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January 18, 2010

HAP Interviewed!: The Art of Losing Interview Repost

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The Art of Losing Interviews Hayley Anne Perkins

Originally Posted 16 January 2010.

Since you put me on the spot, I’m going to have to do the same to you! Without alluding to your writing career or your love of reading, describe yourself. Who is Hayley Anne Perkins?

I’ve been a professional graphic designer for almost ten years. My taste in music is so bad that it’s circled back around to being awesome, kind of like how pugs are so ugly that they’ve rounded the twist to cuteness. I worked as a journalist during and after college, both in print and as an assisant/intern on a documentary for PBS. I have over 10,000 photographs from sixth grade through college, arranged chronologically in photo albums, and they take up a majority of the wall space in my living room. Everything important that I’ve ever learned, I learned from Mr. Feeny or Professor Dumbledore.

Now, on to Green! Briefly summarize, please.

You know how teenagers all think they’re the center of the universe and it changes their lives to discover they’re not? Well, my main character’s life changes when she discovers that she IS. Oh, and her boyfriend is a werewolf.

More seriously, Green is a YA paranormal romance with a few twists — not only is the girl, as well as her love interest, supernatural, but she’s more powerful than he is; Green has a strong tie to real history and historical figures, as well as historical fiction; and I tried to stay away from “traditional” supernatural creatures as much as possible (outside of Werewolf Boyfriend). Rather than culling the majority of my characters from popular Greco-Roman or Norse mythologies, I explored stories and creatures from Japanese, Maori, Celtic, Breton, and Germanic traditions (among others).

And there are no vampires.

Spoilers aside, what would you consider the major themes of Green and the rest of the books of the Metempsyche series? How will the rest of the books in the series be different from Green?

I would say that the central theme of Green is the growing awareness of both self and world that everyone experiences in their adolescence. Of course, Lindy gains this awareness through her transformation into a pillar of the supernatural world’s pantheon (the “Metempsyche”), but also – paradoxically – more human channels as she grows into her romantic relationship with werewolf Daniel. Given that all of the planned books in the series take place within the span of only a few months, that theme stays fairly central, but obviously takes different routes and tackles different obstacles. The second book will likely be the darkest — Green is moderately light, just because I’m not a terrifically angsty person — and will follow Lindy to some pretty scary places in both the past and present, as well as within herself. The third book, as of now, is planned to take a look at the tangled web that is friendship. The fourth book I’m keeping a secret, so you’ll just have to read it!

And how is Green different from other books of the YA fiction genre?

I think that the biggest difference is that while Lindy and Daniel’s love story heavily influences the plot, the crux of the novel is not in their romance. Rather than “OMG new sexy supernatural boyfriend! THIS IS THE BE-ALL, END-ALL OF MY LIFE!”, their relationship helps Lindy to find an anchor in her new existence as a supernatural herself, treating the tropes of immortality, power, and perpetual youth as coming-of-age issues, and not ideals. It would kind of really suck to be a teenage forever, or rather to live hundreds of separate lifetimes of having to go through the same pangs and trials of puberty and adolescence over and over. Getting your period for the first time is traumatic enough once, thanks. Wondering if that cute boy is mean to you because he likes you or because he’s a jerk is confusing enough the first time. At the same time, there is nothing like being a teenager. It’s a very universal experience (no pun intended) despite the fact that it’s all about discovering and cultivating your individuality. The dichotomy of being teenage is something I strived to touch on with Lindy’s narrative.

I’m also going to tentatively say that the structure is somewhat unique, but I’m not sure I can reveal too much without it being a huge spoiler. Or possibly a lie, although I don’t think so.

Some writers say when they are writing a story that they are writing solely for their own enjoyment and writing the story that they themselves would want to read. Some writers, on the other hand, write with a specific audience in mind. Which would you say holds true for you?

The best writing advice given to me by any of my college professors was, “Write your rough draft for yourself. For all of your revisions, pick one person — one specific, tangible person you know — and revise the book for them.” There’s definitely a specific audience, or pop (sub)culture, that I identify with and to whom Green will appeal, and I don’t mind that at all. It’s actually really encouraging, and kind of terrifying. The Green/Metempsyche Novels/Hayley Anne Perkins Fan Club on LiveJournal already has over 80 members, based purely on my blogs and the synopsis of the manuscript, and I think the fact that this idea strikes such a chord with people who haven’t even read the book yet speaks highly of knowing how you can appeal to other readers like you.

But of course, Jacee, you mostly asked this because you’re the person for whom I revised the book, and I will not begrudge you the shoutout!

Stories often undergo a lot of editing before even the first reader, other than the author, lays eyes upon it. How different would you say the version of Green that you now have in your hands is from the first spark of inspiration you had for Lindy’s story? Do you think it will change much more from now until publication?

This might be a mistake to say, but I hope that it does change before it hits shelves. I’m really excited to find an agent and then an editor, and to get a copy of the manuscript covered in red ink in the mail. I’m weird and really love getting revision suggestions and edits — particularly if they’re specific — from someone I respect and trust and whom I know has the best interests of my characters in mind.

Changes that have happened already… Well, Lindy’s name wasn’t Lindy until 30,000 words into the rough draft. She is no longer a cheerleader, and doesn’t fight the FBI. Green was originally much more like an action book than a romance, but this was years and years ago. The current draft (of the romance incarnation) has a different villain than the rough, too!

Would you say that recent trends in YA fiction have at all influenced the development of the Metempsyche series? If so, to what extent, and how?

Yes and no. I didn’t write Green as a paranormal romance because that’s what’s on shelves now; I wrote it as a paranormal romance because that’s what the story is. It was always encouraging to see deals being made and debut authors being released within the same genre, but I only started really tracking that once I had pinned down the first 50k or so of the rough draft and really realized, “OK, this book is a paranormal romance. Is there still a market for that?”

One thing that did influence the way that I wrote Green was definitely my personal negative reaction to books that glorify “dark” (otherwise known as “actually, that’s pretty emotionally abusive”) romantic leads, or reinforce female sexual roles that I consider detrimental. I’m not into the idea of a relationship based in large part on swooning — though in my opinion, Daniel is very swoonworthy, don’t get me wrong. However, I dislike the emphasis that a lot of YA paranormal romances seem to put on controlling or dominant males who make all of the decisions regarding the whats and whens (both physical and emotional) of their relationships, and I really worked to make Lindy and Daniel equals in all aspects.

Sometimes, I confess, the scale tips a little in Lindy’s favor in terms of who wears the pants, but hey, she’s the universe. She does wear the cosmic pants.

I hear that you will soon be releasing short stories centering on some of the periphery characters of the Metempsyche series. Besides Lindy, your protagonist, and Daniel, her love interest, which of the characters in Green do you favor the most and for what reasons, and which do you think has the most interesting backstory? Which character do you identify the most with?

