Archive for June, 2014

Celeste Ng On ALL THINGS CONSIDERED

Monday, June 30th, 2014

Everything I NeverOne of our Penguin First Flights authors was featured on NPR’s All Things Considered on Saturday, Celeste Ng, author of Everything I Never Told You, (Penguin Press). Host Arun Rath says the reader is hooked from the book’s opening line, “Lydia is dead, but they don’t know it yet.”

Learn more about how the Ng structured the novel in  our online chat with the author.

Become a member of Penguin’s First Flights program here.

NIGHTLY NEWS On The Newbery Winner

Saturday, June 28th, 2014

If you’re feeling discouraged about the future of books and reading, just look at the kids in the following video.

The story, created for NBC Nightly News, features author Kate DiCamillo talking to a very receptive group of kids about her struggle to become an author. It did not appear on Friday night’s broadcast, but is in the Nightly News Web site.

DiCamillo will accept the Newbery Award tomorrow night at ALA in Las Vegas for Flora and Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures, (Candlewick Press)

Ten Titles to Know, Week of 6/26

Friday, June 27th, 2014

One Plus One  Last Letter -- hardcover  Last Letter Reprint.

The lead title next week, in terms of holds and library orders is One Plus One by Jojo Moyes, (Viking/Pamela Dorman; Recorded Books; Thorndike). British author Moyes published 12 novels in the same number of years, recently breaking onto best seller lists in 2012 with Me Before You, a novel about the relationship between a quadriplegic and his caregiver that also looked at the issue of assisted suicide. It was such a departure for the author that she worried it would be a tough sell, but it was quite the opposite.

To signal that this book was not a traditional romance,  it was given a distinctive all-type cover. The book turned out to be so successful that the format is now being applied to all of Moyes’s novels (see above; a before and after of one of her earlier romances and its just-released paperback reincarnation). Me Before You was followed the next year by The Girl You Left Behind (Penguin/Pamela Dorman; Thorndike), a historical romance, which was more familiar territory for Moyes.

One Plus One is a contemporary romance and a LibraryReads pick:

“A single mom, her math genius daughter, her eye-shadow-wearing stepson, a wealthy computer geek and a smelly dog all get into a car…it sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it’s actually another charming novel from Jojo Moyes. It’s more of a traditional romance than Me Before You, but will also appeal to fans of quirky, hard-working characters. A quick read and perfect for summer.” — Emily Wichman, Clermont County Public Library, Milford, OH

Naqntucket Brides  9781250042965_0e8e0

Also showing heavy holds are two very different romances, as indicated by their covers, the second book in Jude Deveraux Nantucket Brides trilogy, For all Time (RH/Ballantine; Thorndike) and Sherrilyn Kenyon, Born of Fury (Macmillan/St. Martin’s Press; Macmillan Audio)

Readers Advisory

DollbabyDollbaby. Laura Lane McNeal, (Penguin/Pamela Dorman)

One of the titles in our Penguin Debut Authors program (see our online chat from last week), this is also a LibraryReads pick:

“In this coming-of-age story set in the Civil Rights era, Ibby is dropped off at the home of her eccentric grandmother in New Orleans after the death of her beloved father. Filled with colorful characters, family secrets and lots of New Orleans tidbits, this book will appeal to fans of Saving Ceecee Honeycutt.” — Vicki Nesting, St. Charles Parish Library, Destrehan, LA

Last Night at the Blue AngelLast Night at the Blue Angel, Rebecca Rotert, HarperCollins/Morrow

The HarperCollins Library Marketing team are big fans of this debut and  buzzed it at ALA Midwinter (listen to the Book Buzz here). About a jazz singer and  her young daughter in 1960’s Chicago, it has inspired raptures among the prepub reviewerss. LJ — “Rotert’s musical background informs Naomi’s passion for performance, but it is her heartbreaking portrait of Sophie [her daughter], so wise yet so vulnerable, that readers will remember long after the final page.” It was starred by Booklist and  Kirkus left behind the snark to call it a “tale that’s poignant, poetic and heart-wrenching throughout.”

Liberty's TorchLiberty’s Torch: The Great Adventure to Build the Statue of Liberty, Elizabeth Mitchell, Atlantic Monthly Press

This patriotic holiday, recommend a book that debunks many of our notions about our most famous monumental sculpture. Originally planned for a spot overlooking the newly constructed Suez Canal, by a French sculptor trying to make a name for himself, it was finally, and reluctantly, accepted by the U.S. There’s even a weird  Real Housewives of New York connection. One of the “housewives,” Countess LuAnn de Lesseps gets her title from her marriage to one of the descendants of the builder of the Suez Canal, Ferdinand de Lesseps.

