Books for kids, teens, & those who are young at heart

Category: Interview (Page 2 of 7)

INTO THE FIRE by Kelly Hashway Blitz Tour

Let’s give a big welcome to Kelly Hashway as she celebrates her newest release, the YA paranormal romance INTO THE FIRE. Don’t forget to enter the giveaway!
Hi, Kelly! What inspired you to write INTO THE FIRE?
When I was growing up, my mother watched reruns of the original TV series Dark Shadows. There were a few episodes that featured a woman who was a Phoenix. Every so many years she’d die in fire and be reborn from the ashes. For some reason, this stuck with me and I knew I had to write about a cast of characters who were Phoenixes.

 

The target audience for INTO THE FIRE are teens. What books had the most influence on you when you were that age?
I loved paranormal and horror novels. I was constantly reading those, which I’m sure is why I write them today. I can’t really pinpoint any specific titles though. It was the genres themselves that influenced me.
 
If you were stranded on a desert island and could only bring two books and one movie, what would you bring?
Only two books? That’s a nightmare! Okay, I’ll go with Percy Jackson and the Titan’s Curse by Rick Riordan and Crescendo by Becca Fitzpatrick. Those are still my top two picks even though they’ve been out for years. As for the movie, I’ll pick Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two. You can’t go wrong with that one because there are so many emotions involved.
 
You write a lot of paranormal stories. What is it about that genre that keeps you coming back?
To me, paranormal is the real world but better. Anything can happen and people tend to have extraordinary abilities. I feel like there’s always something new to discover in this genre.

What is the single best piece of advice you have for aspiring authors?
The best advice is probably the simplest. Read. It’s the best form of research you can do (not to mention the most fun), and by reading you’re supporting the industry you want to work in.

If you could have one superpower, what would it be?
I’ve always wanted to fly, mostly because I hate driving. 😉 I used to dream about flying when I was very little though, so the obsession started long before I got my driver’s license. I’ve always envied birds because they can walk, run, or fly. It would be really cool to soar above the world and see it from a different perspective.

 

INTO THE FIRE by Kelly Hashway
Genre: YA Paranormal
Publisher: Limitless Publishing
– SYNOPSIS –
In one month’s time, seventeen-year-old Cara Tillman will die and be reborn from her own ashes…
Her life of secrecy has never been easy. She’s watched her younger brother, Jeremy, burn and rise again in a coming-of-age process called rebirth. And just like her brother, when her time comes, she won’t remember anything from her first life other than she’s a Phoenix—a member of a small group of people descended from the mythical Phoenix bird.
The last thing she needs to worry about is falling for the new guy in town—Logan Schmidt.
Cara is drawn to Logan in a way she can’t explain, but she’s not exactly complaining. Everything is perfect…except it’s not. Once she’s reborn, she’ll forget Logan. And to make things worse, a Phoenix Hunter is on the loose, and Cara’s involvement with Logan is bringing out her Phoenix qualities—the very qualities that will draw the Hunter right to her.
Desperate times call for desperate measures…
Afraid of hurting Logan, Cara breaks it off for good. But her attraction to him runs deeper than a typical high school crush. She wants him—needs him. And if he proves willing to stay by her side, their love might destroy them both.
Can Cara hide from the Phoenix Hunters long enough to survive her rebirth? And if so, will it mean a new beginning with Logan—or the beginning of the end?

 

 

– PURCHASE –

 

 

– ABOUT THE AUTHOR –
Kelly Hashway grew up reading R.L. Stein’s Fear Street novels and writing stories of her own, so it was no surprise to her family when she majored in English and later obtained a masters degree in English Secondary Education from East Stroudsburg University. After teaching middle school language arts for seven years, Hashway went back to school and focused specifically on writing. She is now the author of three young adult series, one middle grade series, and several picture books. She also writes contemporary romance under the pen name Ashelyn Drake. When she isn’t writing, Hashway works as a freelance editor for small presses as well as for her own list of clients. In her spare time, she enjoys running, traveling, and volunteering with the PTO. Hashway currently resides in Pennsylvania with her husband, daughter, and two pets.

 

 

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Meet Sarah Albee Author of Chapter 11 of The Great Connecticut Caper

Chapter 11 of The Great Connecticut Caper is here! That means only one more to go! It’s been a wild ride. In honor of the mystery (almost) being solved, the Connecticut Humanities is hosting an event at Gillette Castle on Sunday, June 7 from 2-4 pm. It’ll be a great opportunity to meet some of the authors and illustrators and to participate in some fun events (I heard there will be bookish type prizes!). In the meantime, today you can get know Sarah Albee, author of chapter 11, a little better. Welcome, Sarah!

