Showing posts with label 2011 Author Post. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 Author Post. Show all posts

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Guest Post
Author Sean Beaudoin

Thursday, February 3, 2011
Hey everyone hope you are all weathering the winter blast that has hit a majority of the Nation. I have been hunkered down for the last two days in my easy chair reading up a storm. 
Today, however,  I am happy to welcome Sean Beaudoin author of  You Killed Wesley Payne, a noir/mystery novel that while dark is also humorous and certainly brings an original voice to the YA audience. Sean graciously agreed to stop by and talk about  writing for the YA audience and the Noir genre.

I think a noir mystery/crime novel for teenagers is really no different than one marketed for adults. At least that's the way I approached You Killed Wesley Payne. Of course, some of the violence and sexual content might be toned down. Or it might not. My impression in general is that a book that panders to a younger audience is a book that ends up not having much of a spine. I hope the books I've written have been challenging to the teens that have read them, mostly because those were exactly the kind of books I wanted to read when I was sixteen. Of course, back then, YA didn't really exist. There was no online branding, specific bookstore shelving practices, or row after row of lurid covers. We made it through elementary school without a single precocious wizard to help transition into high school’s chaste vampiric longings. There were a handful of titles, like The Outsiders and Go Ask Alice that were known to be specifically for teens, but if you go back and read those books now, they’re pulling very few punches. Flowers In the Attic and The World According to Garp and The Basketball Diaries were all books that were sort of being handed around on the "black market" at school. We knew they would be confiscated if discovered, so we highlighted the salacious pages and giggled knowingly over them during study hall.

I feel very lucky to be writing YA in 2011. The audiences are incredibly smart and sophisticated. Tastes are eclectic and passionate. Noir can battle zombies, either on the page or at the register. YA is like the wild west--even though the breakout YA western doesn’t yet exist--in that everyone’s a gunslinger, pretty much writing about whatever they want. The limitations of the last few decades, in publisher’s imaginations and reader’s choices, have completely disappeared.

So I like having my back against the saloon wall, twin revolvers in my hands, plenty of bullets just a laptop away. It’s up to me to come up with something excellent—either an impossible shot or an brilliant escape plan. Which is exactly the way I wanted it way back in junior year, when I looked up from a copy of Kurt Vonnegut’s The Sirens of Titan, busy understanding only half of it (gleefully so) and said “Hey, man-I want to be a writer!”
Thanks Sean for stopping by  Eating YA Books.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Guest Post & Giveaway
Dad’s the Word!
(A look at fathers in middle-grade and young adult literature)
by Hélène Boudreau and friends

Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Today, I am honored to have a very special guest at Eating YA Books, Hélène Boudreau, the author of Real Mermaids Don't Wear Toe Rings, (read my review) a charming and funny look at a middle school girl who suddenly finds out that she is a mermaid. One of the many things I enjoyed about this book was the wonderful relationship Jade and her father had, and I asked Hélène to talk about  fathers in books.



Dad’s the Word!
(A look at fathers in middle-grade and young adult literature)
by Hélène Boudreau and friends

Some of my favorite scenes to write in Real Mermaids Don’t Wear Toe Rings were the ones between my main character, Jade, and her dad. Jade’s dad is a mixture of nerdy and affable; your all around adorable good guy who means well even though he sometimes may get things farcically wrong—especially where his puberty-addled/ newly-betailed daughter is concerned.

This got me thinking about some of my favorite dads in middle grade and young adult fiction. There’s the jovial Mr. Weasley in JK Rowling’s Harry Potter and the determined inventor, Mr. Yelnats, in Louis Sachar’s Holes. Flipping the coin, there’s Burl’s abusive father in Tim Wynne-Jones’ The Maestro and Jenna’s desperately misguided dad in Mary E. Pearson’s The Adoration of Jenna Fox.

What makes these particular characters memorable? Appealing? Distasteful? I asked these questions to several middle-grade and young adult writers and readers and these were their answers.

