April 23, 2010

Interview with Gill James

Remember my review of YA science fiction novel The Prophecy awhile back?  Well, author Gill James was gracious enough to grant an interview with me!  Read my review here, and then enjoy her insights on The Prophecy, her writing schedule, and future books in the works!

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I loved the intercultural themes you explored in The Prophecy.  Could you tell us a little more about your inspiration for Kaleem's story?

I used to be a language teacher. I find learning people's language’s helps you to understand those people and communicate better with them. When that stops happening, we could be in trouble. (My oh my! The same year that Tony Blair took us into the war in Iraq the government stopped the learning of a language being obligatory. Double back-stabbing.)
So, we had to be some way in the future. I actually spent months thinking about the setting before I started writing. However, as I wrote, I realised that a young adult novel basically has to be about a young adult.  

What were your favorite scenes to write?  Were you partial to any characters in particular?
Obviously I like Kaleem. I liked the young Marijam very much as well. Abel and Menjit are a hoot. My favourite scenes to write were the ones which involved other worlds – the kitchen on Zandra for example. But the flashback scenes intrigued me. I’m not sure whose voce that was – they certainly weren’t written in my authorial voice.

Are there any stories, humorous or otherwise, behind the writing of The Prophecy?  What was your writing routine like?
My writing routine always is two hours or 2,000 words a day or revision of  6,000 – 20,000 words. Five days a week, including holidays – though if the truth be told, I’m always behind and use the holidays and weekends to catch up.  As I write this, I’m stuck in Cyprus because of the volcano in Iceland – and what great catch-up time- interspersed wit the odd swim or so.    

How and when did you first pick up a pen (or a typewriter or keyboard!) and start writing?  What advice would you give to writers who are just starting out, especially young writers?

I was nine. I’d run out of Famous Five stories so attempted to write my own. I didn’t start taking myself seriously though until 1997 and was first published in 2000.
Everybody who wants to get published will do so if they keep on trying. It’s a big “if”, though. You have to keep on writing – every day if possible. Your writing will improve. Reading a lot also helps. The other side of it is networking. Get out thee. Get yourself known in the right circles. Find out what is hapneing. Be tough about rejection and consider it feedback.   

I've heard we can hope to see a sequel to The Prophecy out soon.  Can you tell us anything more about that?  What characters and settings can we expect to see return?

The second volume is finished and with the editors. Kaleem is there again. Razjosh is there too but only a little. As much as before we have also Abel, Menjit, Pierre LaFontaine. There are a couple of new characters as well who have bigger roles.    
And I’m currently writing the third volume.

Do you have any writing plans beyond the Peace Child novels?  Do you think you'll stick with young adult literature and/or science fiction, or do you see yourself moving on?

I have three other young adult novels planned. Two are historical, one being fantasy at the same time and the third is contemporary.  I can’t actually see myself writing novels for adults though I am writing and getting published quite a few short stories for adults.
I actually perceive that a new demographic is appearing – don’t know what they’ll be called – but undergraduate / young professional age. Some of the students who were on my course, Writing novels for Young People, are beginning to write for this new age group. I may find that I do, too.   

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Thank you so much for your time, Gill!  I can’t wait to read more of your work!  Check out Gill's blog at www.gilljames.blogspot.com, as well as her website at www.gilljames.co.uk.