CTCaper_poster_finalWhat was your approach to writing chapter 11 of The Great CT Caper? Given that it was the second-to-last chapter, how much did you feel you had to wrap up in order to set up the ending for the author of the final chapter?

I actually worked pretty closely with Stacy DeKeyser, my fellow Caper author who was slated to write the final episode. Together we hatched a plan to wrap up the various plot threads and resolve the story in our two remaining installments. There was quite a bit of back-and-forth and she had some great ideas that I incorporated into my chapter. I think the combination of brain power was a great way to work!

What were your expectations coming into writing a collaborative, serialized story for young readers? Had you written anything like this before?

I have written books that include lots of chapter cliffhangers and that have very controlled word counts, but never in collaboration with other writers. It was fun, but challenging, because my predecessors have wonderfully wild imaginations and took the story onto some wild tangents. I was in the role of “batting cleanup,” and I enjoyed the challenge.

What kind of research did you do for the project?

I visited the Castle and took a whole lot of pictures, so I felt I had a good grounding with the setting.

The Great CT Caper’s target audience is children in grades four through seven. What were some of your favorite books when you were that age?

I loved books with magic in them, like the Narnia chronicles and Edward Eager’s books (Half Magic, Magic by the Lake, etc.). I also loved detective stories, and devoured Sherlock Holmes stories and Agatha Christie mysteries.

What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received? What one piece of advice that you didn’t get but wished you had gotten?

I love Stephen King’s admonition in his book On Writing, where he says, “The road to hell is paved with adverbs.” In other words, write with simplicity and clarity.

The advice I wish I’d gotten? Ignore people who say “Write what you know.” I love finding stuff out. I love not knowing about something and learning about it. It’s the best part of being a nonfiction writer!

If you were stranded on a desert island and could only bring two books and one movie, what would you bring?

I’d bring the collected works of P.G. Wodehouse, the collected works of Shakespeare (is that cheating??), and a Pixar movie. Every one of them is ingenious, but I guess I’d say Monsters Inc. No, Toy Story. No, The Incredibles. Ok. Monsters Inc.

WTWTWhere else can readers find your writings? What’s up next for your writing career?

My latest book, which came out in February with National Geographic, is called Why’d They Wear That? Fashion as the Mirror of History. My next book, slated for 2017, is about poison in human history.

And finally, what is something funny/weird/exceptional about yourself that you don’t normally share with others in an interview?

After college, I lived for a year in Cairo, Egypt, where I played on a semi-professional women’s basketball team!

Albee_SAbout the Author:

Sarah Albee is the New York Times bestselling author of more than 100 books for kids, ranging from preschool through middle grade. Her latest nonfiction middle grade title Why’d They Wear That? is about crazy fashions in history (National Geographic, 2015). She enjoys writing about topics where history and science connect, including Bugged: How Insects Changed History (2014) and Poop Happened: A History of the World from the Bottom Up (2010). When she isn’t writing books or visiting schools in person or via Skype, Sarah blogs about offbeat history at http://sarahalbeebooks.com.

Poop HappenedcoverBugged

Meet J Monkeys THE GREAT CT CAPER Chapter 7 Author

Chapter 7 of The Great Connecticut Caper is here! We’re past the halfway mark and the story really took an interesting turn at the end of the previous chapter. It’s so hard waiting two weeks to see what happens next. J Monkeys, the author of chapter 7, stops by today to share a little about what it was like creating it. Welcome!

CTCaper_poster_finalWhat was your approach to writing chapter 7 of the Great CT Caper? Did it differ any from your approach when creating a piece written solely by you?

It wasn’t much of a deviation for me; I’m a huge planner. I can’t “pants” my way through the day, let alone through a story. The biggest difference was the scale. I’ve written short stories before, but I was able to plan the whole thing, beginning, middle and end. That wasn’t the case for the Great CT Caper. So, I read the previous six chapters, thought about where we were in terms of the overall story then sketched a high level outline of what I wanted to do. I assigned a word count “budget” for each section, which I completely blew past. I’m a novelist by nature, so sticking to 650 words was really, very, impossibly hard for me.

What were your expectations coming into writing a collaborative, serialized story for young readers? Had you written anything like this before?