I don’t want to spoil too much! Let’s see…

I love my hipster poltergeist. His short story is coming first. I adored creating my rokurokubi — a Japanese demon — and I think she’s totally kickass. My regenerist vexes me in all the best writerly ways — she’s the character who makes me stop what I’m doing sometimes and go, “Wait, if your body can heal a [blankity blank blank], then what would happen if you [blank]? Could you [blankity blank]? I need a medical journal!”

As for who has the most interesting backstory, all I will say is that you can decide for yourself as the short stories and book[s] are released.

Did you draw from any real-life experience or acquaintance inspiration for any parts of Green or its characters? How much would you say you are like Lindy?

There are small moments of Lindy’s life that are taken from things that happened to me — just small anecdotal things that she or Daniel or her mother might mention in passing. There is one character who is a sort of homage to the friend with whom I was staying when I both started, and finished, the manuscript, but I don’t really like when books are made up of the author and her/his friends, masked only by thin veneers or de-aging. The most fun that I have in writing is creating my characters, so I really like to start with a blank slate!

How would you describe your writing style? Are you the type to plan as you go or must you have sorted out all the details before you begin writing? Do you tend to write straight through or in bits and pieces that come together in the end?

I have the entire series plotted out day-by-day on a calendar, down to weather details (which, really, when you’re writing about so many supernatural creatures, even the most mundane meteorological changes can be very important), but I don’t write in order. I tend to write from the middle of the book. Part of what I like about writing with an outline is the ability to write “as I’m inspired” while still staying on track.

Would you say that your writing style is inspired by any particular writers? If so, whom?

Hmm… Chelsea from The Page Flipper compared me to Jane Austen, which was very cool. I think that was more in the way that I crafted Lindy and Daniel’s love story than in my actual writing style, but either way, I took it as a huge compliment. Indira Petit, who started the first Green/Metempsyche Novels fan group on LiveJournal, wrote a beautiful review on her blog comparing me to J.K. Rowling, which was my middle school dream come true.

OK, and my adult dream come true. I’ll admit it.

I’m very inspired by the writing styles of Jack Kerouac and F. Scott Fitzgerald — very lush, full of imagery, erring a bit on the verbose side. I’m not one for short, muscular sentences, and I think that the smaller actions between people are often more interesting than huge RUNNING KICKING FACEPUNCHING CAR EXPLOSION! action scenes.

Except in movies, wherein — to quote The Princess Diaries — It’s very hard for me to pay attention unless there’s dancing or explosions.

As of now, what are your goals for the future? What would you consider success?

I just want to find the right representation for Green and the Metempsyche universe so that I can do right by Lindy, Daniel, and the rest of the characters in this world. I don’t want to disappoint the amazing supporters that the series has somehow already garnered, and for them I want to know that I’ve written the best book that I can. And success to me would be walking into a bookstore and being able to pick up a beautiful hardcover copy of Green from a display table.

Finally, what is the current status of Green?

Green is currently being shopped to agents. Outside of that, I’m not sure what I can say without getting sort of iffy on ethics. In other words, REAL-LIFE SPOILER ALERT!

Or something.

For the most reliable updates on Green’s progress through publishing, you can sign up for the e-mail list at http://www.hayleyanneperkins.com (with the form in the sidebar). You can also follow me on Twitter or Facebook for many minor updates and to chat with me, and Indira and Suzanne Keller do an amazing job keeping the LiveJournal fan community for the Metempsyche novels up-to-date.

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January 10, 2010

A Book Blogger Who Got Blogged: Steph Bowe

In October, I interviewed the lovely Steph Bowe of Hey! Teenager of the Year (and also of exotic Australia) for my Book Bloggers Get Blogged feature.

You can read her interview here.

In it, she mentions:

What are your plans for the future?  Do you see yourself working in the literary community?I recently signed with literary agent Ginger Clark of Curtis Brown Ltd for my contemporary YA romance novel, and I hope that I’ll one day be a published author! I’d also like to work as an editor at a publishing house.

Just shy of a month later, Steph’s book was sold to Text Publishing in Australia!

In celebration of being a very-nearly-published YA author (her book will come out in September of this year), Steph is hosting a contest for other aspiring YA authors on her book blog.  Here’s what she has to say:

I am giving away First Five Pages critiques! So if you’re an aspiring YA novelist, interested in getting a bit of feedback from, um, me (a soon-to-be published YA author and real live bonafide teenager), this is the competition for you! There will be five winners, but if there are over 100 entries I’ll announce a few more.

To enter this contest you have to:

  • Be a Google Friend Connect follower of this blog (in the sidebar on the left), just click Follow.

For extra entries:

  • Post about this contest on your own blog (an actual post! Include a link.) +10 bonus entries
  • Tweet about the contest with a link to this blog (include a link to the tweet in your comment) +3
  • Sign up for my mailing list +2
  • Follow or subscribe through a feed, Networked Blogs on Facebook, or Bloglovin’ (all links on left sidebar) +1
  • Put a link to this competition in the sidebar of your blog +1

To enter, just comment below. Be sure to include your links, and I’ll add up your entries.

Competition closes January 18th at 11:59 PM AEST, and will be announced the following day. Winners will be selected randomly with Random.org. Quick, start spreading the word!

(Although at her link, there are more pretty pictures.)

Check out the contest, and her book blog, here!

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January 3, 2010

HAP Gets Interviewed!: a girl and her books Interview

a girl and her books Interview

Originally Posted 31 December 2009

Hayley let me interview her for my tiny corner of the world! So without further ado:

1. I know you get asked this only all the time, but explain Green to someone who has never ever heard of it?

It depends… sometimes I make a lame joke and say, “You know how teenagers all think they’re the center of the universe and it changes their lives to discover they’re not?  Well, my main character’s life changes when she discovers that she IS.  Oh, and her boyfriend is a werewolf.”

Other times, I’m more serious and explain that it’s a YA paranormal romance with a few twists — not only is the girl, as well as her love interest, supernatural, but she’s more powerful than he is; Green has a strong tie to real history and historical figures, as well as historical fiction; and I tried to stay away from “traditional” supernatural creatures as much as possible (outside of Werewolf Boyfriend).  Rather than culling the majority of my characters from popular Greco-Roman or Norse mythologies, I explored stories and creatures from Japanese, Maori, Celtic, Breton, and Germanic traditions (among others).  And then I usually close with another lame quip of, “And there are no vampires.”

2. What got you into writing Green?

It’s funny, but the story of my connection to this plot and the character of Lindy Cook (the protagonist) could be said to have begun any number of places.  I never sat down and said, “OK, I’d like to write a novel. I’d like for it to have fantastical elements and historical fiction, and lots of kissyface, and… and…” Instead, Green and the rest of the Metempsyche universe feel very organic to me. It’s the story I was always meant to write.