In the Media

FriendshipFriendship, Emily Gould, (Macmillan/FSG)

Featured in the New York Times “Fashion & Style” section last week, former Gawker editor Gould has made a living by talking about herself. Her 8,000 word confessional was featured on the cover of the NYT Magazine in 2008. The NYT says, “a case could be made that Ms. Gould’s warts-and-all brand of self-exposure anticipated a wave of confessional writing that paved the way for Girls, Lena Dunham’s quasi-autobiographical hit on HBO.”

Her novel is about young women in New York who are very much like herself (of course). Booklist calls it “a savvy first novel that, in piercing prose, zeroes in on modern ennui and the catalysts that force even the most apathetic out of their complacency.”

Diary of a Mad DivaDiary of a Mad Diva, Joan Rivers, (Penguin/Berkley)

Speakng of oversharing — as the publisher’s promo says about this author, “You know what she says out loud. Can you imagine what she writes in her diary?” and goes on to say:

Anais Nin, Anne Frank and Sylvia Plath wrote the world’s most famous diaries. And where are they today? Dead. But the world’s OTHER great diarist, Joan Rivers, is alive and kicking. And complaining.

In the extraordinary tradition of The Habit of Being: Letters of Flannery O’Connor and George Orwell’s Diaries, comes an intimate and enriching glimpse into the mind of the most illuminating woman-of-letters of her generation—the provocative exploration of an age in which she has lived on and on and on and on.

Tie-ins

OutlanderOutlander (Starz Tie-in Edition), Diana Gabaldon (RH/Bantam trade pbk; RH/Dell, Mass Mkt Pbk)

Series begins on STARZ, 8/9/2014.

Most WantedA Most Wanted Man, John le Carre, (S&S/Scribner; S&S Audio)

This is one of Philip Seymour Hoffman’s final movies (God’s Pocket, based on the book by Pete Dexter, was released on May 9; he will also appear in the two upcoming Mockingjay movies). The movie opens in a limited run on July 25.

Guardians  Guardians Prose

Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy

Several tie-ins are being released for what is expected to be Marvel’s huge summer blockbuster, which opens Aug. 1, including Marvel’s “first prose novel,” Rocket Raccoon & Groot: Steal the Galaxy!   See our full list of tie-ins on our downloadable spreadsheet — Guardians of the Galaxy Tie-ins

Rocket, a gun-totting raccoon and Groot, his companion/body guard, a tree (shown in the latest trailer, below) are expected to be a particular hit with kids.

LEFTOVERS Begins Sunday

Thursday, June 26th, 2014

The Leftovers  Leftovers Tie-in

The HBO series premiere of The Leftovers, based on Tom Perrotta’s novel, begins on Sunday.

It is the #1 People Pick for the week — “The show is a sinister nightmare, and it holds you like one.”

Time magazine’s critic is also a fan. His review is headlined, “It’s gloomy, it’s slow — and it’s absolutely gorgeous.”

Others, however, question if it will connect with viewers.

SF ChronicleViewers may envy those who vanished

New York magazine –HBO’s The Leftovers Is All Bleakness All the Time

Boston HeraldLeftovers nothing but reheated tripe

San Jose Mercury News —  HBO’s The Leftovers is a drab downer

Author Perrotta, recently talked to WordandFilm.com about his hopes for the  series.

HBO has just released a video on the making of the adaptation:

Up Next: LOOKING FOR ALASKA

Thursday, June 26th, 2014

Paper Towns   Looking For Alaska

It’s going to be a race to see which John Green novel hits screens next. The screenwriting team behind The Fault In Our Stars is at work on John Green’s 2008 novel, Paper Towns (Penguin/Dutton), with Nat Wolff, who played Isaac in TFIOS, set to star. In addition, Green tweeted yesterday,

So excited to announce that the brilliant filmmaker Sarah Polley will be writing and directing a film adaptation of Looking for Alaska. I’m a HUGE fan of Sarah’s movies, and her ideas about Looking for Alaska are really wonderful, and I am SO VERY EXCITED.

He has good reason to be excited. Polley wrote and directed the moving Away From Her, starring Julie Christie, adapted from Alice Munro’s short story “The Bear Came Over the Mountain.” It was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Looking for Alaska, published in 2005, (Penguin/Dutton), was Green’s first novel, and it won the Printz Award.

Both Paper Towns and Looking for Alaska were optioned shortly after they were published, but it took the success of TFIOS to get the projects moving.

Teaser Trailer for MOCKINGJAY Part 1

Wednesday, June 25th, 2014

Uh, oh, as the camera pans back, look who is standing on President Snow’s right.

Part 1 arrives November 21 and Part 2 the following year, Nov. 20, 2015.