I’ve done collaborative writing before, with kids, but we do it together. This was very different because they didn’t want us to taint the creative process by hatching a plan from the start. We each just had to react to the stuff that came before us and go forward. It was neat.

Did you come across any particular challenges in writing your chapter?

Did I ever! The word count was rough. I decided to write out my chapter, then go back and edit it down to the appropriate size. Unfortunately, the first draft of chapter seven was 1400 words long, more than double what I was supposed to turn in. I edited it down to 700ish, but realized that I was breaking the most important rule of writing: “Show, don’t tell.” I was telling all over the place! The idea behind “show, don’t tell” is to allow the reader to experience the story with the characters instead of just telling them what happened. It takes a lot more words to “show” a conversation happening through dialogue, for example, than it does to “tell” a recap.

Did you do any research for the project?

Yup. Since my part was the middle of the story, I wanted to include some backstory on our villain. Who was Lady Hallow, why was she doing this and how? So I wanted to tie William Gillette back to Scotland and to the settling of Connecticut. I read up on Thomas Hooker, the Fundamental Orders, the Connecticut Charter and the history of the Charter Oak. I wanted to tie it all together more tightly than I did, but that durned word count got me again.

The Great CT Caper’s target audience is children in grades four through seven. What were some of your favorite books when you were that age?

Nancy Drew, for sure. I LOVED the Nancy Drew mysteries. I still have them on my shelf. I devoured the CS Lewis stories about Narnia, too. Little Women was a favorite of mine. Plus, I was a pretty advanced reader with a fairly permissive Mom. By the time seventh grade came along, I was reading adult historical romances. Certainly that wouldn’t be every parent’s decision, but I loved them. The stories, the swashbuckly-ness, the history. I still do love them.

What writers do you find inspire your own work?

I love adventure stories. Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson stories, JK Rowling’s Harry Potter books, Suzanne Collins’ Gregor stories, The 39 Clues and The Infinity Ring series are all books that I go back to again and again. And CS Lewis’ world building was amazing.

If you were stranded on a desert island and could only bring two books and one movie, what would you bring?

Well, for books, I’d bring two humongous blank books with pencils smuggled inside them to write my own stories. And for a movie? Hmmmm. Tough call. I love history, so something really, really long, with lots of history to inspire ideas for my stories.

The Cordovan Vault ebook cover smallWhere else can readers find your writings? What’s up next for your writing career?

All of my books are available on Amazon, and my website, of course. I expect to start book three of the Livingston-Wexford Adventures early this summer. I left my characters, 15-year olds Kayla and Quinn, in a bit of a tangle at the end of The Peacock Tale, so it’s time to move that story forward. And I wrote a tragedy as part of the “research” on my fictional pirate, Captain Peacock. I’m planning to revise that and release it as a companion piece. It’s really more of a Young Adult story than it is a Middle Grade adventure.

And I’m super excited about some work I’ve been doing this year. I’ve been working with kids, guiding them through a real-life writing adventure. We create, write, illustrate and edit a book, then publish it through Amazon. I’ve been working with schools and after-school programs, kids from Kindergarten through Fifth Grade. It’s been really fun and rewarding. When I get a minute, I need to update my website (www.jmonkeys.com) with links to their books. I’m starting to book programs for the 2015-16 school year now. There’s a link on my website, if anybody’s interested.

And finally, what is something funny/weird/exceptional about yourself that you don’t normally share with others in an interview?

Something funny. Hmmm. Well, it’s not so much funny “ha-ha” as it is funny “odd.” I have a pretty great vocabulary, but I’m a terrible speller. I mean awful. Like, spell-check can’t figure out what I’m trying to spell. Sometimes I don’t even know where to look in the dictionary to figure it out. And my handwriting is worse than my spelling. I sometimes take a break from the computer and go write by hand somewhere away from my house. Usually, when I get back and type it into the story document, there are at least two words that I can’t figure out, either because I butchered the spelling so badly or they’re simply illegible.

monkey logo finalVisit J Monkeys here:

Author website

The Cordovan Vault

The Peacock Tale

Meet Melissa Crandall Author of Chapter 6 of THE GREAT CONNECTICUT CAPER

We’ve reached the halfway mark of THE GREAT CONNECTICUT CAPER! So much has happened since that opening chapter on the Connecticut River when we first learned Gillette Castle had gone missing. Check out chapter 6 and then read about the making of as author Melissa Crandall graciously answers some questions about the making of it and her  writing life. Welcome, Melissa!

CTCaper_poster_finalWhat was your approach to writing chapter 6 of the Great CT Caper? Did it differ any from your approach when creating a piece written solely by you?

