16 Sep

YA Cafe: Interview with Julia Mayer

Posted in Interviews, Reading, Teen Lit, YA Cafe

Welcome Back to YA Cafe, where book lovers can gather and chat about teen literature. I’m your barista, along with Ghenet from All About Them Words.

Each Friday we pick from a menu of topics and share our thoughts on our respective blogs. We’ve also got plans brewing for interviews, events and even some exciting giveaways, so stay tuned! Join the discussion by responding in the comments, on your own blogs or on twitter using the hash tag #yacafe.

Today, Ghenet and I are really excited to unveil our very first video interview at YA Cafe.  A few weeks ago we met up with debut YA author Julia Mayer in New York and got a chance to chat with her about her first book: Eyes in the Mirror.  Some of the topics we covered:

  • Julia’s adventures in publishing Eyes in the Mirror
  • 826NYC, the awesome program where Julia wrote her first draft as a teen
  • Writing from different points of view
  • Seeing situations from multiple perspectives
  • And, of course, Julia’s best advice for aspiring authors

 

Now, without further ado, here’s the interview!

 

We hope you enjoyed watching the video interview!   Guess what?  There’s also a giveaway!  Ghenet and I managed to score an ARC of Eyes in the Mirror, which we got Julia to sign an now we’re going to give it to one of you.  Just leave a comment either here or at Ghenet’s blog and we’ll let Random.org pick a winner.  Contest is open until Wednesday, September 21 at 11:59pm ET.  We’ll announce the winner next Friday.

Keep reading.  Keep writing.  Keep being awesome!

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09 Sep

YA Cafe: New and Improved!

Posted in Reading, Teen Lit, YA Cafe

Hello all,

Today is just a quick post to give you an update about YA Cafe.  Ghenet and I have been brainstorming lots of fun new things to do on Fridays and we’re really excited to kick-start the new-and-improved YA Cafe next week, with a special feature on author Julia Mayer and her new book Eyes In the Mirror.  We’ll also be doing a giveaway!

Later this fall, we’ve got other fun things planned.  Also we were so excited by the YA Cafe Book Club that we’re planning to continue it, only with a slightly different twist so more people can participate without being limited by the book choices.

As always, we love hearing from you so if you have any suggestions of topics or YA-related issues you would like to see us cover, leave a comment or shoot one of us an email!

A huge thank you to everyone who’s supported this project so far!  You rock!

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26 Aug

YA Cafe Book Club: SWEETHEARTS by Sara Zarr

Posted in Reading, Teen Lit, YA Cafe

Welcome Back to YA Cafe, where book lovers can gather and chat about teen literature. I’m your barista, along with Ghenet from All About Them Words.

Each Friday we pick from a menu of topics and share our thoughts on our respective blogs. We’ve also got plans brewing for interviews, events and even some exciting giveaways, so stay tuned! Join the discussion by responding in the comments, on your own blogs or on twitter using the hash tag #yacafe.

Today we’re discussing Sara Zarr’s heart-breaking book: Sweethearts.  This book, about two childhood best friends who are separated, then reunited, is fraught with emotion and at the end I definitely found myself in tears.  (OK, so I admit I cry easily with books, but still.  This one was a tear-jerker.)  But today I’m not planning to gush about the book or blather on about how easily I cry (those ASPCA commercials on TV? Yep, I cry during those too).  No, today I want to talk about flashbacks.

Perhaps one of the most central elements of Sweethearts is the series of flashbacks that reveals a traumatic memory tying the childhood best friends together.  The book opens with a scene from this series and subsequent scenes are sprinkled throughout the first two-thirds of the novel.  So, what makes these flashbacks work?  What could be better?  Here’s my analysis.

5 Tips for Using Flashbacks in Your Novel

1) Put the reader in the scene.  In Sweethearts, all the back-story is revealed through actual flashbacks, not through exposition.  In these snippets of scenes, we’re right there with the characters, experiencing the moment with them rather than being told about the moment from an after-the-fact point of view.  By immersing the reader in the scene, the back-story feels more real and is much more effective at capturing the reader’s attention.

