Saturday, June 30, 2012

Rolling with the Shamlessness

One of the things I love most about being the official Enchanted Inkpot Ambassador of Shamelessness (I feel like I need a badge or something...) is that I get to bring you news like this:

The cover for my friend and fellow Inkie Ellen Oh's debut PROPHESY.


Not only that, but I get to bring you the two FANTASTIC blurbs!
"What an adventure! I fell in love with the lush, richly woven world of PROPHECY. Kira is truly a force to be reckoned with. When I finished my journey with her, all I wanted was more. Spectacular!" - Marie Lu, author of the LEGEND trilogy

"Filled with ancient lore, political intrigue, non-stop action, and a fiercely determined heroine, PROPHECY is a rich and thrilling read—my favorite kind of book!" - Robin LaFevers, author of GRAVE MERCY
I love my job.

Meanwhile, Nancy Holder has a whole flurry of news this week. First, she sold Bulgarian rights to POSSESSIONS, her YA horror series.  Next, she sold the short story "Love and "War" to THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF ER ROMANCE.  And then she'll be the keynote banquet speaker at Slayage 5: Conference on the Whedonverses, July 12-15 in Vancouver, Canada.

Yeah.  She's boring like that.  ;)

In review news, early reviews are coming in for Grace Lin's STARRY RIVER OF THE SKY, with Fuse8 rounding the bend in first.  Spoiler: they loved it.

And lastly, my newest horror title TEN has been included in the Junior Library Guild book club for fall.  WOO HOO!

Okee.  That's all for this week!

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Interview: Nancy Holder & Teen Wolf novel, ON FIRE!

New York Times' bestselling author, Nancy Holder, is about to release her latest work, ON FIRE!, a Teen Wolf novel about Scott facing a new threat from the elusive Alpha. I was fortunate enough to snag an ARC and get an exclusive interview for the Enchanted Inkpot.

Given this is a novel about established characters in an established world, where did the unique idea for this book come from?

I was approached by an editor, who asked me if I would be interested in writing a TEEN WOLF book. After I watched the full season and went to the panel at Comic-con, I had a meeting with the creator, Jeff Davis, and we talked over some ideas for the main plot. The subplot came to me as I thought about what kind of character Jackson was. I also wanted to give the character named Danny and his boyfriend, Damon, an integral role in the story.

Were you a TEEN WOLF fan of the movie/TV show before you took on the book?

I love Michael J. Fox, so I had fond memories of the movie, but the TV show is nothing like it. I was approached about writing a TW novel at Comic-con last year and I went to the Teen Wolf panel, and immediately bought the first season on iTunes. I absolutely loved it. The writing is sharp and witty the way Buffy is. I'm so proud to be associated with it.

What was the most interesting thing about "inheriting" a story's setting and cast of characters? What were your favorite parts and which were the hardest?

The first season of TEEN WOLF is very linear, and there is a big reveal as well as a cliffhanger in the season finale. I had a big phone conference with the people at MTV about how to do the novel without spoiling the reveal and how to insert a new adventure into the narrative. Then I had a meeting in L.A. with the creator/show runner, Jeff Davis, who had a great idea for the "A" plot. I figured out which characters to use in that plot, and then created a "B" plot using other characters. Then I made them intersect. Jeff definitely gave me the starting point. He's smart, articulate, and so creative. I have such respect for him. Probably the hardest part was "freezing" the story between two of the episodes. I watched all the episodes many times, but I only watched up to Episode 5 more times than that, so I would internalize what a viewer would "legally" know up til then. I doubt any of my readers will care, but it was important to me.

You can tell the difference when an author takes note of the details; especially things like modern technology to make a story feel real. What are some of the advantages and challenges of including things like cell phones, GPS, and downloadable apps?

In some ways, it's harder because we're more tethered and it's harder to create an air of mystery about where someone is or what they're doing. There are a lot of dropped calls in ON FIRE! But I'm actually following a thread that Jeff Davis laid down in the episodes with the phone finder-app.

I think that was a great thread and one readers can relate to as well as that "loss of control" feeling that's a common theme of lycanthropy stories. (Also true for teenage boys!) How do characters like Scott and Derek deal with these struggles and how does it show up with their relationships to girlfriend Allison, hunter Kate, and each other? What parallels did you draw between werewolves and adolescence?

At this point in the series in which ON FIRE takes place, Scott is having a lot of trouble controlling the shift. Derek helps him, but Stiles does, too. Stiles also figures out that Allison anchors Scott. A lot of Derek's backstory is revealed in ON FIRE, especially his relationship with Kate. He's fighting for control as well. The parallels between werewolves and adolescence are very direct--kids battling hormones, acting like animals, losing their cool. It's a perfect metaphor.

Who is your greatest influence as a writer?

Shirley Jackson, hands down. I love her.