The big difference, of course, was that there were five other writers ahead of me, so my preparation involved reading those five chapters, seeing how they meshed together, and then working to make my chapter fit as another piece to the puzzle.  I’ve had a lot of experience doing that sort of thing – I’ve been writing collaborative pieces since high school – so I was familiar with the drill.  Whether I’m working solo or in collaboration, my chief goal is to write the very best I can.

What were your expectations coming into writing a collaborative, serialized story for young readers? Had you written anything like this before?

Oh, yes.  Back in high school, my friends and I wrote serialized stories where one of us would start, write the plot into a corner, and then gleefully pass it on to the next person to figure out.  My first professional novel – Star Trek’s ICE TRAP – was written in collaboration with two other writers under the name L.A. Graf, and for the past several years I’ve participated in The Exquisite Project at Bill Library in Ledyard, CT.  In essence, that’s a writer/artist version of the old “Exquisite Corpse” parlor game.

The Great CT Caper’s target audience is children in grades four through seven. What were some of your favorite books when you were that age?

I was (and still am) a voracious reader, so there were many.  Some that readily come to mind are:  Peter Pan (J.M. Barrie), Misty of Chincoteague and King of the Wind (Marguerite Henry), Black and Blue Magic (Zilpha Keatley Snyder), Andy Buckram’s Tin Men (Carol Ryrie Brink), Steel Magic (Andre Norton), and the Moomintroll books (Tove Jansson).

What writers do you find inspire your own work?

Truthfully, every writer I read affects me in some way.  Some teach me ways to be a better writer, and others show me things I don’t ever want to emulate.  Some of those who energize me about the craft of writing are J.M. Barrie, Stephen King, Ray Bradbury, Barbara Hambly, and Jonathan Carroll.

If you were stranded on a desert island and could only bring two books and one movie, what would you bring?

The books would be Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie and A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens.  (And if I could sneak in one more, it would be “Red Ranger Came Calling” by Berke Breathed.)  As for movies…that’s hard, because my favorite changes all the time depending upon my mood.  Probably JAWS.

Everyone is always trying to sneak in an extra one on that desert island! Where else can readers find your writings? What’s up next for your writing career?

Most of my books are currently out of print, but can be found wherever used books are sold.  In the past year, my short story “Centaur” appeared in the online magazine Allegory, and I also sold essays to CHICKEN SOUP FOR THE SOUL: THE POWER OF FORGIVENESS and the Journal of the American Geriatric Society.  They can also check out my website at www.melissacrandall.com and my blog “The Wild Ride – Caretaking Mom Through Alzheimer’s” at https://melissacrandall.wordpress.com/.

Currently, I’m working on a fantasy story and doing research for what I hope will turn into a novel based during the American Civil War.

And finally, what is something funny/weird/exceptional about yourself that you don’t normally share with others in an interview?

I once baby-sat a convalescing elephant.

photo 1 (1)About the Author:

Melissa Crandall writes “whatever needs writing.”  To date, that’s included science fiction novels, fantasy short stories, and non-fiction essays.  For several years, she served as fiction judge for the Darien Library Teen Writing Contest.  Crandall enjoys hiking with her dog and pursues nature photography as a hobby.

 

Meet Beth Lovell Illustrator for THE GREAT CONNECTICUT CAPER

Have you check out chapter three of THE GREAT CONNECTICUT CAPER yet? You’ll definitely want to after reading this interview to see what Beth Lovell has created as an illustration for the Caper. All the beautiful artwork on this post was graciously provided by Beth. Let’s give her a big welcome!

What is your typical approach when sitting down to start a new project?

I draw or paint every day and usually my work is completed in one fell swoop. I work anywhere from 5 minutes to an hour or longer on a particular piece, usually.

gillette sketch

Did your approach differ at all for creating your illustration for the Great CT Caper?

Yes, I did multiple sketches for the different characters imagining how they might look, and I sketched and took loads of photos on site at the locations that were mentioned in my chapter and at Gillette Castle itself. I wanted to have as many resources in my own hand as possible for completing the assignment and I prefer if possible to work from observation rather than photos. I did have to Google search for some character ideas however. I scanned all the drawings and paintings and sketches and made a collage in Photoshop laying everything out like I wanted. I printed and re-drew on the prints, and rescanned and re-collaged everything several time before I was happy with it. My husband is a Photoshop expert so he had a hand in it as well.