I actually just remembered the other day that in sixth grade, the author Debbi Chocolate (Imani in the Belly) came to my school and ten kids — including me — were chosen to do a writing workshop with her.  She gave us thirty minutes to write a story, and mine was about a teenage girl who took one-hundred years to age one year, basically giving her a first-person account of most of the major events in history.  Obviously, that’s not really Lindy, at all, given the synopsis of Green, but I feel like it shows an inherent interest of mine to create one character who has gotten to experience… everything.

More specifically, and less cheesily, the idea for the basic identity of Lindy’s character — a high school girl who was literally the embodiment of the universe — came to me when I was sixteen myself. However, her name wasn’t Lindy, she was a cheerleader, and the rest of the world in which she lived was pretty much nonexistent. Oh, and she was supposed to fight the FBI or something, I don’t know. I tried a few times to write her story, but it never panned out. I never got further than a prologue full of shadowy no-ones and a lot of running.

I never forgot about the idea, but I also stopped attempting to do anything about it until one early early morning about six months after my college graduation. Through the rest of high school, college, and after, I explored all different genres of writing — playwriting and screenwriting, hard-boiled mystery, journalism, chick lit.  I never really attempted paranormal romance or urban fantasy, but the bug was still there.  Then, I went back to campus to visit my best friend, who writes really fascinating comic books. I fully maintain that there’s just some sort of fantastical idea-bug in the air wherever she is, because I fell asleep… I woke up at five o’clock in the morning… wrote 25 pages of what was to be Green… and fell back asleep. When I woke at a more reasonable time, I found the pages, reread what I’d written, and just felt that it was right.

3. How long did it take from first writing Green to the publishing world?

Well, I guess depending on where you’d count the start date, either twelve years and counting, six years and counting, or just over a year and counting.  But there’s still a long road left to go.  I don’t think that the process of a writer is ever really done.  That might be a bastardized Michelangelo Buonarroti quote, but I’m not sure.

4. What is your dream job that is not in the literary field?

Cafe-owning ballerina on broadway.

5. What book, or book series do you consider to be highly overrated?

I have never read a single Animorphs book, and I don’t think I ever will.  I also think that people give Ernest Hemingway WAY too much credit.

6. Is there a certain genre of books you just cannot get into?

I’m not a fan of really hardcore scifi or epic fantasy.  I respect it for how much research and detail is put into the stories, but I usually have a hard time reconciling the stories with the ideas they present — if characters are living on a planet a different distance from their sun than Earth, and with different geographic and anthropological boundaries than Earth, I just don’t believe that they would eat three meals a day and pull out a pocketwatch to check the time.  I think that’s part of the reason that I do really enjoy paranormal romance and urban fantasy, though — I love the idea of “our world plus otherworld.”  Otherworld on its own is a little much for me, I guess.

7. If you could only read five books, a series could count as one book, for the rest of your life which five?

The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac, The Universe in a Nutshell by Dr. Stephen Hawking, The Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and the Princess Diaries series by Meg Cabot, only I wouldn’t bring Princess on the Brink on account of the Michael/Judith thing.

8. I know you were a fellow history major. What got you into history and made you decide to major in it?

I’ve always been fascinated by history.  As a very small child, all of my favorite movies took place in the first half of the 20th Century (Pete’s Dragon, Bedknobs & Broomsticks, Summer Magic, Polly).  Then I discovered the American Girl series, and history had me at Samantha Parkington.

I have a theory that there are so many historical fiction series for girls because pre-teen and teen girls are inherently nosy and want to know about other girls’ stuff: “What are her clothes like?  What kinds of boys does she know?  What does she do for fun?”

History majors just never lose that nosiness.  I focused on social history and emphasized pop culture history and its effect on adolescent girls (my thesis was on The Beatles & Boy Bands!) and it opened a lot of diaries, closets, and idealized fantasy crushes for me to explore.  That was fun.

9. What is your favorite 90’s cartoon?

Doug!  Actually, most of the cartoons I watched in the ’90s are probably actually considered cartoons of the ’70s and ’80s.  I watched a lot of Muppet Babies and Care Bears, and my dad and I made a tradition of The Rocky & Bullwinkle Show.  You can read about my eccentric taste in cartoons here: http://hayleyanneperkins.com/blog/?p=229

10. Anything else?

I just want to thank everyone who has shown support for me and for my writing, especially over the rollercoaster of new experiences that was 2009.  And Happy New Year!

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HAP Interviewed!: Interview Repost from Breathe Me

Breathe Me Interviews Hayley Anne Perkins

Originally Posted 08 December 2009

First let’s talk about Green in general and then get into more of you, Hayley Anne Perkins, as a person. Here you go.

Breathe Me: What was your inspiration to begin writing Green?

Hayley Anne Perkins: Well, that’s sort of a tricky question. I really have no idea! I never sat down and said, “OK, I’d like to write a novel. I’d like for it to have fantastical elements and historical fiction, and lots of kissyface, and… and…” Instead, Green and the rest of the Metempsyche universe feel very organic to me. It’s the story I was always meant to write.
More specifically, and less cheesily, the idea for the basic identity of Lindy’s character — a high school girl who was literally the embodiment of the universe, of all history — came to me when I was sixteen myself. However, her name wasn’t Lindy, she was a cheerleader, and the rest of the world in which she lived was pretty much nonexistent. Oh, and she was supposed to fight secret agents or something, I don’t know. I tried a few times to write her story, but it never panned out since I didn’t really have any direction. I never got further than a prologue full of shadowy no-ones.

I never forgot about the idea, but I also stopped attempting to do anything about it until one early early morning about six months after my college graduation. I went back to campus to visit my best friend, who writes comic books and comes up with, probably, a story idea a day. I fully maintain that there’s just some sort of fantastical idea-bug in the air wherever she is, because I fell asleep… I woke up at five o’clock in the morning… wrote 25 pages of what was to be Green… and fell back asleep. When I woke at a more reasonable time, I found the pages, reread what I’d written, and just felt that it was right.

BM: How do you feel about people calling your Daniel Haliburton the new Edward Cullen?

HAP: Flattered, embarrassed, incredulous, awed, bemused, and a little terrified. And that doesn’t even get into what I think about it — just how I feel!

BM: The book isn’t even released yet and you have very devoted people wishing to read this, I include myself among this, why would you think that is? What aspects have helped?

HAP: I think that it definitely helps that paranormal romance is so popular right now. People are always looking, right now, for the next book they can really sink their teeth into (pun slightly intended) in the genre, but the typical stories about human-girl-meets-supernatural-boy are becoming overplayed in a lot of readers’ minds. I think that the idea that, while Lindy does meet a beautiful supernatural boy in Green, she’s more powerful than he is, appeals to readers who are frustrating with YA heroines who are little more than dishrags. That’s definitely not to say that’s the fate of all, or even most, YA heroines in the paranormal romance genre, but it is the trope that’s being bandied about the most in mainstream pop culture right now. I think, though, that paranormal romance — and YA in general — have the potential to give their audience protagonists who are hugely positive female role models and literary heroines who are entertaining in their own right.