And most important question: what is your favorite flavor Jelly Belly?

Licorice. I love it!

Thanks, Nancy, for stopping by the Inkpot! You can read more about Nancy and her other books at www.nancyholder.com!

Monday, June 25, 2012

TOTW: There's Always Time for a Good Book

Fantasy is what happens when "What If?" meets world-building, creating incredible people and places full of magic and mystery yet to be discovered until the pages start flipping and we end up reading until the wee hours in the morning. There are themes that grab us and refuse to let go, leaving us bleary-eyed and wondering when the hours flew by. I find one of the most challenging and rewarding ways to turn the world as we know it (or think we know it) on its head is when the author bends or breaks the boundaries of time.

Time is linear, the dash between dates on a tombstone: it starts at the very beginning and continues all the way to the end (or perhaps somewhere after Happily Ever After), but the story takes place on the journey; somewhere or somewhen in-between. The march forward seems like a straight road until, like Harold with his Purple Crayon, we veer off the path in order to discover adventure. To bend time or travel through time changes the landscape; from the classics like A Wrinkle in Time, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and The Girl, The Gold Watch and Everything to modern twists like Myra McEntire's Hourglass & Timepiece and Hermione's Time-Turner in The Prisoner of Azkaban, the wrap-around is a fun way to wrap our brain around a new set of old circumstances and see things differently the second time around.

My childhood favorite, Tuck Everlasting, hit the Pause button on time and allowed me to ask my first questions about immortality and what it was like to exist outside of mortal time; questions reflected back in tales like Lois Duncan's Locked In Time, L. M. Boston's The Children of Green Knowe, and the return of the Sons of Adam and Daughters of Eve in The Chronicles of Narnia.

Sometimes time-travel is a quest to preserve history or to right a wrong as in Diana Wynne Jones' A Tale of Time City or to understand it as in Jane Yolen's The Devil's Arithmetic, or to want more of that precious commodity like in Kate Thompson's The New Policeman; longing to live longer is part of what time is all about: we want to keep going, we don't want our story to end. (And if that's not enough, there are some who sneak in extra hours such as in Philippa Pearce's Tom's Midnight Garden and Scott Westerfeld's Midnighters series. Haven't we all wondered what we'd do with more time?)

There are lots of wonderful stories that play with the fantasy of having more time, endless time, time stops, and to travel through time. This long, lazy summer, take some time to kick back with a cold butterbeer, check your gold pocketwatch, and catch a tesseract to the Restaurant at the End of the Universe. You can pick up a favorite book and read it again, transporting yourself back to the first time you met your heroes and find that they're still there, waiting for you as if time stood still.

What favorite time-themed book would YOU suggest for a great summer read? Take some time to add a comment to the thread!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Jacqueline West and THE BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE


It is a delight to welcome the immensely talented and witty Jacqueline West to the Inkpot!  I remember picking up the first of THE BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE (#1, THE SHADOWS) in a bookstore because I couldn't resist the cover image of a girl climbing through a picture frame into a clearly very magical woods.  When I started reading, I was thrilled to find myself in the thick of a magical adventure with all the best ingredients:  a spunky, imperfect heroine (Olive), a spooky house, extraordinarily gifted cats, and, of course, those enchanted pictures a girl might want to climb into.  I loved THE SHADOWS and could not have been happier to ask Jacqueline West a few questions, now that #2 (SPELLBOUND) is out and #3 (THE SECOND SPY) on its way to bookstores in a couple of weeks!

Anne, on behalf of the Inkpot:  Thank you so much for stopping by, Jacqueline! Standing in front of a painting and dreaming oneself into it--we've all probably done that at least a few times.  Your books confirm my suspicion that no portal could possibly be as satisfying as a painting in a frame!  Do you remember any particular paintings that you wanted to enter, back when you were a child?

Jacqueline:  When I was little, I spent a lot of time at my grandparents’ house.  It was a big old house (so of course it seemed absolutely gigantic and ancient to little me), and it had a lot of interesting antiques and art objects in it.  I can still remember many of the paintings that hung on the walls: a girl picking wildflowers in a long pink gown, a shepherdess on a dark hill, a crumbling brown barn, several Norman Rockwell prints… It was very un-menacing stuff, unlike the collection in Olive’s house!  I remember giving names to the people in the paintings, deciding ‘She looks like a Gretchen,’ and ‘He looks like a Charlie,’ and imagining what they might have been saying to each other when they were captured in paint, mid-scene.  I almost got myself to believe that the paintings would come to life as soon as no one was looking, and the people in them would finally go back about their business.  I think that’s where the idea of the living paintings came from.  It’s funny: I never imagined myself actually climbing into a landscape or joining the painted people.  I just wanted to live through the characters I created in my mind.        

