Friday, June 29, 2007

Eric Luper, Author Of "Big Slick" & Other Fine Literature




Today’s YA interview is with Eric Luper, author of Big Slick which is his first novel. It is an action-filled book about hot cars, growing up, relationship, bad choices, gambling and hot girls. It's a great book with lots of surprises. It's now available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other bookstores.

EI: Would you share some early insight into who you were as a teenager? What were you like? Please tell us more about Eric Luper -- the man behind the author.

Eric Luper: I was quiet as an early teen, but things changed suddenly when I was in 10th grade and I refused to show my PSAT results to my homeroom teacher who was going up and down the aisles looking at everyone's scores. She made the comment that ever since I had gotten contact lenses something changed about me and that it was NOT for the better. So, I made the comment that ever since she had gotten braces she was spitting more bits of croissant on the first three rows than ever before. This propelled me to temporary stardom in my high-school (okay, maybe more like there was a few hours of buzz around the lunchroom) and I realized that I had a choice: 1) I could be that quiet kid in the corner or 2) I could not be that quiet kid in the corner. I chose the latter. Junior and senior years turned out to be far more fulfilling.

EI: Do you enjoy writing? What is it about this art form that enchants you the most? Why have you chosen to write in the genre in which you write?

Eric Luper: The more I write, the more I like it. That's not to say it's not hard or it's not frustrating or it doesn't drive me to the brink of insanity. What I love most about it is the concept that there a finite number of words, yet an infinite number of ways to express yourself through them. Give a gazillion authors the same idea and none of them will write it even remotely alike. I love writing YA in particular because it's got the rawest emotion of any genre. It's like an exposed nerve. Oh, and also because I'm pretty darn juvenile myself.

EI: Could you describe your path that led you to publication--any stumbles along the way? Is there anything that you would do differently, knowing what you do now?

Eric Luper: I met my editor, Wesley Adams, at a writing conference in New York City. He is the editor for Jack Gantos, a writer I've admired for years. He had forgotten his glasses and was unable to read his notes, so he just winged it. From that moment, I knew he was the editor for me. I consider it an honor to have Wes helping me bring my debut novel to the shelves. As for doing something differently, I suppose if it ain't broke, don't fix it!

EI: Was there a central theme that you wanted readers to grasp?

Eric Luper: I write by creating characters that I love and putting them into tough, tough situations. I kick my characters when they're down and then I kick them some more. Themes, I think, are things that happen on their own, as a result of relentless kicking.

EI: Are there any kid or teen books that rocked your world while growing up? And why?

Eric Luper: I was a reluctant reader growing up. In fact, I was a terribly reluctant reader. TV was so much easier to take in. I could tell you dozens of television shows and movies that rocked my world. However, I did cleave to certain books: The Phantom Tollbooth by Norton Juster and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (trilogy) by Douglas Adams were two favorites. I think what attracted me to these books was how the authors used creativity and humor with such flair. Both books also have such an "otherworldly" feel to them. This is likely due to the fact that they both take place in another world!

EI: How do you imagine your audience as you are writing? Do you try to do character development, chapter outlines, various novel-related brainstorming? Do you have sheets of newsprint covered in story boards all over your walls?

Eric Luper: The only audience I'm thinking of entertaining is me. I try to keep myself entertained from the first page forward and hope that my readers will be as entertained as I am. As for my technique, I write by the seat of my pants. I'm not a good outliner and character sketches make me feel confined. I just grab a concept and let things unfold as I go. I know something good is happening if I make myself laugh or get choked up as I'm sitting at the keyboard.

EI: Let's shift gears here for a second... let's talk about Andrew Lang, the protagonist in your novel "Big Slick". How much of Andrew is planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with his character?

Eric Luper: Before I typed a single word, Andrew was a complete character. Rather than having lists of his likes, dislikes and favorite ice-cream flavors, I just knew him instinctively. Andrew told me what he was going to do. The same went for every other character in my novel. I know them all very well.

EI: What was your biggest challenge while writing and creating Andrew? Did you work him out in advance, or did he evolve as you wrote the story? Are any of the characters in the story actually based on real people in your life?

Eric Luper: I often base characters on people I know in real life. More often I blend different personalities and features from people I know and set them free in my brain. I knew Andrew a long time before I started Big Slick. Scott is a mélange (I love that word, mélange) of several different people I know. Jasmine comes from someplace different. Cincinnati, I think.

EI: How did you develop or come up with the idea of 'Big Slick ?" What inspired you to write this book? What about writing for teens appealed to you?

Eric Luper: Big Slick originated as a short story. In fact, chapter 1 is very similar to the original short story (you can read it on my website). When I read the story to my critique group, they clamored for more. Over the next few months, ideas percolated in my head. Once I started typing, the novel came relatively quickly. As for writing for teens, kids this age are dealing with so much. They are still kids, yet they are experimenting with being adults by interacting in an adult world. It is a crucial time in every person's life, it's fascinating to me, and it's a fertile ground for fiction!

EI: Would you care to tell us about Jasmine's character? What do you think readers would expect different from these characters?

Eric Luper: I love Jasmine. She's quirky and Gothy and definitely an individual. She's the kind of girl I wish I knew when I was in high school. Maybe I did and I don't even realize it. Andrew, Scott and Jasmine all bring something different to the table and it still amuses me thinking about how all three interact and fit together through the course of the book.

EI: If you were allowed total control of the Hollywood version of 'Big Slick' who would be in it? And in your opinion who do you think should direct?

Eric Luper: I love asking other authors this question, but I hate answering it. Despite how visual my book is, I never linked my characters to specific actors. Doing it now is tough because it confines the images in my brain. I would have to leave the casting to a good director, one who understands the book. I'd be honored to have John Hughes direct. His work was such a guiding force when I was younger that I trust he would do the right thing. I wish he would get back into coming-of-age films because he's so good at them! So, Mr. John Hughes, if you happen to Google yourself and read this, please get in touch and I'll send you a copy of Big Slick right away!

EI: What is a typical work day schedule when you are in full writing mode? Would you tell us a little about your process for editing, revising, and novel development? How long did it take you to write 'Big Slick' including the time it took to research the book?

Eric Luper: I have a day job, so I write or edit or polish when I can. I get to my office before hours or I stay up late at night. My muse comes at the strangest times, then sometimes not for a long while. I ride the wave as long as I can and then spend as much time as I need to regroup. Then, when I'm ready, I lace up my steel toed boots and go back to mercilessly kicking my characters.

EI: As a first time fiction writer, do you feel more pressure, feel insecurities fade away or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

Eric Luper: Writing is a great means of escape for me. When I am immersed in what I'm writing, everything else drops away. It's the in-between time when I get nervous and feel pressure and crawl under the table and curl into a fetal position.

EI: What's up next? Is there another book in the works? What can you share with us?

Eric Luper:I finished my second novel a few months ago. It's called "Bug Boy" and is about an apprentice jockey during the 1934 Saratoga track season. Back then, conditions for these kids (who were as young as 8) were deplorable. Abuse was rampant and they were treated as property rather than as people. Bug Boy is about a struggling young apprentice who is pressured to help fix a big race. The book is filled with tough choices and a lot of opportunity for me to kick characters.

My third book is top-secret. I'm about 30,000 words into it, and the acronym for the top-secret title is EMLM. (Figure that one out, David Lubar!) It is a piece that is exciting me quite a bit, but it's just too early to share.

EI: Mr. Luper, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers?

Eric Luper: It's going to sound corny, but my advice is to write from your heart. If the story doesn't move you, you can't expect it to move anyone else. For me, it's the toughest part of what a novelist does. It means putting things out there that most people would like to leave buried.

To learn more about Eric Luper, please visit him at:
http://www.ericluper.com/
http://www.myspace.com/ericluper
http://blog.myspace.com/ericluper

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Melissa De La Cruz, Filipino-American Author Of 'Au Pairs' Series Writes For Teens & Adults








Today’s YA interview is with Melissa De La Cruz, she's the author of Au Pairs which was bought by the WB Network for television. Her book How to Become Famous in Two Weeks or Less was sold to Universal Studio as a reality program and to Walt Disney Studio as a motion picture.

She's a former fashion editor and has appeared as an expert on style, trends and fame for CNN and the E! Ms. De La Cruz is a graduate of Columbia Universtiy. She grew up in Manila, Philippines.

EI: Ms. De La Cruz, would you share some early insight into who you were as a teenager? What were you like? Please tell us more about Melissa De La Cruz -- the woman behind the journalist & the high-fashion author?

MDLC: Ever since I was a teen, I have always looooved to read as well as shop. My two favorite places were the mall and the library. I read a lot of Stephen King, Anne Rice and LOTR (including the Silmarillion), and my favorite labels were Benetton and Esprit. I went to an all-girls high school so on the rare, eagerly-anticipated free-dress days I planned my outfit VERY carefully. I liked to adopt different fashion personas--sometimes I was a bit goth--one of my favorite outfits was an oversize Cure concert t-shirt, slouchy gray pants from the Gap and black Roman sandals from Payless and a black blazer from the Salvation Army that I bought for three dollars. And sometimes I was totally Cher from Clueless--very matchy-matchy and cutesy (hey it was the 80s). My other favorite outfit was a houndstooth blazer and matching miniskirt, with tights and black knee-high boots. And yes, sadly I had really big hair. I used to roll my bags upwards from my face in a style that resembles a croissant.

As far as what I'm really like, I think most people would say I'm a lot like my blog. I'm obsessed about shopping, and I work a lot, and I read everything I can get my hands on, and I don't see my friends as often as I'd like, and sometimes I get to go to some pretty great events, like fashion week or a golden globes after-party, or a Hollywood gifting suite, so I need to leave my house and get my hair done.

EI: Ms. De La Cruz, Please tell our readers about your experience as one of the founding editors of 'Hint Magazine.' What was the career path that leads you to that level? And do you express your inner self in your writing or do the personas you create exist only in your imagination?

