Friday, March 22, 2019

C. Lee McKenzie Q&A

C. Lee McKenzie has written 4 middle-grade and 4 YA novels.  In fact, her YA, The Princess of Las Pulgas, is not only one of my favorite YA's ever, but it is also one of my top books of 2014!  And here is a Q&A with C. Lee:


1.    What are your books about?

All of my YA characters confront issues that youth deal with. My first book was about self-abuse and healing. My second about loss and rebuilding a life. My third about illiteracy, neglect and the importance of cross-generational connections. My fourth dealt with bigotry. 

When I write for middle grade, I like to focus on adventure and fun, but I never leave out what I hope kids can get from their early reading experience--the importance of friendship, loyalty, and respect. I love to tuck history inside when I can. In The Great Time Lock Disaster the kids do some time travel and see Queen Victoria’s Coronation. In Some Very Messy Medieval Magic they meet Richard II. Since I’m fascinated by the California Gold Rush era, I had a lot of fun tying in my characters’ adventures in Sign of the Green Dragon to early Chinese mining history and mythology. 

2.    What made you decide to write novels?

I don’t think I made a conscious decision to write novels, but when I read about a study of Ivy League students that said 1 out of 5 of those interviewed admitted to some form of self-abuse, I decided to write an article about it. Then I discovered others much more qualified than I am had done that, somehow my article morphed into a story (Sliding on the Edge) about a girl and a grandmother and a horse named Magic. That was the beginning, and I kept going.

3.    What is your writing routine?

Honestly, I don't have one. I write long and hard. I take breaks. I take a lot of walks thinking about nothing but walking, then I go back to writing. Sometimes I write the end before the beginning (a lot of writers have told me they do, too) I write disconnected scenes and put them together. I write straight from beginning to end. The story comes down the way it will, and I’ve learned to step aside and never worry about routines.

4.    Do you belong to a writing group?

I’ve been in my writing group since 2007. I’ve meet them at various times, but we all live in different places so our critiques are done online. One is in France (you’ll be reading her work one day because she’s a really fine writer), one lives in Arizona and writes to contract. She’s also really a strong and interesting writer. One lives in New Jersey and is an award winning author. I’m so grateful to have these writers in my corner to keep me honest and give me good feedback.

5.    How did you get your publisher?  Do you have other books written that are
       waiting for publication?  Are there any in a drawer? 

My first two books I subbed directly to the publisher, and—hallelujah—they bought them. Unfortunately, the publisher folded their YA imprint, so I was sans publisher. I subbed my third and fourth novels to Evernight Teen and they took both books. I now have an agent, and I’m hoping a publisher will give the one she’s sending out a chance because I feel very strongly about it. I have three other books that I’m “cultivating” and hope to see in full bloom at some point. I won’t even go into the ones I’ve stashed in a folder called “Fits and Starts.” 

6.    Who edits your books?

My publishers do that for my young adult books and one of my middle grades. I did self-publish three middle grade novels, and for those I hired a professional editor. I learned that I must never do the final edits of my own books. DISASTER.

7.    How much time does it take from signed contract to published book?

It depends. With the big publishers it can take 2+ years after acquisition. With small presses about half that time. When you self-publish that’s up to you, but usually I take a year which includes a lot of editing, finding the right cover artist, laying out publicity and all kinds of chores that take a lot of planning.

8.    How do you come up with titles and covers?

Usually I don’t have trouble with finding a title. For my debut novel, the publisher chose Sliding on the Edge. I wanted the book to be titled Bad Ass Attitude. I still wish it had been, but authors don’t always have a say about things like that. All of the other titles I chose. In fact, I wrote Alligators Overhead because I already had that title in my head, and I wanted a story to go with it.

9.    How long does it take to write each book?

I often work on several projects at a time, but my guess is about a year. However, now that I’ve published several books, I seem to be slower. I’m guessing that’s because I know how much work comes after I publish, and I know how much of an uphill battle I’m facing to make my work stand out from the millions of other books flooding the market. I almost dread sending a book into the market because then my life is non-stop promotion.


10.  How many books do you write in a year? 

As I said, several, but none are really competed. Right now I have one book with my agent, one new book finished and marinating, and I have two others in various stages of completion. Come to think of it, I write like I read. I have the same number of books I’m reading in the same stages of completion. 

