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Books: Word Up - YA

Tuesday, June 24, 2008


YA Hotness (in honor of Sharon)


What better way to bid a bloggy farewell to Sharon than to address a few of her favorite things -- hot publishing deals, hot young New Yorkers, and YA fiction? To those ends, we contacted our (best) friend and author Lauren Oliver (indeed, she's hot), who recently got a "significant deal" (that's publishing lingo, not my own) for two young adult books. The first, tentatively titled If I Should Fall (Bowen Press/Harper), is due out in 2010. Here's an excerpt from our email Q&A: 

1)  What kind of process did you go through to get this deal?

This wasn’t the first book I’ve tried to publish, actually. I’d written two adult novels previously. The first got me literary representation but no deal; the second didn’t even get sent out because it was a big mess (I’m still planning on returning to it at some point, though). 

It was weird; the idea for this young adult novel just came to me and I couldn’t stop thinking about it. I spoke about it a little with my mom and dad, since I still need their advice/approval for pretty much every decision I make. Everything seemed to crystallize easily in this case (though I still feel as though I paid my dues; I’ve been writing every day since I was about five). I wrote sixty pages and a detailed outline. I had a pretty clear sense of where I wanted to go with the story. 

Then I approached one agent and one agent only—Stephen Barbara of the Donald Maas Agency, who’s absolutely amazing. He went to the University of Chicago and he’s just so good at his job, really committed, goes to bat 100 % for his authors, etc. I’d reconnected with him at a publishing event (I work in publishing as well) and so I gave him my sixty pages and outline and crossed my fingers he would like it. He did; he got back to me in record time, we went out to breakfast, I felt super fancy, and we formalized it.  He’s the one who came up with the pitch letter (that’s why having a good agent is so important—an agent really can represent your work better than you, and agents aren’t shy about bragging on behalf of their clients!). The partial manuscript went out to about fifteen publishing houses and was pre-empted by Brenda Bowen at HarperCollins.  She’s starting up her own imprint there and I am so, so thrilled that my book will be on her list. She’s the kind of person who just inspires trust and confidence—which is good, because I tend to freak out a lot. 

2) What's the book about? I know it's a two-book deal -- will the second one be a sequel, or something different?

I don’t want to give too much away, but. . .the protagonist, Samantha, dies in the first chapter. However, she continues to wake up, again and again, on the day of her death. She ultimately figures out that the life she must save is not her own, but beyond that the book is really about discovering what is important and valuable about life. At first she feels cursed by the situation she finds herself in, but ultimately she’s being given an opportunity that rarely presents itself in real life: a second chance.

The second book will not be a sequel. I didn’t think I could get away with killing Sam off and then resurrecting her more than seven times, to be honest.

3) What's it like knowing that you're going to be a published author?

It’s like the moment right before a storm when everything gets still. . .just kidding! Wouldn’t it be annoying if from this point on I started answering every question like a “writer”?  Seriously, it’s an amazing feeling, although it still seems very surreal. I feel incredibly validated and very blessed; it’s just a wonderful thing to know that there are people out there, smart people, who believe that I have a talent for this thing I love so abidingly. 

4) You're currently in NYU's creative writing program. Why did you decide to go to graduate school for writing? Do you ever think that now that you've got this deal, it's a waste of time/money?

Oh, it’s totally a waste of money and time. JUST KIDDING, NYU!  I think it’s been a really valuable experience, actually. I mean, look, many writers don’t go and get their MFAs--most don’t. The only thing that makes you a writer is writing. But attending an MFA program allows you to focus very heavily on doing just that for a few years; it forces you to generate large quantities of material, it forces a kind of discipline, it forces you to read, read, read.  In other words, it helps you hone and develop the habits of a writer. I think that’s invaluable. And it’s amazing to benefit from the critical eyes of so many intelligent people, and you become a more analytical reader, as well.  That can only help.

Plus, I think people in the publishing world take MFA programs seriously. I think to them, again, it indicates a certain amount of discipline. I really have no proof of that; it’s just my general impression but I’m going to go ahead and claim it. Claiming things without proof: something I did not learn in my MFA program.  That technique was honed in college. 

5) Tell us something strange about you.

I eat ketchup on everything. Even on tomatoes. People think it’s really gross.


6/24/2008 11:37:00 AM by Sharon | Comments [0] |  




Friday, June 06, 2008


OMFG Maine


Truly, life gets more amazing every day.

Cecily von Ziegesar, author of the Gossip Girl YA book series that was then adapted into the BSE, is working on her first adult series, according to Hyperion. Due out in 2009, the series (first book is called "Cum Laude" -- really??????) will be about a group of young adults who meet during their freshman year at a small college in MAINE. (Via.)

[Cross-posted on About Town/Word Up.]

--- Deirdre Fulton 


6/6/2008 10:12:00 AM by Sharon | Comments [0] |  




Tuesday, June 03, 2008


Exploring Goodreads


 

I finally got around to reading my May email update from Goodreads.com, one of several social networking sites for book nerds like me. (I use it primarily to keep track of my own current reading habits / progress; I’m less interested in reading/writing reviews.) Since I joined about a year ago, the site has continuously improved; recent updates include the ability to purchase books directly from your “To-Read” list, and an addictive, reader-formulated book quiz.

