Sunday, September 30, 2012

Laura presents..(part 3 - GRAND finale)

a total geekout moment over author Libba Bray:

EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEPPPPPPPPPPP!!! I got to interview the one and only Libba Bray, the amazing author of Going Bovine, Beauty Queens, the Gemma Doyle series, and now, The Diviners. You've already heard of the amazing opening keynote she's given, now it's time to learn more about this hilarious woman and the books she's written. On to the interview!

Q: I've noticed that all of your teen fantasy books you've chosen a time period before WWII. Why haven't you set any in the modern world?

 A: Well, I'm fascinated by history, I mean it's like stories at work. It also really helps when you're building a world for your books because I enjoy the what if aspect to writing in a historic period. I'm also selfish and like to write about what interests me and I really like history, especially the Victorian age with the gas lamp lined streets and Gothic architecture and the Roaring Twenties with tons of glitz and glam, things being built everywhere, and cars just criss-crossing through traffic.

Q: So few authors have written for both fiction and fantasy. What made you want to tackle both genres?

A: I really feel as if the stories pick you. With Gemma and her books, I was trying to explore the idea of growing up as a girl and all the challenges a girl faces and why the world's afraid of that. With Going Bovine, I heard about a man in my hometown that got the human version of mad cow disease, which scared me, so I decided to write a book about not being able to trust your reality. I tend to write about the big questions or things that need to be explored.

Q: What's your favorite thing about writing for teens?

A: They really keep me honest. When you're a teenager your really starting to find out your identity and who you are away from your parents. It's this time when you're really being honest with yourself and that helps to keep me honest.

Q: Do you have any rituals you do before writing?

A: Umm, no; not really. There's this cafe near my house that I really like and I go there in the morning to buy a cup of coffee and a bagel, but that's about it (of course her answer was said in a much more Libba-style, but I can't really convey that through text).

Q: What is your favorite thing to write about?

A: It really depends on the day. It's like one day you feel like wearing jeans and a t-shirt and another you want to wear a tiara and want to only be addressed as Natasha; it depends on the day and how I feel. Although if i had to boil it down, I like to write about the hilarious or the things that are hard to say.

Q: You're one of a handful of writers to make a second appearance at the Austin Teen Book Festival, as a keynote speaker no less. What made you want to come back?

A: Austin is an amazing city, and as a native Texan myself, I know this personally. This festival is just very great and I'd love to come back again, at least until they're all like "Really Libba, stop being a stalker".

Q: If your readers could know one thing about you, what would it be?

A: I'm a ninja. It's about time that I tell the world, it's been under wraps for far too long. 

By the way readers, I agreed with her to keep her whole ninja on the down low, so be hush hush about it.

Libba Bray is just one of the greatest, sweetest, funniest authors I have ever met and she is nothing but inspirational. For those of you reading this who haven't read her books YOU NEED TO GO STRAIGHT TO BOOK PEOPLE AND BUY ONE NOW! You have no idea what you're missing out on!

Signing off for now,

Laura

Laura presents...(part2)

a report on an author panel AND using artistic license to rename it:

Hey readers I'm back again! This time I'm here to give you the low down on the We Don't Need Roads Where We're Going Panel (editor's note: this is otherwise known as the "Where We're Going, We Don't Need Roads" panel :D) which had Marissa Meyer, author of Cinder, Greg Leitich Smith, author of Chronal Engine, Jeff Hirsch, author of Magisterum, and Dan Krokos, author of False Memory. For those of you who like a bit of trivia, Jeff Hirsch hails from Virginia and can escape from a straight jacket while hanging upside down. Now, let's talk a little bit about the author's books. Marissa's novel is a futuristic re-envisioning of Cinderella; an idea she came up with when writing for a Sailor Moon contest in which a fairy tale had to be mentioned and a it had to be set in the future (although the original was about Puss in Boots). Rachael Cohn's book is about a 16 year old clone who serves as a companion to a family on a bio engineered island that's supposed to be paradise and the trouble she will have to face later on in life. Beta is the first in a four book series that will officially come out in about two weeks but is on sale here at the book festival. (SPOILER ALERT: the end of this book has a huge cliffhanger that Rachel Cohn as been confronted about many times already. Jeff Hirsch's book Magisterium is about brilliant 16 year old Glen (who is indeed a girl) who lives in a world where there is a rift in reality. On one side of the rift is a world based on technology and on the side is a world based on magic. When her father is arrested for creating something absolutely top secret. Now she must run across the rift to the Magisterium and find herself along the way. Dan Krakos' book is called False Memory and it's about a girl named Miranda who wakes up one day and has no memories. She eventually finds out that she has the power to inspire mass panic and that she, along with a boy named Peter, was raised to be a weapon of mass destruction. Now she must find out why she has no memory and try to stay alive in the process.

With introductions out of the way, let's move on to the next series of questions.

Q: How did you build your world?

A: Marissa: Her first novels were thinly veiled knock offs of Lord of the Rings and she's a huge Firefly fan, so she had a bit of a sci-fi/fantasy base already. She decided to do some research on what scientists can do today and looked up cyborgs, mixed the two together, and took it to the next level to create the fantastic world found in Cinder.
    Rachel: If she was a good student, she'd say she did research on cloning. In reality, she didn't actually do any research. She just used the premise that cloning is real and let the voice of her characters take her the rest of the way. In her own words, she can't fake stuff she's not good at and science is definitely one of those things, so she didn't really care if the science was real or not.
    Jeff: He really based the world off of his characters as well. There was some science mentioned, but it was more about what fit the story. One side of hsi world worked on a technological model and the other on a magical model. The system of magic however is really important and there wasn't much research on that. He really used this magic as a metaphor between Glen adn her being at one with the world.
    Dan: He read an article on I-09.com about panic pheremones and how it's used among the animal kingdom. This really inspired him and thought he was cool.


Q: Why did you add a sense of darkness into your novels?

A: Marissa: When it comes to telling a good story, you need darkness; writing a story about a shinny happy world with shinny happy people just isn't interesting. It wasn't really so much as a choice for her because every story needs conflict and with conflict comes darkness. Cinder is the first in a four book series and she can guarantee us that there will be more darkness to come.
    Rachel: Life is dark and darkness is everywhere. That's just life and it's going to be reflected in her novels. She tends to protect her characters most of the time and her editors are always like "we need more tensions in the novel Rachel". In her latest novel, Beta, however, she loaded tons of darkness onto the main character in the first fifty pages, so much so that her editors had to tell her to cool it! She did spread this out through out the novel before it went to print.
    Jeff: Darkness comes up naturally with conflict and the only thing we can do with it is to make it as serious and detailed and interesting as possible.
    Dan: Since all his answers were taken, he had to think about it a bit. He eventually responded by saying that all great books are about something wrong in the world and the character has to fix it.

Q: What do you all plan on doing next?

A: Marissa: Her next book, Scarlet, is the second in the Cinder series and is a twist off of Little Red Riding Hood and will come out next February. (Side note: this is not a companion novel it is a follow up)
    Rachel: Her next book is title First and it's going to be about the original beings (the ones the clones were modeled after).
    Jeff: Since Magisterium just came out, he doesn't have a title for his next book yet, but it should be out next fall. He did tell us that it's going to be a loose retelling of the Odyssey that takes place in the second American civil war.
    Dan: His next book will come out in May.
    Greg: His next comedy will be out in the Spring of 2014

Now that the standard questions were covered, it's time for the audience questions.

Q: Are there fairies in any of the books?

A: Rachel: "Not in mine, but now there will be".
    Jeff: "I don't really call them fairies, but yes, there are fairy-like creatures in my book".
    Marissa: "There are characters that are parallel to a fairy godmother but are more like androids".