MDLC: I was lucky enough to meet three very special guys who became my very good friends, and we all founded Hint together, I think what led me to Hint was luck--I was a fashion journalist in New York, so I had a bunch of clips already and a solid reputation as a writer. I was looking around for something fun to do, and it sort of fell in my lap, and the four of us really got along. For a few years, we were inseparable, and raised a lot of havoc in New York. It was like being in a rockband. The fabulous Lee Carter, whom I met at a fashion show, was the one who brought us all together. I'm very proud of where we all ended up. Horacio Silva is now an editor at the New York Times Style magazine, Ben Widdicombe is a big-time gossip columnist for the Daily News, and Lee still runs Hint, which has won countless of awards, including a Webby. We joke that they should do a "Behind the Fashion" story on us, since we kind of "broke up" right when we started winning all the awards. I think of my time at Hint very fondly.

Hmm. Do I express my inner-self in my writing? I guess so. I'm pretty comfortable in my own skin though. It took a long time to feel that way, but now that I do feel that way, I look back at my insecure, awkward old self and I wish I hadn't been so hard on myself back then. I think my outer-self and my inner-self are pretty alike. I've been the bitchy mean girl, but I've been the outcast girl, I know what it's like to have tons of friends and fun, and I also know what it's like to be the one standing outside the circle. A lot of people ask if I am "Cat" from "Cat's Meow". And while Cat certainly has my sense of humor, she's not me. My characters all have parts of me, but they are their own creations.

EI: What about your experience as a fashion editor for Marie Claire, Harper Bazaar, The New York Times, Seventeen, Glamour, Cosmo Girl to name a few? How did you manage to be in the limelight?

MDLC: I was a freelance writer for all those publications, not a fashion editor. It was great to write for all those magazines--it's a tough industry to crack, and I feel honored that I have contributed to all of these publications that I read avidly. I think it just takes persistence, determination and luck. I never say 'no' to anything. I have written for all of those above but I have also written for a ton of magazines that have died (Lifetime, Rosie, Men's Style to name a few) as well as tons of magazines and publications no one has heard of. I think you have to start writing for a lot of places before the big names take notice.

EI: Do you think that your experience as an editor and a journalist helped you succeed as a writer? Do you still write for periodicals? What are the do's and don'ts of writing for periodicals, and how does the discipline differ from writing your famous novels?

MDLC: Writing for magazines and newspapers is great training. You learn to work under deadline and with an editor. I don't write for magazines as much as I used to--I don't have time with all the books under contract. Dos and don'ts? Every magazine has a certain style that you have to fit. I would say do study the magazine and know what kind of stories they like to run before you pitch them. And don't miss your deadline. Writing short pieces is a lot easier because it doesn't take as much time. Novels are harder because you have to keep at it for an extended period of time, and the payoff isn't as quick.

EI: I understand that you where twelve years old when you immigrated to this country with your family? You were practically a teenager when you left the Philippines, perhaps a six grader? Did you attend one of the exclusive private schools in the Philippines, such as Saint Paul in Ermita, Saint Theresa's or the Assumption Catholic School in Dasmarinas? What was life like growing up in the Pacific Rim?

MDLC: I had actually finished my first year of high school when we moved. I guess I'm young for my grade? But we don't have eighth grade in Manila, so really I had finished eighth grade when we moved. You know, now that I think about it, I was thirteen when we moved, not twelve. Oops. My bad. I turned fourteen here during my freshman year of high school in America. And yes, I attended Assumption Convent. Life in Manila seems like a dream now. I remember being very sheltered. And having lots of gates and security everywhere. Bodyguards at the mall. Lots of maids and nannies. And my parents going off to tons of fabulous parties--and throwing tons of fabulous parties in our fabulous house. My mom would have her facialist, her seamstress, and her hairstylist visit the house every weekend. It was decadent and dreamy. Lots of hanging out at the country club and three-month vacations to Europe.

EI: In one of your interviews you noted that you grew up in Manila as a 'rich kid', before moving to the States. Did you live in one of the elite neighborhoods of Forbes Park, Dasmarinas Village, or Greenhills in those days? And you also mentioned that your family maintained a staff of nine servants in Manila, plus a chauffeur. What was the transition to life in America like for you?

MDLC: We lived in Valle Verde II in Greenhills. Oh dear. Transition to life in America was very hard. It's still hard! LOL. My husband (who is American and from the Midwest) says that I don't know how to do anything. I expect everything to be cleaned up after me, like a little princess. I guess half of me grew up very entitled and the other half is kind of this flinty, no-nonsense immigrant. I understand the dynamic of rich communities, the insulation, the snobbery, but I also understand what hardscrabble struggle is like.

EI: How does the Filipino American community respond to your books? Do you make an effort to connect with them? How accepted are you?

MDLC: I think they like my books. I get a ton of email from Filipino teens. And I've been featured in a lot of Filipino publications. My publisher (Simon and Schuster) has said they would like to send me to Manila some time, as there is a lot of interest there if I visit. I hope to visit sometime soon!

EI: What would you like to say to writers who are reading this interview and wondering if they can keep creating, if they are good enough, if their voices and visions matter enough to share? What surprised you most about the publishing process from the writer's perspective?

MDLC: My main advice to all writers is NEVER GIVE UP. You just need someone to say yes, to take a chance on you. Which also means SEND YOUR STUFF OUT. You have to deal with rejection, get your stuff out to the world--don't NOT send it because you're scared they're going to say no. They're going to say no. Definitely. But one day, someone will say YES. And the other thing is to hone your craft--keep reading, keep writing.

What surprised me about the publishing process is that it is an industry. It's a business. Your book has to sell, it has to appeal to an audience of readers, or there is no reason for it to be published. I guess I was very naive, like many writers, when I first started. I thought I would publish a book and it would change my life. But it's about having career longevity, and sales. I feel very lucky that I have found an audience for my writing-the Ashleys, which is coming out this December, is my 10th novel and my 4th series. I love my readers--they are so enthusiastic and appreciative. And so cute!

EI: Many writers describe themselves as "character" or "plot" writers. Which one are you? And what do you find to be the hardest part of writing?

MDLC: I think I started out a character writer. I think I have to say this because Cat's Meow had no plot when I turned in the first draft! But I've slowly become a plot writer, I think. I love a hard-to-put-down book, one you can't stop reading. The hardest part of writing, for me, is trying to figure out what the unexpected is, and trying to have it happen naturally in the story and not have it 'forced'. I also really hate to have a predictable plot--when books are predictable, they become really boring. The most predictable outcome is the one that seems easiest to write, so it's a struggle to NOT go there, and to try to see if the story can go somewhere else. And usually, that happens only through lots of hard work and rewriting and facing off at the computer. If you write the first thing that comes to mind, it's usually the first thing that the reader will think of also.

EI: Would you describe yourself as a confident writer, always ready to face the next new challenge? Either in front of a TV camera, famous celebrity or an editor? Do you have to psyche yourself up to try different venues?

MDLC: I think all writers have to be confident, otherwise, you'd never get anything done, and I certainly have always had confidence in my work. I know I'm a good writer, even when I got rejected from various MFA programs. :-) Writing has always come easily to me. I've always been drawn to books, and love to read, and I'm lucky enough that I'm able to write as well. Being in front of the TV camera does not come as naturally, but it can be learned. I deal with having to be on TV by never watching myself on television. I just cringe! But here's how to pull it off--wear a bright, solid color, get your hair and makeup done, and never-stop-talking. Dead air kills.

EI: You are well known in the writing community as the beautiful, talented, former fashion editor, wears high end fashion clothing, a celebrity journalist, and now a bestselling author. How do you manage being the center of public attention and the limelight? Do you ever feel pressure or insecure, or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

MDLC: Why thank you! That is very nice of you to say. *Blush* Part of me certainly loves the spotlight. I've always loved fashionable parties, VIP rooms, and the torrent of camera flashbulbs. We are in the middle of book tour for my new anthology "Girls who like boys who like boys" and we had more than a dozen events, and two book parties and it was so much fun just to plan what I was going to wear! I think it's so nice to get attention for a book, readings are very invigorating. It's all a hoot. I also figured out that if I angst about the appearances, or worry too much about everything, I don't get to have any fun. My personality tends towards the goofy, and I love to entertain. I've always loved telling stories, whether on paper or to a large group of people. So it's just a natural extension of my private life. My father was a huge raconteur, so I think I inherited some of that.

EI: When you look back on your enormously successful career as a 'fashion editor' is there anything you would've done differently? Ever dream of having your own "designed fashion line?" If so, what and why? If not, how do you manage to move forward without regrets?

MDLC: At one point when I was much younger I did think it would be fun to be a fashion designer, but I don't think I have the patience or the imagination to think up entire collections every season. I realize I'd much prefer to buy clothes rather than to make them. And I love to describe them!

EI: Your book 'Au Pairs' was a phenomenal bestseller --- what do you think most appeals to people about your work? And how difficult was it to muster up the courage to write another, risking a jinx'?

MDLC: I think my books are very entertaining, fast reads, and I work very hard to make the characters appealing and the stories fun. Skinny-Dipping, which was Book Two in the Au Pairs series, was hard to write because I was worried that it wouldn't live up to the first one. But at some point, you just forge ahead, and get it done, and it's just up to the public to decide. I'm a risk-taker and I'd rather try and fail at something rather than never try anything at all. (At least when it comes to books and my career. I'm a big fraidy-cat when heights are concerned.) I'm not scared of failure, I think it's the only way you'll ever have success in life.

EI: Each of your novels seems to take a moral question and dramatize it without trivializing it. Are you consciously exploring issues of "teen sex's sells" versus " GOODY TWO-SHOES", or personal evil, etc.? How does this work for you?

MDLC: This is unconscious, although I think when you write a book, you are writing from a certain point of view, and perhaps the morality comes through even though I think I'm just writing something very entertaining. I just never would like to be preachy. There is a lot of me and my personality in the books, and I do believe in certain things, like that you can like fashion AND be smart at the same time, and that working hard is the best way to get ahead, but it's also really fun to live the high-life at nightclubs and VIP rooms. One of my favorite books is SNOBS by Julian Fellowes, where he writes about people who are drawn to worldly things and how does one hold on to "True Values" when you're angling to get into the private Royal box at Ascot, for instance. I think the thing to do is not to take everything so seriously and have a good sense of humor about yourself.

EI: You've written many novels in which your main characters 'Johnny Silver, Mama Fay, Taj. Sutton, Eliza, Mara, Jacqui, Ryan Perry, Jeremy, Schuyler Van Alen, Oliver, Dylan to name a few --- , and of course Cat McAllister--- in parallel, to solve their conflicts. What challenges do returning characters pose? How do you keep the complicated, and life --- like, relationships clear in your mind -- and have you found yourself to be surprised with the strains, turns, changes among these characters? Do you ever tire of them? What happens then?

