:
FROSTFIRE by Zoe Marriott
A fantasy YA about a girl who is
possessed by a demon, and when she's forced to join a band of rebel soldiers
and grows close to their two leaders, is terrified she won't be able to protect
them from her own terrible power. I just finished reading this, and thought it
was wonderful. The writing is exquisite and the heroine is brilliantly
kick-ass. And the cover is beautiful!
SECOND CHANCE SUMMER by Morgan Matson
I've always been a huge fan of Sarah
Dessen, but I reckon she now has some serious competition for the crown of
realistic romantic contemporary. I already loved Morgan's first book, AMY AND
ROGER'S EPIC DETOUR, but this one, a story about a girl whose family take one
last vacation together before a life-changing event, forcing her to face up to
the ghosts of her past, just blew me away. Warning: do NOT read this book in
public unless you don't mind total strangers seeing you flat-out bawling. And
make sure you have plenty of tissues!
THE WITNESS by James Jauncey
A gritty, near-future dystopian set in Scotland,
where conflict over who should own land in the Highlands is escalating. A teenager
witnesses a massacre and ends up on the run with the only survivor, a young
boy. Everything about this book is just breathtaking. One of my favourites of
all time.
From next week, I'm going to be AWOL (at
least from blogging) for a while. My book 2 deadline is looming ever nearer,
and I need to take time away from the blog to make sure I get the MS finished.
However, it won't be sitting in the corner of the internet gathering cobwebs.
Some of my fellow Lucky 13s are taking over, starting with a post next week
from the awesome Ellen Oh, so I hope you'll still stop by for a read.
Until then, to the writing cave… see you
again at the end of September!
Tuesday, 27 December 2011
Author Interview - Liz Coley

Hi Liz. Tell us a bit about yourself.
I’m Liz Coley, mother of three teenagers, changing careers mid-life from volunteer extraordinaire/chauffeur to author. It’s going to be crazy interesting.
When did you start writing, and why?
I started writing seriously in 2002, when I wanted to create a sci-fi novel my two boys could enjoy. The Captain’s Kid was born over the next two years during piano lessons and taekwondo classes. It has never sold. I kept writing, though, because I was determined to give it a solid effort, and, I reassured myself, I was setting a great example for my kids of standing up in the face of rejection and plowing ahead with my dreams.
What is your writing process like?
First I have to go grocery shopping on the way home from school drop-off, then prep the vegetables or start a soup simmering. Some dusting or bill paying or sorting things or laundry might enter into it. Then there’s catching a missed episode of Daily/Colbert. Make a latte. Oh bother--it’s almost lunch time. You get the drift. Procrastination often steals the morning, but the afternoon can be a productive rush of writing frantically packed in before carpool.
You have a debut YA novel, PRETTY GIRL-13, coming out from HarperCollins in 2013, but you’ve also self-published a YA novel, OUT OF XIBALBA. What made you decide to self-publish XIBALBA, and what made you decide to pursue a traditional publishing deal for PRETTY GIRL-13?
I have written eight manuscripts by now, all with the goal of traditional publishing. OUT OF XIBALBA was a true labor of love, a story involving a lot of historical research about the Mayans, a sophisticated civilization that fell into ruins in the jungle a millennium ago. I drop a teenaged girl from Ohio alone into that world of human sacrifice, bloody warfare, and palace politics. As a time travel/alternate history/romance/2012 apocalypse story, it wasn’t something hot on the radar for teens, and in fact, many of my readers have been adult men and women. It refuses to be niched, which makes it impossible to sell traditionally. However, I knew I’d regret it forever if XIBALBA languished on my hard drive, so I made the decision to self-publish before the world ends.
Can you tell us a bit more about the process of self-publishing XIBALBA?
Using Createspace for my print platform and Kindle and Smashwords for my ebook editions, I learned so much from self-publishing--lessons that I believe make me a better author for my publishers. Since a self-pub author makes all the decisions, I now have a better appreciation for both cover and internal design--fonts and style decisions and typesetting. I appreciating what it means to be the final copy-editor and proofreader. I get the really important differences between e-pub and print, including use of images and fonts. Most of all, I appreciate the sizable challenges of promotion and distribution. Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kindle, and Nook all carry OUT OF XIBALBA now, and it is getting nice reviews. I’m working to get it into some libraries and schools. (see LCTeen.com)
And can you tell us a bit more about PRETTY GIRL-13’s journey to publication?
PG13 was my 2009 Nanowrimo novel. I had spent a year thinking about it, the prior summer doing the research, September and October clearing my plate of other projects, and November diving into what was a dark and difficult subject. I delivered the story to my agents in early 2010 and spent half a year in revision with them. They took the manuscript out on submission at the start of 2011, and I signed with HarperCollins in July.
If you could only own one book, what would it be (and why)?
This is too hard. Maybe the Oxford English Dictionary (with the magnifying glass and a really bright light) or maybe a favorite that I have reread to shreds but never get tired of--The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis or Memory by Lois McMaster Bujold.
If you could only own one album, what would it be (and why)?
A recording of Handel’s Messiah, because I could sing along.
Who or what is your biggest inspiration?
In terms of writing, I am always inspired by the stories and interviews I hear on NPR. In terms of how to live your life, I am inspired by my mom.
And finally, what’s next for you?
For Nanowrimo 2011, I am digging into another dark psychological story I hope will please PG13 readers. If PRETTY GIRL-13 is about secrets you can’t even tell yourself, this one is about a guilty secret that has to be told, even if it means losing everything.
Thanks for letting me interview you, Liz! It's been great to have you on the blog and to find out more about your books - they both sound fab!
