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January 19, 2010

Book Bloggers Get Blogged: The Art of Losing

Book Bloggers Get Blogged!

In talking to Chelsea (The Page Flipper) and Heather (Book Woman), I thought it would be a fun to turn the tables and do a series on my blog of interviews with YA book bloggers — let them be the stars! So now every Tuesday, another Book Blogger will be featured.

If you’re interested, please e-mail me.

Jacee S., 18, The Art of Losing

1. Describe yourself without using any qualifiers relating to reading, blogging, or writing… who are you outside of your literary life?

This is the one question that forever leaves me at a loss for words, despite how frequently it is asked and how many social networking sites of which I am a member. I suppose I should start by saying that I am 18-years-old and a freshman in college, hoping to major in something that’ll lead me into the realm of music marketing, which, sorry to say, book-lovers, is my true calling in life. I work currently as a webmaster for a talent management company, but I also do a little freelance web design on the side. Oh, and I have a cat! I cannot tell you her name or how she got it; I’d be breaking the rules!

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?

You know what? Despite how badly I’d like to start flapping my hands like a fangirl and name something by the ever-enchanting J. K. Rowling, I really think I’d want to keep Grendel by John Gardner. It tells the opposing side to the epic poem “Beowulf,” which is about this very one-dimensional, ultra-buff hero type that comes to a village to kill all of the monsters. Grendel is told in the point of view of one of those monsters, and not only does it demonstrate how things are never all that they seem, it also is very thought-provoking in that it explores a lot of different philosophies as the protagonist struggles with finding which one best fits him. I don’t think I will ever come to a point where I won’t still be pondering over that book and all it has to offer. There’s just so much left in it that I’ve yet to wrap my mind around.

3. Congratulations! You’ve been given the position as Personal Assistant to any author of your choice (all time periods and genres allowed)… who is it, and what’s the biggest problem you have to overcome working with them?

Charles Dodgson, who some know better as “Lewis Carroll,” author of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. (He wrote many more stories, poems, and essays, but those are his most popular works.) Not only did he have such a clever way with words, but he was also a teacher of mathematics and a great logician, a church deacon, and an inventor. He even dabbled in photography. Although he found great talent in so many arenas, he remained quite a private man. His enigmatic tendencies both on paper and in real life make him all the more intriguing, but that’s an aside.

I read once that he decided to quit teaching and take up photography because he felt that most of his students were lazy, stupid, and altogether unwilling to learn, and, though I would most certainly experience quite an inferiority complex when standing next to the genius himself, I cannot help but laugh along with him for now. His rejection of his students and his compassion for Alice Liddell, for whom he wrote both of the Alice books, made obvious in a favorite poem of mine, “A Boat Beneath A Sunny Sky,” make him seem likable enough as a person.

More importantly, I have the impression that every word that ever came out of his mouth was perfectly placed and deep and thoughtful, and I would just love to work for someone so … absolutely brilliant.

I think my biggest problem, besides feeling so dwarfed by his talent and intellect, would be that, his being such a hero of mine, I wouldn’t want him to be other than as I imagine him!

4. When it comes to reading and reviewing, which aspect of a book is the most important to you? The plot? The characters? The setting? Something else entirely?

Plot advancement is important, yes, but aren’t the parts of books that we always remember most the characters and the things they say, the little things they do? Without interesting characters to carry the plot, there is little reason or motivation to finish reading a book in the first place.

5. If book blogging weren’t an option, how would your reading habits be affected? Would you be as motivated to read if you couldn’t widely impart your thoughts on books to other readers?

I do not currently reach quite a large audience, and I am actually very new to book blogging. However, I have noticed some differences in my reading patterns already. I am the type that loves familiarity. There is nothing more comforting to me or more enjoyable than reading a book I have read a hundred times before! Suspense can be nice, but, for me, the absence of it does not at all make a great book any less enjoyable. Perhaps that is the mark of a great book! But to answer your question, I have noticed that I have much more motivation to read new things. I think I also pay much more attention to details that change often, like setting and periphery characters, that I don’t always remember so specifically by the time I have finished the chapter. Telling others about what you have read requires a deeper knowledge than simply reading for entertainment does.

6. 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?

