Posts Tagged ‘middle grade fiction’

Realistic Fiction: Hunt, Quick, and Green

Posted in children's books, e-books, reviews on April 30th, 2013 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

W-Be-Someone's-Hero

Three powerful books about kids dealing with major issues. Troubled kids, wise and compassionate kids. Be Someone’s Hero is the message on a sign that foster child Carley finds in her borrowed bedroom. She’s in need of a hero herself, having just been released from the hospital after being severely beaten by her mother’s boyfriend, and not only finds that in Julie Murphy, but manages her own gestures of heroism. In LyndaW-One-for-the-Murphys Mullaly Hunt’s One for the Murphy’s (Nancy Paulsen Books, 2012), Carley is welcomed into the complex family life of good people and comes out the other side with a dilemma, but a vision of who she will become.  Each character breathes with energy and verve, there are misunderstandings, snarky moments, humor and a kind of personal sharing that Carley craves. I spent some time with the author in New York during the SCBWI conference and when I read Carley’s voice, I heard and saw Lynda.

The moment I turned the last page I wanted to be a witness to Carley’s brave story again. So, I read it out loud to my husband. There are so many books to read that I don’t normally read them twice. Carley teaches us good things about dealing.

Sorta-Like-a-Rock-StarOn Friday night, during the opening presentation of the Newburyport Literary Festival, Matthew Quick of Silver Linings Playbook fame introduced us to hopeful stories of those the world has inflicted with emotional trauma. In Sorta Like a Rock Star (Little, Brown and Co. 2010) Amber Appleton may be homeless, passing nights with her alcoholic Mom in a parked school bus, but she is in her own words a “hopeful misfit.” The ideosyncratic characters she befriends – from a haiku writing ‘Nam vet to Korean church-going immigrants, handicapped kids, and the depressed denizens of an old folk home – are all improved by knowing Amber. She cajoles them into doing more, being more, but when a shocking tragedy finally bowls her over and she succumbs to the debilitating power of hopelessness, they rally in a big way, bringing the story arc to a rousingW-The-Fault-in-Our-Stars denouement. She then defiantly faces her demon, paving the way for healing. Quick, who likes to be called Q, has played with format in ways that enhance the power of the drama in the lives of these richly depicted anomalous people. I am eager to delve into his Boy 21 next.

Months ago I was swept away by John Green’s duly revered The Fault in Our Stars (Dutton, 2012). Like the many layers of delicious filo pastry, this narrative interleaves human passions with wisdom from literary greats like Shakespeare (from whence the title comes) to the annoying, fictional Peter Van Houten, formed into a delicious story laced with humor, tragedy, and the ironies of life. From the onset when Hazel meets Augustus Waters, their terminal relationship soars impelled by sparkling dialogue, gallows humor, and the romance of following their dreams in spite of the Grim Reaper’s ugly shadow. Here are young people tackling some of the most profound and universal aspects of life and death and wringing every bit of joy, empathy and meaning out of their brief time on this planet. I savored it, then went on to other books that were piled up waiting…books that had been recommended to me by good people who know. I waded 70 pages into one contemporary realistic YA, put it down and started a humorous MG, put that aside and went for a realistic supposedly funny YA by the same author, but after 45 pages I went back to the first of these. Surely my bookstore friend must be right. Maybe I just had not given it a fair chance. But somehow, the journey was not there.

So I indulged myself and re-read The Fault in Our Stars, finding even more richness in it than I had seen before. Hazel and Augustus, Amber, and Carley are my heroes. No, they don’t need to wear capes.

 

Critique groups as incubators

Posted in children's books, Writing today on March 29th, 2013 by JAZ – 1 Comment

MonsterCostume_CoverIncubators help things hatch. What emerges are success stories. At an SCBWI crit group in Andover, MA fifteen people sit around a table giving input to the five presenters each month. Marianne Knowles is the well-experienced coordinator who keeps everything moving in a productive, positive direction. With that many voices, good input on developing stories happens, and everyone’s work evolves based on the discussions. Everyone also shares information on the children’s literature publishing industry. One member, Carol Gordon Ekster, told the crew about Where Am I Sleeping Tonight: A Story About Divorce , published by Boulden Publishing and Ruth the Sleuth and the Messy Room, published by Character Publishing. Soon Kirsti Call had a signed contract with Character Publishing for her picturebook The Raindrop Who couldn’t Fall. That inspired another crit buddy, Paul Czajack to submit Monster Needs a Costume to Scarletta Kids, which he heard about through the group, and the book will be released this September and he has signed commitments for more in the series. Then another crit buddy, e-mailed to say that Simon and Schuster has just picked up her middle grade novel!  What will be next?