BM: How long ago did you begin writing the book?

HAP: Well, like I said, I very originally started about seven years ago now, but the actual full text of Green was written in late 2008 and early 2009.

BM: Why do you think the few people who read your book at the July 2009 Focus Group identify themselves so much with Lindy?

HAP: Personally, I think — well, I hope — that it’s because Lindy is very much her own person. My goal was to make her relatable because of her uniqueness — I mean, how many people are actually the universe? — than to go the route of leaving her a blank canvas or vessel. Lindy has definite likes and dislikes, true friendships and friendships of convenience, and reacts to her explorations of the supernatural world in the way that I think I would… with wonder and wit, but also a small struggle to believe that everything is real.

BM: I understand the love story in Green between Lindy and Daniel is a driving force for the novel, was developing it hard?

HAP: Not at all! That was actually the easiest part of the novel for me. Again, I didn’t really sit down and decide that Daniel would exist, or be a werewolf, or love Lindy. He just is, and does. I really enjoy writing them together and I can’t even explain my excitement over people’s acceptance of their story.

BM: You started writing ever since you were three years old, why do you think you were so interested in the written word?

HAP: Probably because when you’re three and can write, it gets you a lot of attention! Plus, I had a really hard time as a child understanding that it wasn’t that my peers didn’t want to talk to me at two or three years old… it was that they didn’t know how!

My parents also made sure that books and reading were a huge part of our home. Every week my dad and I would walk to the library, which was in a white building with vines climbing up the walls, and I was allowed to check out as many books as I wanted. We read together every night, and for a long time, I felt a closer kinship to book characters than to other kids.

Until I was in third grade, I didn’t know that it would be possible for me to create characters. Sure, I sometimes wrote stories with little names that I liked taking the place of my own for the protagonists, but I didn’t really consider them characters — just fake versions of myself. I assumed that I had to write stories about the characters that greater minds had birthed — Gloria Gopher, Kirsten Larson, Karen Brewer, Jesse Bear — because the act of creating a whole new person (or anthropomorphic thing) seemed sacred and mystical. I wrote hundreds of stories in preschool, kindergarten, early elementary school, all using the characters that other people created, just because I legitimately believed that I was not worthy of such a thing. I was just a kid, I couldn’t make a person.

In third grade, my teacher finally told me that I couldn’t keep writing about other people’s characters because it was a breach of copywright.

I… was shocked.

Not only COULD I create characters… but I was SUPPOSED to invent these people for the stories in my mind? I could put names to the faces that crowded mental corners and give them likes and dislikes and backgrounds and histories and parents and siblings and favorite foods and enemies and quirks like preferring to wear socks with pom-poms (which one of my first independent characters did)?

It was, perhaps, the most profound epiphany I had ever had.

It may still be. It’s debatable.

At any rate, my writing career really started with, oh, seventeen years of writing fanfiction.

BM: When writing a story, what do you think is the most important aspect to have in mind? Complete Plot? Character development? Character relationships? Dialogue?

HAP: Character relationships, because otherwise, there’s no way to anchor the flow of the plot, the development of said characters, or the basis for the dialogue.

BM: If you could choose a character from a book to bring to life and speak to him/her, who would it be and why? It can be any character from any book ever written.

HAP: Ray Smith of The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac, because… he is Jack Kerouac. Anyone who thinks or speaks with the rambling beauty of Ray Smith/Jack Kerouac is someone who fascinates me.

BM: There are many people in my class that have never finished a book because they find no interest in them, what book would you recommending for young readers like them to become more fond of reading?

HAP: I will never not recommend Harry Potter. To anyone. For any reason. Platform 9-3/4 is where already more than one generation set out on their journey towards reading, and for very good reason. Harry Potter is the only book (series) I can think of that can appeal equally to children, teens, and adults; women and men; all races, religions, and nationalities. Every person wants to believe that one day, an owl will swoop in through their window and tell them that after everything else is said and done, they are special, because they are loved.

BM: Name your favorite art piece.

HAP: Michelangelo’s Pietà

BM: Name your favorite book.

HAP: Argh! WAY too many to name. See http://www.hayleyanneperkins.com/recommended.php and name any book there, and it has been my favorite at some point in my life.

BM: Name your favorite mythological creature.

HAP: Hmm. I don’t know if I can share without spoiling! I’m getting a little anxious trying to decide on one, because it feels unfair to the rest of my characters. Haha!

BM: Who is your favorite author? Does he or she inspire your writing in any way?

HAP: My two favorite authors are JK Rowling and Jack Kerouac, and they both inspire me hugely in different ways. JK Rowling is, to me, the epitome of “the author.” The difference in my mind between a writer and an author is the depth of the world they created, how much they respect that world, how much they respect our world, and how much they respect their readers, who bridge the two. JK Rowling’s Harry Potter universe is as multilayered and rich as our own, and she stays very consistent within it — she always has a clear and logical reason or history behind every decision that affects her characters within it. She also has shown so much social responsibility and understanding of her influence in “the real world,” and she never condescends to her readers, even when the series she never intended to be for children became popular with kids. She’s an amazing inspiration and to be like her will always be my ultimate, unattainable goal. When I lose faith in the world, I read Rowling. Jack Kerouac, in contrast, just reminds me every time I read him of how beautiful words can be. When I lose faith in words, I read Kerouac.

BM: Roberto Bolaño used to say that it is very important to write different stories at a time, would you agree with him or would you say that it is better to focus on just one story at a time?

HAP: I think that’s true, but there will always be the story that’s tied most into your soul and your bones and your heart that will bubble up to be the strongest and clearest and best. I worked on all four books in The Metempsyche Novels simultaneously, but focused the most on Green; now, I’m focusing the most on Red, but also working on the next two books, the short stories of the secondary characters, and a few other things.

BM: J.K Rowling, for example, wrote the epilogue for Harry Potter before starting the books, did you do something like that for The Metempsyche Novels or are you just letting it be?

HAP: I do know the epilogue, but I haven’t written it, just because I don’t want to jinx anything being cut by the publishers when it’s time for a final editing.

BM: When you write a book with this much magic and creatures, is it harder to write because you have to think of a deeper reason for everything or is it easier since you can practically do anything?

HAP: Oh… my… gosh, I have never researched anything in my life as much as I research every aspect of every particle of dust in the supernatural world of the Metempsyche novels. The mythos of every supernatural creature is very inspired by existing legend, available science, historical ideas… and of course, all of Lindy’s past lives are as historically accurate as I could make them. Writing this series is not exactly a Saturday afternoon frolic of the imagination, that’s for sure. In my opinion, reason is the difference between a good book and a great book (which is another lesson from JK Rowling!). The deeper you can get into the world of your characters, the more places they can lead you in developing their story, rather than you having to try to force along a plotline that is as thin as dental floss. If you really understand your characters and their environment, then their linear arc can split off into a great golden web like Priori Incantatem, and your work can feel round and complete. It’s the difference between a book you love and a book that changes the way you approach reading, writing, and seeing. The most successful stories know exactly why their mythologies function the way they do (even if it’s just convincing technobabble!). If you don’t know the parameters of your magical beings, they’ll stretch and stretch until suddenly things sparkle that probably shouldn’t. To break the rules, you need to know which directions they already bend.

