
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Shameless Saturday

Friday, August 8, 2008
Meet the award winning author - Meg Rosoff

About the book:
“Every war has turning points and every person too.”
Fifteen-year-old Daisy is sent from Manhattan to England to visit her aunt and cousins she’s never met: three boys near her age, and their little sister. Her aunt goes away on business soon after Daisy arrives. The next day bombs go off as London is attacked and occupied by an unnamed enemy.
As power fails, and systems fail, the farm becomes more isolated. Despite the war, it’s a kind of Eden, with no adults in charge and no rules, a place where Daisy’s uncanny bond with her cousins grows into something rare and extraordinary. But the war is everywhere, and Daisy and her cousins must lead each other into a world that is unknown in the scariest, most elemental way.
A riveting and astonishing story.
About the author:
Meg Rosoff was born in Boston and had three or four careers in publishing and advertising before she moved to London in 1989, where she lives now with her husband and daughter. Meg has earned numerous prizes including the highest American and British honors for YA fiction: the Michael L. Printz Award and the Carnegie Medal.
The interview:
2k8: Can you tell us about "the call," when the Printz committee called you, and what transpired afterward on that special day?
Meg: I'd had a pretty peculiar year already. My first novel was published in August, and I heard it had won the Guardian Children's Fiction prize (in London) even before it was published. Because I was 47, with no real experience in trying to get published, I was incredibly pleased, but didn't quite realize the extent of the honour (maybe everyone wins the Guardian prize?).
Then the week the book came out, I found out I had breast cancer, so I was in the hospital on publication day, and you can imagine how surreal that was. By the time the call came from the Printz committee, it was early January, and I was right at the end of six months of really gruelling chemotherapy, bald, sick, feeling pretty lousy -- and ALSO trying to work on my second novel, which had been rejected in a first draft by both my American and London editors!
So it came as an amazing confirmation, to hear the voice of Betty Carter at the other end of the phone and all those amazing cheering librarians. I had no idea what powerful, liberal advocates for books and reading librarians were until I started writing books for teenagers. And then they came out of the woodwork, these astonishing women (they're mostly women) -- opinionated, well-read, radical, funny. To be honest it never even occurred to me that I might win the Printz, because How I Live Now was such a controversial book, (it contains underage sex between first cousins). I figured (especially in America in 2004/5) it might be burned, not given a medal. In other words, when the phone call came, I thought they must have the wrong number. But then each member of the committee got on the phone, introduced her/himself, and congratulated me -- from Mississippi, Hawaii, Texas, Arizona, Colorado...there was such a strong sense of consensus and warmth. I don't cry easily, but I cried then.
2k8: Has winning a prestigious award affected your writing in any way? Is it harder now, or easier?
Meg: Having a first novel that wins an important award is fantastic, but it also puts a lot of pressure on what comes next. In a funny way, having cancer helped because it kept me grounded, made me realize that what was important was being alive and well, and while medals are lovely, it's the fact that I'm alive and (after all these years of working at other careers) can make a living writing novels that's the ongoing miracle.
I think the acclaim helped me stick to my guns on the second book, when both editors were saying they wouldn't publish it. It was fair enough, they didn't know what I could do -- but I didn't really know what I could do either! The first novel had emerged in a single draft, more or less intact, while the second one really needed lots of hard graft, as they say in England. But I stuck with it, and it went on to win the Carnegie medal in London. I think with each novel you write, it gets a little easier, because in each one you come up against all the fear and the worry that it's no good, and you work through it, and stick with it, and (hopefully) produce something good at the end. So next time, you recognize the anxiety, and are slightly less thrown by it. Also, one good book is likely to be a fluke. But if you've written three or four that people like, you figure you might manage five or six! I'm kind of a believer, however, that the anxiety and self-doubt are part of the process. I (superstitiously) think that if I relaxed and became totally confident about it, I'd lose something important to the process of writing. Terror, perhaps?
2k8: If your current writer self could travel back in time to talk to your debut novelist self, what advice would you give him/her?
Meg: I was incredibly lucky. I submitted a practice novel to the woman who became my agent, and she suggested I write another -- she didn't say "a better one" but I got her drift -- and I was desperate to know what all the rules were for writing for teenagers, what I could say or couldn't say, what subjects I could tackle...and she said, "don't worry about rules. Write the best book you can write, and I'll find an audience for it." That's possibly the best advice I've ever had. I would modify it slightly to my former self, and say simply, "write fiercely." So many people try to think about what might sell, what people might like, what would make a good subject. I think real passion shines out in writing, and connects with a passionate reader.
2k8: And to end on a light note - what fun things do you have planned for this summer?
Meg: The English summer is only six weeks long (school goes until late July), plus it tends to rain all summer -- but I love the rain, and we have a tiny house on a wild stretch of sea in Suffolk (where I set my latest novel, What I Was), and my idea of heaven is just to be there with my daughter, my husband, the dogs, a pile of good books, and the boats sailing past the windows. It's often windy and rainy there, which might not be "fun" exactly, but it makes me very very happy.
Meg, you deserve all the happiness you can find. Best wishes to you and thank you for sharing so freely with us!
Thursday, August 7, 2008
Meet the award winning author - A.M. Jenkins