Jennifer Malone: Agented Author, Free-lance Editor

Posted in children's books, creative living, Editing on January 30th, 2013 by JAZ – 5 Comments

IMG_0188 Jennifer Malone one of my critique group buddies, has gone from being the New England Head of Publicity and Promotion for 20th Century Fox and Miramax Films to writing for YA and MG. Jen is fun, fabulous at networking, and her stories are contemporary tales full of humor. Right after Hurricane Sandy did its thing, Jen immediatelyset up a blog and organized a successful online auction of services for writers donated by a long list of editors and authors. She is a contributing member at YAtopia. She is agented by Holly Root at Waxman Leavell Literary Agency and recently had an exciting editorial door open, which she has just announced at www.jenmalone.blogspot.com. It couldn’t happen to a better person!

JAZ: Hi Jen. Congratulations on your new position as free-lance editor. How did this come about?

Thank you! I connected with another freelance editor, Jennifer Pooley, as a result of the Hurricane Sandy auction that I organized.  She happened to see my agent tweeting about it and immediately contacted me to donate her services.  Jennifer is a former acquisitions editor at Harper Collins, so you can imagine her donated critique was much sought after.   For some time now Jennifer has been offering her editorial services to writers looking for a read more »

John Flanagan: Brotherband Chronicles

Posted in children's books, Norse, reviews, Writing today on October 14th, 2012 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

John Flanagan’s strengths are dramatic action, innovative conflict, and complex male characters who breathe and sweat. This fantasy adventure trilogy with a Middle Ages setting combines humor, intelligent language and complex characters to propagate a fast-paced, engaging tale awash with daring plot twists. Although mostly promoting good morals, the level of violence over these first three volumes escalates beyond what some will feel is appropriate for ten-year-olds who will read all three. There are plans for four more books.

In The Outcasts, volume 1 of the trilogy, sixteen-year-old boys are divided into teams to train as Skandian warriors. Most are excited at the prospect, read more »

NYT article: Publishing Gives Hints of Revival, Data Show

Posted in children's books, e-books, reviews, Writing today on August 9th, 2011 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

By

Published in The New York Times: August 9, 2011

“The publishing industry has expanded in the past three years as Americans increasingly turned to e-books and juvenile and adult fiction, according to a new survey of thousands of read more »

Advice from a kid: Miranda, age nine

Posted in children's books, creative living, life in general, process, Writing today on July 15th, 2011 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

Miranda and I went for a walk. She told me what she thinks about books. 

Here’s what she said.

Topics that some kids like (kids that I know):

  • Fluffy kitty cat books (I hate them completely)
  • Books with some scary moments and action (I personally like these best :)
  • Craft books like how to decorate cupcakes, paper mache or mask making
  • Humorous books like Junie B. Jones
  • Romance with a little bit of horror
  • New stories with older settings or a combo of two older stories with a new twist.

The best rated stories have… read more »

Cheryl Klein: An Editor with Second Sight

Posted in children's books, process, Writing today on April 6th, 2011 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

Cheryl Klein, Senior Editor at Arthur A. Levine Books, hopped on a train from NYC to Andover, MA to give an informative talk recently to our children’s book writers’ critique group. She fielded questions we had previously submitted. She also read and gave read more »

Eerie parallels

Posted in children's books, life in general, reviews on October 1st, 2010 by JAZ – Be the first to comment

eleven by Patricia Reilly Giff

In June we embarked on a major road trip around the Great Lakes from our home in MA. I brought some books on CD for in the car and a couple of paperbacks including Eleven, a powerful and poignant story by Patricia Reilly Giff. In the book, Sam who is just turning eleven, suspects that he may be someone else.

Sam doesn’t read well, so how can he decipher the old newspaper clipping in the attic with his picture as a three-year-old next to the word “missing”? He enlists Caroline of the tangerine hair to read it for him and asks her, “suppose I belong somewhere else?”  That worries him because he loves his grandfather Mack, the woodworking shop that they share, their friends Onji and Anima, and Night Cat, too. Sam’s teacher, Mrs. Stanek asks he and Caroline to build a castle for read more »