MDLC: I think the challenge in writing a series is keeping the characters true to themselves but also letting them grow and letting the story develop. I'm constantly surprised by my characters--like when Schuyler asks Oliver to be her human familiar in Masquerade--you'd think she'd know better! (And you'll have to read the book to find out what happens! I don't want to give away any spoilers.)

As far as the characters' relationships and lives, those are all clear in my head, what's hard with writing a series is sometimes you forget if the character has blue eyes or green, or what color hair. Did I say Schuyler had blue-black hair? Or was it more a dark brown? That sort of thing.

EI: What made you to decide to start writing books about vampires? What do you hope readers take with them after finishing "Masquerade...?"

MDLC: I've always been interested in vampires. My favorite books growing up were Anne Rice's Vampire saga and Stephen King's Salem's Lot. I loved Anne Rice because Lestat was such a wonderful character--so flawed, so beautiful, so evil. And Salem's Lot just scared me to death. Blue Bloods just came naturally out of a desire to write something in that vein, but also to figure out a new mythology for the vampires. Masquerade is the second book in the series, which I think is deeper and a richer read, and I hope readers like it enough to read the next one--Revelations!

EI: Your readers and other writers often like to get behind the author's writing routine. Would you like to share your fans your typical writing day schedule now that you have your beautiful daughter?

MDLC: It hasn't been typical at all! Which is really hard. I used to be able to write until three in the morning under deadline. But now that I am breast-feeding and she is still not sleeping through the night, it's been impossible. I'm just so fatigued! I used to go to this writer's office in Brentwood that I loved, and I think it's time to go back since I can't get any work done at home. Writing and parenting is a 24-hour job. I just feel like I'm always working. I guess the typical day now is I work from 9-5 when the nanny is here, then have playtime and dinner and try to see my husband and putting-her-to-sleep time from
5-8. Then around 9pm I try to work again until midnight. Luckily my husband and I both work from home, so we do see each other even when both of us have crazy deadlines.

EI: Now... let's shift gears here for a second. Can you share with us some of the challenges you faced to publish "Girls Who Likes Boys Who Likes Boys?"What inspired you to put together this anthology?

MDLC: Girls who like boys who like boys: true tales of love, lust and friendship between gay men and straight women is an anthology I edited with my dear friend Tom Dolby. It was inspired by the close friendship we shared, and I thought there should be a book that celebrated the alliance between gay men and straight women. We were looking for a lot of variety--stories about best friends, but also stories about families--we have an essay by Philip Himberg where he writes about how his ex-girlfriend, Cathy, gave birth to his daughter and gave her to him and his partner to raise. Also an essay by Sex and the City's Cindy Chupack, where she writes about her gay ex-husband and how they were able to wish each other well when the marriage ended. We really didn't face any challenges at all. My agent sold the book in a week to Dutton, and then we put together our "dream lists" of writers we'd love to work with and most of them said yes. Simon Doonan, Gigi Grazer, Andrew Solomon, Ayelet Waldman, Mike Albo, David Levithan, Anna David, Alexandra Jacobs, Karen Robinovitz, Elizabeth Spiers---and tons more are in the book and share their wonderful stories.

EI: Please tell us about Schuyler Van Alen, Oliver and Dylan? What was your biggest challenge in developing these characters? How did you develop them? Did you work them out in advance, or did they evolve as you wrote the story?

MDLC: A long time ago, there was a club in New York called "The Bank" and it was a bit of a dorky goth club, not at all like the swishy velvet-rope nightclubs with thousand-dollar bottle service that are all over New York now. My best friend Morgan and I looooved the Bank, because they played all our favorite bands: Sioxsie Sioux, The Cure, Bauhaus, all the songs we loved as teens. When I was writing Blue Bloods, I thought of the Bank, (because it was a nightclub in an old crumbling bank) and Schuyler came into my head as a teen who was worried about how to get into the Bank. I was also very inspired by how Mary Kate Olsen dressed--all those layers and hobo chic and thought Schuyler would dress this way. Oliver is based a bit on Morgan, his sense of humor and his sophistication, and Dylan is based on another friend of mine from college who was broody and gorgeous and a bit of a 'bad boy.' They evolved into their own beings as the story progressed. It was fun to find out Oliver was Schuyler's conduit, for instance, and that Dylan was also a vampire (oops--spoilers, uch!).

EI: Please tell us about ' The Au Pairs: Crazy Hot' the 4th book in the series. Would you care to share a little a bit about it?

MDLC: Crazy Hot is the fourth Au Pairs book, with all new adventures for our favorite partying babysitters. Mara has a cute new 'intellectual' boyfriend, the anti-Ryan, who seems perfect for her--but is he really? Jacqui is discovered as a supermodel by two hot saucy Aussie photographers, and falls for one of them, and Jeremy proposes to Eliza with what she thinks of as a "Holly-rock"--an engagement ring just for show, just like the one Paris Hilton and any number of starlets wear in Us Weekly and say they're "engaged." But Jeremy's really serious--so is it icebergs ahead? It's another fun romp in the Hamptons!

EI: If you were allowed total control of a Hollywood adaptation of "Masquerade: A Blue Blood Novel" which actors would you cast? And who would you want to direct?

MDLC: I try not to say because I like my readers to imagine the characters instead of the actors when they read the book. I think that's the fun thing about reading--you get to imagine on your own what they look like. I love the LOTR movies but now when I read the book, I picture Orlando Bloom instead of the Legolas I had seen in my minds' eye.

EI: Would you give us a hint about your upcoming book "666?" What can you tell us about it?

MDLC: 666: The Number of the Beast is a horror anthology from Scholastic. I have a short story in it called "Shelter Island" about one of our favorite Blue Blood vampires. Readers will find out what happened to Dylan! And it's from the point of view of a human girl, which I thought was fun and interesting to write.

The next book in the Blue Bloods series is REVELATIONS, which comes out next fall. And the second book in the Angels on Sunset Boulevard series is THE STRIP.

My next novel that is coming out is THE ASHLEYS in December, which kicks off a new series about the most popular girls in seventh-grade. Truth or Dare. Sleepover Parties. Rank Calls. Gossip. Shopping. Cute Boys. Don't miss it!

EI: Ms. De La Cruz, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers? Maraming Salamat Po. Thanks once again and good luck with your next book "THE ASHLEYS". We are all cheering for your success!

MDLC: Thanks very much! This was a lot of fun and thanks for thinking of me! I would say to all aspiring writers, not to give up! Never take no for an answer, and keep writing...the more you do it the better you get at it!

To learn more about Melissa De La Cruz, please visit her at:
http://www.melissa-delacruz.com/
http://www.myspace.com/melissadelacruz

Photo of Ms. Melissa De La Cruz (BW) By Ruffy Landayan, Los Angeles, CA.

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Michael Standaert - A Journalist Turned Novelist


Welcome to “Up Close & Personal.” For every interview I will be introducing a literary personality discussing his views and insights, as well as upcoming literary events around the world.

Today’s interview is with Michael Standaert, author of the new released novel Pisco Kid. His writing has appeared in TechCentralStation.com, Far Eastern Economic Review Hong Kong), San Francisco Chronicle (book reviews), Central Europe Review (Prague), Vietnam News Network, Seoul Times, Boston Review, Maisonneuv (Montreal), Nthposition.com, CritiqueMagazine.com and others.

He has worked as a journalist in the U.S. and Europe over the last few years, and helped found Euro-correspondent dot com. Besides journalism, his fiction, poetry and essays have appeared in a variety of notable publications, magazine and has completed three novels.

EI: Would you share some insight into who you were as a teenager? What were you like? Please tell us more about Michael Standaert -- the man behind the journalist and author.

MS: Probably both pretty normal and a bit odd I think. Your regular awkwardness, goofiness, and shyness at times; other times a bit more daring, exploratory, outrageous. I had bad acne early on when I was about 13 or so, and hit puberty earlier, so grew rather quickly. I was a good football player for a while in middle school and in high school, a poor golfer, wasn’t really that studious unless I was reading what I wanted to read. I would spend a lot of time in the school library reading Hemingway, Douglas Adams, and Tim Cahill and others. These were my favorite writers early on … so a strange mix of realism, humorous sci-fi, and wry travel writing. I wanted to be something like Hemingway for a while, and this probably led me to pursue journalism since I knew he’d started that way. I still haven’t been able to give up journalism like he did, since I really haven’t made any money at all off the two books I’ve written. The first could still break even and the second is just out, so I don’t know if I’ll get above the line yet. It’s funny, I ran into a guy a few years ago when I was out at a bar in my hometown and who I’d gone to school with from grade school through high school, and he remembered me as something of a preppy football player type, kind of like Zack (I think that was the name) from Saved By the Bell, but I never really saw myself that way. By later in my senior year I’d started rebelling a bit more and getting into your usual teen age trouble, experimenting and all that.

EI: Mr. Standaert, please tell our readers about your experience as a journalist in the US. What was the career path that lead you to that level?

MS: I started as a sports journalist, and later was kind of a roving correspondent for the Des Moines Register while attending the University of Iowa. After finishing at Iowa I moved to Europe to start an MA program through Cardiff University in Wales and after a year that moved to Brussels, Belgium where I freelanced most of 2002, covering the EU and a variety of other stories. That was when I started writing for some higher profile publications. Part of it was luck of being where other American journalists were not, but a lot of it was hard work just trying to build myself up as a freelance writer. After running low on money I came back to the U.S. from Europe and went underground for a while in 2003, working as a janitor at night, living at my parents, and writing the Pisco novel. After that I moved back to Iowa City where I’d studied before and covered some of the Iowa Caucuses and interviewed about 30 writers from around the world who were there for the International Writing Program, selling quite a few of these stories to publications abroad. I was also writing the Skipping Towards Armageddon book for Soft Skull at this time. I think it was around this time I started reviewing books as well. In Iowa I met the woman who would be my wife. She was born in Canada, grew up in Taiwan, and was my interpreter for an interview I did with the Chinese writer Yu Hua. She eventually moved to California to continue her studies and I followed her out there and got a job as a writer for a foundation, a great job that gave me the opportunity to live in and write for the community of Big Sur, and also allowed me the chance to go to India and Sri Lanka to help document projects they were involved with there. This last year I did a review every couple weeks for Publishers Weekly, but had to give that up upon moving to China since it isn’t very cost effective for them to send books all the way over here. So, now in China I’m working as an editorial consultant for a weekly English language magazine that is basically overseen by the government, something that’s both been frustrating and illuminating. After my year contract is up, I’m not sure what will be next. It depends on what both my wife and I have going on.