Casting LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS

Tuesday, June 24th, 2014

Light Between Oceans  The Last Apprentice: Seventh Son  Tulip Fever

It was just announced that Swedish actress Alicia Vikander is finalizing a deal with Dreamworks to star in an adaptation of the 2012 summer hit, The Light Between Oceans by M.L. Stedman (S&S/Scribner). Deadline reports it is one of the roles the “brightest young actresses have been trying for.” Michael Fassbender is already set to star, with Derek Cianfrance directing.

She is also being offered another coveted role, to star in The Danish Girl, based on the 2001 novel by David Ebershoff (Penguin), about one of the first men to have a sex-change operation, and his relationship with his wife.  The project has has been in the works for several years, and other actresses having been announced for the role of the wife, including Gwyneth Paltrow and Charlize Theron.  At one point, Nicole Kidman was set to play Einar Wegener/Lili Elbe, but earlier this year, it was announced that the film would take a different direction, with a male actor, Eddie Redmayne, taking on that role. Filming is expected to begin this fall.

You could do a whole display based on the 25-year-old Alicia Vikander’s book-related projects. In February, she will appear in Seventh Son, based on the first two books in The Last Apprentice series by Joseph Delaney. She stars as Vera Brittain in the upcoming Testament of Youth, based on the Brittain’s classic WW I memoir. Currently, she is filming Tulip Fever, based on the novel by Deborah Moggach (who also wrote The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel). In 2012, she starred in A Royal Affair, based on the novel by Danish writer Bodil Steensen-Leth and had a supporting role in Anna Karenina.

Holds Alert Deux: THE VACATIONERS

Tuesday, June 24th, 2014

The VacationersThe Entertainment Weekly blog just added another voice to the chorus of excitement over The Vacationers by Emma Straub, (Penguin/Riverhead) — see our holds alert from two weeks ago (and our prediction that this would be a breakout).

Entertainment Weekly gives a pitch for it being THE 2014 Summer Must-Read:

It’s kind of like a Jonathan Tropper novel in that it’s super-readable and funny and a total page-turner, but it also has a lot of smart things to say about relationships and love and big messy families. It’s light but not just empty calories — ideal for the beach!

Several libraries have ordered more copies, but holds continue to outstrip ordering.

The Pearl Bump

Tuesday, June 24th, 2014

There’s a rival to the Colbert Bump — the Pearl Bump.

T.S. SpivetThe three under-the-radar books that Nancy Pearl recommended on NPR’s Morning Edition yesterday all made significant jumps on Amazon’s sales rankings.

The book she called “fabulous, fabulous,” The Selected Works Of T. S. Spivet by Reif Larsen, (Penguin Press, 2009) broke in to the top 100, rising to #80.

Meanwhile, Colbert featured an author on his show yesterday who hardly needs the bump, John Green. His book, The Fault in Our Stars, continues at #1.

Penguin Young Readers Live Chat

Monday, June 23rd, 2014

Join us any time between 5 and 6 p.m. today.

Live Blog Live Chat with Django Wexler, THE FORBIDDEN LIBRARY
 Live Chat with Django Wexler, THE FORBIDDEN LIBRARY(06/23/2014) 
4:38
Nora - EarlyWord: 
We will begin our live online chat with Django Wexler in about 15 minutes
Monday June 23, 2014 4:38 Nora - EarlyWord
4:39
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Meanwhile, here’s the cover of the book…
Monday June 23, 2014 4:39 Nora - EarlyWord
4:39
Nora - EarlyWord
Published by Kathy Dawson Books, Penguin Young Readers
Monday June 23, 2014 4:39 
4:40
Nora - EarlyWord: 
And an outline of the plot (from publisher):

"When Alice’s father goes down in a shipwreck, she is sent to live with her uncle Geryon—an uncle she’s never heard of and knows nothing about. He lives in an enormous manor with a massive library that is off-limits to Alice. But then she meets a talking cat. And even for a rule-follower, when a talking cat sneaks you into a forbidden library and introduces you to an arrogant boy who dares you to open a book, it’s hard to resist. Especially if you’re a reader to begin with. Soon Alice finds herself INSIDE the book, and the only way out is to defeat the creature imprisoned within. It seems Geryon is more than he says he is. But then, so is Alice."
Monday June 23, 2014 4:40 Nora - EarlyWord
4:41
Nora - EarlyWord: 

It’s had good response from reviewers:

Booklist -- "It's a joy to watch the dutiful Alice develop her innate curiosity and become a proactive, resourceful heroine, matching wits with snarky cats, dangerous beasts, and a certain smug boy. This is a charming, adventuresome fantasy from a promising new author."


