No crickets, please!

Two new reviews to report today. Both readers seemed to have enjoyed Celia on the Run, but in very different ways. I love that! I love that the same characters and plot line, the same exact words in the same order, can have a unique impact on the person taking in the story that's different from other impressions on the same story. Plus, it's always helpful for me to hear the readers take, so I owe Francene at Poetic License and Mandy at I Read Indie a big thank you for sharing their thoughts on their blogs (and for the praise, of course!) If there weren't readers willing to take the time to post feedback, and I was left with a published novel and heard only crickets in response, I might start to wonder if somebody left a window open because I'm hearing crickets and I don't want to be hearing crickets. No crickets, please! Check out what these readers had to say:

http://francenecarroll13.blogspot.com/2012/07/celia-on-run.html#

http://twimom101bookblog.blogspot.com/

Character Recycling

I was invited to do a guest blog post on Actin' Up with Books and took the opportunity to write about "character recycling", how I've been known to salvage good characters from less-that-perfect manuscripts of my past and try them out in a new setting because I just can't leave them behind. Here's the full article: http://actinupwithbooks.blogspot.com/

Character Recycling
I have two dirty secrets. Sometimes I forget to recycle bottles and cans, and sometimes I recycle characters from past stories I’ve written. There’s no excuse for the bottles and cans, but I believe recycling a character can be a good thing.
 It’s almost like an in-depth character study, a trial run. I’ve created a person, compiled quirks, traits, and preferences, then tried them out in a setting or scenario. I’ve had practice with that particular character and really liked them, but the story was sub par, and I hate to lose a good character just because I couldn’t come through on the manuscript. I’ve written about 10 manuscripts over the last 4 years, most of them unfinished junk, a few keepers, and so far, just one that’s made it through publication (with Untreed Reads), but I feel no shame in sharing with you that Nick Novaczek, the main character from my debut novel, Celia on the Run, was a shy but admirable kid that was originally from a novel I’ve since abandoned, which was called The Trampoline. The original story didn’t quite work, but the character did.
 Armed with a great character, one I knew very very well from writing him all the way through a previous manuscript, I tried him out in a new setting, cast him opposite a wild and reckless beauty named Celia, and put them in a sorta stolen car on their way across the country for completely different reasons. Bingo! Nick was made to hopelessly crush on an ungrateful girl like Celia, he was meant to overcome his fears and jump off a bridge (among other things), and he was ready to come-of-age on the road trip of a lifetime.
Now that Nick Novaczek is out in the world in my first published novel, that’s it, I would never dream of recycling him. As for the countless other characters in my unfinished / unpublished work, they’re likely to get revamped, re-matched, and probably renamed before I’m done with them!

 

 

YA: On the Fringe of Adulthood, On the Fringe of a Genre

I was given the opportunity to write about a YA topic of my choice for a guest blog post on All-Consuming Media, and boy, I had so much to say. The whole genre classification thing is a bit limiting to me, and sub genres can get a little out there too, unless we're talking SciFi. The books I tend to enjoy the most are the ones that don't quite fit into any one genre, they're the misfits on the bookshelf. On a multiple choice test, they're "D. None of the Above". If I had to put Celia on the Run in between two books on a bookshelf (imagine for a moment the ebook was a real book and please know I wouldn't dream of comparing my writing to these awe-inspiring authors), I would put it in between In the Path of Falling Objects by Andrew Smith, and Amy and Roger's Epic Detour by Morgan Matson. I remember when I first began shopping my manuscript around in the summer of 2010, I purposefully left out the genre from my query letters because I was quite concerned with misleading anyone into thinking my writing was suitable for children. Celia on the Run is a story about young adults, and is appropriate for SOME young adults, but not all. I searched the web, looking for a simple tag for a not-so-simple book, and kept getting similar information, saying YA is classified as fiction FOR young adults or ABOUT young adults, so that's the route I ended up going.

In the end, once I had finished writing the guest blog post for All-Consuming Media, I finally figured out how to describe the genre of my debut novel: It's YA with a slap in the face.

Read the whole article here: http://tigersallconsumingbooks.blogspot.com/2012/07/guest-post-ya-on-fringe-of-adulthood-on.html

Review (with major spoilers) + another giveway!

Thanks to Lisa and her blog Adventures in Biblioland, there's a chance to win a free copy of Celia on the Run. Lisa got through the entire novel in just two days, loved the emotional ups and downs, got a little freaked out too, and she took the time to write a very thorough review (but its got major spoilers so don't read it unless you've already finished the book or you're one of those people who can't help but read the last page first...you know who you are!) http://fauvely.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/review-celia-on-run-sarah-mandell.html#

Enter the Giveaway!

If you're interested in winning a free copy of Celia on the Run, just enter the giveaway contest on a blog called "i loves to read". Anita Morgan, the reviewer, had some great feedback and comments and like so many other readers, she just didn't quite know what to expect in the end. I know that probably drives a lot of people nuts, not knowing what's ahead for the characters, but that's my favorite kind of story (to read and to write)! http://iloves2read.blogspot.com/2012/06/celia-on-run-sarah-mandel-win-free.html#