About the book:
Don't call me a demon. I prefer the term Fallen Angel.
Everybody deserves a vacation, right? Especially if you have a pointless job like tormenting the damned. So who could blame me for blowing off my duties and taking a small, unauthorized break?
Besides, I've always wanted to see what physical existence is like. That's why I "borrowed" the slightly used body of a slacker teen. Believe me, he wasn't going to be using it anymore anyway.
I have never understood why humans do the things they do. Like sin—if it's so terrible, why do they keep doing it?
I'm going to have a lot of fun finding out!
About the Author:
A.M. Jenkins is the author of Breaking Boxes, Damage, Out of Order, Beating Heart, Repossessed, and Night Road, which have won honors including the Delacorte Press Prize for a First Young Adult Novel, California Young Reader Medal, L.A. Times Book of the Year Finalist, ALA BBYA Top Ten, and the Michael L. Printz honor. Jenkins is coauthor (with Tiffany Trent) of the forthcoming Queen of the Masquerade, a book in the Hallowmere series.The Interview:
2k8: Can you tell us about "the call," when the Printz committee called you, and what transpired afterward on that special day?
A.M.: I was in Philadelphia attending ALA with some of my closest YA writer friends when I got the call. My cell phone rang while we were at breakfast, so I was lucky enough to get the news while surrounded by people who understood what a phone call like that truly means.
Afterwards, we met up with more friends and kept them company while *they* had breakfast, which would have been a semi-momentous occasion for me anyway because I got to taste scrapple for the first time.
From there I had to catch a cab to the airport and fly home, then start getting my family and house back in order; unpack, do laundry, that sort of thing. My family and writing lives are in different compartments, so once I headed home everything was back to normal.
2k8: Did you buy anything special for the awards ceremony or celebrate in any special way?
A.M.: At the Philly airport I got an express massage while waiting for my flight home. For the awards ceremony itself, I don't think I bought anything.
2k8: If your current writer self could travel back in time to talk to your debut novelist self, what advice would you give him/her?
If you haven't started your next book yet, start it now, because you will need that distraction. It's better to have something to focus on future-wise as your first book comes out.
2k8: And to end on a light note - what kind of pie are you most looking forward to enjoying this summer?
A.M. Pie has crossed my mind not at all. But I will eat pretty much anything that's not moving. And some things that are.
Thanks, A.M., for joining us - now go have some pie, you'll be glad you did!
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Meet the award winning author - Carolyn Mackler

About the book:
Fifteen-year-old Virginia Shreves has a larger-than-average body and a plus-size inferiority complex. She lives on the Web, snarfs junk food, and follows the "Fat Girl Code of Conduct." Her stuttering best friend has just moved to Walla Walla (of all places). Her new companion, Froggy Welsh the Fourth (real name), has just succeeded in getting his hand up her shirt, and she lives in fear that he’ll look underneath. Then there are the other Shreves: Mom, the successful psychologist and exercise fiend; Dad, a top executive who ogles thin women on TV; and older siblings Anaïs and rugby god Byron, both of them slim and brilliant. Delete Virginia, and the Shreves would be a picture-perfect family. Or so she’s convinced. And then a shocking phone call changes everything.
About the author:
The interview:
2k8: Can you tell us about "the call," when the Printz committee called you, and what transpired afterward on that special day?
Carolyn: On the morning the awards were announced, I had my ringer off on my phone. That's what I used to do when I wrote, before I had a child and needed to be more in touch with the world. Also, that shows how much I had NO CLUE that The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things was being considered for Printz Honor. But then, mid-morning, I decided to check my messages. And there it was - the chair of the Printz Committee, congratulating me on getting a Printz Honor. I flipped! I started screaming, shouting, jumping around my apartment. I called my husband, my agent, my parents - and basically couldn't stop hyperventilating. And then, throughout the rest of the day, calls and emails poured in from writer-friends all around the country. Sort of like my birthday, only less expected and with a shiny silver sticker involved.
2k8: Has winning a prestigious award affected your writing in any way? Is it harder now, or easier?
Carolyn: For a while after, I struggled a bit with my writing. I had this idea that a Printz Honor-winner should have a certain type of book - not that I had any clue what that book was. So after a few months I ignored that voice in my head and got back to the business of telling stories and enjoying the writing process. I wouldn't say it's easier or harder now because of the award. Writing is always a blend for me - hard with a dash of easy. Or, on the good days, easy with a pinch of hard.
2k8: If your current writer self could travel back in time to talk to your debut novelist self, what advice would you give him/her?
Carolyn: Stay true to myself. Try hard not to compare myself to others. Enjoy the process. Make an attempt to show up at the computer almost every day. Though be sure to take time off, too! I didn't take much time off in the early days.
2k8: And to end on a light note - what fun things do you have planned for this summer?
Carolyn: I'm currently a judge for the National Book Award - young people's literature. So I'm reading all summer - more than 250 books total. It's intense. Other than that, spending lots of time with my family. We're going up to the Adirondacks in a few weeks and I'm counting the seconds until that. Lots of swimming and hiking and - you guessed it - reading.
Wow, I'll say you'll be doing some reading. Thank you so much for joining us, Carolyn.
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
Meet the award winning author - Ellen Wittlinger