Horn Book - “By giving the richly textured literary adventures "teeth" and by placing subplots both inside and outside the books, Wexler dexterously avoids the "it's only a story" pitfall that might distance readers from the action, while the wondrous Library will gratify book lovers and fantasy experts alike.”

School Library Journal -- "Wexler ingeniously creates an inventive world with interesting creatures and frightening situations."

Monday June 23, 2014 4:41 Nora - EarlyWord
4:59
Nora - EarlyWord: 

I see chat participants gathering!

You can send your questions through at any time. They'll go into a queue, and we'll submit as many of them as we can to the author before the end of the chat.

Don’t worry about typos – we’ll make them too!

Monday June 23, 2014 4:59 Nora - EarlyWord
5:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 

Here’s our moderator Lisa Von Drasek. Say hi, Lisa!



Monday June 23, 2014 5:00 Nora - EarlyWord
5:00
lisa von drasek: 
Hello, everyone!, I greet you today from the University of Wisconsin Student Union. Its a beautiful day here on the water.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:00 lisa von drasek
5:01
lisa von drasek: 
Madison
Monday June 23, 2014 5:01 lisa von drasek
5:01
Nora - EarlyWord: 

You're a long way from home -- on your way to ALA?



Monday June 23, 2014 5:01 Nora - EarlyWord
5:02
lisa von drasek: 
Not yet...just had a visit today with a Kerlan Friend, Lois Ehlert in Milwaukee and we are on our way home to the Twin Cities. Stopped at the U for our on-line chat.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:02 lisa von drasek
5:02
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I see Django is in the house -- say hi!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:02 Nora - EarlyWord
5:03
Django Wexler: 
Hi!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:03 Django Wexler
5:03
Django Wexler: 
Welcome, everybody!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:03 Django Wexler
5:03
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Those of you joining us -- say hi to Django.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:03 Nora - EarlyWord
5:04
lisa von drasek: 
Hi Django. How do you pronounce your first name?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:04 lisa von drasek
5:04
Django Wexler: 
Like Jango, without the D.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:04 Django Wexler
5:04
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
Hi Django and Lisa, glad to be joining in today!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:04 Guest
5:04
Django Wexler: 
(Just like in the Quentin Tarantino movie.)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:04 Django Wexler
5:04
[Comment From MI LibrarianMI Librarian: ] 
Hi Django -- from the shores of Lake Michigan!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:04 MI Librarian
5:05
lisa von drasek: 
Django,

can you say a little about why as a published writer for adults that you turned your talent to a a solid middle grade fantasy?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:05 lisa von drasek
5:05
[Comment From school librarianschool librarian: ] 
And hi from Maryland.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:05 school librarian
5:05
[Comment From Cat LoverCat Lover: ] 
Hi from Ohio
Monday June 23, 2014 5:05 Cat Lover
5:06
Django Wexler: 
Sure. So, I started writing The Forbidden Library back before I *was* a published author for adults.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:06 Django Wexler
5:06
lisa von drasek: 
you were writing both at the same time... can you timeline that for me?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:06 lisa von drasek
5:06
Django Wexler: 
I'd gotten an agent for The Thousand Names, and he was shopping it around to publishers, but I needed something else to work on while that was happening.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:06 Django Wexler
5:07
Nora - EarlyWord
Monday June 23, 2014 5:07 
5:07
lisa von drasek: 

Why did you write a kids book?

Monday June 23, 2014 5:07 lisa von drasek
5:07
Django Wexler: 
Let's see. I signed with Seth (my agent) in fall 2012. Rewrote Thousand Names that Winter. We submitted it in January 2013, and that's around when I started writing Forbidden Library.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:07 Django Wexler
5:07
Django Wexler: 
Part of the reason I went with a kid's book was that it fit the idea I had, but part of it was because I wanted to write something shorter.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:07 Django Wexler
5:08
lisa von drasek: 
can you talk about who you liked to read...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:08 lisa von drasek
5:08
Django Wexler: 
Thousand Names is gigantic, and I was planning sequels, so I needed something that wouldn't take up quite the same amount of time.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:08 Django Wexler
5:08
lisa von drasek: 
what books influenced you?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:08 lisa von drasek
5:08
lisa von drasek: 
kids and adult?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:08 lisa von drasek
5:09
Django Wexler: 
Lets' see. For kids books I've always liked a bunch of good fantasy MG and YA authors.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:09 Django Wexler
5:09
Django Wexler: 
I love Phillip Pullman, Phillip Reeve, JK Rowling obviously, Jonathon Stroud, and Terry Pratchett.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:09 Django Wexler
5:10
Django Wexler: 
On the adult side, I love guys like George R. R. Martin, Joe Abercrombie, Steven Erikson, and China Mieville.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:10 Django Wexler
5:10
Django Wexler: 
I'm really attracted to things with an ambiguous morality -- that's a big part of Forbidden Library, filtered into the world of a kid's book.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:10 Django Wexler
5:10
lisa von drasek: 
Librarians, I see a lot of humor in the FORBIDDEN LIBRARY. any favorite moments for those who have read?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:10 lisa von drasek
5:12
lisa von drasek: 
one of mine was .."You don't get to say what's creepy , your a talking cat....you're creepy..