EI: Do you think your experience as a journalist helped you succeed as a writer? Do you still write for periodicals? What are the “do's and don'ts” of writing for periodicals and how does the discipline differ from writing your novels?

MS: I think journalism can help to an extent, but it can also blunt your fictional instincts, so it’s good to be able to take a break now and then. I’ve mostly been a freelancer, which has its good and its bad … you have a lot of time to devote to your writing, but it’s a catch-22 since if you want to eat, all of that writing has to be journalism. But you find ways. The last few years I haven’t found those ways to devote to fiction though; getting married, having a full-time job, moving to China for a full-time job, and the two books hanging over my head diverted me from any fiction writing. That’s about to change though. I can feel a good period coming on. I’ll still write for periodicals when I can, but I only want to do it if the story is interesting or important, or if I’m reviewing books, which I enjoy since it helps me keep up on what’s current. I don’t really have any tips other than to try to write the best you can, no matter what it is. That’s a hard thing to do at times. That aspect isn’t any different from writing a novel, but a novel takes much, much longer and can really wear you out compared to a 1,500 word article. And don’t blog too much, unless you’re blogging fiction. I have a feeling that my own blogging has taken some energy and drive from me.

EI: Do you enjoy writing? What is it about this art form that enchants you the most? And could you describe your path that leads you to publication -- any stumble along the way? Is there anything about you that you would do differently, knowing what you do now?

MS: Journalism writing can be interesting at times, but I don’t enjoy it as much as writing fiction. I hate press conferences. You never get much out of them. I do enjoy one-on-one interviews with though, which is a benefit of journalism … getting out and meeting people you would otherwise probably never talk to. I enjoy writing fiction, and in crazy moments poetry, but it can be a long and weary process writing fiction, especially a novel. Yet when you’re in a groove nothing else is better.

EI: Was there a central theme that you wanted readers to grasp? What surprised you most about the publishing process from the writer's perspective?

MS: The central theme for Pisco revolves around lies. Big lies, small lies. Pisco is constantly lied to in the story, lies to others, and lies to himself. There are other themes weaved into this, but I think that’s at the heart.

EI: Mr. Standaert, you are well known in the writing community as a China based writer and journalist currently living in Beijing. Your writing has been published in notable publications such as: San Francisco Chronicle, Boston Review, Eastern Economic Review Hong Kong, Seoul Times, Central Europe Review in Prague etc... and now an author? Do you ever feel pressure or insecure, or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

MS: My wife and I were joking the other day that if I wrote something very critical of the Chinese government, I might get kicked out of the country and that the publicity would be good for the book. I can see the headlines now: “Unknown Writer Booted from China” or “Minor Author Banned” … I am not know at all, so it was funny to read your question. As far as pressure or insecurity, yes, they are there, they are always there. Sometimes pressure is good if you channel it correctly. Insecurity can freeze you in your tracks. When that happens you must go forward somehow. But as far as any pressure from being ‘known’ … that’s not there at all. I’ve lately felt the opposite pressure since there hasn’t yet been a review of Pisco, and it just leaves a person wondering why. If I get all bad reviews, that’s fine. It’s more of the fact that if I didn’t have any response, I would never know.

EI: Are there any kid or teen books rocked your world while growing up? And why?

MS: Where the Wild Things Are … but that was when I was very young. I was also a big Dr. Seuss reader. I didn’t really read many teen books, though I did read a lot of classic adventure stories in larger print. Both Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn were extremely important to me. I thought I was Tom Sawyer for a while, and growing up along the Mississippi River lent some reality to that. The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy series was as well. I think I was drawn to its weird humor. A couple books that rocked my world in my late teens were The Stranger by Camus and Crime and Punishment by Dostoyevsky. Lately it’s been Haruki Murakami.

EI: Let’s talk about “Moses” in your novel “The Adventure of Pisco Kid”. How much is ‘Moses’ planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with his character?

MS: Moses is actually Pisco, or the name Pisco’s adoptive mother gave him. He liked the name Pisco, since that was the word on the cloth bag he was found in. Pisco is a liquor made in Peru. She has something in her mind about him becoming a savior type, and tries to press him on this. I didn’t have a lot planned out from the start with Moses/Pisco. I knew he would be a rodent exterminator, that he would like folk and bluegrass music, that he was really just a regular imbecile like the rest of us who happens to have a series of events change his course in life. You know where to go next by what has just happened or what you think might happen next. I really didn’t plan this one out in great detail, though I did have some Point A to Point B plotlines I wanted to move Moses/Pisco to and from. Between that is unknown territory.

EI: What was your biggest challenge and obstacle while writing and creating “Moses?” Did you work him out in advance, or did he evolve as you wrote the story?

MS: He evolved as I wrote. I think the biggest challenge was trying to not hurry him through my plotline since whatever humor, or whatever statements are being made, or whatever character development between those points takes time to develop. A lot of it is linguistic gymnastics, compilations of images, and other experiments creating a mood that Pisco is swimming through.

EI: How did you develop or come up with the idea of ‘The Adventure of Pisco Kid?” What inspired you to write this book? What about satire writing appealed to you? What do you think readers would expect different from ‘Pisco Kid’?

MS: I knew I wanted to write about a young man who’s mother thought he was a messiah. I also had in mind various stereotyped characters that I wanted to play with, either accentuating the stereotype or changing it slightly, just playing with it to show some of the absurdities of those stereotypes. I don’t know if I was totally successful with that or not. On another note, I wanted to satirize this notion of “spreading” whatever it is to the rest of the globe … faith, democracy, materialism, whatever … this messianic tendency that is engrained in the American spirit, folklore, music, art. We haven’t even perfected our own democracy and we go around trying to shape others in our image. There are good and bad points to this … you have someone like Martin Luther King, with his very religious messianic messages that helped deliver a people (somewhat) from their poor place in societ, and on the other hand you have some folksy snake oil salesman like George W. Bush who is very clumsy at the messages, half-articulate, but somehow (at least for much of the time) was able to get a lot of people to buy his charms. Means, ends, outcomes and intentions all vary, though my thought is that it’s generally a damaging thing if a nation deludes itself with messianic tendencies, especially imperial ones. But Bush was born of that. His generation first thought it could find inner utopia in peace, drugs and rock-n-roll, later they thought they could find it in the stock markets, Jesus and capitalist globalization. Iraq was just part of that latter manifestation, though it probably would have been better if they’d stayed in their youthful, drugged up, idealistic mode. There is both something terrifying about Bush’s shoulder slapping, smirking, head pumping ways, and also endearing, like hey, this is a guy that would probably have been fun after a few beers. Unfortunately he got drunk on power and Jesus. He’s a sad character really. I kind of crafted one character in Pisco slightly on him.

EI: How do you imagine audience as you are writing? Do you try to do character development, chapter outlines, various novel-related brainstorming? Do you have sheets of newsprint covered in a story boards all over your walls?

MS: I don’t think much about an audience for fiction. I just try to write whatever appeals to me or I want to explore at the time. I do sometimes do character sketches, outlines and brainstorming, but it’s usually very rough. If I really plotted everything out it might take some of the enjoyment out of me of discovering the unknown territories between the plotlines. I think Pisco was the most fun I’d had writing anything, since I just kind of let go and didn’t really care anymore if I was doing this or doing that. No storyboards. I know people who do a lot of prep work though. The advantage is you don’t get stuck as much. The disadvantage of the way I do it is you can get lost and not recover, which is bad news if you’ve been writing a novel for six months. I have two other completed novels that I’ve put in the drawer. I don’t know if they’re very good or not, but I don’t think I could ever go back to them totally. I may be able to do some salvage work for spare parts from them though.

EI: What would you like to say to writers who are reading this interview and wondering if they can keep creating, if they are good enough, if their voices and visions matter enough to share?

MS: If it is something you really want to do, go for it. If you’re halfhearted about it, it’s not going to work. Keep polishing, keep writing and it will get better, or at least you would hope. Sometimes it doesn’t. Half the time you’ll think your brilliant, the other half that your shit. It comes with the territory.

EI: Would you describe yourself as a confident journalist & a writer, always ready to face the next new challenge? Either in front of a TV camera, or an editor? Do you have to psyche yourself up to try different venues?

MS: Hunger breeds more confidence, though it also wears you out. I don’t think I’m a particularly confident person. You always have self-doubts. I’m most confident when I’m in the zone and writing something, when it’s flowing, because everything else drops away and you don’t really worry about confidence or anything else. Getting back there is the hard part. Worrying that you can’t get back there ruins confidence. As far as journalism, you do your job and try to write the best article you can. I’ve not been in front of a TV camera, and actually the idea scares me a bit. Facing an editor isn’t that difficult.

EI: Now tell us what is life like living in China? What is the transition like for you?


MS: I’ve been here since mid-March, so a relatively short time so far. My impressions are also only of Beijing, since that’s where I’ve been. I have only been as far as an hour outside of the city. Beijing is massive. You can feel the weight of it. Construction continues non-stop, people are everywhere, cars are everywhere, it’s just go, go, go. Lately my eyes have been stinging from the pollution, but in May the weather was very nice. I didn’t witness the sandstorms this year, and I’d partly wanted to go through one. I like living in Beijing so far. Our apartment has three bedrooms, so my wife and I can each have an extra office and if guests come they can stay. All for only about $500 a month, which is quite a change from Monterey and Palo Alto in California where we were living before in one-bedroom apartments for over twice that. Food is cheap. We had four dishes at dinner last night for about $4 and were stuffed to the gills. I’m trying to learn some Chinese, but that’s going slowly. It’s also somewhat annoying to be looked at all the time. I’m blond and big and red faced, so I do stand out. We also live on the west side of the city, where there aren’t many foreigners, where it’s a bit more residential. It’s a bit hard to get to know Chinese people, or at least it has been so far, other than whom I’ve met through others. Being friendly and from the Midwest I always feel like saying “Ni hao!” to people I walk past at my apartment complex, but when I do they look at me really strange and don’t say anything back. I guess strangers don’t really say hello to each other here. Or maybe they just don’t know how to react. The transition for me was easier than it was for my wife, even though she is from Taiwan.