Anne:  How about painting people or worlds?  When I was in college, my friends and I worked for months on a collective felt-pen masterpiece, an illustrated map of fairyland. (Alas, it faded to nothing in the sun a few years after graduation.) Have you ever painted or drawn a landscape that you wanted to wander through?  Or have your landscapes always been written, rather than drawn?

Jacqueline:  Oh, I love the idea of a collectively created fairyland map!  Maybe it faded because the fairies wanted to keep their secrets…

I’ve always enjoyed painting and drawing, and I’ve dabbled in art off and on, but I’m always frustrated by not being able to get the image in my imagination onto paper or canvas.  My pictures never turn out the way I intend them to—sort of like Olive’s disastrous experiment with powerful paints in THE SECOND SPY!   With writing, I’ve realized that I can get a lot closer to transferring what’s inside my mind to the outside.  Now and then, I even put together a line or find a simile that’s exactly what I meant to say, and that’s a wonderful feeling. 

Anne:  Leopold, Harvey, and Horatio join a long and august line of fabulous fictional cats.  All the best magical stories seem to have 'em, and I have to say yours are some of my favorites.  But what is it with cats, do you think, that makes them so very story-worthy?

Jacqueline:  Young readers often ask me that, especially when they learn that I’m a cat-allergic dog-lover!  I explain that cats seem to me like they’d be awfully good at keeping secrets.  My dog would give up all his secrets (if he had any, which he doesn’t) in exchange for a baby carrot.  Cats always appear to have an interesting inner life.  They’re so independent and self-contained and regal—it just seems like there has to be something fascinating going on in there.

Anne:  Olive's parents make me chuckle every time they wander into the story, with their obsession with numbers and complete inability to understand what's really going on in Olive's life.  Do you have any math-oriented people in your world, or does the mismatch between Olive and her parents really just stand in for the mismatch between almost every child of Olive's age and his or her well-meaning but slightly clueless parents?

Jacqueline:  Ah, the Dunwoodys…  No one in my world is quite like them, although I’m sure fragments of former math teachers are mixed into them here and there.  I decided that math should be the Dunwoodys’ calling because I thought of it as the counterpoint to the McMartins’ magic.  Math and magic each have their own rules and logic and complexities, but they run along parallel lines—or at least they do in Olive’s world.  Because Olive is so different from her parents, she notices things about their new home that her parents don’t perceive at all.  While they are caught up in the magic of numbers, she’s caught up in the magic of art. 

Anne: Olive herself is a great character.  She is lovable, but not perfect.  She's a good friend, but she makes mistakes.  She's scrappy and creative, but also has her worries and fears and weaknesses.  Who are some of your favorite fictional heroines or heroes?  Do you have a larger picture of how Olive should be growing and changing across the series?

Jacqueline:  Thank you so much.  The setting and many of the characters around her are fantastical, but I wanted Olive to feel real.  She doesn’t have any inborn magical talents or superpowers; she’s not secretly a demi-god or a chosen one.  She just uses the strengths that she does have to change her own world for the better, when she can. 

Some of my own favorite fictional heroes and heroines are like Olive in this way.  As a kid, I loved Anne of Green Gables, in part because of how Anne imbues the real, natural world around her with beauty and excitement and magic.  I also loved Calvin from Calvin and Hobbes, who is weirdly similar to Anne in that he uses his imagination to transform his whole world (with much more violent and sometimes disgusting results, of course).  All of the animals in the Hundred Acre Wood are alive because Christopher Robin believes in them.  Wonderland may only exist because Alice dreamt of it, or was curious enough to discover it. 

Olive is flawed in many ways, and sometimes her shyness or her reluctance to trust others gets her into trouble.  Throughout the course of the books, I knew Olive would find good friends for the first time in her life, and that she would then have to learn how to be a good friend herself.  A lot of Olive’s inner conflict stems from this issue, and from her learning to have faith in her own strengths and talents—even if they aren’t exactly what she or her parents hoped they would be. 

Anne: Since I brought up the "series" question just now, let me say that this is one series where the books just get more vivid and more fun as you go.  I think my favorite so far is actually the third!!  This makes me so happy, just to know that it is POSSIBLE to write sequels that have all the zest of the original, and that truly can stand alone.  I hadn't reread THE SHADOWS (#1) before starting SPELLBOUND (#2), and I wasn't lost or confused for a moment.  Kudos to you for bringing the reader so seamlessly along!  Did you know from the outset that this would be a series?  A series longer than three books?  How many more do you have plotted out in your mind?

