Showing posts with label Teen Book Scene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teen Book Scene. Show all posts

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Through Her Eyes Blog Tour - Jennifer Archer Interview

Next stop on the "Through Her Eyes" Tour!

Today we have an interview with the lovely Jennifer Archer. Her book, "Through Her Eyes" is something amazing!


1. How did you come up with the title?

The title evolved with the book. By that, I mean that the book had several
different titles before we chose Through Her Eyes. Originally, it was Picture
This, but after an extensive rewrite, I decided to change it to Luminosity because
I thought that was a better fit for the story’s darker tone. When my agent was
about to begin shopping the book around, she admitted that she didn’t like the
title, so we brainstormed a bit and ended up selling Through Her Eyes to Harper
Teen with the title Click. After the sale, my editor pointed out that a movie had
recently premiered with the same name, so we made a list of possible options for
yet another title and gave it to the team at Harper. They wisely choose Through
Her Eyes.

2. Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?

My main goal when writing a story is to entertain my readers; I hope that the book
is fun to read and hard to put down. However, Through Her Eyes does touch on
the importance of truth, learning to embrace change and differences in others,
and moving on with life after a loss, so if Through Her Eyes challenges readers to
think about those issues, I would be very humbled by that.

3. How much of the book is realistic?

I can relate to Tansy. I grew up moving frequently, so I know what it is like to
leave old friends behind and to try to fit-in at a new school. I wasn’t exactly
like Tansy, though – she is braver than I was as a teenager. Still, I’m sure her
character sprang to life in my mind at least in part due to my own childhood
experiences.

All of my stories are a mixture of truth and imagination. I live in Amarillo, a town
of around 175,000 in the Texas panhandle, which is surrounded by many smaller
towns. I visited several of these small communities to get a sense of what the
fictional town of Cedar Canyon might be like. I also researched life in the 1930s
so that Henry’s world would be as realistic as possible.

4. What books have influenced you most?

The Pink Motel was my favorite book during elementary school, and it very well
might be the source of my lifelong fascination with beaches and the ocean. A
Wrinkle in Time taught me that well written, compelling fiction can stretch the
mind, making confusing subjects more interesting and accessible. Escape from
Warsaw and To Kill a Mockingbird exemplified how powerful and life-changing
a well-told story can be. The Great Gatsby brought me an understanding of
symbolism and imagery, and illustrated that if handled deftly, those elements add
depth of meaning to a story. Rebecca proved that tone and atmosphere can set
a desired mood and stir a reader’s emotions. Go Ask Alice showed me how one
person’s story and words can impact another person’s choices.

5. If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

Long before I ever published a book, I took creative writing classes from two
romance writers: DeWanna Pace, and NYTimes bestselling author Jodi Thomas.
Both of these talented women went on to become my friends, as well as my
teachers. I’ve learned a lot about the craft of writing from them and consider
them mentors. I’ve also learned so much from my friend Kimberly Willis Holt,
who won the National Book Award for Children’s Literature for her novel When
Zachary Beaver Came to Town. And every day, I continue to learn and grow as
a writer with the help of my incredible critique partners, author Mary Schramski,
NYTimes Bestselling author Linda Castillo, and soon-to-be-published authors
Marcy McKay, Anita Howard, and April Redmon.

6. What book are you reading now?

I am reading The Lacuna by Barbara Kingsolver with my book club.

7. Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?

I can think of several, but will name just a few for the sake of space! Sophie
Jordan isn’t new – she has written romance novels for years and is a New York
Times bestselling author. However, she is new to teen fiction, and when I read
her YA novel Firelight that came out in September, 2010, I was hooked. I’ve also
become a fan of Lauren Oliver, who wrote Before I Fall and Delirium. And a
somewhat new author, Rebecca Stead, wowed me with her John Newbery Award-
winning novel, When You Reach Me.

Friday, February 25, 2011

The Other Side of Life - Blog Tour

I'm not back but I do have some tour promises i need to fulfill.

Today I have Jess C. Scott, author of The Other Side of Life, on the blog! :D Let's all welcome her!

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Music is a huge influence and inspiration to me! Here is a list of songs that I associate
with The Other Side of Life [Book #1 in the (Cyberpunk) Elven Trilogy].