EI: Mr. Standaert, as you know... China, the US & India are in a standoff regarding global warming. It seems unless China and India agree to participate with the US in restricting “green house gasses,” the world’s greatest polluters will not be part of the solution. How does the average Chinese person see China’s role in global warming?

MS: I’m not a China expert; I only live here. And I’ve only been here a few months at that. A really interesting project for someone to do I think would be to interview as many 100-year old Chinese people as possible, to get their opinion on what they’ve seen through their lifetimes. As for your question, I do know that the three major polluters need to come together and hash out a plan of action, but it is going to be difficult. China and India are developing. The U.S. is developed. China and India think it is unfair that they can’t develop to the point where they’re better off and the U.S. doesn’t want to go down. I don’t think it has to be about this though if a system is devised where emissions are cut at the same time less polluting technologies are invested in and adopted. But time’s a wasting, isn’t it? I’m not sure the average Chinese person really gets an accurate picture of what is going on, either inside or outside of China to make a rational and well-rounded opinion on many matters. But that’s the cost of a one-party system and curtailing of free speech.

EI: Recently, China has made important alliances with South American countries securing future supplies of natural resources, especially petroleum. How is this development portrayed to the people of China?

MS: The State media portrays developments like this as benefiting a global ‘harmonious society’ and helping to continue economic progress in China. There’s nothing wrong with this at all. Every country does this. China needs resources to continue advancing and they have actually done a remarkable job of lifting millions of people out of poverty. That isn’t to say that I don’t have a lot of problems with the poverty of culture or intellectual freedom here, but still there is a lot of art being created. Sometimes the weight of repression results in diamonds. I don’t see why more political freedom would be a bad thing, and I think there are people in the leadership who would agree. It’s just that there are others holding this back. They are mostly afraid of turmoil and chaos, and China has a lot of experience with turmoil and chaos to the point where their fears are not unfounded. I just think they are a bit too worried about advances in political freedom than they should be though. If you have a one-party system though, that party doesn’t want to give up power. Even in a democracy, where you may have multiple parties, if one party dominates, things can go a bit awry as they did when the Republicans controlled the White House and both legislative branches. No one party should have that much power and checks and balances are there to curtail that power, but it doesn’t always work. Voting does work though, as we’ve seen. Some semblance of balance has been returned, but then it could swing wildly to the left again and you’d have the same thing. I’m becoming more “critically middle” as I get older I think.

EI: Would you recommend for new writers or journalists live in China to gain an understanding of the culture and acquire experience in the world of journalism where the government officially owns the media?

MS: If that is what they are interested in, yes. I’d like to be here a while to see for myself. Everything is so new to me right now that I haven’t formed solid opinions on a lot of things. It takes some time.

EI: Does the threat of censorship faced by journalists in China's for revealing corruption among high-level Chinese government officials, advocating political reforms, or reporting on other banned topics still exist?

MS: Yes. Certainly. The biggest hurdle I see right now, in my short time here, is self-censorship. People don’t want to cross the line because the line is always blurry and is never in the same place. One day you could be critical and get away with it, the next day you could write the same thing and it might land you in jail. This type of pressure has a way of eating into the work of journalists where they tend to hit below where they think that line is.

EI: Is it true that in Beijing, the newspaper widely cited as having the most journalists attacked is the daily tabloid Jinghua Shibao Beijing Times? The rumor has it that Beijing paper, Jinghua Shibao has earned this distinction by being the "most active media in Beijing, and being first on the scene" of breaking local news events.

MS: I’ve heard some really good things about this paper, and that they are able to get away with more intense and critical coverage. I just wish they weren’t an anomaly. They’ve been able to cover things in Beijing that other papers in the countryside couldn’t touch I think, things like the demolition of hutongs and protests by people evicted from their homes.

EI: Are there Chinese people who are not happy with the situation with regards to their government, and do a lot of people still protest against the government... more than they can endure?

MS: I’m sure there are. There are also many people who are satisfied with the current situation as long as they are making money (which many are, to greater degrees), raising their child (though some have more than one), able to buy the latest technology, see the latest movies (most times). It’s really hard to tell though. I’ve heard the most protests occur in China than anywhere else and there have been increasing numbers of them the past few years, mainly far from the camera’s eye. But I haven’t yet looked into this much yet.

EI: Would you comment on the differences between what you saw the first time you arrived in China and now? Do you have any moments of doubt that there’s something wrong with the perception of American’s overseas?

MS: It’s only been a couple months, so I really can’t comment. As for Chinese perceptions of Americans, I think overall it’s very positive. You’re likely to get more antagonism being an American living in Europe than you would in China. That could change on a dime though if something happened to drive relations down the drain, especially if something happened with the Taiwan situation.

EI: When you look back on your enormously successful career as a journalist here in the US, is there anything you would’ve done differently? If so, what and why? If not, how do you manage to move forward without regrets?

MS: It hasn’t been enormously successful, I don’t think. I’ve been lucky to be able to write for some quality magazines and papers and if I’d chosen a career path that saw me working my way up the ladder at a paper I probably wouldn’t have had the same opportunities. You make the leap. I don’t like to think about what I would have done differently, though I would probably have hired an outside editor to look over my non-fiction book I did for Soft Skull so I could have had another set of eyes on it. Moving forward isn’t hard, it’s the only thing you can do. Plus my memory isn’t as good as it once was, and I’m only 33. There are benefits to that.

EI: Who are some of the authors you keep returning to as a reader because of their ability to create vivid, three-dimensional characters?

MS: I’ve read a lot of Murakami the past couple of years. I really enjoyed reading a book by the British author Simon Ings called The Weight of Numbers, recently. I don’t come back to many writers multiple times, though I have read almost all of Hemingway, much of Bukowski, Dostoyevsky, and a few others.

EI: What would you tell those authors considering applying to an M.F.A. program? In your opinion how important is it for a writer to have a writing degree?

MS: It’s not important to have a writing degree unless you want to teach, and then if you don’t and have a few books published, you still might be able to teach. As for MFA’s themselves, I think they are great for the right person, but personally I think there are too many programs. The benefit is it gives you a couple of years to really concentrate on your work and get the opinions of others on your work and network a bit. You can also do this yourself if you move someplace cheap (China? Vietnam? Cambodia?) and spend a couple years writing and maybe have a group of readers online you can work with, though then you wouldn’t have the networking part of that. This is the cheaper way as well, and maybe more interesting in the long run.

EI: What's up next? Is there another book in the works? What can you share with us?

MS: Not sure exactly. I’m about to start in on some writing sketches and see where that takes me. I have a few ideas for books and some rough outlines. I do know I want to devote more time to fiction. I also wouldn’t mind a long non-fiction project about something in China, but that may be a year or two down the road. I’d like to get back into the fiction first. I still have a lot to learn myself and need to get back into the zone.

EI: Mr. Standaert, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers?

MS: Thanks, Mr. Johnson. It was a pleasure. My writing tip would be to try to write every day. This is something I’m trying to get myself to do more of.

To learn more about Michael Standaert, please visit him at:
http://www.piscokid.com/\
http://www.myspace.com/adventuresofthepiscokid

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Jen Calonita - Former Entertainment Journalist & Now Bestselling Author Of "Secret Of My Hollywood Life: On Location"





Today’s YA interview is with Jen Calonita, she is the author of “Secrets of My Hollywood Life: On Location” which is the second book in the series.

Ms. Calonita was working for Mademoiselle when she was tapped by Teen People where over the last eight years she is risen to the post of senior entertainment editor. Her career accomplishments also include stints at Entertainment Weekly, Marie Claire and Glamour Magazine as entertainment journalist.

Her list of interviews includes such notables as: Reese Witherspoon, Lindsay Lohan, Hilary Duff, Joey McIntyre from New Kids on the Block, Ashton Kutcher, J. Lo, and Donald Trump. She has a knack for knowing the inside track of the high profile Hollywood youth sets.

EI: Would you share some early insight into who you were as a teenager? What were you like? Please tell us more about Jen Calonita -- the woman behind the journalist & the author?

JC: I’ve always loved writing. In high school I wrote for the school newspaper and submitted articles to teen magazines. I always thought I would go for a writing career after college, but I figured it would be with magazines (which it was). I never envisioned myself becoming an author.

EI: Ms. Calonita, how did you get started in publishing? Did you set your sites right after college?

JC: I graduated Boston College and got my first job at Mademoiselle magazine (which is no longer in business). It was a great place to learn the ropes. From there, I went to Teen People, where I worked as an entertainment editor for five years.

EI: Do you express your inner self in your writing or do the personas you create exist only in your imagination?

JC: I like to say I’m able to tap into my inner-13-year-old. The things I write about are usually things I’ve experienced (like the celebrity world while I was at Teen People) or things that happened to me during high school. I bet most writers would say that high school and college gave them their best material!

EI: Please tell our readers something about your experience as a Senior Entertainment Editor for Teen People? What was the career path that leads you to that level?

JC: I worked my way up from an associate to a senior editor over the years based on my experience and hard work. I loved working at that magazine (which is also no longer around, sadly). I felt like we really put out a magazine that appealed to all kinds of teens and covered everything they were thinking about. I loved writing about TV and movies and knowing what was coming up sixth months, or a year from now in the world of entertainment.

EI: What about your experience as an entertainment journalist for Glamour, Marie Claire and Entertainment Weekly? How did you manage to be in the limelight?

JC: Well, EW and Glamour I’ve only written for once. Marie Claire several times. I write for TV Guide sometimes and do some work for some custom publishing magazines. I love doing magazine writing. When you’re an author, it’s just yourself in a room typing and it can get a little lonely. Working on magazine pieces and doing celeb interviews makes me feel a little more connected. But as a writer, you don’t get too much attention—unless you tick somebody off!

EI: Do you think that your experience as an editor helped you succeed as a writer?