Classical: Charles Dodgson, C. S. Lewis, and Sir James M. Barrie. Contemporary: J. K. Rowling, Joyce Carol Oates, and Jerry Spinelli. I’d seat myself at one end of the table with Dodgson and Barrie on either side of me so that they faced one another. Judging from each of their most renowned works, I don’t think I’d want to miss a second of interaction between them. I’d have Lewis seated next to Dodgson because I can’t imagine him stranded at the other end of the table with the contemporary authors. Rowling would be next to Barrie, for no reason that I can put my finger on. Oates would be on Rowling’s other side with Spinelli on her other side, seated at the end of the table opposite me. I think Oates and Spinelli would get along best out of the three contemporary authors, and Rowling might just be perfectly suited between Barrie and Oates.

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

Common as it may seem, I love the comma. If it were allowed, my sentences would go on forever like one flowing, continuous thought. Unfortunately, most people aren’t fans of elongated sentences, laden with comma after comma, and after reading Charles Dickens, particularly A Tale of Two Cities, I cannot blame them.

8. What literary device could you happily never see used again? (Simile, metaphor, spoonerism, hyperbole, etc.)

Portmanteau! As clever as it is to group together words to form new ones, I have no idea what you’re trying to say to me.

9. What is your favorite local bookstore? What’s a bookstore that you’ll never set foot in again? And do you have a ‘dream bookstore’ that you’d either love to visit… or would love to design and own one day?

Unfortunately, I have no local bookstores! (That goes only if Walmart and the public library don’t count, and, if you ask me, they don’t.) There used to be this really lovely one downtown that looked a bit on the inside like how I imagine Ollivander’s Wand Shop (from the Harry Potter books). The walls were of some sort of dark wood and the books, though separated, thankfully, into sections by genre, were just sort of strewn about so that finding just the right book seemed a bit like magic in itself. I was sad to see it close! A bookstore I would never set foot in again? I went inside one once that was only sci-fi and harlequin romance! The horrors! The cheesy covers! My dream book store would be a lot like the old local bookshop that I previously described, only much larger. Perhaps I would also require an employee of chalk-white hair and pale, blue eyes to creep out the customers a bit.

10. Have you been to any Teen Read Week events or other Writers’ Conferences? What was your favorite meet-and-greet or interview experience?

Unfortunately, no.

11. In your opinion, what is a YA novel? How is it different from a children’s novel, and how is it different from an adult novel? What makes someone a YA reader — because it’s clearly more than a matter of their being “a young adult.”

My impression is that it’s largely got to do with the way an author introduces the protagonist. In children’s literature, the author’s first task is to ensure that the child reading the book will even want to read about the lead character. In a way, it’s like introducing him/her to a new friend, and the character in question should be someone the kid would want to be best friends with. In young adult literature, it is generally understood that the reader is of a little more maturity, and so, while the protagonist may not be someone that the reader totally identifies or agrees with, there is usually a certain respect or empathy (or both) that the reader has for the lead character for one reason or another, and this is established very early in the novel, as so with a children’s novel. With an adult novel, the author may skip this step altogether, realizing that the reader will have already experienced a disillusionment with society and the real world, expecting the protagonist to be flawed and carrying a bit of baggage.

12. What’s your guilty pleasure reading snack? And what’s your guilty pleasure to read while snacking on it?

There is something about warm tea that makes me feel really clever when I’m drinking it and reading a book. My guilty pleasure books all include classic children’s novels like Peter and Wendy and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

13. “Don’t judge a book by its movie!” As a connoisseur of all types of books, which genre do you think translates the best from page to screen? What’s your favorite book-to-movie adaptation? Conversely, what’s a book that you hope never to see filmed?

This may sound a bit weird, but what about Nicholas Sparks books, particularly? I think they tend carry over very much in one piece. Perhaps adult romance fiction, in general, though I don’t have much knowledge of the genre.

My favorite film based on a book is a version of Tom’s Midnight Garden that I frequently saw on HBO Family as a child. I don’t believe it’s ever been released to video or DVD, but it was so lovely that it inspired me to search for the book at my local library (contrary to its popularity, I’d never actually heard of it before). The film actually did an excellent job of not only telling the story accurately and with a well-casted set of actors and actresses, but also of portraying the book’s feel, which for any story is nearly impossible to describe and probably much harder to reproduce.

Though it has probably already been done, I hope never to see a film version of Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Do not misinterpret me; it is an excellent book. I only think that, upon seeing it played out, because of its intensity, I might vomit.

14. What are your plans for the future? Do you see yourself working in the literary community?

I think I will always be a part of the literary community, but as a simple fan of books. Like I previously stated, I would like to work in PR or marketing someday, but my focus, more preferably, would be in the music industry.

15. You’re one of only two Book Bloggers who has read Green! Without spoiling too much, describe the book… a “mini-review” of the Focus Group draft, per se.

