Showing posts with label Nina LaCour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nina LaCour. Show all posts

Jen Doll Responds to the Read YA Controversy with Thoughts About Nuance—

Monday, June 9, 2014

and this is one of the many things I love about Jen.

Jen's whole piece, on Hairpin, is here.

Her final words are a sweet, right challenge:
So read, read Y.A., read adult literature, read blog posts, read magazines, read your box of Cheerios in the morning. Read all you can and want to read, acknowledging the easy and unchallenging and the difficult and complicated, and form your own opinions, trying to add a little room for nuance and understanding and openness in all that you do. That’s the best you can do as a reader, a writer, and a human.
And how honored am I to have Going Over included among works by Markus Zusak, Nina LaCour, Andrew Smith, Cammie McGovern, Laurie Halse Anderson, Sherman Alexie, Aaron Hartzler, E. Lockhart, and Matthew Quick on Jen's "10 Contemporary Y.A. Books That Made Me Think (and That I Loved)."

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when we are not writing we are living: the kitchen, five months later, is done

Saturday, April 12, 2014

In San Antonio, on the TAYSHAS panel, Susan Schilling asked what we do when we are not writing.

We are, in our own ways, living.

Nina LaCour remakes whole rooms, top to bottom. Dana Reinhardt pursues the immediate results—the appreciable outcomes—of cooking. Andrew Smith has not, in fifteen years, missed a day of running—wherever he is, wherever he goes, he heads out into the weather. Blake Nelson learns as much as he can (in sometimes funny ways) about people.

When I am not writing (and most of the time, I am not writing), I do many things that I am not particularly good at. Building objects out of clay. Raising seedlings into buds. Dancing the tango with my husband. And, also, sometimes all-consumingly, turning my nearly 100-year-old house into a home.

This past November, I began a quest to refinish my kitchen. To replace the broken things. To up the ante on the colors. To generate new light and life. It was a fraught proposition from the get-go—famously horrific weather, disappointing contractors, a leaking roof, delays, unforeseen expenses.

This morning she stands. Whole at last, complete.

I am, when I am not writing, living.


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Grasshopper Jungle/Andrew Smith: Reflections

Friday, April 4, 2014

Andrew Smith.

They talk about him. They say, He's one of the smartest guys in the room. They say, He's one of the most charming. They say, Have you read? You've got to read. Here, they say. Is Grasshopper Jungle.

My friends, I've now had the privilege of reading this bright lime green marvel of a book, too. Plot synopsis, as provided by the flap copy:
In the small town of Ealing, Iowa, Austin and his best friend, Robby, have accidentally unleashed an unstoppable army. An army of horny, hungry, six-foot-tall praying mantises that only want to do two things.

This is the truth. This is history.

It's the end of the world. And nobody knows anything about it.

You know what I mean.
There, in those lines, is the confident craziness of the scheme, the rhythm of the tale, the sounds-convincingly-like-a-teen-but-is-written-by-a-guy-who-studied-Political-Science,-Journalism,-and-Literature-at-college-ness. This book is big, jammed with the promised promiscuity, the necessary confusions, and the wild what if's of a world that has turned terrible toxins on itself. One reads to see what will happen next, what can happen next, what these likable, mixed-up, also truly human characters are going to fumble upon next. It's sci fi. It's something else. It's Drew Smith.

Usually I quote from the pages of the stories themselves. But I just read the final final words, which happen to sit in the acknowledgments. There's a paragraph I really like, I really get, I really jive with. There's a paragraph that reminds all writers everywhere of how so much of our lives is predicated on finding just the right reader at the right time. Drew Smith now has a world full of readers. But this book all began with an agent who cared.
About two years ago, I decided to stop writing. Well, to be honest, not the verb writing, but I decided to get out of the business aspect of it, for which I have absolutely no backbone. I never felt so free as when I wrote things that I believed nobody would ever see. Grasshopper Jungle was one of those things. It was more-or-less fortune, then, that I happened to show the first portion of the novel to my friend Michael Bourret. He talked me into not quitting.
I'll be joining Drew Smith as well as Nina LaCour, Black Nelson, and Dana Reinhardt on the Tayshas Reading List and Authors next Thursday in San Antonio, TX. I can't wait to meet all the panelists and our moderator. Maybe we'll see you there.

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oh, my! headed to Texas to do time with Nina LaCour, Andrew Smith, Blake Nelson, Dana Reinhardt, and the Good TAYSHAS and Texas Teens and Texas Tea Folks

Friday, March 28, 2014

I love when this sort of thing pops up on Facebook. Me and the Real Writers. Headed to Texas. Here's the caption, in case you are going to be near:

Join Nina LaCour, Andrew Smith, Blake Nelson, Dana Reinhardt, and Beth Kephart for Tayshas Reading List & Authors on Thurs, April 10th, 10am in 103 AB, Street Level at #txla14

I'll be at other events as well, in dear San Antonio with dear Chronicle. My schedule:

April 9:
3:00pm  
Going Over Book Signing

April 10:
9:30am
Texas Teens 4 Libraries (TT4L) ARC signing
Grand Hyatt Hotel

10:00am                   
PANEL: “Tayshas Reading List and Authors”
Moderator Susan Schilling, Chair, Tayshas Committee 2012-2013

12:00pm
Texas Tea with YA Authors

Good Glory. I'm going to also make some time for some barbeque, even if that occurs at 4 AM in the morning. All thanks to Tayshas, Texas Teens 4 Libraries, Texas Tea, and Chronicle Books!