2) Consider verb tense and point of view.  One of the elements that struck me about Sweethearts was that all the flashback moments are in present tense, while the rest of the book is written in past tense.  What this does is that it adds immediacy to the flashback moments, as well as a sense of urgency.  Also, by using different tenses in the flashbacks than the real-time text, Zarr makes it easier for the reader to identify when we’re in flashback mode and when we’re back in the present.  This is a nifty technique that solves the problem of having to add headers to flashbacks with dates or what-have-you so that the reader knows where we are in the timeline.  The present tense serves as enough of a cue.

3) Don’t forget to bring the reader back.  The reason many writers are often encouraged to avoid flashbacks is because of a phenomenon dubbed “Disappearing Scene Syndrome” (I first heard this term at a lecture by author and teacher Peter Selgin).  What this means is that sometimes writers will get so wrapped up in the flashback that they forget to bring the reader back to the present.  Example: Your character is brushing her teeth and remembering a wild, crazy night she had partying with her girlfriends.  The story continues following the women as they tour the party circuit and we never come back to the scene in the present where the main character is brushing her teeth.  What Zarr does so beautifully in Sweethearts is that she always brings the reader back to the present after those intense flashback scenes.

4) Don’t make the flashback too long.  A corollary to the previous tip, be careful about making flashbacks that are too long so that the reader doesn’t forget where we are in the actual timeline.  The way Zarr resolves this problem is that she gives us a longer flashback right at the beginning (with a header and date so we know we’re in the past), but subsequent flashbacks are much shorter.  She also does a great job of cutting off the flashback at a cliff-hanger so that we have to keep turning pages to find out what really happened.  Again, a subtle technique, but very effective one.

5) Make sure there’s a pay-off.  This is my one quibble with the flashbacks in Sweethearts.  There is so much suspense and buildup to the grand finale that when we finally do discover what really happened, I’ll admit that I was slightly disappointed.  I thought that the result would be much more terrifying.  Don’t get me wrong, it was a painful scene (or series of scenes) to read, but I was expecting something much, much darker to be the end-result and when that didn’t happen, I felt like the author had led me to believe one thing and then given me another.  Again, let me underscore that the actual series of flashbacks are very scary and dark.  It’s just that with the rate of the build-up, I was expecting the climax of that sequence to be even darker than it ended up being.  But this is all a minor quibble, considering how artfully Sara Zarr handles the flashbacks otherwise.

Take-home Message: In the end, it’s all about building trust with the reader and making sure that the reader understands where the story is in time and place.  Flashbacks are tricky to handle well and the series in Sweethearts is artfully done.  If you’re writing a book that involves a series of flashbacks, I definitely recommend reading Sweethearts by Sara Zarr as an example of how to do them.  Actually, if you’re looking for a heartbreaking, heartfelt book, I would also recommend Sweethearts, because it’s just that: heartfelt and heartbreaking.

Want to read more about SWEETHEARTS: check out Ghenet’s response at All About Them Words.  Then share your thoughts with us in the comments or on your own blog.  (Don’t forget to leave a link in the comments so we can check it out!)

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23 Aug

YA Cafe Book Club Discussion Questions: SWEETHEARTS by Sara Zarr

Posted in Reading, Teen Lit, YA Cafe

This week is our last of the YA Cafe Summer Book Club sessions and we’ll be discussing Sweethearts by Sara Zarr.  I can’t believe the summer went by so fast!  Feels like just this morning we were announcing the book club idea and now we’re on our last book.  But don’t worry, Ghenet and I have lots of fun things planned for YA Cafe in the fall so stay tuned for more adventures in teen literature.

The Book Club Discussion posts will go up this Friday on both iggi&gabi and All About Them Words.  As always, you can share your thoughts in the comments or share a link and post your response on your own blog.  Also, don’t forget to join in the conversation on twitter, using the hash tag #YAcafe.  Here are a few discussion questions to get discussion going.

  1. Did you find that the cover and title represented what the story was really about?  How so or how not?
  2. What did you think of the story structure with the past revealed in short chunks?  Did you find it effective?
  3. How did you react when you finally found out what happened to Jennifer and Cameron in the past?  Was it surprising?  Scary?
  4. Secondary characters play an important role in this book.  Which secondary character resonated most with you and why?
  5. How you define yourself is a central theme in this story.  Jennifer goes through great pains to redefine herself as Jenna.  Have you ever had the experience of redefining yourself as someone new?  What was it like?
  6. What did you think of the ending and how it’s not a typical love story?

Can’t wait until Friday!  In the meantime, if you haven’t read Sweethearts, get your hands on a copy and read it!

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