Songs that influenced the book:

1. The Chemical Brothers – Three Little Birdies Down Beats (for the cyberpunk/
futuristic/magical texture / when they’re about to travel on the elves’ train network)

2. Maidens of the Celtic Harp (for the Celtic/Elven charm! While Nin and Anya are
having a meal in the elves’ underground abode)

3. Linkin Park – The Catalyst (for the ‘emotional’ components)

4. Nine Inch Nails – That’s What I Get (during a nihilistic moment where Anya ponders
on why life is always cruel to idealistic dreamers)

5. Johann Strauss II – The Blue Danube (a famous classical waltz, when Anya and Nin
have a dance together)

Other songs I listened to while writing:

6. Nine Inch Nails – Year Zero (the album brings to mind a futuristic dystopia, which
mostly goes in line with a cyberpunk theme)

7. Vivaldi – Autumn Allegro (from ‘The Four Seasons’—good for tension, and a prompt
towards action)

8. Kevin MacLeod – Darkness is Coming (I used this song for the book’s trailer @ http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YiT3bLQIyg)

9. Michael Jackson – They Don’t Care About Us (great song by MJ)

10. Se7en – Digital Bounce (a ‘hi-tech’, upbeat kind of song by a very talented Korean
popstar. Features in Anya’s playlist, briefly mentioned in one chapter)

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Author Bio:

Jess identifies herself as an author/artist/non-conformist. Her literary work has appeared
in a diverse range of publications, such as Word Riot, ITCH Magazine, and The Battered
Suitcase. She is currently working on several multiple-genre-crossing projects, including
her trilogy featuring cyberpunk elves.

Website: www.jessINK.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/jesscscott
Twitter: www.twitter.com/jesscscott
Blip.fm (music playlist): www.blip.fm/jesscscott

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There you have it! Hope you all enjoyed it and have a great day!

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Tell Us We're Home Blog Tour - Marina Budhos Guest Post

Even though I said there was supposed to be a hiatus, this post was scheduled way before that thought crossed my mind. So here is a guest post from the lovely Marina, author of Tell Us We're Home. :D

Enjoy!

Which character was your favorite to write and why (and how you developed them) and which do you relate to more?


That’s a hard one to answer, since I grew to like all three, very much, and think that there’s a bit of me in all three. However, let’s put it this way: Lola was a blast, insofar as she just pounced on to the page, and never left. Her energy, her voice, was right there, from the get go. I wrote her material the fastest, which seemed apt for her. I always knew she would be obsessed with history, and had a fast mouth. I knew she'd land in trouble somehow, but I wasn't exactly sure how. My favorite scenes to write were later, when she really crashes and is in the therapist’s office and her moxie boldness isn’t serving her anymore.

But I will say it was Maria who began as the most distant and truly grew on me. Her pining for Tash, her accompanying her mother on job interviews, her slow political awakening, felt wonderful to write. I loved writing the scene where she sees Tash's house and encounters his parents--that felt very natural to me, and perhaps drew on my own sense of outsideness. I also just enjoyed figuring out where she would take herself, what kinds of new and sometimes painful insights she learned along the way.

Jaya always began as the main character, and so in a sense, you could say she was whom I was closest, or most intimate with. I felt as if I knew her, knew the way she saw the world, and how she felt, especially about her mother. Writing her was about tunneling inwards, understanding her inner landscape, the imagery of her past, which was so vivid to her.





Thanks for stopping by, Marina. :D Hope you enjoyed this last (not for long) post.

Back to hiatus-ness(?).


Thursday, January 27, 2011

Fused Blog Tour - Kari Lee Townsend Guest Post

Today, for a blog tour, I have Kari Lee Townsend on my blog.

I asked her "What Her Favorite Childhood Book Was and Her Favorite Memory With It?
Here's what she had to say.
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Childhood Books & The Memories That Go With Them

A person's childhood goes by so quickly. I have four children, and I'm watching theirs go by way too quickly for my liking. Childhood is a time for believing that anything is possible. For discovering the wonders of the world. For setting off on new adventures and not being afraid. Books are one of the best ways to experience things you never thought possible.