Jacqueline:  Woo-hoo!  So glad to hear that each of the books stood on its own!  The truth is: I didn’t know that this would be a series until THE SHADOWS was finished.  I had assumed that no one would want to publish one book by me, let alone two, so when my agent and editor first brought up the idea of a sequel, I was surprised, and then nervous, and then ecstatic.  Maybe I had been subconsciously writing the start of a series all along, because there was nothing in THE SHADOWS that had to be changed in order for there to be a Volume Two.  Most of the doors were closed, but a lot of windows were left open.  Almost as soon as I started work on SPELLBOUND, my amazing editor (Jessica Garrison at Dial) brought up the idea of a longer series, and suddenly I had the freedom and the space to think in terms of a big, multi-part story.  I’m revising Volume Four right now, and Volume Five will be the final installment.  I know what’s going to happen in the last book, but I haven’t put anything more than sketchy notes on paper—I only work on one book in the series at a time; I can’t move on to the next until I know the one before it is truly finished. 

Anne:  Are there parts of Elsewhere we have not yet seen?

Jacqueline:  Oh, yes.  Absolutely.  There are many more secrets waiting to be discovered, both inside and outside the house. 

Anne: Your #1 villain is named Annabelle McMartin.  I always knew Annabelle was a scary, scary name--I have friends who call me "Annabelle," and it makes me shiver.  Now I understand why!  I won't rest easy until Annabelle is thoroughly defeated, evaporated, melted, and/or reformed.  When does the next installment of THE BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE come out?  How long do I have to keep looking over my shoulders whenever I go outside??

Jacqueline:  Just one more year, I promise!  Volume Four will be released in summer 2013, and if everything goes according to schedule, Volume Five will follow in summer 2014. 

Anne:  And . . . are you working on anything else that is non-Elsewhere-related?

Jacqueline:  I am indeed.  I’m currently at work on a YA project (the title is currently in flux) that’s very different from THE BOOKS OF ELSEWHERE.  It may be released between books four and five of ELSEWHERE, but nothing’s set in stone yet.  I’ll keep the Inkpot posted!

Anne:  Thank you for taking on these questions, Jacqueline!  I can't wait to see THE SECOND SPY hit the bookshelves in July--it's a great yarn, thrilling and moving.  Congratulations on these lovely, wonderful books!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Happy Ever After Endings...Sort Of.

from thelastfirstkiss.com.au

Ahhh, endings. That last page, or last paragraph or last line that closes out the story. A good ending sticks with you when you close the book, leaves you feeling satisfied, but at the same time sad that the story is over.  A bad ending--one that's too confusing or simplistic---can ruin a book, leaving a sour taste in the reader's memory. It used to be that endings were as simple as adding a happy-ever-after. Not anymore. Endings are slippery, tricky beasts, hard to pin down and even harder to write well. 

Fortunately, we here at the Enchanted Inkpot are brave, intrepid souls and endings don't scare us (much). And to prove it, we've gathered some of the endings from our current projects. Some of these endings, are final, some aren't. But all of them are awesome.

from cornellsun.com
AMAZING ENDINGS

And if you were watching when the sun slunk behind the dark mountain ridge, you would have seen four shadows run across the tarmac, two holding hands, and one chasing a huge shaggy dog, all spotlit by the NASA Ames Research Center lights, falling into the outstretched arms of two shadows crying with happiness. 
     --Keely Parrack


This time, setting out wasn't a new thing. But the day was new, and Piri was new, and so were her wings.
     --Kate Coombs, from  Lemonade Wings (WIP)


Once he'd finished learning all there was to know about Claudette McGavin, he'd go to bed, ready for another day.
     -- Caroline Hooton


"I'd start making up some house rules right now," Conor told Grump's new mum. 
     -- Ellen Booraem


She curled one hand around the carved tiger in her pocket and the other around Emil's strong fingers. Then, connected to both her past and her future, she looked the man in the eye. "My name," she said. "is Shar."
  -- Miriam Forster, from the prequel to City of a Thousand Dolls. (WIP)


from scrabblesense.com

In the lantern light she could see that her gift was a strong, slender sword, its silver hilt scored with sigils and set with moonstones. Meg lifted it to the night. "Once upon a time," she said, "there was a princess who knew she was meant for more than twirling her tresses and swooning."
     --Kate Coombs, from The Runnaway Princess


“You could still be cursed,” I said.
“My curse is broken, right?”
I didn’t say anything.
“Right?” Henry said again.
I tossed the remote onto the futon and headed for the door. “I guess we’re going to find out.”
     -- P.J. Hoover, from Tut (Tor Children's, Winter 2014)


Braeden looked over his shoulder, watching as Inisfail grew farther and farther away, until they sailed through the mists and it disappeared from sight. He was momentarily overcome with sadness, but then he turned back around and saw his parents, friends, and Kira, and knew that wherever he was, as long as they were with him, he was home. 
     -- Erin Cashman, from Legend of the Four


Josie rolled over in bed and opened her eyes. She could still see Nick's face. "I'll wait for you," she said even though she knew he couldn't hear her. "I'll wait forever."
    -- Gretchen McNeil, from 3:59 

from psych-your-mind.blogspot.com

What's YOUR favorite last line?  Any thoughts on happy-ever-after?