You know how you read one of those YA romance novels for which your only true motivation for getting through the book is that you wish that you could be the leading lady so that you could have that fantasy romance? When you’re done, you might feel very skeptical about the mythology of the book, find some gaping holes in the plot, and realize that the writing is really not that good at all. Thankfully, Green is not one of those books! The first of the Metempsyche novels chronicles protagonist Lindy’s discovery that she is, in fact, the physical embodiment of the universe. As if discovering smack dab in the middle of your teenage years, when everyone is telling you that you aren’t the center of the universe that you actually are, after all, isn’t enough, imagine struggling to accept that coupled with falling in love with the most beautiful boy you have ever laid your eyes upon. Oh, and he’s a werewolf! But he isn’t perfect, he can’t make the world bend to her every will, and he sometimes gets a little too caught up in his knitting. That is the gist of Green, but I must also vouch for Hayley here in saying that besides all of the aforementioned, which had me squeeing all the way, there is a truly stunning cast of characters backing the novel, all of them complex and well-rounded, and the work put into researching the mythology of the series is mind-blowing. Reading Green, there are no, “Huh. He sparkles?” moments. It is truly fantastic.

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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 8, 2009

Book Bloggers Get Blogged: The Page Flipper

Book Bloggers Get Blogged!

In talking to Chelsea (The Page Flipper) and Heather (Book Woman), I thought it would be a fun to turn the tables and do a series on my blog of interviews with YA book bloggers — let them be the stars!  So now every Tuesday, another Book Blogger will be featured.  If you’re interested, please e-mail me.

Chelsea, age 17.  The Page Flipper.

1.  Describe yourself without using any qualifiers relating to reading, blogging, or writing… who are you outside of your literary life?

I’m a voracious coffee-drinker, which might play a small factor in my night owl tendencies. I love watching tv and movies – I have a serious Buffy addiction, and can stay in my jammy pants all day if someone doesn’t force me to change. I also love nature walks; I’m a total tree-hugging, animal-loving vegetarian. Deal with it.

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’d probably take Mythology by Edith Hamilton. I love reading myths, and it has so much info in it that it’s allowable to read over and over again and still learn something new. Plus, all the myths can create a lot of great story ideas, which, even though might not be able to be written down, can provide some good daydream material. (I don’t know if anyone else does this, but I totally daydream stories in my head all day.)

3.  Congratulations!  You’ve been given the position as Personal Assistant to any author of your choice (all time periods and genres allowed)… who is it, and what’s the biggest problem you have to overcome working with them?

Laurie Halse Anderson! She’s my absolute idol, and when I saw her at a signing, she totally rocked. So smart and funny and deep, plus she had pretty hardcore shoes. Her books are just amazing. The biggest problem would be me fangirling too much. It might get in the way of my PA duties.

4.  When it comes to reading and reviewing, which aspect of a book is the most important to you?  The plot?  The characters?  The setting?  Something else entirely?

While everything else is important and adds to the overall storyline, I think the characters are, by far, the most important. If you have good characters that you can really get attached to, then the book will be good no matter the plot or setting. But if you take away the characters, and you have no connection with them, the story notches down a lot on the enjoyment factor. Think of To Kill a Mockingbird without Atticus or Harry Potter without the whole gang (especially the Weasleys!). You have nothing.

5.  If book blogging weren’t an option, how would your reading habits be affected?  Would you be as motivated to read if you couldn’t widely impart your thoughts on books to other readers?

I’ve always been a reader, way before I started book blogging in 2007. But it definitely motivates you – being able to talk to other readers about books and to share your opinion really gets me even more excited about books. And with websites like Goodreads, where you can share what you’ve read with everyone else, I think there’s an environment for motivation among every reader. The internet’s a powerful thing, dude.

6.  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?

Laurie Halse Anderson for deep conversations, Libba Bray to add bubbles and humor to the mix, and Suzanne Collins, because anyone who can write something that dark and thrilling would be amazing to meet in person.

As far as the dead classic authors go (how morbid, Hayley!) – Jane Austen, because she’s, you know. Jane Austen. Girl power! Betty Smith, because I love Francie Nolan a little too much, and Lewis Caroll, to see if his mind is as surreal as his books. Oh! Or Frances Hodgson Burnett because I’d so love to visit the Secret Garden again. That’s four, isn’t it? I’m a cheater.

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

I think the comma adds a heck of a lot to the written word. Writing wouldn’t flow without it. And the exclamation mark ! because it pops.