JC: Definitely. When I’m editing my books now, I love the process. I think because I came from the editing world and I’m so used to working and reworking a piece, it’s a little bit easier for me to wrap my head around changes. I can picture how I want to fix things and where I want to move different plot points.

EI: Do you still write for periodicals? What are the do's and don'ts of writing for periodicals, and how does the discipline differ from writing novels?

JC: See answer number five.

EI: What is your response to the public perception that writers’ creative insight and energy is frequently the product of personal conflict?

JC: I would say that probably is true half of the time. I’m always fascinated by people like J.K. Rowling, who created a whole new world that mesmorized readers. I know I find my best material writing from things I’ve experienced or witnessed.

EI: What would you like to say to writers who are reading this interview and wondering if they can keep creating, if they are good enough, if their voices and visions matter enough to share?

JC: I would say just keep working at it. The more you practice, the more you get down on paper, the easier the words will flow.

EI: What surprised you most about the publishing process from the writer's perspective?

JC:
Probably how much you work alone. In the magazine world, I could write an article and ten people would look at it and edit it and give me comments BEFORE I reworked the piece! As an author, you submit a broad proposal and then once it’s approved, just start writing. Someone doesn’t look at it chapter by chapter or plot point by plot point until the whole book is finished (at least in my experience).

EI: Many writers describe themselves as "character" or "plot" writers. Which are you? And what do you find to be the hardest part of writing?

JC: Sometime the middle of the book can be the hardest. I know how I want to start and I know how I want to finish it, but sometimes I get a little lost in the middle and am not quite sure how to keep the momentum going. That’s why I work off outlines as much as I can so that I stay focused. I’m not really sure what I focus more on—character or plot, but I do know I like to paint a picture of the scene so that the reader feels like he/she is there.

EI: Would you describe yourself as a confident writer, always ready to face the next new challenge? Either in front of a TV camera, famous celebrity or an editor? Do you have to psyche yourself up to try different venues?

JC: Over the years I’ve gotten used to interviewing celebrities and figuring out what you can ask and what you can’t, but sometimes when I’m about to interview a star I really like, I still do get nervous!

EI: You are well known in the writing community as the beautiful, smart, celebrity journalist. You have interviewed Reese Witherspoon, Lindsay Lohan, Hilary Duff, Ashton Kutcher, J. Lo, Donald Trump to name a few... and now a novelist? How do you manage being the center of public attention and the limelight?. Do you ever feel pressure or insecure, or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

JC: “beautiful, smart, celebrity journalist”? Wow, um, can I quote you on that? Seriously though, there are so many other writers/editors who do exactly what I do on a much bigger scale that I admire so much. I really don’t spend much time in the spotlight, let alone the limelight. In front of a flashlight, maybe, but that’s about it.

EI: When you look back on your enormously successful career as a journalist with Mademoiselle, & Teen People is there anything you would’ve done differently? If so, what and why? If not, how do you manage to move forward without regrets?

JC: I’m really happy with the experience I had at both magazines. They allowed me to do everything I dreamed of doing—let my ideas be heard, let me write about stars, travel…I couldn’t have asked for better jobs.

EI: You have articles published in different publications such Marie Claire, Glamour to name a few... Would you recommend for new writers to submit short stories to magazines to gain an understanding and acquire experience in the world of publishing? For those just discovering your work, could you briefly summarize your backlist, highlighting as you see fit? Would you please tell your fans more about it?

JC: I’m not sure I can remember every article I’ve written, but I have written for the magazines mentioned in questions above and I do have two books out now. As for magazines, I would pitch and pitch and pitch some more any magazine you want to write for. I still pitch, and get turned down, all the time! But you just have to keep submitting your ideas so that editors can see how dedicated you are. Hopefully one day one of your ideas sticks with them and they want to use it.

EI: Now... let’s shift gears here for a second. Can you share with us some of the challenges you faced to publish your first novel “Secret Of My Hollywood Life?”

JC: I was extremely fortunate that an editor at Little, Brown Books for Young Readers agreed to have coffee with me so that I could tell her my idea for a novel. I was even more lucky that she agreed to read the proposal, which wasn’t even written yet, when I was done. After a few months of rewrites and changes, they hired me to write Secrets I and II.

EI: What inspired you to write these cool stories? And what is your response to the public perception about your creative insight with your book? Is there anything about you that you would do differently, knowing what you do now? Are any of the characters in the story actually based on real people in your life?

JC: The characters in Secrets have traits, or experience similar things that have happened to stars I’ve interviewed over the years. That’s where the title “Secrets” came from—the secrets in the book that Kaitlin reveals are real secrets that stars have told me, over the years, about life in Hollywood.

EI: How much of ‘Kaitlin Burke is planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with her character? What was your biggest challenge?

JC: I’m starting to plot out where Kaitlin might go if there is a Secrets four and I love figuring out what her next move should be. Kaitlin is almost like a real person to me at this point and I’m very careful about what I want to happen to her next.

EI: Please tell us about Kaitlin Burke, Sky Mackenzie and Drew Thomas? What was your biggest challenge in developing these characters? Did you work them out in advance, or did they evolve as you wrote the story?

JC: Kaitlin and Sky are costars on a hot TV show that are constantly fighting over fame, jobs and guys. I wanted the two of them to have the same struggles girls in high schools all over America face, just on a much more public platform. Living in the constant glare of the spotlight has to be really difficult and I wanted readers to see that struggle that Kaitlin faces—how can she balance her uber-cool life in Hollywood with the time to do normal teen things that every girl wants to do?

Drew is supposed to be the Hollywood climber who will do anything to get his name in the papers. I’ve met quite a few Drew’s over the years…

EI: Please tell us about ' Secret of My Hollywood Life: On Location' the 2nd in the series. Would you care to share a little a bit about it?

JC: In “On Location,” Kaitlin is spending the summer shooting a movie with her favorite director, Hutch Adams and her costar, Drew Thomas, who happens to be her ex. He desperately wants to get back together so that he can get more face time in US Weekly. Kaitlin already has a new boyfriend, Austin, who is as unHollywood as they come, and she’s a bit nervous about introducing him to her world and to Drew. And of course, Sky is back to cause more mischief as well.

EI: If you were allowed total control of a Hollywood adaptation of 'Secret of My Hollywood Life', which actors would you cast? And who would you want to direct?

JC: Wow, I’d love to see Secrets on the big screen! I get this question a lot and I have to say, for Kaitlin, I love Ashley Tisdale. She just seems like she’d be perfect. Lookswise, I modeled Austin after Chad Michael Murray, but by the time, if ever, we ever do a Secrets movie, he’d probably be too old to play him!

EI: Would you give us a hint about your upcoming 3rd series “Secrets of My Hollywood Life: Family Affair, due spring 2008? What can you tell us about it?” Are there anymore wacky stories about Kaitlin’s entourage?

JC: In Secrets III, Kaitlin is happy to be back on the set of her hit TV show and can’t wait for her life to get back to normal after a hectic summer. Too bad there’s a hot, new young actress on the set who wants the spotlight all to herself. Now Kaitlin and Sky, the two sworn enemies, have to work together take down an even bigger diva than the two of them combined.

EI: Ms. Calonita, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers?

JC: Thank you so much for asking me! My advice is to write—as much as you can—about anything and everything. Write what you know and the words and ideas will start flowing. You never know where they’ll take you.

To learn more about Jen Calonita, please visit her at:
www.myspace.com/jlcal

Friday, June 8, 2007

John McNally - Award-Winning Author, Essayist, Professor & Recipient Of Chesterfield Writer’s Film Project By PARAMOUNT PICTURES, For Screenwriting






Today’s YA interview is with John McNally, he is the acclaimed author of America's Report Card, Book of Ralph which was optioned for film and anthologies including Bottom of the Ninth.

His book Troublemakers won the John Simmons Short Fiction Award, Nebraska Book Award and was a Book Sense selection.

EI: Would you share some early insight into who you were as a teenager? What were you like? Please tell us more about John McNally -- the man behind the author.

JM: What was I like as a teenager? I spent a lot of my time as a teenager being depressed; I remember that. I was probably pretty self-absorbed, too, which I suspect isn't all that unusual for being a teenager. I'd like to tell you that I was reading great books which then laid the foundation for a career as a writer, but that wouldn't be true. I rarely read anything. I was involved in a lot of extracurricular activities, most notably Drama Club, and I believe that my acting experiences actually had an impact on my writing, though I'm not sure I realized that until many years later. Writing from a chosen point of view is a lot like method acting in that both the writer and the actor must submerge themselves into a distinct consciousness and then ask him- or herself hundreds of questions about what that character would and wouldn't do. All those years I spent in high school plays didn't go unused, even though once high school was over I never had the desire to be in another play again.

EI: Do you enjoy writing? What is it about this art form that enchants you the most? Why have you chosen to write in the genre in which you write?

JM: As frustrating as writing can be, I can't think of anything else I would rather do. In fact,I'm miserable to be around when I'm not writing. For me, fiction writing allows you to do things that no other medium can really do all that well, which is to capture both the external events of the world and the internal thoughts of the narrator simultaneously. To lose yourself in a great novel is unlike any other experience, and as a novelist, I aspire to writing that kind of book, the kind where the reader forgets that he or she is reading words on a page.

EI: In what ways does your writing benefit from being a professor at Wake Forest University? Do you feel that the skills you possess inform the way you approach writing a novel and, if so, how?

JM: You can't spend eighteen years teaching fiction writing, as I have, and not learn a lot about the craft of writing. By now, I've read literally tens of thousands of pages of student writing, and I've had to think about every sentence, every word choice, every decision that went into their plots, every character that they've brought to the page. And then I write up comments on those stories, and, as a group, we talk about them in class. I've been doing this year after year. It's the sort of intensive concentration that forces me to think about storytelling in new ways, because I'm constantly seeing new examples by beginning writers, some of which work, some of which don't work.

EI: Could you describe your path that leads you to publication--any stumble along the way? Is there anything about you that you would do differently, knowing what you do now?

JM: I wrote three unpublished novels before my first book was published, and I wrote numerous unpublished short stories before my first story was published. Would I do something differently, knowing what I know now? No, not really. Failure is a necessary part of being a writer. I had to write the books and stories that didn't work to be able to write the ones that did. It's all a learning experience...and I'm still learning.

EI: Was there a central theme that you wanted readers to grasp?