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Judging Teen Stories with a Remarkable Cast for the "It's All Write" Contest

Monday, April 16, 2012

A few months ago, Vicki Browne, the teen librarian with the Ann Arbor District Library, wrote to ask whether I might participate in the "It's All Write!" Short Story Contest, a project her library has, together with the Ann Arbor Book Festival, sponsored for the last 20 years.  According to the web site, more than 1,500 entries from young writers all around the world have been received for the contest over the years.  This year, 350 stories arrived.  

Winners of "It's All Write!" are compensated handsomely—with cash rewards, with publication in a booklet, and with an awards program that will be held, this year, on May 12th.  But perhaps most importantly of all, the winners know that they have been carefully read by judges who have invested their own lives in stories and words.  This year I join a remarkable slate of individuals in the judging process, and I am honored.  It is my hope that those young writers who read this blog will pay close attention to this program and start thinking about possibilities for next year's contest. 


Natalie Bakopoulos
     The Green Shore, Natalie’s debut novel is set in Athens and Paris, against the backdrop of the Greek military dictatorship and  centered around four memorable characters.  She received her MFA in Fiction from the University of Michigan.  She was also recognized as a 2010 PEN/O. Henry Award-winning author.

Judith Ortiz Cofer
     Critically acclaimed and widely published poet, novelist, and essayist Judith Ortiz Cofer’s  latest book, If I Could Fly, tells the story of 15 year old Doris, who learns that ‘she might have to fly far distances before she finds out where she belongs.  Judith writes extensively about the experience of being Puerto Rican and her identity as a woman and writer in the U.S.  Currently she is teaching literature and creative writing at the University of Georgia.

Kelly Milner Halls
     Kelly has had more than 25 books published, one of which is the amazing non-fiction title  Operation Rescue: Saving the Baghdad Zoo, which tells the story of remarkable animals and the team that worked to save them.   A recent release, Girl Meets Boy: Because There Are Two Sides to Every Story, is a collection that she edited with a lineup of YA authors with a he said/she said telling of each story. 
Her shorter nonfiction has been published in numerous publications.  She lives in Spokane, Washington.

Beth Kephart
       Acclaimed novelist for both teens and adults, Kephart currently teaches creative nonfiction workshop at the University of Pennsylvania. She is the winner of numerous grants, and the Speakeasy Poetry Prize, among other honors. Kephart’s essays are frequently anthologized, and she has judged numerous competitions.  Undercover  and House of Dance  were both named a best of the year by Kirkus and Bank Street. Nothing But Ghosts, A Heart is Not a Size and Dangerous Neighbors, were also critically acclaimed. Most recently, You Are My Only, tells the gripping stories of Emmy and Sophie, in alternating narratives, ‘of loss, imprisonment, and freedom regained.’
Nina LaCour
     Ms. LaCour received a MFA in Creative Writing from Mills College and currently teaches English at an independent high school.  She is also co-founder of ‘Write Teen’ a series of YA writing classes.  Hold Still, Nina’s first novel, was published in 2009 and is a William C. Morris Honor book, a Junior Library Guild selection, an ALA Best Book for Young Adults, and a Chicago Public Library’s Best of the Best Books of 2009.  Nina won the 2009 Northern California Book Award for Children’s Literature and was featured in Publisher’s Weekly as a Flying Starts Author.

Laura Resau
     With a background in cultural anthropology and ESL-teaching, award-winning author Laura Resau has lived and traveled in Latin America and Europe. Her experiences inspired her novels for young people-- What the Moon Saw, Red Glass, The Indigo Notebook, The Ruby Notebook, The Jade Notebook, Star in the Forest, and The Queen of Water. She lives with her family in Colorado.
Pat Schmatz
     Bluefish is the fourth teen novel for Pat Schmatz.  This latest book received a starred review from Horn Book, Bulletin of the Center for Children’s  Books, and School Library Journal.   In Bluefish, everything changes for thirteen-year-old Travis,  a new student who is trying to hide his illiteracy, when he meets a sassy classmate with her own secrets and a remarkable teacher. Pat currently lives in rural Wisconsin. 

Rita Williams-Garcia
     Rita Williams-Garcia’s work has been recognized by the Coretta Scott King Award Committee, PEN Norma Klein, American Library Association, and Parents’ Choice, among others. She recently served on the National Book Award Committee for Young People’s Literature and is on faculty at Vermont College MFA Writing for Children and Young People.
Winner of the 2011 Coretta Scott King Award AND the Newbery Honor Book, One Crazy Summer  is the story of three girls from Brooklyn who head out to California to stay with their mother, a poet, who ran off years before; the year is 1968.

Terry Trueman
     Stuck in Neutral, published in 2000, was a Printz Honor book, followed by Inside Out, Cruise Control, and No Right Turn.  Terry received his degree in creative writing from Eastern Washington University, with degrees in psychology and an MFA in creative writing , also from Eastern Washington. 
Terry Trueman is the father of two sons, and makes his home in Spokane.

Ned Vizzini
     Ned Vizzini is the author of It’s Kind of a Funny Story, Be More Chill, and Teen Angst? Naaah. . .  He has written for the New York Times, The Daily Beast, and season 2 of MTV’s Teen Wolf.  His work has been translated into seven languages and will soon be in Czech.  He is the co-author, with Chris Columbus, of the forthcoming fantasy-adventure series House of Secrets.  Forthcoming in the fall of 2012, is a new teen novel,  The Other Normals. 




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