From Becky Levine: author of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide

* Myron Krupnik in Lois Lowry's Anastasia books: Myron--he just cracks me up. Anastasia emotes and he makes all the WRONG suggestions, and she emotes more. Probably just brilliant Lowry writing makes him real and layered, not perfect, with just a few words.

* Pop in Steve Kluger's My Most Excellent Year: Pop is the ultimate in supportive, with his own agenda, but listens and gives enough freedom. Plus Pop can't let a school project pass without overkill. Teachers flinch (with smiles) when they see him coming.  

I guess for both, the authors hit ‘Love With Comedy’ right on the nail.

From Kristin Tubb: Author of Autumn Winifred Oliver Does Things Different and Selling Hope (2010)

* Ramona's dad in Beverly Cleary’s Beezus and Ramona: He understands and appreciates the differences in his girls.


* Uncle Alec from Louisa May Alcott’s Eight Cousins/ Rose in Bloom: Uncle Alec was a great influence on Rose. He helped her get healthy, encouraged studies at a time when it wasn't proper for girls to learn about things such as physiology and ensured she was not a silly girl who spoiled her fortunes. 


* Pa from the Little House  books by Laura Ingalls Wilder: Pa was a kind man who worked a ton but still made time for his daughters. He's a good man and helps others.

* Mr. Weasley from JK Rowling’s Harry Potter: Mr. Weasley rocks, especially as a dad to so many kids. He welcomes Harry into the family, he is stern when he needs to be but is also one of those dads who can be your friend and joke around. He cares a great deal for his entire family.

From Miranda Kennealy: author of Score (fall 2011)

* Loved the dad in A. S. King’s Please Ignore Vera Dietz: Dad tried hard to protect his daughter from his mistakes, and even though he was flawed, he loved Vera and grew along with her.

* Hated the dads in Revolution and A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly: Hated the dad in Revolution because he rarely listened and liked to ignore problems instead of confronting/helping with them.

* Northern Light: Dad didn't listen to MC. I can't stand parents who don't listen, because why would kids speak up when it really matters?

From James Alfred McCann : author of Rancour and Flying Feet

* The dad in Acceleration by Graham McNamee: The only dad I've ever thought was well-written was in Acceleration by McNamee. They were a lower class family, both mom and dad did shift work, *and yet* the dad was not abusive or on drugs.  In fact, the relationship between the son, mom and dad was very healthy and yet the story still carried with suspense and drama.

From Melody Delgado Lorbeer:

* My favorite Dad in middle-grade fiction is Opal's Dad in Kate Dicamillo’s Because of Winn Dixie:  He seems vulnerable and real.


From Michelle Hodkin: author of The Unbecoming of Mara Dyer (fall 2011)

* Valentine Morgenstern of The Mortal Instruments by Cassie Clare for most memorable:  He's completely three dimensional, a far cry from the cackling Disney villain. His actions are detestable but you can understand his motivations. And he's also very present in all three books in a very bad way. Impossible to forget.

So, what about you? What are some of your favorite, most despised, affable, despicable, impossible-to-forget dads in middle-grade and young adult literature? Please share!


Hélène Boudreau is the author of Real Mermaids Don’t Wear Toe Rings. She’s never spotted a real mermaid in the wild but the writer in her thinks they are just as plausible as seahorses, flying fish and electric eels.

In a fun promotion for the holidays, Sourcebooks/Jabberwocky is offering signed Real Mermaids Don’t Wear Toe Rings bookplates with proof of purchase. More info HERE.

*You can find Hélène on Twitter, Facebook and on her Website.

I want to thank Hélène for this amazing look at "fathers in the word", and I encourage everyone to check out Real Mermaids Don't Wear Toes Rings. 

To help you do this, I am giving away a copy of the book. The giveaway is international (or wherever The Book Depository ships). All you have to do to enter is leave a comment answering the question above about fathers. Also make sure to leave your email in your comment so I can contact you. Giveaway ends 1/9.



 
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