JM: No, I don't write with theme in mind. I begin with characters and situations and then I see where the story takes me. I want to be surprised by what my characters do. To write with a theme in mind would probably make my writing more predictable. That's not to say that my work as a whole doesn't have recurring themes -- I'm sure they're there -- but as a writer I'm not all that interested in them. That's the critics job: to dissect the work after the fact.

EI: When you look back on your enormously successful career as an author, is there anything you would've done differently? If so, what and why? If not, how do you manage to move forward without any regrets?

JM: Well, thanks for calling my career enormously successful. I appreciate that, even though I don't think of it that way. If I were to characterize my career, I think I'd call it "modest" and "always on the brink of imploding." I'm sure I would do some things differently, but I don't ever think about that, so it's hard to answer that question. I'm always thinking about what's in front of me: the next short story, the next book.

EI: Mr. McNally, you are well known in the writing community as an award winning author, a Chesterfield Film Writer's recipient which was sponsored by Paramount and currently a professor at ‘Wake Forest University’ in North Carolina. Do you ever feel pressure or insecure, or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

JM: I always feel insecure. The day I feel secure is the day I should really start to worry. Maybe because I grew up in a household where we lived check to check, and where we often moved from one apartment to the next every few years, I'm always aware of the tenuousness of stability. In other words, I don't really believe in stability -- I think it's an illusion -- so I'm always expecting it all to come crashing down. I'm not fatalistic about it; I just don't take for granted that I'll have a career, writing or otherwise, from one year to the next. Even as I write this, I don't have a publisher for my next novel. I'm writing without a net.

EI: Are there any kid or teen books rocked your world while growing up? And why?

JM: As I wrote above, I didn't start reading much of anything until I was a sophomore in college. I came to reading late. I watched a lot of movies. I was obsessed with movies and, in high school, kept track of every movie I had ever seen. I liked the idea of books; I just wasn't reading them.

EI: When did you get the first inkling that your book might become wildly popular? Can you describe your feelings upon realizing this?

JM: Hm. I'm not sure any of my books are wildly popular. I wish that were the case. I mean, I'm always grateful when someone brings a book up for me to sign or when I receive a kind email from someone who's read one of my books, but like a lot of writers of literary fiction, I'm still struggling to break through to a larger audience.

EI: How do you imagine audience as you are writing? Do you try to do character development, chapter outlines, various novel-related brainstorming? Do you have sheets of newsprint covered in a story boards all over your walls?

JM: For novels, I sometimes have a very vague outline in the form of incoherent notes, mostly things I'm trying to remind myself to put in later. By and large, I dive in and see where the characters will lead me. I don't think much about audience except in very vague ways. I write books I wouldn't mind reading, so I guess my audience would be people like me, and my tastes are pretty broad. I like high-brow literature, and I like certain pulp novelists. One thing I can say is that I don't want my books to alienate anyone. I don't write for an elite group of readers. That doesn't interest me. I'm much more flattered when someone tells me that my book is one of the few books that they've read since high school that they've really liked than I am when someone with a Ph.D. from Princeton tells me that they liked my book. That's probably where my working-class roots kick in. I'd much rather be a writer for the common reader.

EI: Let’s shift gears here for a second... and let’s talk about “Hank Boyd” the protagonist in your novel The Book Of Ralph. How much of Hank’s planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with his character?

JM: The Book of Ralph grew out of a series of autobiographically based moments. Once I started a story, I just let Hank and Ralph take me where they wanted to take me. I had a great deal of fun writing that book, and I think (I hope) that the fun I was having comes across on the page. I wrote about half of that book in a feverish six month period, and during that time, I would barely get into one plot when another would come to mind, so I would begin that one, too. It was great fun -- a gift, really.

EI: What was your biggest challenge and obstacle while writing and creating “Hank & Ralph? Did you work them out in advance, or did they evolve as you wrote the story? Are any of the characters in the story actually based on real people in your life?

JM: The characters evolved. Hank is a little bit of my alter-ego, but he's not really me. Ralph began as a composite of three kids I knew who were like Ralph, but by the second "Hank and Ralph" story I wrote, Ralph had become his own person. There really weren't any major obstacles, except that the agent that I had when I began writing it didn't think it was commercial and wanted me to write something else. We parted ways, and I kept working on the book.

EI: How did you develop or come up with the idea of ‘When I Was a Loser?” What inspired you to write this book? What about writing for teens appealed to you?

JM: When I Was a Loser is an anthology of 25 writers writing about their teen years. I edited the book, and I contributed an essay to it as well. Since I write a lot about teens, I began to think of how other writers might approach the same subject, and then I began to think of writers whose work I admire or who have compelling voices. I put together a proposal for the book, and, fortunately, my publisher liked the idea. I write a lot about teens because it's a critical juncture in a person's life, and, as such, it lends itself to drama (both comic and serious drama). Also, there are so many universal experiences that take place during that five to six year period, so there's bound to be an audience for the subject, if it's done well. Plus, I love books like Huckleberry Finn and The Catcher in the Rye.

EI: Please tell us about 'America’s Report Card' due to be released on June 19th. Would you care to tell us about ‘Charlie Wolf & Jainey O’Sullivan’s character? Would care to share a little a bit about them? Can you give us a hint as to what it's about? What do you think readers would expect different from these two characters?

JM: The paperback of America's Report Card will be released on June 19th; the hardback came out last year. In short, it's the story of a lonely man (Charlie Wolf, who scores standardized tests for a living) and a lonely girl (high school senior Jainey O'Sullivan), who meet each other when Charlie reads Jainey's essay-answer on her standardized tests and determines that her life is in danger and that she's in need of his help. The book is a departure for me because it's also a political satire that deals with such things as the paranoia that government can instill in the individual and the thin line between fact and conspiracy.

EI: Have any of your book been optioned for film yet?

JM: The Book of Ralph has been optioned.

EI: If you were allowed total control of the Hollywood version of ‘Book of Ralph’ who would be in it? And in your opinion who do you think should direct?

JM: I would love to see Alexander Payne direct it. (He directed Election.) He's got the right sensibility for it. I honestly don't know who would be in it, though. If John Cusack was twelve and Jack Black was fourteen, I'd suggest that they play Hank and Ralph.

EI: What's up next? Is there another book in the works? What can you share with us?

JM: I just finished a collection of short stories, Ghosts of Chicago, which I hope will be out next summer, and I'm working on a new novel.

EI: Mr. McNally, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers?

JM: My best advice is to write every day. Make it a habit. When you find yourself talking more about writing than writing, then you're in trouble.

To learn more about John McNally, please visit him at:
http://www.bookofralph.com/

Thursday, June 7, 2007

Alyson Noel - Award-Winning Author of “Art Geek & Prom Queen” And Other Books For Both Adults And Young Adults.






Today’s YA interview is with Alyson Noel. Her novel, Art Geeks & Prom Queens won the New York Public Library Book of Winter 2006 award, and was also included in their prestigious Books for the Teenage 2006 catalog. It has been nominated for the American Library Association's Teens Top 10 Award. Her recent novel Kiss & Blog, is now available at your local bookstores and online.

EI: What were you like as a teenager? Please tell your readers more about Alyson Noël -- the woman behind the author?

Alyson Noel: By my senior year of high school I was a lot like my character Alex, in Faking 19—sort of lost, alienated, and unsure of my future. And also like Alex, I loved to read and write, so for my AP English class I would often turn in short stories I had written instead of the required essays. Luckily, I had an understanding teacher!

EI: Do you enjoy writing? What is it about this art form that enchants you the most? Why have you chosen to write in the genre in which you write?

Alyson Noel: I love writing. I love the feeling of getting so lost in creating a story that hours slip by without notice. As for why I chose my genre—I’m not really sure since I pretty much hated high school! Though maybe in some strange way, writing about it allows me to sort of “correct” that.

EI: In what ways does your writing benefit from your training as a former flight attendant? Do you feel that the skills you possess inform the way you approach writing a novel and, if so, how?

Alyson Noel: Being a flight attendant taught me the importance of discipline, organization, and to always be on time since the plane doesn’t wait if you’re ten minutes late! Not to mention how it’s a lot easier to live out of a suitcase if you’re well packed and know where everything is. Those skills definitely transfer to my writing as I try to approach it like a job, and I’m pretty good about beating my deadlines.

EI: Please explain to your fans about your previous life? Do you think that job was nightmare?

Alyson Noel: On some days it was a complete nightmare! But for the most part it was a pretty equal mix of good and bad. But getting to meet so many amazing people and travel the world for free, made the pantyhose, peanuts, and polyester dress worth it!

EI: Could you describe your path that lead you to publication--any stumble along the way? Is there anything about you that you would do differently, knowing what you do now?

Alyson Noel: I’d probably do everything different, since I had no idea what I was doing when I set out on my journey! It was pretty much just me, my manuscript, and a brand new copy of Writer’s Market. Though in retrospect it was probably better that I didn’t know there were rules, otherwise I might’ve tried to follow them and it could’ve taken even that much longer! So in short—I finished my book, sent it everywhere, and then sat back and waited for the offers to come in. When I received a string of very encouraging rejection letters instead, I enrolled in an online class, where I was eventually led to my then agent, who asked for a revision, and then sold my revised manuscript several months later in a two-book deal to St. Martin’s Press.

EI: You have created a world where teens life & adults does move forward sequentially but instead moves in a more random and fluid way. How did you keep your characters and storyline funny, complicated and straight?

Alyson Noel: Um, I don’t know. Really, I just try to tell the story in the best way I can, and even when I’m trying to be serious, the funny somehow manages to sneak in there!

EI: When did you get the first inkling that your book might become wildly popular? Can you describe your feelings upon realizing this?

Alyson Noel: I get excited just seeing my books on shelves—number five was just released and yet it still feels completely surreal to me. And getting letters from readers is The Best!

EI: ‘Fly Me To The Moon’ was your debut adult novel. It’s laugh-out-loud funny. Did you ever intend the book to be connected to these specific genres, or did it just evolve?

Alyson Noel: I was only partly aware of genre when I wrote it. I mean, I knew it would be a woman’s journey and have a happy ending, but really, I was just trying to write a story about a flight attendant that would show that world for what it really is—crazy, unpredictable, exciting, somewhat surreal, and full of contradictions!