do you make yourself laugh when you write?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:12 lisa von drasek
5:12
lisa von drasek: 
I was on the edge of my seat...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:12 lisa von drasek
5:12
Django Wexler: 
Sometimes, or at least smile. If it makes me laugh when I come back to it later, I know it's a good line.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:12 Django Wexler
5:12
Django Wexler: 
Ashes gets most of the good lines.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:12 Django Wexler
5:12
Django Wexler: 
But then he's a cat, so he obviously would.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:12 Django Wexler
5:13
[Comment From Cat LoverCat Lover: ] 
The cat SHOULD get the good lines!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 Cat Lover
5:13
lisa von drasek: 
You really captured cat personalities with Ashes and Mother. Do you have any cats?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 lisa von drasek
5:13
Django Wexler: 
Clearly!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 Django Wexler
5:13
Django Wexler: 
Yes, I have two cats.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 Django Wexler
5:13
lisa von drasek: 
picture please?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 lisa von drasek
5:13
Django Wexler
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 
5:13
Django Wexler: 
They are Sakaki and Tomo.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:13 Django Wexler
5:14
lisa von drasek: 
Nice
Monday June 23, 2014 5:14 lisa von drasek
5:14
Django Wexler: 
The thing about cats is that it seems so obvious, if they COULD talk, what kind of personality they'd have.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:14 Django Wexler
5:14
[Comment From Cat LoverCat Lover: ] 
You DO know what you're talking about!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:14 Cat Lover
5:14
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
What beauties! and inspirations!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:14 Guest
5:14
lisa von drasek: 
can you tell me a little about your writing day?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:14 lisa von drasek
5:15
Django Wexler: 
They are awesome. I think Ending looks like Sakaki, although Sakaki is scared of everything.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:15 Django Wexler
5:15
lisa von drasek: 
Do you have a day job?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:15 lisa von drasek
5:15
Django Wexler: 
Usually I try to get two sessions of writing in, one in the morning and one in the afternoon.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:15 Django Wexler
5:15
Django Wexler: 
So it's like, morning writing, lunch, taking care of misc. stuff like twitter, publicity etc, then more writing.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:15 Django Wexler
5:15
Django Wexler: 
Then computer games and whatnot.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:15 Django Wexler
5:16
lisa von drasek: 
what is your twitter?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:16 lisa von drasek
5:16
Django Wexler: 
I quit my day job (at Microsoft) about two years ago.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:16 Django Wexler
5:16
Django Wexler: 
@DjangoWexler -- come say hi!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:16 Django Wexler
5:16
Django Wexler: 
There's a lot of good stuff on my website too at http://www.djangowexler.com
Monday June 23, 2014 5:16 Django Wexler
5:17
lisa von drasek: 
I was just reading about the lack of "strong women characters" Alice is not only smart and brave but also a bit snarky for the time.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:17 lisa von drasek
5:17
Django Wexler: 
In particular check out the Forbidden Library art page, I love that stuff! http://djangowexler.com/for...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:17 Django Wexler
5:17
lisa von drasek: 
the art in the book was done by a friend...how did that come about?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:17 lisa von drasek
5:18
Django Wexler: 
See, people misunderstand what "strong" means there. I see a lot of fantasy authors think they're making their women characters "strong" by letting them kill hundreds of orcs or whatever.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:18 Django Wexler
5:18
Django Wexler: 
That's not what "strong" means in this context. It's about strong *characters*, which means they have to have their own story. If a woman can kick ass, but her role is still "the hero's girlfriend", that's not a strong character.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:18 Django Wexler
5:18
Django Wexler: 
Hmm. My friend didn't actually to the art that's IN the books.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:18 Django Wexler
5:19
lisa von drasek: 
oh, I misunderstood
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 lisa von drasek
5:19
Django Wexler: 
The US art was done by Alexander Jansson, and the UK art by David Wyatt.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 Django Wexler
5:19
lisa von drasek: 
The characters are the opposite of two-dimentionals, do you have full biographies and backstory written for each?....