Also fun to see is the list of “Movers and Shakers” -- that month’s most popular books. May’s top five are: Animal, Vegetable, Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver (read it, loved it); Uglies by Scott Westerfeld (sci-fi YA about a society where everyone gets prettifying plastic surgery at age 16 -- sounds good); a twofer of Tweak by Nic Scheff and Beautiful Boy by David Scheff (a boy’s tale of crystal meth addiction and his father’s story of dealing with it); The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak (heard great things about this book, started it, couldn’t get into it, didn’t finish it); and The Road by Cormac McCarthy (definitely on my to-read list, and currently being made into a movie).

You can be my book-friend here: http://www.goodreads.com/profile/dfulton.

 -- Deirdre Fulton


6/3/2008 2:38:00 PM by Sharon | Comments [0] |  




Monday, March 03, 2008


The New Yorker reviews Gossip Girl




Er, more specifically, JANET MALCOLM has reviewed Gossip Girl, and we're talking about the book series by Cecily von Ziegesar, not the television series by Josh Scwhartz. Oh, we are completely losing our shit over this review. It is three pages long online, although we would be so happy if it were longer, and that Malcolm did succumb against her own will and "go on telling Blair stories until they are gone..." The piece is so full of delicious bits we're pretty much at a loss. We would cut and paste the entire thing here just to satisfy our need to have it preserved somehow, but instead we elected to simply link to it and cut out the clip from our print copy and file it away in our file folder of amazing stuff. But just because we really can't help ourselves:

Von Ziegesar uses the technique of narration through interior voice with all her major characters, but when she gets into the id-shaped mind of Blair Waldorf she crosses a kind of boundary. Blair is both a broader caricature and a more real person than the others. Her over-the-top selfishness and hatefulness has the ring of behind-our-masks-we’re-all-like-that truth. And among her malevolent internal mutterings lurk some of the series’ funniest lines. When her mother marries Cyrus Rose, for example, and proposes that Blair reconsider her refusal to take his name, Blair’s inner voice growls back: “Blair Rose? No thank you. It sounded like the name of a perfume made especially for Kmart.”

Even though the books are about a hundred years old in terms of newsiness and timeliness, it really doesn't matter because of how elegantly Malcolm dissects them here. We wish we were her, pretty much.


3/3/2008 1:02:16 PM by Sharon | Comments [0] |  




Tuesday, February 26, 2008


More "Fine Lines": Why obsess over the NYTBR when you can obsess over 80's YA?


Hell to the yes. "Fine Lines," the newish Friday feature at ultimate lady-blog Jezebel just keeps getting more and more delish. The past fortnight showcased two of our especial YA favorites: The Cat Ate My Gymsuit by Paula Danziger and Elizabeth George Speare's The Witch of Blackbird Pond. Read them both, then come back to us, if you choose. YA-Rant Alert!



We own almost every single Danziger book. We bought most of them used at garage sales or from that Scholastic book-buying catalog thing they always had once a month at our school (which furnished most of our youthful library! when the books came it was like nerd holiday and birthday all in one!). Cat is probably our pet Danzinger tale, mostly because it's written about an outcast from the perspective of said outcast, it never gets overly precious, it's raw and honest and lonely and real, and shit, Marcy is a total card! What a hidden firecracker!

So yes, we adored her in Cat, but then suddenly we found ourselves SERIOUSLY DISAPPOINTED in Danziger for turning Marcy's whole life story around in an unpleasantly cliched manner. The sequel novel about our girl, There's a Bat in Bunk Five, catches us up to Marcy about a year later: she's lost a ton of weight, is suddenly pretty (no more awkward adolescence at 15? how nice for her!), and scores one of the cutest, wittiest, guitar-playing dudes at the artsy fartsy camp Ms. Finney and her hot, bearded husband run instead of teaching English to ungrateful public school kids. Phew. It's like -- what gives? One of the things that was so wonderful about Cat is that at the end, everything doesn't turn out to be 100%! And that's cool! Because newsflash! Not every social wallflower BLOSSOMS LIKE A LOVELY DELICATE FLOWER in two seconds after their phsycial appearance changes for the better. Duh! It's just upsetting. We felt as though something was STOLEN FROM OUR HEARTS after we read Bat. The worst part? Yes, we were jealous of Marcy! When we were supposed to be relating to her! What happened?!



On the other hand, The Witch of Blackbird Pond always satisfied and freaked us out to the nines every time we read and read and reread it in middle school. So delicious! Such a perfect teen precursor to our beloved Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca, the sort of haunting romantical coming-of-age mystery creep-fest that makes life worth living! Kit, dear, headstrong Kit, is flawed -- and yet -- she's all fierceness and fabulosity. Old Hag has her totally figured out: she screws up, but we can't help but love her to pieces by the end. Plus, the Purtians! Connecticut colonial wilderness! Crippled Mercy and her big blue eyes! Boys in breeches! Sharp-tongued Nat! CONSIDERING the idea of marrying simply to get out of doing back-breaking housework! Oh, god. Where, oh where, is that Scholastic book catalog when we need it? Or a used bookstore? Or a library? We want tea and old books, now, forever, yesterday.


2/26/2008 4:02:48 PM by Sharon | Comments [4] |  



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On The Phoenix's books blog, we obsess over literature so that you don't have to. Reviews, readings, news, and literary gossip. Levar Burton might not have wanted you to take his word for it. But we do.

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YA Hotness (in honor of Sharon)
OMFG Maine
Exploring Goodreads
The New Yorker reviews Gossip Girl
More "Fine Lines": Why obsess over the NYTBR when you can obsess over 80's YA?
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