EI: Do you always know a story's ending when you begin writing?

Alyson Noel: I know it’s going to be an “up” ending, though that doesn’t always translate to “getting the guy.” Sometimes it just means the characters complete the journey and come away from it stronger and better than before. But the actual events are always subject to change, and they often surprise me.

EI: Let’s shift gears... tell us about your book ‘Kiss and Blog ’ how did you come up with the title and idea? Can you give us a hint what it’s all about? And what inspired you about the book? And what about writing for teens appealed to you?

Alyson Noel: Kiss & Blog is about two friends, Winter and Sloane, who make a vow to be popular but only Sloane makes it. So Winter, angered by her best-friend’s defection, gets revenge by revealing all of her secrets in an anonymous blog. . .

The idea was born from that false feeling of anonymity, that sort of disconnect you can get when you’re alone in your room, venting on your keyboard, and how easy it is to forget how your words not only have permanence, but that they affect others. Also, I wanted to show how revenge is never worth it, that it’s so much better just to move on and build a better life, but I wanted to show that in a modern, hopefully entertaining way!

EI: How much of ‘Winter and her best friend Sloane’s ’ life is planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with any of your characters?

Alyson Noel: I knew their point of conflict when I started writing it as well as a general idea of where it would end up and how it might get there, but the smaller details and events just sort of evolved based on their personalities and personal histories which I made a rough draft of before I got started. I pretty much approach all my books in the same way.

EI: What challenges or obstacle did you encounter while writing and creating Winter How did you overcome these challenges?

Alyson Noel: Winter does some not so nice things, though she manages to justify them because she’s been hurt. Sometimes it’s hard to make my characters go too far, to be really mean, and make big mistakes, though it’s important that I do because the lesson is always sweeter in the end.

EI: The premise for "Kiss & Blog" is fascinating! How did you arrive at it? And how did you then transform it into a novel? Did you outline the plot, do character sketches, etc.?

Alyson Noel: I always start with an outline, hitting the major points on the journey, and a rough character sketch of their backgrounds, likes, dislikes, etc. But the outline itself is pretty vague, because the actual events are always shaped by the characters.

EI: What can fans look forward from you in the coming months?

Alyson Noel: Saving Zoë is coming out in September 2007, and it’s the story of a girl named Echo, who’s reeling from the aftermath of the brutal murder of her sister Zoë. Her parents are numb, her friends are moving on, and she feels she’ll never be able to live up to her sister’s memory. And then Zoë’s former boyfriend Marc shows up with her diary. At first Echo’s not interested, doubting there’s anything in there she doesn’t already know. But once she starts reading, she becomes so immersed in her sister’s secret world their lives begin to blur . . .

EI: Would you like to close the interview by telling your readers any writing tips for the young aspiring writers?

Alyson Noel: I think it’s important to read- a lot, all the books you can! And then when you do sit down to write, to just allow yourself to fill up the page without trying to be perfect—just turn off your inner critic and let the words flow because you can always go back and change it. Nobody writes a pretty rough draft, it’s only the first step!

EI: Thanks once again and good luck with your next book

Alyson Noel: Thanks for the interview- it was fun!

To learn more about Alyson Noel, please visit her at:
http://www.alysonnoel.com
http://www.alysonnoel.com/blog.html

Friday, June 1, 2007

Tish Cohen - Her Book ‘Town House’ Was Sold To 20th Century FOX Movie



Today’s YA interview is with first-time novelist, Tish Cohen. Presenting to Hollywood from Canada her literary debut is as well received as any insider. Her book ‘Town House’ was sold to 20th Century FOX Movie.

The director of Thelma & Louise, Alien & Gladiator -- Ridley Scott has been brought on as producer. Dough Wright, who is a screenwriter is adapting the book for the screen.

Her upcoming book ‘The Invisible Rules of the Zoë Lama’ will be out this June.

EI: Would you share some early insight into who you were as a teenager with your readers? What were you like as a teen? Please tell us more about Tish Cohen -- the woman behind the author.

TC: As a teen, I was on the periphery. Friends with everyone, but belonging to no one single group. I never really tried to fit in - it was more fun not to. I tried to shock people with what I wore, what I did. I had no interest in becoming a cheerleader - something all the other girls dreamed of.

EI: Do you express your inner self in your writing or do the personas you create exist only in your imagination?

TC: There's probably a small part of me in nearly every character I create. My Town House protagonist, Jack Madigan, is much like me in his battle with panic attacks but not in every way. No fictitious character should ever be wholly good or wholly bad. Different characteristics should arise according to circumstances, etc.. For example, while I might not be perceived to be selfish, there do exist situations under which I'm very much so. And that aspect of my personality might work its way into a character one day.

EI: What is your response to the public perception that writers’ creative insight and energy is frequently the product of personal conflict?

TC: I think that's probably true. It is for me. Would I have been a writer if I'd lived a more conventional life? I doubt it.

EI: What would you like to say to writers who are reading this interview and wondering if they can keep creating, if they are good enough, if their voices and visions matter enough to share?

TC: I'd say that if you have a unique voice, a fresh story to tell (or even a fresh take on a story already told), and you're persistent, your chances are good. I believe that everyone is talented at something and it's vital that you find out what it is. If your talent happens to be writing...you don't need me to tell you to keep going. You probably couldn't stop if you tried.

EI: Many writers describe themselves as "character" or "plot" writers. Which one are you? And what do you find to be the hardest part of writing?

TC: I'm all about the characters. My agent has to constantly remind me that these characters must actually do something--make a cup of coffee, cheat on an exam, urinate on the sidewalk--anything!

The hardest part of writing, for me, is dealing with the angst that goes along with taking my words public.

EI: Are you armed with notebook and pen at all the times? Do you always carry your laptop or PDA with you to write?

TC: I'm usually armed with a pen and notebook. If I've left my notebook at home, I can always dig up a spare receipt, Band-Aid or dollar bill to scratch notes on. If I'm travelling, my laptop comes with me. But at home, my writing time is divided between my office computer and my laptop on the sofa.

EI: Do you let anyone read your manuscript, before you send it to your editor or agent?

TC: My best friend and my husband usually read my adult manuscripts and my kids read my middle grade stories.

EI: Was there anyone who really influenced you to become a writer?

TC: My high school English teacher, Miss Schermitzler, told me I should become a novelist. But the writer who has influenced me the most is John Irving.

EI: Now let’s shift gears here for a second... Can you share with us some of the challenges you faced to publish your newly released novel “Town House?” Is there anything about you that you would do differently, knowing what you do now?

TC: I was surprised how many people balked at my creating a male protagonist. To me, it seemed the most natural thing in the world.

EI: What was the inspiration for your novel? And what is your response to the public perception about your creative insight with your book?

TC: The inspiration for Town House came from a grand old house in New Orleans I'd seen on a home renovation show. A woman was selling her house and a crew was giving it a facelift. They never showed the inside of the house, but the owner spoke of the entire 4th floor being a stage, and having raised her children there during times when they had no heat and no furniture. I thought to myself--what a great setting for a book.

I think some people might assume I have a few anxieties, like Jack in Town House. They'd be right.

EI: How much of Jack Madigan and Penelope is planned out in your head? How do you know where you will go next with their characters? What was your biggest challenge in creating them?

TC: I wrote from a chapter outline, but their personalities really developed as the story came to life on paper. My biggest challenge was making sure I had enough conflict between characters to make them jump off the page.

EI: How did you develop these characters? Did you work them out in advance, or did they evolve as you wrote the story?

TC: I do work out the characters in advance, but it isn't until I begin writing that they become more real.

EI: What is a typical work day schedule when you are in full writing mode? Would you tell us a little about your process for editing, revising, and novel development? How long did it take you to write ‘Town House’ including the time it took to research the book?

TC: I pretty obsessive - I work from about 9:30 am to 7 pm when working on a first draft. My agent reads the draft, suggests edits, then after I make the changes, it goes to my editor. The first draft of Town House was written in just under a month, I was able to write very quickly and obsessively because I'd developed the story in a detailed chapter outline.

EI: What about writing for mainstream women’s fiction appealed to you?

TC: I've never really thought much about where my books fit in. I just write the stories I'd like to read.

EI: As a first time mainstream fiction writer, do you feel more pressure, feel insecurities fade away or are you able to separate all that from your own creative process?

TC: I definitely feel pressure about being published, but it doesn't interfere with my writing. I almost believe that if I wasn't worried, complacency might interfere with my writing!

EI: Now... tell us what is the premise of your new book ‘The Invisible Rules of the Zoë Lama’ which I understand is for the YA audience and it will be published by Dutton in July 19th ’07? Can you give us a sneak peek?

TC: From the back cover:

Life is full of official rules, and seventh grade is no exception. If you are one of Zoë’s lucky friends, you know all about the invisible rules too, from what to wear on Picture Day to which boy is the Most Vile (that would be Smartin Granitstein). Ever since the day Zoë Monday Costello neutralized the playground bully, she has been the go-to gal for classmates and teachers alike. She applies her talents at home too, giving her harried single mom much-needed dating advice and keeping a careful eye on her grandmother, who has been acting very strange lately.

When a new girl, Maisie, comes to school with a “reputation,” Zoë is determined to help her fit in. Despite Zoë’s best coaching efforts, however, things go terribly wrong. And Maisie isn’t her only problem. Zoë’s interfering backfires on many people—worst of all on herself. Just when Zoë’s name is complete and utter mud, Grandma goes and splashes it all over school. Is there any invisible rule to help her out of this mess?

Zoë Lama is a whirlwind who will pick up fans on the first page of this uproarious story, carry them effortlessly to its satisfying conclusion, and leave them craving another wild ride.

EI: What's next for your fans? Is there a third book in the works?

TC: I've already written the second in the Zoe Lama series, and my next adult book, Inside Out Boy, will be published by HarperCollins in the summer of 2008.

EI: Ms. Cohen, thank you for contributing to my blog. It has been a pleasure for me to get to know you, and your work a little better. Would you like to end your interview with a writing tip or advice for young aspiring writers?

TC: Develop your voice. It's the single most important factor in getting published.

To learn more about Tish Cohen, please visit her at:
http://www.tishcohen.com/
http://www.thedebutanteball.com/
http://www.myspace.com/tishcohen