….do they surprise you as you write?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 lisa von drasek
5:19
Django Wexler: 
But several friends of mine have been kind enough to do art for me based on the book, which you can read here: http://djangowexler.com/for...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 Django Wexler
5:19
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I was just looking at the U.K. cover on your Web site-- So different.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 Nora - EarlyWord
5:19
Nora - EarlyWord
Monday June 23, 2014 5:19 
5:20
Django Wexler: 
I love the UK internal artwork, very wood-cut style. It has a great old-fashioned feel.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:20 Django Wexler
5:20
Django Wexler: 
I wouldn't say I have *full* biographies? I generally make up what I need as I go along.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:20 Django Wexler
5:20
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I'll post some of those.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:20 Nora - EarlyWord
5:20
Django Wexler: 
I feel like if you have a good sense of who a character IS, you can tell the kind of backstory he or she might have.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:20 Django Wexler
5:21
lisa von drasek: 
can we talk how your fairy is really creepy and scary,...where did that come from?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:21 lisa von drasek
5:21
Django Wexler: 
I do have notes on the backstory of the older characters, like Ending and Geryon.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:21 Django Wexler
5:21
Django Wexler: 
When I started the book, I decided I didn't want to use any "stock" fantasy creatures. Fairies, elves, dragons, etc.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:21 Django Wexler
5:21
Django Wexler: 
So any time I included something like that, I would put some kind of a twist in it to make it unique.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:21 Django Wexler
5:22
Django Wexler: 
So Vespidian, the fairy, is creepy and scary looking, with a bunch of wasp-like characteristics. (I hate wasps.)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:22 Django Wexler
5:22
Nora - EarlyWord
From the U.K. edition
Monday June 23, 2014 5:22 
5:22
Django Wexler: 
The Dragon, which you can see in that picture, has eight legs and six eyes, and is kind of alien-looking.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:22 Django Wexler
5:23
lisa von drasek: 
Alice's empathy is as much a strength as her quick wits. Was that an attribute from the start?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:23 lisa von drasek
5:23
Django Wexler: 
The elves had needle-like hair which stands up into spikes when they get startled. Etc.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:23 Django Wexler
5:23
Django Wexler: 
Alice really evolved as a character during the book. I always knew I wanted her to be intelligent, hard-working, and a little bit cynical and smart-alecky.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:23 Django Wexler
5:24
Django Wexler: 
But as I went along, her empathy became more important. It's really one of the biggest points of the series -- it's what makes Alice different from the other Readers.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:24 Django Wexler
5:24
lisa von drasek: 
it seems that you have a gift for the cute and threatening at the same time. Anything like that in your real life?f
Monday June 23, 2014 5:24 lisa von drasek
5:24
Django Wexler: 
Hmm. I have a stuffed animal collection that includes various cute monsters.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:24 Django Wexler
5:24
lisa von drasek: 
Hah
Monday June 23, 2014 5:24 lisa von drasek
5:24
Nora - EarlyWord
This one gives me the chills -- like TRUE DETECTIVE!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:24 
5:25
Django Wexler: 
I have a cute Cthulu and Darth Vader
Monday June 23, 2014 5:25 Django Wexler
5:25
Django Wexler: 
Cats are a bit like that to be honest. They are adorable, but also full of sharp bits.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:25 Django Wexler
5:26
lisa von drasek: 
I could see these adventures translating easily to other medium...movie and/or game...plans?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 lisa von drasek
5:26
Django Wexler: 
None at the moment, but we're certainly out there. I have a film agent, etc
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 Django Wexler
5:26
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
Thanks for the UK art Nora--beautiful!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 Guest
5:26
[Comment From Cat LoverCat Lover: ] 
Well said!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 Cat Lover
5:26
Django Wexler: 
people kept asking about Thousand Names and when it was going to be a movie.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 Django Wexler
5:26
lisa von drasek: 
The protagonist was not aware of her powers is not unusual start. What is unusual is the magical powers are attributed to her being a Reader. Can you describe what that is?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 lisa von drasek
5:26
Django Wexler: 
But I think Forbidden Library would be better suited to it.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:26 Django Wexler
5:27
Django Wexler: 
So, in Alice's world magical powers are based on the ability to activate magical text inscribed in books.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:27 Django Wexler
5:27
Django Wexler: 
Which they called capital-R Reading.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:27 Django Wexler
5:28
Django Wexler: 
The most basic ability of the Reader is to open these special books and use them, either to go to a world inside them or to pass through a portal to another place.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:28 Django Wexler
5:28
Django Wexler: 
Eventually they learn to create them, too, out of little bits of raw magic they fish out of other books and cram together.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:28 Django Wexler
5:29
Django Wexler: 
A particular type of book, called a prison-book, lets them bind magical creatures and use their powers.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:29 Django Wexler
5:29
[Comment From MD. school LibrarianMD. school Librarian: ] 
I love the idea of the Reader literally entering the book. Where did that come from?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:29 MD. school Librarian
5:29
Django Wexler: 
I'm not entirely sure! It's something I've always wanted to do something with.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:29 Django Wexler
5:29
Django Wexler: 
The idea of a library where the books contain worlds has been kicking around in my head for a long time.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:29 Django Wexler
5:30
lisa von drasek: 
The world building in Forbidden Library is detailed and unique yet it is easy to suspend disbelief ...