Q: Who do you like better, Luke Skywalker or Han Solo?

A: Dan: "no comment"
    Greg: Han
    Rachael: Yoda, but if she had to chose between those two, Han
    Marissa: Bubba Fed
    Jeff: Han

Q: Where is your favorite place to write outside of your home?

A: Dan: The New York Public Library
    Rachel: The rooftop of her LA apartment building because it's just peaceful and has an amazing view.
    Marissa: Her porch at her home in Seattle (when it isn't raining)
    Jeff: It doesn't really matter where he is so long as he has his "writing assistant", Rosie. (I'm going to assume Rosie is some type of pet because it was never really specified what Rosie was)
    
Q: What made you want to write and what would you say to those who want to write?
     Jeff: His seventh grade English teacher gave them a creative writing assignment and he found out he loved to write. His advice to budding authors is to read as much as you can and anything you can and write everyday.
     Rachel: She agreed with Jeff and added that there will be a lot of negative responses to anyone's work and that many publishers will reject her, but that you just shouldn't listen to what anyone else says. If you love writing enough, you'll get to where you want to go.
     Dan: He worked at a gas station for 9 1/2 years and he used to read while one the job. One day, he read a book he loved so much he decided to start writing his own stuff and eventually got an agent. His advice is to persevere and never give up.
     Marissa: She's always loved reading, even from a young age. Once she finally realized that people actually wrote the books she loved, she decided to become a writer herself.

This panel was amazing and I'm so glad I got to see these amazing authors interact with their fans!

Ta-ta For Now,

Laura

Laura presents... (part 1)

An interview with author Rase Carson:

Rae Carson is a bright, wonderful woman whose books are absolutely AMAZING and I feel so honored to have been able to interview this debut author. For those of you who haven't read her books The Girls of Fire and Thorns and the Crown of Embers, you need to read these books. Now, it is my pleasure to tell you about my wonderful interview with Rae.

Q: These days, most teen books, if they include magic, have witches, fairies, or some type of overt magic. How did you come up with this subtle form of magic?

A: I don't like stories where they character is just so powerful and has such overwhelming ability because it gets boring; it's like nothing can bring that character down. In my story, I limited Elisa's magic so that it's more like an obstacle for her to overcome. Elisa doesn't know her magic, it's like a huge mystery that she will have to solve.

Q: If you had to compare your story with any Disney move, which would it be and why?

A: That's a hard question because I don't really like Disney movies because most of the princesses in the stories seem so helpless. If I had to choose though, I'd say Tangled, because the main character seems like she can get stuff done.

Q: Why did you decide to portray your main character (Elisa) as an experienced warrior queen than an already established queen?

A: She wanted to model her character with a coming of age experience. She wanted her to come into her power and earn the heck out of the title of being queen and being kick-butt.

Q: What will your next project be once you finish your current series?

A: I'm going to start on an epic fantasy trilogy about a girl in the California gold rush who has the power of finding gold. It's going to be like Little House on the Prairie on steroids.

Q: What's your favorite thing about writng and why did you decide to write for teens?

A: I really like the challenge of writing. It takes the analytic side of my brain and the creative side and marries the two together; it forces me to use my whole mind. I like writing for teens because I think they're smarter. If I write about some complicated concept they'll get no problem while adults are like "this is really complicated and confusing". Teens are also willing to read anything and really explore the different types of books while most adults are stuck in whatever type of book they like.

This interview was one of the funniest I've ever conducted and I am so glad to have had this opportunity.

Ta-Ta,

Laura 

Sunday, September 23, 2012

The OFFICIAL reporters of the Austin Teen Book Festival is the Book People Teen Press Corps. They will be taking pics, posting panel discussion write-ups, and conducting interviews through out the day. They have already been hard at work reading books by the 2012 Festival authors. Check out what they have already been up to at this link: Book People Teen Press Corps