About the author:
Ellen Wittlinger is the author of 14 novels for young adults, including such titles as Sandpiper, Blind Faith, Parrotfish, and her newest book, Love & Lies. Her novel Hard Love won a Michael L. Printz Honor Award and a Lambda Literary Award. Many of her novels have been listed on the yearly best books lists of the New York Public Library and the American Library Association; she has also won state book awards in Massachusetts, Michigan and Pennsylvania. A former children’s librarian, she lives with her husband in western Massachusetts.
The Interview:
2k8: You won the honor award in 2000, the first year the Printz was awarded. What was that like? Can you tell us about the "call," when the committee called to let you know you'd won?
Ellen: It was amazing to be among the first Printz winners--and it was such a stellar group of writers too--it couldn't have been more exciting. When the call came, fairly early in the morning for a slug-a-bed like me, I couldn't wrap my mind around it. I don't know what I said in response to the committee chair's telling me, but probably something like, "Are you kidding?" I was on speakerphone and I could hear all the committee folks laughing in the background. That convinced me it was no joke. My editor called me with congratulations later in the morning after the announcements were made, then my agent called too, followed by many writer-friends. You don't get many mornings like that in a lifetime.
2k8: Did winning the award affect the writing of LOVE & LIES: Marisol's Story? Make it harder, perhaps?
Ellen: No, because I had no intention of writing a sequel--to HARD LOVE or any other novel-- for many years. People asked for a HARD LOVE sequel, but I always felt after each book was finished that I'd told that story and it was over. Not that I didn't want to revisit some of the characters, but I just couldn't imagine what story I'd be telling. It seemed as if the story of those characters had already been told. It took a number of years before I thought seriously about whether or not there was another story to be written about these same characters. I kept getting stuck on the fact that Marisol was going to college and YA novels don't usually follow characters there. When it finally occurred to me that she didn't necessarily HAVE to go to college right away, everything else fell into place. The new book would be HER story this time with Gio around as her friend--and his story could also continue in a positive way.
2k8: If your current writer self could travel back in time to talk to your debut novelist self, what advice would you give him/her?
Ellen: Good question. I think I might have said, "Don't quit your day job," which is what I did after the first novel came out. There are always ups and downs in the career of a writer and it might have been helpful to have that second identity (not to mention the second income) at many points along the way. On the other hand, I would have said, "You're in this for the long haul--don't get upset by every slight or bad review." Sometimes you have to have a thick skin to keep on believing in yourself.
2k8: And to end on a light note - what kind of pie are you most looking forward to eating this summer?
Ellen: Oh, peach pie... always peach pie!
Good luck to the Class of 2k8!
Thank you, Ellen, and best of luck to you too! Having you here was a real treat - even better than peach pie.
Monday, August 4, 2008
The Week of the Printz

The Michael L. Printz Award is awarded once a year for Excellence in Young Adult Literature. The winning book gets a gold seal and the honor books receive a silver seal.
The ALA web site has this to say about the award - "The Michael L. Printz Award is an award for a book that exemplifies literary excellence in young adult literature. It is named for a Topeka, Kansas school librarian who was a long-time active member of the Young Adult Library Services Association. The award is sponsored by Booklist, a publication of the American Library Association."
The Printz award has only been around since the year 2000, not nearly as long as the Newbery award, which is awarded annually to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children. But it's safe to say it is growing in recognition and the list of authors who have received the award is quite an extraordinary list indeed.
This week, we're talking to four special Printz award winners and honor winners. They're busy folks, but we managed to get a few minutes of their time to tell us what it was like the day they got the call from the committee, and answer a few other fun questions for us.
First up tomorrow - Ellen Wittlinger, who received the Printz honor award for her book, HARD LOVE, in 2000.
It promises to be a fun week, and we do hope you'll join us. As you read along, imagining what it must be like to get that call, you might consider the fact that one of our very own members of the Class of 2k8 could very well be a recipient of this prestigious award next January, when it's handed out for the year 2008. If it happens, and with 14 amazing young adult books in our class, the odds are pretty darn good, remember, you heard it here first!
Friday, August 1, 2008
On the Shelf!