BM: Who was the first person, apart from you, to read this book?

HAP: My friend Jacee and my editor Suzanne read it as I wrote, to keep me progressing forward instead of editing too much and impeding my own goals.

BM: Now for a typical question, what advice do you give young people that aspire to be writers some day?

HAP: Read. And write.

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November 4, 2009

NaNoWriMo Support Blog for The Penultimate Page

Read the original posting at The Penultimate Page or the NaNo Support ning.  Thanks, Emilee!


It happens to everyone.

You sit down at your computer, pull up WikiPedia to fact-check your Norse mythology…

And three hours later, you’re totally enthralled reading about the varieties of Japanese Kit-Kat bars.

As a writer, this is a totally normal progression of thought.  Writers are naturally interested in… well, everything.  No matter what genre you write, to flesh out a story is to create the world in which your characters live – often from the ground up: Do they live in a city or a town?  Is it a real place?  What’s the weather like, and how does that affect what your characters wear and do and drive (or not)?

Whether writing high fantasy or realistic contemporary chick lit, research is an essential part of the storycrafting process.

Say that you want to write an urban fantasy that sets a mortal girl from 1966 Chicago against a backdrop of Greek gods and teenage titans who take over the Art Institute.

Only… you were born in 1990, live in a suburban area of Kansas City, and you know nothing about Greek mythology beyond what you saw in Disney’s Hercules when you were eight.  And it was so scary that you cried and had to leave the room halfway through the film.

What do you need to research first?  And more importantly, how do you research it?

My personal opinion is the setting.  The first, and most salient, question to ask when researching a new setting is to explore your own motivations: Why do you want to set your story in that place – and at that time?

Before I make my next overarching statement, I need to own up: I was a History major in college.  I find research to be unbelievably fun, especially when it’s focused on cultural aspects that inform and shape the lives of characters (or, er, people).  So my next overarching statement about the research process of fiction is: Time is a place.

So for our sample plot bunny, you would need to research both “1966” and “Chicago” in the same way.  People, and characters, are products of both nurture and nature, and the “wheres” and “whens” of their existence dramatically shape the “whos” and “whys.”

In other words, changing someone’s clothing doesn’t make them live in any certain time period any more than simply saying that they live in Chicago means that they’re Chicagoan.  Think about your own life, and all of the things your “wheres” and “whens” affect: not just your clothing, but the foods you eat and the stores in which you shop, the kind of car your parents drive and the type of house you live in.  What was the first political event you remember?  Who was the first person you knew to say a “bad word” and what did they say?  What did you do when you came home from school, and what was your first job – or what do you think it will be?

What are your neighbors like?

How did you learn about sex?

Do you have to wear a school uniform?

How has your taste in music changed over the years?

As instinctive as the answers to these questions are in your own life, your character is not you.  At least, I hope not.  And at least not more than 15% you, as most characters are in some way inextricably tied to their creators.  All the same, you need to be able to answer these questions as quickly, certainly, and accurately for your characters as you did for yourself.

A good jumping point to discern just what aspects of your characters’ “whens” and “wheres” will be most important is the 100 Questions About Your Character survey (originally developed by tabletop gamers, but co-opted by writers everywhere).  You can find a clean copy at http://storywrite.com/contest/6584.

So now you know what you need to know.  But how to go about acquiring that knowledge?

Well, in my humble opinion – and on pain of death to anyone reading this who shares this tidbit with any of my old History professors – WikiPedia is a great place to start for basic outlines of information.  The key is to explore the depths of the “References” and “External Links.”  It’s like an ultra-concentrated Google search that doesn’t torture you with Boolean specifics – you can already reasonably guess that if the References on a page about Neighborhoods of Chicago says that it’s leading you to Wicker Park, it really is.  Score one for Web 2.0!

Of course, the flip side to WikiPedia’s greatness (besides those temptations to play The WikiPedia Game or clicking links until you end up looking at Japanese confectionery) is its overreaching broadness.  Great, so you’ve found a page on Neighborhoods of Chicago and it has eighty-six bajillion References.  How the heck do you know where to go and how to find just what you need to enhance your story?

My knee-jerk reaction is to advise that you read everything you can get your grubby little paws (sorry; werewolves on the brain!) on in regards to the world where your characters live.  Even the smallest details — the coloring of a candy wrapper, whether a street runs North-South or East-West — can prove to be integral to the integrity of your work.  Maybe your MC needs to chase Artemis down Wacker Drive.  Without research, a tense scene of hide-and-seek in the construction of its extension to the Lake Shore could never come to fruition, and a part of your plot arc would be lost.  You just never know!

However, I realize that most people have neither time nor gumption to read the encyclopedia.  I blame my own habit on the year I was in sixth grade, when I was so bored with classes that I decided to memorize the Almanac pages that came in our Assignment Notebooks.  However, the deeper you can get into the world of your characters, the more places they can lead you in developing their story, rather than you having to try to force along a plotline that is as thin as dental floss.  If you really understand your characters and their environment, then their linear arc can split off into a great golden web like Priori Incantatem, and your work can feel round and complete.  It’s the difference between a book you love and a book that changes the way you approach reading, writing, and seeing.

So take notes!  Whether you take notes manually – a great way to imprint the information you’re reading digitally, so you can rely more on your mind and less on said notes – or by bookmarking relevant pages, make sure that your hard work isn’t flowing in one ear and out the other.  Make columns for “Who,” “What,” “When,” “Where,” “Why,” and “How,” or categorize with a timetable of your characters’ day (Wake, Dress, Eat, School?, Work?, Eat, Free Time?, Sleep) to make sure you cover all of your bases.

The same rule goes for researching your supernatural creatures.  It isn’t enough to know the bare bones of their legends, or the image of what you’re trying to create.  The most successful stories know exactly why their mythologies function the way they do (even if it’s just convincing technobabble!).  If you don’t know the parameters of your magical beings, they’ll stretch and stretch until suddenly things sparkle that probably shouldn’t.   To break the rules, you need to know which directions they already bend.

So what does any of that have to do with Kit-Kat bars?

I have no idea.

But that’s the fun of worldbuilding.  Every world needs candy.