8.  What literary device could you happily never see used again?  (Simile, metaphor, spoonerism, hyperbole, etc.)

I’m not a big fan of prequels or flash-forwards; I’d much rather just hear about it when I read it than be exposed to it early on. Some are neccessary or create a present awareness, but a lot of times I see them as useless. Is that a literary device? I don’t even know what the heck spoonerism is, but it sounds dirty. And I want to be an English major. Psh.

9.  What is your favorite local bookstore?  What’s a bookstore that you’ll never set foot in again?  And do you have a ‘dream bookstore’ that you’d either love to visit… or would love to design and own one day?

In Hudson, Ohio – which is about 45 minutes from where I live – they have an independent bookstore called The Learned Owl that I love. It has a lot of great YA and just has this awesome atmosphere. I’d much rather buy my books there than at chains.  And I doubt I’ll ever have a bookstore I won’t step foot in – they’re all just too mouth-wateringly tempting. But if I could own any bookstore, it’d look a lot like this, but with a nice cafe filled with yummy coffee and tea, and have one of Hermione’s Time Turners.

10.  Have you been to any Teen Read Week events or other Writers’ Conferences?  What was your favorite meet-and-greet or interview experience?

I went to ALA this year with Kristi from The Story Siren and my best friend Emili. It was like heaven. All these great teen authors signing and giving you free books. I could have spent my life there, although my shoulders wouldn’t be too pleased (lugging around all those books was HARD.) It was a very bookish atmosphere, and was probably one of the most fun weekends of my life! I also had the chance to interview Lisa McMann and Cassandra Clare at a bookstore in Cincinnati, and I was totally in awe. I love (love, love, love) going to conferences, events, and signings.

11.  In your opinion, what is a YA novel?  How is it different from a children’s novel, and how is it different from an adult novel?  What makes someone a YA reader — because it’s clearly more than a matter of their being “a young adult.”

As a teenager, you’re right in the middle stage of life – not a child, but not yet an adult. You’re just starting to really think for yourself and be independent, and it’s scary. A lot of teenagers find out who they are, what they believe in, and who they want to be at this exact point. And that’s exciting for me – I know I’ll always read YA, even when I’m 80 years old, because it’s such a pivotal time in life. It’s hard, but it’s great. And I think there’s a lot more freedom in YA than there is in adult literature. There are just so many genres that you’d never see make it to the adult community. Can you picture a full-length novel sectioned in Adult that details about killer unicorns, like in Rampant, or creepy psycho fairies, like in the Hallowmere series? I haven’t come across any. And there is just so much variety. I’m totally in love with YA and every genre it has to offer, and I think I will be my whole life.

12.  What’s your guilty pleasure reading snack?  And what’s your guilty pleasure to read while snacking on it?

An orange shake from Steak N’ Shake and the Bloody Jack series by L.A. Meyer. Making me nostalgic as I type this.

13.  “Don’t judge a book by its movie!”  As a connoisseur of all types of books, which genre do you think translates the best from page to screen?  What’s your favorite book-to-movie adaptation?  Conversely, what’s a book that you hope never to see filmed?

I think romance adapts really well to the movie screen. In books, I think it takes more words to be convincing of love than in a movie. I think it’s hard for fantasy or scifi movies to be realistic to the books, because there are so many different adaptations of creatures, how magic looks, etc. They’re much more in-depth and, I think, harder to show. So, staying true to my words, my favorite book-to-movie adaptation is, by far, Pride and Prejudice (the Kiera Knightley version), and I hope never to see The Host by Stephenie Meyer go into film, as I’m guessing it’s bound to do. I actually thought the book was very, very deep, and I think it being transformed into a movie will make it lose that element.

14.  What are your plans for the future?  Do you see yourself working in the literary community?

Yes! I would truly love to be an author, get a job in publishing, and own my own bookstore. I’m shooting for all three, but any one of them would make me ecstatic. I’m hoping I can get an internship at a publishing house and get a behind-the-scenes peek to see if it’s for me, first, though. The other two I already know would be absolutely perfect fits for me.

15.  You’re the only YA Book Blogger so far who’s gotten to read Green!  Without spoiling too much, describe the book… a “mini-review” of the Focus Group draft, per se.

Ooh, pressure! First off, I’d like to say that I love it. I’m not being a suck-up towards my interviewee (hi, Hayley!) – I want anyone reading this to know these words are true. I think it’s going to be huge. It has everything you could think to want in a fantasy book, and then moves ten steps further. It has romance, myth, great characters, amazing writing, and that certain unnameable feeling you get when a good book just sets with you. If you’re reading this, I’m hoping it’s enough to convince you, because you’ll defintiely want it on your TBR list.

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