April 22, 2010

Waves

Waves by Sharon Dogar
Associate Links: Amazon/IndieBound
  • Why I picked it up: Won it in a contest, exciting blurb from Philip Pullman on the front
  • Disclosure: Won my paperback copy in a book-blogger sponsored contest, no reimbursement from author or publisher
“Where is she? And what was she doing out on the waves that night?”
For Hal, now, this summer is different. Sure he’s spending it, as always, with his family at their cottage on the wild west coast of England. But this summer he meets Jackie, beautiful, impetuous Jackie. Lying with her on the beach while she sculpts mermaids from wet sand–it’s paradise. Or would be, if only he didn’t keep hearing the desperate pleas of his lost sister Charley in his head . . .
For Charley, then, last summer was different. Pete, the impossibly gorgeous surf god, wanted her, she couldn’t believe it! To lick the sand off his lips, to let the sun tan the outline of her hand over his heart–she’d do anything to be with him. Even if it meant sneaking out and leaving her tagalong brother Hal behind. Just for one night. How could she have known what would happen by dawn?
Set at a beach where growing up goes wrong, Waves is a coming-of-age mystery about first love and tragic loss. About a family drowning in sorrow, and the courageous son struggling against the tide to save them.
Yes, the word "lyrical" is a book reviewer's cliche, but this book truly warrants the adjective.  Everything about the prose was lyric and beautiful, ebbing and flowing like the waves and tides it described, leaving me quite literally breathless as I raced to keep up.  Whatever criticisms I have, I have to give it that.

Honestly, though, perhaps that is my criticism.  The breathless pace and mystery started to annoy me by the end, when the sickly saccharine sweet resolution left me with a bad taste in my mouth and the mystery unraveled in a most unsightly manner.  It was build-up to nothing.  Can you scream PET PEEVE?  And the mixed perspectives of Hal and Charley only made it worse.

However, if you enjoy mystery, if you enjoy stream-of-consciousness POVs, if you enjoy grief stories, if you enjoy beach love stories that don't necessarily end happily, then this book might still be for you.  The chemistry between Jackie and Hal, not to mention the love triangle between Pete, Charley, and Am, fairly crackled with electric realism, while the deep grief underscoring Hal's home life was raw and mostly believable.  Sarz in particular was an interesting character.  There were times when they transported me to the beach so completely I could practically feel the sun, saltwater, and sand on my skin.

Another interesting aspect was the discussion of life, *The Other Side*, and everywhere in between.  What was it?  Magical realism?  Paranormal?  Could you even get away with calling it fantasy?  (I'm doing so in my label of this post.)  Whatever it was, sometimes it worked and sometimes it didn't; I could never quite decide.  It reminded me vividly of Toni Morrison's Beloved, which I just finished, with its discussions of spirits and revenge and also sometimes with its writing style.  Obviously it wasn't quite as expertly written as Beloved, but they're still similar, in my opinion.

In the end, I think it's the kind of book you'd have to read to believe.  It's not a difficult read, or a long one, and on virtue of the prose alone it's a good study for aspiring writers.  But in the end, I'm not sure it would be worth much more than a quick borrow from the library.

The Final Verdict: Sweeping, vivid, with beautiful prose, but inconsistent and confusing at times.  Three and a half out of five stars.

April 21, 2010

Waiting on Wednesdays #5

What do you think, blogosphere?  Am I doing okay at this?  If you'd like to console me and join me in meme ineptitude, this one's hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine, so go check it out!

My pick this week is...The Red Umbrella by Christina Gonzalez.

There's been A TON of buzz about this book already, and the premise definitely intrigues me!  I'm trying very hard to squeeze in more PoC reading into my YA diet - I've been following a lot of recommendations from Ari at Reading in Color - and this sounds like something I'd love.  I'm semi-fluent in Spanish, working as hard as I can at becoming totally fluent, so I enjoy almost anything involving Latin America.  I'm also a big fan on "the true meaning of culture" stories, as I'd like to think I'm kind of writing a science fiction version of one.  Anyway, check out the summary below!
The Red Umbrella is the moving tale of a 14-year-old girl's journey from Cuba to America as part of Operation Pedro Pan—an organized exodus of more than 14,000 unaccompanied children, whose parents sent them away to escape Fidel Castro's revolution.
In 1961, two years after the Communist revolution, Lucía Álvarez still leads a carefree life, dreaming of parties and her first crush. But when the soldiers come to her sleepy Cuban town, everything begins to change. Freedoms are stripped away. Neighbors disappear. Her friends feel like strangers. And her family is being watched.
As the revolution's impact becomes more oppressive, Lucía's parents make the heart-wrenching decision to send her and her little brother to the United States—on their own.
Suddenly plunked down in Nebraska with well-meaning strangers, Lucía struggles to adapt to a new country, a new language, a new way of life. But what of her old life? Will she ever see her home or her parents again? And if she does, will she still be the same girl?
The Red Umbrella is a moving story of country, culture, family, and the true meaning of home.
 What are you waiting on this Wednesday?  Leave the links to your posts in the comments below!