I remember loving to read almost anything because it felt like I was stepping into a whole other world. It was like getting swept away in an amazing movie, and I hated to see it end. I don't really have one favorite book, but I do have a favorite series. I was addicted to the Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys books. The thought that kids so young could venture off on great adventures, facing all sorts of dangers, yet solving the mystery on their own in the end was so exciting.

I have one sister and one brother. When we were really young, my dad was in the air force. But once he retired and worked as an air traffic controller for the FAA, we finally put down roots and lived next door to our cousins growing up. I have always had an active imagination, but these books inspired me to come up with some pretty cool adventures for us all to play.

Even today, I still love a great mystery. In fact, my Samantha Granger books have a mystery in them as well. And I also write a cozy mystery series called The Fortune Teller Mystery Series with book one, Tempest in the Tea Leaves, coming out in August. To find out more about all my books, go to http://www.karileetownsend.com

Thanks so much for having me here today. This has been fun, and I hope all of you find a great book to curl up with that inspires you to live your own adventurous life :-)


Thank you, Kari, for coming here today! Hope you guys enjoyed it and be sure to read Fused: The Samantha Granger Experiment. Out Now!

Until next time,

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Nyxen's Review of "Tell Us We're Home"


Tell Us We're Home by Marina Budhos
297 Pages
Atheneum 2010

Jaya, Maria, and Lola are just like the other eighth-grade girls in the wealthy suburb of Meadowbrook, New Jersey. They want to go to te spring dance, tehy love spending time with their best friends after school, sharing frappes and complaining about the other kids. But there's one big difference: All three are daughters of maids and nannies. And they go to school with the very same kids whose families their mothers work for.

That difference grows even bigger-and moer painful-when Jaya's motehr is accused of theft and Jaya's small, fragile world collapases.

When tensions about immigrants start to erupt, fracturing this perfect, serene suburb, all three girls are tested, as outsiders-and as friends. Each must find a place for herself in a town that barely notices she exists.


This book really wasn't one for me but I actually did enjoy it, nonetheless.

Tell Us We're Home tells the story of three immigrant girls who all have a few things in common: They're not from New Jeresey and their mothers are all nannies for the rich kids' family they girls go to school with.

They find each other when times get rough and they've stuck through it all. They just want to fit in, some more than the others but in the end they remember who their friends truly are. These three girls just don't know what to do when they're left alone, in this cruel, rich kid world, when their parents are in trouble.

I'm not really sure how to explain it but this book gives you hope, and an open mind about important issues. I highly reccomend it.

Marina Budhos did a tremendous job on this book.

I rate this book Four Stars.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Trickster's Girl Blog Tour - Hilari Bell Interview

Today, thanks to everyone at Teen Book Scene, I have an interview from Hilari Bell! She's the author of Trickster's Girl.

So, let's welcome Hilari!

NA:How did you come up with the title?

HB:With a lot of work, that's how. For me, a title either appears with the concept of the story, it's the perfect title, and no one ever tries to change it--or (far more often) the book has no title throughout its writing and coming up with one is really hard. My clever and original working title was "Book One". All I knew then was that I liked the word Trickster for the title, but didn't know what to put with it--much less what to call the second book. And I was worried that Trickster it made it sound like Raven was the main character, when in fact the main characters are Kelsa in the first book, and Jase in the second. I turned the rough manuscript over to my critique group and asked them to come up with a title for me--as I frequently do at this stage. We brainstormed back and forth and came up with some things, and I mulled them over and finally settled on Trickster's Choice, which I really liked. I then gave the title (with the book) to my editor, who also liked the title really well...until she realized that Tamora Pierce had recently used that exact title for one of her books. Contrary to popular belief, titles can't be copyrighted--but there are a lot of disadvantages to duplicating the title of a book already published in the same genre for the same age group. So my editor and I brainstormed some more and came up with Trickster's Girl instead. I'm very happy with that, and it also goes well with Traitor's Son, which was the perfect title for the next book.

NA:Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp?

HB:Not really a message. Most of my books have a theme, but that's more to keep me on track than to demonstrate something to the reader. I doubt many readers will pick it up, but in the first book, what Kelsa learns is that sometimes you have to give up control/responsibility, and in the next book what Jase learns is that sometimes you have to take on responsibility, even if it's not a fight you started. But as I said, I don't think too many readers will notice that bit of balancing. In fact, there's a lot in both stories about achieving the right balance.