You can also find out more about Liz here:
Lizcoley.com
LCTeen.com
Phlography.blogspot.com
TheLucky13s.blogspot.com
twitter.com/#!/LizColeyBooks
When did you start writing, and why?
I started writing seriously in 2002, when I wanted to create a sci-fi novel my two boys could enjoy. The Captain’s Kid was born over the next two years during piano lessons and taekwondo classes. It has never sold. I kept writing, though, because I was determined to give it a solid effort, and, I reassured myself, I was setting a great example for my kids of standing up in the face of rejection and plowing ahead with my dreams.
What is your writing process like?
First I have to go grocery shopping on the way home from school drop-off, then prep the vegetables or start a soup simmering. Some dusting or bill paying or sorting things or laundry might enter into it. Then there’s catching a missed episode of Daily/Colbert. Make a latte. Oh bother--it’s almost lunch time. You get the drift. Procrastination often steals the morning, but the afternoon can be a productive rush of writing frantically packed in before carpool.
You have a debut YA novel, PRETTY GIRL-13, coming out from HarperCollins in 2013, but you’ve also self-published a YA novel, OUT OF XIBALBA. What made you decide to self-publish XIBALBA, and what made you decide to pursue a traditional publishing deal for PRETTY GIRL-13?
I have written eight manuscripts by now, all with the goal of traditional publishing. OUT OF XIBALBA was a true labor of love, a story involving a lot of historical research about the Mayans, a sophisticated civilization that fell into ruins in the jungle a millennium ago. I drop a teenaged girl from Ohio alone into that world of human sacrifice, bloody warfare, and palace politics. As a time travel/alternate history/romance/2012 apocalypse story, it wasn’t something hot on the radar for teens, and in fact, many of my readers have been adult men and women. It refuses to be niched, which makes it impossible to sell traditionally. However, I knew I’d regret it forever if XIBALBA languished on my hard drive, so I made the decision to self-publish before the world ends.
Can you tell us a bit more about the process of self-publishing XIBALBA?
Using Createspace for my print platform and Kindle and Smashwords for my ebook editions, I learned so much from self-publishing--lessons that I believe make me a better author for my publishers. Since a self-pub author makes all the decisions, I now have a better appreciation for both cover and internal design--fonts and style decisions and typesetting. I appreciating what it means to be the final copy-editor and proofreader. I get the really important differences between e-pub and print, including use of images and fonts. Most of all, I appreciate the sizable challenges of promotion and distribution. Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kindle, and Nook all carry OUT OF XIBALBA now, and it is getting nice reviews. I’m working to get it into some libraries and schools. (see LCTeen.com)
And can you tell us a bit more about PRETTY GIRL-13’s journey to publication?
PG13 was my 2009 Nanowrimo novel. I had spent a year thinking about it, the prior summer doing the research, September and October clearing my plate of other projects, and November diving into what was a dark and difficult subject. I delivered the story to my agents in early 2010 and spent half a year in revision with them. They took the manuscript out on submission at the start of 2011, and I signed with HarperCollins in July.
If you could only own one book, what would it be (and why)?
This is too hard. Maybe the Oxford English Dictionary (with the magnifying glass and a really bright light) or maybe a favorite that I have reread to shreds but never get tired of--The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis or Memory by Lois McMaster Bujold.
If you could only own one album, what would it be (and why)?
A recording of Handel’s Messiah, because I could sing along.
Who or what is your biggest inspiration?
In terms of writing, I am always inspired by the stories and interviews I hear on NPR. In terms of how to live your life, I am inspired by my mom.
And finally, what’s next for you?
For Nanowrimo 2011, I am digging into another dark psychological story I hope will please PG13 readers. If PRETTY GIRL-13 is about secrets you can’t even tell yourself, this one is about a guilty secret that has to be told, even if it means losing everything.
Thanks for letting me interview you, Liz! It's been great to have you on the blog and to find out more about your books - they both sound fab!
You can also find out more about Liz here:
Lizcoley.com
LCTeen.com
Phlography.blogspot.com
TheLucky13s.blogspot.com
twitter.com/#!/LizColeyBooks
Thursday, 13 October 2011
The Lucky Thirteens Blog Launches Today!
I'm really excited to announce that a brand new group blog, the Lucky 13s, will be launching later today - and I'm going to be there!
We're a group of authors with debut children's and young adult books arriving in 2013. We'll be adding members as we go along and blogging about all aspects of writing and the writing life.
So why not grab some balloons and a part hat and come on over to help me and fellow founder members Rachele Alpine, Liz Coley, Jessica Corra, Lamar "L.R." Giles, Kristen Kittscher, Tara Lazar, Nicole Maggi, Ellen Oh, Steven dos Santos, Sarah Skilton and Jessica Young celebrate our launch day at The Lucky 13s? It'd be great to see you. You can also follow the Lucky 13s on Twitter.
Many thanks to all the Lucky 13s for their hard work over the last few weeks, especially to Nicole for getting it all going in the first place!
We're a group of authors with debut children's and young adult books arriving in 2013. We'll be adding members as we go along and blogging about all aspects of writing and the writing life.
So why not grab some balloons and a part hat and come on over to help me and fellow founder members Rachele Alpine, Liz Coley, Jessica Corra, Lamar "L.R." Giles, Kristen Kittscher, Tara Lazar, Nicole Maggi, Ellen Oh, Steven dos Santos, Sarah Skilton and Jessica Young celebrate our launch day at The Lucky 13s? It'd be great to see you. You can also follow the Lucky 13s on Twitter.
Many thanks to all the Lucky 13s for their hard work over the last few weeks, especially to Nicole for getting it all going in the first place!
Labels:
getting published,
Lucky 13s,
writing
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)