11.  Do you have a mentor? 

Nope. Just me. But I have a muse. I’ll send you a picture of him. My mother-in-law gave him to me years ago, and he sits on a book shelf and looks over my shoulder while I write. He’s quite demanding.

12.  Do your characters speak to you?

They keep me awake at night, but that’s good because I realize that when the characters aren’t talking to me, the book’s not working. That’s when I tuck it away and forget it. When I pull it up again later and the characters start jabbering at three a.m., then I know it’s time to write their story.

13.  Do your characters dictate what happens in your books?  Or do you know
       ahead of time where they’re going?

Both. I set the course and know where I want the story to go, but sometimes I let the characters take the lead. They often veer off course, but as long as they reveal the underlying core theme, they’re welcome to be in control. It’s kind of fun, actually, and usually when those characters charge ahead, the story really takes off.

Thanks for the great questions! It’s always fun to write about writing.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h59dYGrVQvs

The Princess of Las Pulgas, by C. Lee McKenzie - a YA that I LOVED


Monday, March 11, 2019

Another Author Event

We were back at A Great Good Place for Books on Thursday night.  This time, we went to see Taylor Jenkins Reid, author of Daisy Jones & the Six. Her book is the rage right now.  Her Goodreads rating is high (4.4/5), and, just like Where the Crawdads Sing, it's a Reese Witherspoon Book Club selection.  But here's where the books diverge.  Reese's production company bought the TV rights to the book BEFORE IT WAS DONE!  And then she sold it to Amazon Prime.  It WILL be showing up on TV either late 2020 or early 2021.  Casting will begin soon.

Another very interesting piece of information came out of the discussion Taylor got to cast the voice actors for the audiobook.  And at least three of them are well-known:  Jennifer Beals (Flashdance), Judy Greer (27 Dresses, The Wedding Planner), and Benjamin Bratt (Miss Congeniality, Traffic).  I don't think authors usually get that kind of control.  Pretty cool.  And leave it to GGP's owner, Kathleen, to get another big name author.  How does she do it?

Here are a few pictures from that night.






Friday, March 8, 2019

Pieces of Me: Rescuing My Kidnapped Daughters, by Lizbeth Meredith

A few months ago, my cousin, Richard, told me about a friend of his that he met in Alaska when he worked up there.  He was on the board of a women's shelter that the author, Lizbeth, worked at.  And she was trying to raise money to go to Greece and reclaim her 2 daughters, 4 and 6, who had been kidnapped by her ex-husband and taken back to his homeland.  Richard told me she wrote a book about her experiences, and I immediately bought it.  And it sat in my TBR pile...and sat...and sat...  Then a couple of weeks before we were going to see him and his wife again, I figured I should read it.  All I can say is Wow!  This is some book.

Let's get right to the punchline.  We find out on pages ix and x that Lizbeth was successful in getting her girls back.  And, today, they are adults and are doing fine.  You want to know the mark of a good writer? It's making you feel the tension and the uncertainty of a situation when you already know the outcome.  And let me tell you that there were definitely moments in Pieces of Me when I wondered what was going to happen next.  Did I forget that she got them back?  Nope.  Did I worry anyway while reading it?  Yep.

You all know my obsession with connecting with the at least the protagonist, whether it's a memoir, like this, or a fictional genre.  Did I connect with Lizbeth?  I must have because I teared up IN THE PROLOGUE!  Are you kidding me?  But I will also say that there was humor right off the bat.  Don't get me wrong. This book is most decidedly not funny.  But it helped to break up the drama a little bit. Other than that, though, I had moments of outrage and uttered a "few" mild expletives.  There are even some moments when it was all done that hit Lizbeth as if she had been in a war.  When you read the book, I think you will feel the same way that I felt.  Memoirs can be sketchy and unpredictable.  This is one that I think everybody will get wrapped up in. Because of what Lizbeth had to do, and then did, you won't be sorry you read it.




P.S.  If you live in the Bay Area, Lizbeth is flying down from Alaska to come to our RBC meeting on March 20.  How cool is that?  For those who are interested in attending, and don't get the regular RBC emails, contact me at lloydrrussell@gmail.com, and I will give you details.

P.P.S.  I am using a new computer.  Sorry about all the random stuff on the left of the page.  I will make sure that doesn't appear next time.