NA:How much of the book is realistic?

HB:I write SF and fantasy--and this book crosses both genres, so there's a double dose of not realistic! However, because it's near future SF set on this planet, I got to take the same trip, over the same roads that Kelsa did--so all the places are real, and (without the magic parts) I did most of the thing she did in healing the leys, including exploring lava caves with a very inadequate flashlight, wading into icy lakes, sneaking out of sight of the ranger to pass the don't-cross tape and lay hands on the glacier. And the places Jase goes in Alaska I also went, and discovered for myself how alive the sickly looking taiga feels. I had so much fun doing the research for these books! I wasn't, of course, being chased by a homicidal biker gang, but the restaurant where they attacked Kelsa is real too, though I moved it's location a bit. And Pickhandle Lake, which really was a First Nations gathering place called Chetthel Chi. And the museum Kelsa robs is real, though I changed its name. In fact, except for the science fiction parts and the magic parts, most of the things in this books are real.

NA:Are experiences based on someone you know, or events in your own life?

HB:My own father died of cancer, about 10 years ago. And because he had come to passionately hate hospitals, we let him die at home, in his own bed. But I have to admit that was hard on our family in all kinds of ways. The debate about whether to put a dying family member in a hospice is a very real one, and neither decision is right or wrong. You just have to make the right choice for your family and the person who is dying.

NA:What books have most influenced your life most?

HB:Books as a whole have been a huge influence on my life, but I think the most influential ones were Lloyd Alexander's Prydain books. The were the first "real" books (not picture books) I ever read, and they made me into a lifelong fantasy reader, and eventually a fantasy writer.

NA:If you had to choose, which writer would you consider a mentor?

HB:Lloyd Alexander, for all the reasons mentioned above. When someone asks me who my style most resembles, I think it's probably him.

NA:What book are you reading now?

HB:First I should confess that I mostly read adult books, and not so much YA. But right now it's Robert Parker's latest Spenser mystery. Next up on my list is Mercedes Lackey's new fantasy novel. And the last book I read was Lois Bujold's latest Miles Vorkosigan book--science fiction. I added Lois, because she's probably my favorite author right now. Both her Miles books and her Sharing Knife books are absolutely wonderful.

NA:Are there any new authors that have grasped your interest?

HB:New authors...as in just publishing their first books? No one I can think of offhand. New authors as in, I just discovered them recently? I've really enjoyed Lindsey Davis' Marcus Didius Falco mysteries (historical mystery) and Susan Elizabeth Phillips (humor/romance) I don't read a lot of romance, but the humor in the Phillips books is delightful.

Thank you Hilari for stopping by on this amazing Blog Tour!

Until next time,

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Everlasting Blog Tour - Angie's Top Ten List

This is my first ever blog tour and I am super excited. Today Angie Frazier, author of Everlasting, has so kindly graced us with her presence. :D

Let's welcome Angie!

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10.) Peeta from The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins (even though I was firmly Team Gale, Peeta was more of a “hero” type)
9.) Po from Graceling, by Kristin Cashore (for some reason I always envisioned Russell Crow…)
8.) Chen Yong from Silver Phoenix by Cindy Pon (Yummm…)
7.) Gabriel St. John from Nine Rules to Break When Romancing a Rake, by Sarah MacLean (Those rakes always win me over in the end)
6.) Jace from The Mortal Instruments series, by Cassandra Clare (Holy guarded and sarcastic hotness)
5.) Sid from The Winter Rose by Jennifer Donnelly (Who doesn’t love a bad boy every now and again?)
4.) Mr. Knightly from Emma by Jane Austen (This is one “close family friend” scenario that truly works)
3.) Mr. Darcy from Pride & Prejudice, by Jane Austen (Need I say more?)
2.) Randall Jackson from The Eternal Sea (hint hint! Seriously, I didn’t expect to like him as much as I do now)
1.) Oscar Kildare, from (cough, cough) Everlasting. (Don’t judge me. I’m just being honest!)

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I just want to thank Kelsey and Kari for letting me be apart of this blog tour. And thank you to Angie for stopping by!

Her WEBSITE and her BLOG.

Until tomorrow,