Some of my favorite research links:

http://www.foodtimeline.org/

http://www.flickr.com/groups/theretrokid/pool/

http://miss-vintage.com/

http://solomon.bltc.alexanderstreet.com/

http://asp6new.alexanderstreet.com/was2/was2.index.map.aspx

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/

http://www.wikipedia.org

http://www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com/

http://online.sagepub.com/

http://www.tvparty.com/

http://www.retrojunk.com/

http://www.inthe80s.com/

http://www.inthe70s.com/

http://www.nytimes.com/

http://www.factmonster.com/spot/fashiontime1.html

http://www.ventrella.com/Ideas/grammar.html

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October 18, 2009

HAP Gets Interviewed!: ChickLitTeens for Jessica’s Birthday Extravaganza

Chick Lit Teens Interviews Hayley Anne Perkins

The ever-excellent Jessica of Chick Lit Teens interviewed me for her Birthday Extravaganza!  I’m really excited to have been her closing interview of the Extravaganza as well, and I’m grinning like a fool to be included in the company of Sarah MacLean, who I met at the Biggest Author Signing Ever; the incomparable Maggie Stiefvater (werewolf lovers represent!); and all of the others included!

You can read my interview on her site here or just keep scrolling…

Describe Green in five words or less.

Do the five words need to be a plot summary? I’m terrible at short plot summaries, but here’s a go: “Teenage universe explores her power.” If I can describe it in five adjectives, which would make me quite pleased, as I feel like that plot summary sounds a little like the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles… and the book is not really all that like TMNT at all, despite both having Michelangelo in them…. I would describe Green as “Funny, sexy, philosophical, mythological mayhem.”

Which one of your characters do you relate to the most? Why?

I relate to all of them in some way, and it’s hard to answer this knowing that most people haven’t yet had a chance to read Green and meet the characters for themselves. I’m going to cop out a little bit and say that I think that I, like most people will, most relate to (MC) Lindy because there’s something very compellingly ordinary about her despite being embroiled in fantastical circumstances — but she’s actually a character who is delightfully ordinary, rather than being a blank-canvas vessel of clumsiness and blushing that somehow I’m supposed to find likable. Lindy has definite likes and dislikes, true friendships and friendships of convenience, and reacts to her explorations of the supernatural world in the way that I think I would… with wonder and wit, but also a small struggle to believe that everything is real.

Would you rather see your book as a TV show or a movie?

Well, at the moment, I’m still looking forward to seeing Green as a beautiful hardcover book, but in my daydreams I definitely see it as a movie. It sounds a leeeeetle bit conceited, but I don’t think that the plot would work well as a TV show, since it’s so multilayered and full. You’d really have to catch every episode for it to make any sense, and I’m not sure that forty-four minutes a week could really delve into the mythos of the Metempsyche universe if you also had to recap its inner workings for new viewers.

Who would be your dream cast?

It sounds totally cliche right now, but I would give just about anything to see Tom Sturridge play the part of Daniel, the romantic lead of the series. He’s a phenomenal actor who says so much in scenes of silence, and he’s got the closest “look” I’ve seen to how I imagine Daniel — a very delicate but strong face, very masculine but beautiful, and a little bit scary behind the eyes when he needs to be. He probably wouldn’t be interested in playing a werewolf, though, given what playing a vampire has done to his best friend, so I also like the idea of Avan Jogia, who is closer to the right age, I guess. But I’m a Tom girl at heart.

It’s harder for me to place a Lindy that I like, because I’m so protective of her. Kay Panabaker was suggested by one of my Focus Group readers, and she would be OK. The singer Savannah Outen looks similar to Lindy as well, in that they both have very big eyes and kind of round faces.

In terms of any other characters, I’m working on a collection of short stories of their narration that will come out one at a time leading up to the release of Green, so once you read those… you can let me know who you see as the characters! I’m not going to spoil everything all at once!

Outside of writing, what do you enjoy?

I watch a lot of television. I also really enjoy food and cooking, so I do that a lot. My original editor and I actually get together most Saturdays to cook together; it’s a LOT of fun. I also worked as a graphic designer for a long time, so I like making digital and multimedia art, but I can’t draw at all. AT ALL. Other than that, my day job takes up a lot of time and sends me on a lot of random business trips, so to get in my forty hours a week of writing on top of that, I don’t have a lot of time for much else these days.

What is your favorite adjective? Why?

It sounds facile, but I think my favorite adjective is “beautiful.” I like its ambiguity and the way it exudes a sort of quiet sigh of perfection.

If you could meet any author (past or present) who would it be?

Only one? I think by default I would need to say J.K. Rowling, because she’s influenced the way that I approach reading and writing more than any other writer. If she were to be unavailable, I’d want to meet Jack Kerouac, just to listen to him ramble for a while and how beautiful it would be.

What’s next for you?

Right now, working on getting the Metempsyche series on shelves for everyone to read and — hopefully — enjoy. Writing the collection of short stories starring that world’s secondary characters. Finishing up my website to make it full of fun and interesting Green and YA Lit things, and of course blogging pretty copiously, including the superfun Book Bloggers Get Blogged, featuring the lovely Chick Lit Teen herself, Jessica!

Happy Birthday Extravaganza, Jessica!

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September 20, 2009

A Bookish Chat: Siobhan Nichols Interviews HAP!

HAP Interview by Siobhan Nichols

Yesterday I interviewed Siobhan Nichols (author of The Darling Rebels, out in ten days on Diversion Press!) and today she’s interviewed me!

-How long did it take you to write ‘Green’?

Well, that’s sort of a tricky question.  The idea for the basic identity of Lindy’s character — a high school girl who was literally the embodiment of the universe, of all history — came to me in my junior year of high school, but her name wasn’t Lindy, she was a cheerleader, and the rest of the world in which she lived was very unclear.  I tried a few times to write her story, but it never panned out since I didn’t really have any direction.

In college, I focused on writing in entirely different genres and expanding my skill set.  I still read fantasy/paranormal romance/magical realism, but in my head, it was never the genre that I intended to write… which was mostly just stubbornness on my part, actually, and an almost religious deference to J.K. Rowling.

Then, about six months after my college graduation, I went back to campus to visit my best friend, who writes comics and whose creativity I envy.  I fully maintain that there’s just some sort of fantastical idea-bug in the air wherever she is, because I fell asleep…  I woke up at five o’clock in the morning… wrote 25 pages of what was to be Green… and fell back asleep.  When I woke at a more reasonable time, I found the pages, reread what I’d written, and knew that somehow, I’d finally found the story I was meant to write!

From there, the rough draft of Green took five months, and the second draft about 90 days.  After that it went to the Focus Group, who had it for about six weeks and sent back their suggestions.

-Do you listen to music while you’re writing? If yes, what sort of music? If no, tell me what kind of music do you like anyway?

I’m one of those people who needs to have some kind of built-in distraction to focus, otherwise I go off in search of something with which to procrastinate.  I almost always listen to music while writing, or else I watch seasons of TV shows that I’ve basically memorized in the background.  Writing Green was a labor of Fall Out Boy’s Folie A Deux, Vanessa Carlton’s Heroes & Thieves, and all of the leaked live tracks by Robert Pattinson… but I wrote a large portion of Green on the New York subway system and Staten Island Ferry, and my iPod Shuffle has everything from Huey Lewis & The News to Sia to Hanson to Bruce Springsteen.