What was your biggest challenge for creating a piece of artwork for the Great CT Caper?

Working under the deadline of a week was exhilarating and frantic. I think artists secretly like the pressure of a deadline because it focuses you like nothing else can!

Did you do any particular research for this project?

I sketched on location at many of the parks mentioned in the chapter. It was fun to see a few places in Connecticut that I had not yet visited. Connecticut offers quite a bit of variety in terms of terrain, there is the shoreline, beaches, wooded hiking trails, really interesting and unusual architecture like Gillette Castle.

I did Google searches to come up with a couple of characters in my illustration and that was loads of fun. If you have something particular in mind when you start your image search it is fun to see how close you can get to that idea, but also there is a random element there.

Scan

How did you get started in illustrating?

I have been doing a drawing or painting every day as challenge to keep art a significant part of my life since 2009. I was trained as an oil painter, but I seriously love drawing, it is so fun and direct, it seems so much more natural of a way of making things for me and I just cannot stop doing it. My drawings have a kind of illustrative quality so I have just been going in that direction more and more. I would love to illustrate more professionally but I have only done a few published things, if you count web venues. I would love to illustrate a graphic novel.

What is your work space like? Do you have any other places you like to work?

I work at home, in our dining room which has my computer desk and scanner, and a large table made from a wooden door. It is a fabulous workspace that everyone in the family uses for various projects, homework, and whatnot.

I also have a small field kit of art supplies that travel with me at all times so I can sketch in the supermarket, or out and about whenever I see something that is visually interesting. I love sketching on location and have drawn many times at the Peabody, and coffee shops, and the New Haven green and around.

workspace

What artists inspire you?

This is a big question, and for this interview, I will focus just on illustrators. Before I had children, most of my influences were people who made paintings, but since my kids were little I have just gone mad for children’s book illustrators, cartoonists, and people who make graphic novels. A few who I admire greatly are Mimi Grey whose collaged children’s books are just fabulous and funny she did Traction Man, Kate Beaton who draws Hark a Vagrant, Lucy Knisley whose graphic novel Relish is just fabulous, and Isabel Greenberg who drew Encyclopedia of Early Earth.

Besides chapter three of the Great CT Caper, where else might people find your work?

I have work at www.bethlovell.com. I have a Facebook group for anyone who’d like to share their own daily drawings. https://www.facebook.com/groups/cawdailydrawing/

It goes along with a course I am teaching at Creative Arts Workshop in New Haven, but the Facebook group is open to anyone to join. The more the merrier!

daily drawing 4

Any upcoming projects you’d like to mention?

I recently had some sketches of Occupy New Haven in the CT Bound flatfile show at Artspace, which is a small show accompanying the CT(un)bound Book Art show going on there right now. The show was up through January 31st.  http://artspacenh.org/include/404.asp?404;https://artspacenh.org:443/galleries/gallery5/

And finally, please share something silly/unusual/interesting that you don’t normally share in interviews…

This does not really fit your question, but here goes:

One of my favorite young adult novels is serially written collaboratively by a bunch of different fabulous authors, it is called Click! and it includes Nick Hornby (Author), David Almond (Author), Eoin Colfer (Author), Roddy Doyle (Author), Deborah Ellis (Author), Margo Langan (Author), Gregory Maguire (Author), Ruth Ozeki (Author), Linda Sue Park (Author), Tim Wynne-Jones (Author).

click

So when I heard about the collaborative  CT Caper project, I really wanted to try for it. I was so excited to be chosen as one of the illustrators on this project. I’ve always wanted to work on a graphic novel so this seemed like a good step in that direction.

The thing I want to say is that my sketch that I submitted was really sketchy and fast and I had wanted to make a whole perfect ink drawing or graphic novel spread out of it, but procrastinating artist that I was, the deadline approached, and I had to decide if I thought my sketch was good enough to submit. In my heart of hearts I knew I could do better, but in my heart of hearts I knew I also really really wanted to participate so at 11:45 pm I uploaded what I had and I am so glad I did. I want to share that with any and all artists, writers and students, go ahead and try, please don’t wait til you feel like everything is perfect, you are good enough exactly as you are, right this minute!

selfportrait with messy hairAbout the Illustrator:

Beth Lovell is a Connecticut artist who has posted a daily drawing or painting online since 2009, a practice that began as a New Year’s Resolution. Beth has an MFA in Painting from Yale School of Art and a BFA from Indiana University, Bloomington. You can find her work at www.bethlovell.com and littlewolfpress.etsy.com.

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