Would you be able to say to a kid if you liked __________ book, you will like mine.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:30 lisa von drasek
5:30
[Comment From MD. school LibrarianMD. school Librarian: ] 
it's a great metaphor -- books can change you.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:30 MD. school Librarian
5:30
[Comment From MD. school LibrarianMD. school Librarian: ] 
"there is not frigate like a book"
Monday June 23, 2014 5:30 MD. school Librarian
5:30
Django Wexler: 
There's an anime (Japanese cartoon) called Yami to Boushi to Hon no Tabibito (roughly "Travellers in Darkness with Book and Hat") that has roughly that theme, which I saw a long time ago.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:30 Django Wexler
5:31
Django Wexler: 
Lisa, hmm, I'm not really sure? It's hard to compare books directly that way.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:31 Django Wexler
5:31
lisa von drasek: 
okay
Monday June 23, 2014 5:31 lisa von drasek
5:31
Django Wexler: 
When I was writing it I thought of "Harry Potter Book 1" as my target demographic in terms of roughly the kind of people I was writing for.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:31 Django Wexler
5:31
Django Wexler: 
But that was more an age group/vocabulary thing.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:31 Django Wexler
5:32
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
Are you bothered when the book is compared to others? I've seen it compared to Harry Potter (isn't EVERY fantasy) and INKHEART.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 Jersey Librarian
5:32
Django Wexler: 
Bothered, not particularly?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 Django Wexler
5:32
Django Wexler: 
I mean, comparing something to Harry Potter these days, as you say, doesn't mean much because everything is.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 Django Wexler
5:32
lisa von drasek: 
I would say that you achieved that! What they have in common for me is - fast paced adventure, great story AND a pleasure to read aloud.