April 20, 2010

Stuff that happened on my unannounced vacation

Put it this way.  This week has been hectic.  Which is why my last post was almost a week ago!  *faints*  Anyway, the reason for my absence was...drumroll please...I went on vacation to Fargo-Moorhead, ND-MN, and thoroughly enjoyed myself with my family.  Yes, I had Internet, but seeing as it was vacation, I used it for really important stuff like finishing the last three episodes of Avatar: The Last Airbender season one (love that show!), playing completely inane fashion design games like Couturious.com, and letting my younger siblings get their Webkinz fix.  What can I say?  It was fun.

Anyway, here were some non-reading, mostly food-related highlights:
  1. My sister and I ate some nasty orange Jello that tasted like sunscreen smells.  No joke.
  2. I managed to eat eight pieces of quiche in three days.  My mom makes the best quiche ever.
  3. We saw a wildfire and a flood within about ten minutes' drive of each other.
  4. At the Fargo Holistic Expo, my sister and I sold lots of chakra-colored hairbeads and made lots of money to put in our respective savings accounts.
  5. Also at the Fargo Holistic Expo, we passed the time by sorting out psychics were frauds and which were eerily spot-on.  (Neither of us ended up getting a reading ourselves, you understand.)
  6. We got to go swimming!  In a SWIMMING POOL!  'nuff said.
  7. We got to stay up till one in the morning listening to a bad, bad country band playing for about six elderly people for a Seniors' Night Dance in the reception room adjacent to our hotel room suite.  Why on earth would you play till one in the morning at a hotel?!?!?!? Some of us were actually trying to sleep!
  8. I ended up strangely traumatized by the face-stealing demon in the last episode of Avatar, season one.  The worst part is that that my sixth sense tells me he'll probably show up again, just because he's so freakin' scary.  The horror!  (Don't spoil it for me as I haven't made it to seasons two or three yet.)
  9. We got to visit the Hjemkost Heritage Museum in Moorhead, Minn. and tour a Norwegian stave church replica.  It was actually pretty cool.  Google it, or something.  Oh yes, and my little brothers got cool Viking (How to Train Your Dragon!) hats and my little sister got a book informing her that if we were Vikings, I'd be married and probably have kids by now.
  10. I managed to consume enough food for a small country in one sitting at Usher's House Restaurant, also in Fargo.  An hour later I was hungry again.  Growth spurt, maybe?  Anyway, it was really good.
  11. I got to see a real-live tumbleweed.
  12. Somebody took an actual GOOD PICTURE of me.  (See below.)
  13. I bought the coolest book ever about repurposing T-shirts.  There's a pattern for a WEDDING DRESS in there.  No joke.
  14. I almost cried when I read all of the wonderful comments on my guest post that Ari at Reading in Color posted over the weekend.  Check it out for yourself.  And please go follow Ari if you don't already, because she is amazing. =)
 Anyway, now you've been updated.  As for what I read:
  • The Demon in the Freezer by Richard Preston
  • The Lost Continent by Bill Bryce
  • Beloved by Toni Morrison
No YA, but all fabulously good.  (Scary, funny, and, erm, scary.)  I'd highly recommend them!  Anyway, what did I miss in the blogosphere and Twitterverse while I was gone?  Anyone care to enlighten me?

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