I also watched a lot of The Office (US), Two of a Kind, and Castle.

-What did you dream of being when you were growing up? (Wow, that’s such a cliche question.)

I took the adage “You can be whatever you want when you grow up!” very literally for a long time.

My original goal for the future was to be a Muppet.

Not a Muppeteer.

A Muppet.  I really wanted to date Kermit the Frog, or at least Iggy Iguana from Under the Umbrella Tree.

After I learned that I could be anything I wanted within the parameters of “being a human,” I really wanted to be a famous ballerina who wrote award-winning novels on the side, and who owned a “dapple-gray thoroughbred.”  I also really wanted to star in my own Disney Channel Original Series because I was envious of Lizzie McGuire’s hair.

I’m still envious of Disney Channel hair, and I’m determined to buy at least one custom Muppet from FAO Schwartz, but I don’t dance anymore and I have no room in my apartment for a horse.  I figure retaining a desire for one outta three ain’t bad.

-A lot of authors write the kind of books that they want to read. Would this mean that you like to read supernatural/magical books?

It’s the funniest thing, but I didn’t realize until I was about 35,000 words into Green that I really do enjoy stories that fall into the “fantasy” category.  Because I’d never really gotten into any of the more seminal fantasy/sci-fi authors — Tolkien, Tamora Pierce, Asimov, Gaiman — I just figured that my intense love for Harry Potter… and books like Harry Potter… was a fluke.  It was when I started putting together my “Recommended Reading” list for my website (which is forthcoming… it’s really, really long) that I noticed that almost every favorite book I’ve ever had has had some fantastical element to it… life as a genetically-altered clone, monsters arriving in the mail, learning spellwork from battered old library books.  Even books like The Princess Diaries, which is ostensibly contemporary realism, are fantastic in that way that no one REALLY suddenly discovers in the penguin house at the Central Park Zoo that they’re a princess.

So the short answer is “yes, I enjoy fantasy and magical realism novels.”  Haha!

However, I never really like having to call Green “just” a fantasy novel or a paranormal romance or magical realism.  There are a lot of elements of realistic historical fiction — which I adore; I used to live for the American Girl books, and I majored in History in college.  Even though there are obviously a lot of supernatural elements to Green, I think its greatest strength is that I wrote it with the mindset that it was not about the supernatural, but about the characters’ lives.  One of the most unanimous compliments that the Focus Group had was on the relatability of Green and the ways that the fantastical was used, more as a facet of Lindy’s life than a separate element from it.

-Name a strength and a weakness in your writing style.

I think that my strongest suit is imagery… When I was in third grade, I got in trouble for writing my Young Author’s story with too many meticulous descriptions of the heroine’s clothing and home and foods.  Normally that’d be fine, if there had been a plot in any way to float them.  I’d like to think that I’ve struck more of a balance since then?

I think my weakness is probably either being too verbose at times — shocker! — or writing the dialogue for arguments.  Writing interpersonal conflict has always been a weak point of mine, since it’s so much easier for me to write intrapersonal conflict.  I do try, though!

-Being a huge creeper, I see that you live in New York City. Are you inspired by where you live and how the people around you live?

I actually don’t live in NYC anymore!  I lived there for a year, writing for The Hollywood Reporter and Tommy2.net, working for local indie bands, and makin’ lattes at Starbucks.  I did write the entirety of the rough draft of Green there, as well as most of the second.

I think I always expected New York to inspire me more than it did, in a lot of ways.  Because I was so young and fresh out of college when I was living there, most of my life consisted of stress and being desperately poor and running around from place to place, trying to find the New York I’d always been looking for.

I did get a lot of amazing writing fodder and life experience out of my time in the city — squatting for four months in Brooklyn in a building condemned by the Health Department on over 250 violations, then roving around from borough to borough every week, couch-surfing… and even spending a week pretending to be enrolled in Monmouth University in New Jersey to sleep in their dorms!  Haha!  Spilling boiling coffee all over Mr. Big from Sex and the City… going to a party hosted by Pete Wentz of Fall Out Boy and ending up on The Real World: Brooklyn… having the automated MTA Ticket Booth eat my money at 3AM in the Village after seeing the midnight premiere of How To Be and not having any more and being stuck in Manhattan until the attendant arrived at 6AM, just in time for my two-hour commute back to Staten Island… exploring Times Square at night, waiting for the 1-train, and falling in love a little more each time.

I also did a lot of writing on my four-hour daily commute, so there are a lot of scenes that are prefaced in my notebooks with, “Awkward: Sitting next to someone’s 80-year-old grandma.”

-How did you pick the name Lindy for your protagonist?

Originally, her name was Rian, so that I could make wordplay out of “Rian/reincarnation.”  This was back when she was a cheerleader and had no plot.

I didn’t change her name until I was maybe 20,000  or 25,000 words into the rough draft.  She just didn’t feel like a “Rian” anymore.

I was on the Staten Island Ferry after a closing shift at Starbucks, so about 5AM, in pouring rain, trying to stay upright while the boat knocked around on the dock and so tired I was basically cross-eyed — and still with an hour to go before home — when a girl in front of me put on a backpack that had a name written on it.  It was too blurry to actually see, and I’m pretty sure now that it was just the placard for the company that made the backpack, but it made the name “Lindy Cook” pop into my head.

So if there really is a Lindy Cook out there on Staten Island, I guess she’s very inspirational.  I think it actually just said JanSport, though.

-Since ‘Green’ deals with a lot of historical events and people, which one was your favorite to write about?

Ahhh, this is tough because I can’t give away spoilers!  It’s also a little like asking me to choose a favorite child, since each of the historical characters took so much care in researching and creating and making sure that I could be faithful to the real girls and women who lived similar lives in those times.  A few are actually my fictionalized versions of real historical figures, although very, very little-known, who I wanted to see given tribute and who I thought were unlikely to ever really get the remembrance they deserved.  Others are wholly creations of my own, and those were a lot of fun as well.

For some, I visited my parents and said, “Hey, Dad, list ten random years in history and ten random countries,” and I mixed and matched his answers.

Not all of those worked.

For another, I called my grandmother and had her tell me what her experience of the Kennedy assassination was like.

For all, I really wanted to focus on the aspects of daily life would have been like, more than trying to cover any sort of sweeping historical commentary.  Their lives and the snippets of them that the reader sees in Green weren’t made of political reforms and shipwrecks and artistic masterpieces, but how those were perceived and affected by them.  That’s the part of History that fascinated me as a little girl reading Meet Samantha, and as a college student studying History for my thesis papers.  The connections between their lives and the life led by Lindy, now — and hopefully the reader, too — are what I really hoped to come through.

-I saw this question on your blog and I wanted to ask you the same thing, so forgive me for borrowing your question. Which authors, living or dead, would you like to have dinner with?

I’ll answer with the same parameter I asked — three living, three dead.

I’d invite J.K. Rowling, because I really admire her convictions about societal change and her recognition of the kind of influence she has, and how she uses her work so subtly and so effectively communicate the ideals she believes in, and her commitment to really giving her readers a whole, developed world, and using that world to be so respectful of her characters, was really, really inspirational to me in developing Lindy’s universe (pun, a little!) and the people and supernatural creatures who inhabit it.

I would invite Jack Kerouac, because his approach to prose fascinates me.  He writes the ugliest people, the ugliest places, with so much beauty that it almost hurts to read it and not get to live it.  There’s a passage in Visions of Cody where Kerouac describes a pickup football game of neighborhood boys, Neal Casady, and himself, and it goes on and on with every play and every scraped knee and the sky and the leaves, and it’s about three pages long… in one sentence.  It’s remarkable, and beautiful.  Dharma Bums is one of my favorite books of all time and is absolutely astonishing.

I think that F. Scott Fitzgerald would also fit in well, because I feel like he and Jack would get along well as drinking buddies, and I’d want to be there when they started to wax philosophical about the state of the modern world and speak in beautiful, sad imagery.  The way that Fitzgerald punctuates his long strings of morose narration with stings of dialogue is something that I tried to emulate in college.  “You always look so cool.”

I’d round the table off with Meg Cabot, because she would add levity to the table; Jonathan Larson, because I think songwriters should could and because his work is probably the third- or fourth-most influential on mine due to my Rent obsession in high school and the emotionscapes that he can create in so few words; and Carolyn Mackler, because I was really intimidated when I met her and just stood there feeling shy, and I’d like to make a better impression and get to talk to her about how gorgeously honest her work is.

-Do you have a favorite place to write?

I probably write most productively at my desk, but my favorite place to write is the coffee shop next door.  Today was actually a heavenly writing day — cool and rainy, sitting at a table in the window with a peanut butter mocha and a chocolate-chip cupcake.  I write best in the autumn and on overcast days.

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September 19, 2009

A Bookish Chat with Siobhan Nichols!

Filed under: Biliophilia!, Bookish Chat — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 9:31 pm

Siobhan Nichols

In honor of the impending release of The Darling Rebels (Diversion Press) by my great friend Siobhan Nichols, she and I have decided to ask each other ten questions about our reading favorites, writing habits, and nitty-gritty book details!  Here’s my interview with her, and my responses to her questions are coming tomorrow!

1. How did you come about writing The Darling Rebels? Why historical fiction?

I got the idea for The Darling Rebels on the way home from school during my freshman year of high school. I was almost home and this scene–which ended up being almost the whole chapter of October–started running through my head. As soon as I got home, I scribbled it down in a notebook. I worked on the structure of the story and the characters for almost all of high school, then I ended up in Scotland for the spring semester of my first year of college and I wrote like a madwoman over there (the story was 400 pages by the time I got on the plane back home). At first I made it in a different time period because I wanted there to be corsets but as I went about writing the story, I realized that the things I wanted to transpire wouldn’t work the same way in the present day.

2. You’re trapped in a dystopian society like that in Fahrenheit 451, where all books, periodicals, scriptures, texts, or other forms of written communication have been banned… but in this society, every person can hoard away one piece of writing to keep for herself. What is the one written piece that you choose to keep, and why?

I would keep Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. That series was such a huge part of my childhood and adolescence and I think that it’s an insanely important piece of writing. Out of all of them, I would keep the seventh one because it is such an emotionally tumultuous story. It makes my heart soar and sink every time I read it. Except for the epilogue, which I pretend doesn’t exist. No offense, J.K.R.

3. When it comes to writing — and reading– which aspect of a book is the most important to you? The plot? The characters? The setting? Something else entirely?

The characters are certainly very important, but even the greatest of characters will fall flat on the page if the story isn’t written well.

4. You’re giving a dinner party for three contemporary (living) YA authors and three dead classical authors. Who are they, and who do you seat next to whom? Why?

Oh wow. The living ones would be JK Rowling, Sarah Dessen, and (this is quite a stretch here) Lemony Snicket. The dead ones would be John Keats, JM Barrie, and Mark Twain. I would let them pick who they want to sit next to and see where the night takes us.

5. What’s your favorite punctuation mark? Why?

I love ellipses because….they’re fun….and….
I seem to use them a lot in my writing. My characters always seem to have thoughts trailing off.

6. What genre do you classify The Darling Rebels under, and why? What’s the faultline between YA and adult fiction, in your opinion?

Mostly I would say it’s YA. Even though it’s set in another time period, it’s not really a historical book. I didn’t go to insanely great lengths to capture every detail of what life would be like at that time (and this may or may not be very obvious when you’re reading it). I think that the dialogue between the characters and their relationships and dynamics are more important. It’s not like a Corvette is going to be driving down the street in 1898 or they all go dancing in the clubs to Britney Spears; I think that I had a pretty good feel for the period.

And I think that YA is suited for teenagers going through that coming of age stage in their life. Most YA protagonists go on some sort of quest or journey to find themselves; they’re usually stronger and/or smarter at the end because of what they went through. Adult fiction is when you’re in the ‘real world’ and you have a job, a spouse, maybe some children. It’s mostly about what age group you’re trying to relate to

7. What are your plans for the future of The Darling Rebels characters? Or any other books you have on the slate?

I have A. LOT. of projects right now. I’m working on two sequels to The Darling Rebels at the moment, and along with those, I’m writing two more stories and I have ideas for another trilogy and a modern piece. So, I’m in pre-production and production for 8 books right now.

In the case of the Rebel sequels, the next one switches narrators (which has proved to be tricky since I have to get to know her) and the third one switches back but adds a whole mess of new characters.

8. Describe your perfect writing location… are you in a coffee shop sipping cappuccino or curled up at home near the window? Reading on a Kindle in the Big City or taking in the smell of a dusty hardcover?

I cannot write around people. Cannot. Right now, I write in my dorm whenever my roommate is gone. My dream writing place is a secluded, very quiet house (like in Secret Window or Colin Firth’s place in Love Actually) with a great view of nature.

9. The Darling Rebels is a historical novel… but if you could choose to have been born in any year, setting the stage for you to be the perfect age to attend any historical event(s), when would you choose to live and why?

I actually really like the idea of being 17 or 18 at the turn of the 20th century, though I can’t decide if I would want to live in England or America during that time. I also would have loved to go to Woodstock, which is such a cliché thing to say but I don’t care.

10. How would you describe your writing style? What writer or style has been most influential on you?

My writing style mostly focuses on dialogue. I like to think that I write good (if not great) dialogue. But I’m bad at description of places and movements. I also don’t think I can pinpoint a specific author or style. Whatever I’m reading at the time sort of stays in my mind and I try my hand at writing like that author. Some of the experiments make it into a story, but most don’t.

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