And I don't say that lightly
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 lisa von drasek
5:32
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
Are you influenced by Anime?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 Jersey Librarian
5:32
Django Wexler: 
There's definitely some similarity with Inkheart (which I actually haven't read)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:32 Django Wexler
5:33
Django Wexler: 
But I think the point of the story is very different.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:33 Django Wexler
5:33
Django Wexler: 
Yes, I'm definitely influenced by anime.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:33 Django Wexler
5:33
Django Wexler: 
I did some Japanese in college, and that's always been one of my hobbies.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:33 Django Wexler
5:33
lisa von drasek: 
yes, I would agree....
Monday June 23, 2014 5:33 lisa von drasek
5:33
Django Wexler: 
They do children's TV *way* better than we do, at least until recently.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:33 Django Wexler
5:34
Django Wexler: 
Especially in the MG age range.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:34 Django Wexler
5:34
lisa von drasek: 
Is there an Anime series you would recommend to librarians who may not be familiar with the genre?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:34 lisa von drasek
5:34
Django Wexler: 
Ooh, that's tough.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:34 Django Wexler
5:34
lisa von drasek: 
yes indeed, tough questions here!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:34 lisa von drasek
5:35
Django Wexler: 
The Miyazaki movies are always a go-to. (Spirited Away, Nausicaa, Princess Mononoke, Totoro, etc.)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:35 Django Wexler
5:35
lisa von drasek: 
Oh yes! Totoro! Spirited away!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:35 lisa von drasek
5:35
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
Love those!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:35 Guest
5:35
Django Wexler: 
A lot of the stuff I consider favorites is a bit dark for kid.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:35 Django Wexler
5:36
Django Wexler: 
I actually write a column called "Lost in Animeland" at SF Signal about anime for non-anime-fans: http://www.sfsignal.com/arc...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:36 Django Wexler
5:36
lisa von drasek: 
Dark! Dark! you don't consider Forbidden Library dark???!!!!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:36 lisa von drasek
5:36
Django Wexler: 
The Forbidden Library is as dark as I could get away with in a book for ten-year-olds.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:36 Django Wexler
5:36
lisa von drasek: 
thanks for the column link..
Monday June 23, 2014 5:36 lisa von drasek
5:37
Django Wexler: 
Like I said, I tend to be a fan of stuff that's at least a little ambiguous.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:37 Django Wexler
5:37
lisa von drasek: 
It is dark as childhood is dark but you have a thread of humor that saves it from being oppressive.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:37 lisa von drasek
5:37
Django Wexler: 
For me one of the most fun things about The Forbidden Library is that Alice doesn't really know who the good guys are.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:37 Django Wexler
5:38
lisa von drasek: 
ambiguous! Alice doesn't know?!! I don't KNOW! When is the sequel!!! I am dying here!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:38 lisa von drasek
5:38
Django Wexler: 
It always bugged me in kid's books where the Wise Old Mentor comes on and says, "By the way, this is who is good and this is who is evil."
Monday June 23, 2014 5:38 Django Wexler
5:38
Django Wexler: 
How come Wise Old Mentor gets to decide that? Who appointed him judge?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:38 Django Wexler
5:38
Django Wexler: 
The sequel (The Mad Apprentice) should be coming out in March of next year.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:38 Django Wexler
5:39
Django Wexler: 
It's basically done, they're working on cover and other art.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:39 Django Wexler
5:39
lisa von drasek: 
and of course we find it is our own actions that could make us good /evil
Monday June 23, 2014 5:39 lisa von drasek
5:39
[Comment From School LibrarianSchool Librarian: ] 
Were you "dark" as a kid? Should we worry about such kids?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:39 School Librarian
5:39
Django Wexler: 
The series is intended to be five books, and I've got it mapped out to a definite conclusion. (Hopefully!)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:39 Django Wexler
5:39
Django Wexler: 
Do you mean "dark" as a person, or did I like dark stuff?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:39 Django Wexler
5:40
lisa von drasek: 
what did you read as a kid?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 lisa von drasek
5:40
Django Wexler: 
The latter was definitely true. I was reading adult books by age 10 or so (just whatever they had on the SFF shelf in the library.)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 Django Wexler
5:40
Django Wexler: 
And I played a ton of role-playing games, etc.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 Django Wexler
5:40
Django Wexler: 
I was more of a total nerd than any kind of cool dressing-in-black with silver jewelry type though.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 Django Wexler
5:40
[Comment From School LibrarianSchool Librarian: ] 
I mean liking "dark" stuff. But that probably also carries over into the kids personality.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 School Librarian
5:40
lisa von drasek: 
did your parents support your extra curricular choices?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:40 lisa von drasek
5:41
Django Wexler: 
I think liking "dark" stuff is not something to worry about. All the kids *I* know are pretty good about the difference between fantasy and reality.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:41 Django Wexler
5:41
Django Wexler: 
And I really believe in the idea of letting kids pursue their interests and what they like in terms of books, movies, etc.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:41 Django Wexler
5:42
Django Wexler: 
Trying to sanitize everything just makes it worse.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:42 Django Wexler
5:42
Django Wexler: 
My parents were very supportive of me. I didn't require much work as a kid, I spent a lot of my time either reading or playing quiet games.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:42 Django Wexler
5:42
Django Wexler: 
Sometimes they would encourage me to, like, play soccer or otherwise get out of the house.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:42 Django Wexler
5:43
Django Wexler: 
But I come from a very bookish family, so by their standards I wasn't too far from normal.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:43 Django Wexler
5:43
lisa von drasek: 
you were a career changer....can you say something about that?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:43 lisa von drasek
5:43
[Comment From School LibrarianSchool Librarian: ] 
I agree. Besides, what are you going to do? Force them to go to Nicholas Sparks movies?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:43 School Librarian
5:43
Django Wexler: 
Meaning, that I changed careers?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:43 Django Wexler
5:44
Django Wexler: 
Haha, anything but that!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:44 Django Wexler
5:44
Django Wexler: 
I learned from my parents, I think, that you're not locked in to whatever it is that you do. They both had very strange career paths.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:44 Django Wexler
5:44
Django Wexler: 
My dad went from math teacher to opera singer (for 20-odd years) to computer programmer and bank executive.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:44 Django Wexler
5:45
Django Wexler: 
My mom did photography, advertising, non-profit work and marketing, and ended up as a Presbyterian minister.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:45 Django Wexler
5:45
lisa von drasek: 
meaning that you had a regular job and then became a writer full time. was this a leap of faith? how long were you writing before your first book sold?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:45 lisa von drasek
5:45
Django Wexler: 
So I had good examples that changing careers was something you could do.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:45 Django Wexler
5:45
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
Woa! Amazing about your father.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:45 Jersey Librarian
5:46
Django Wexler: 
I started writing when I was in high school. I wrote a little bit about it here: http://www.powells.com/blog...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:46 Django Wexler
5:46
Django Wexler: 
I did some fan-fiction and other stuff, but I finally wrote a fantasy novel and tried to sell it in my last year of college.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:46 Django Wexler
5:46
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
And your mother, too! Glad they served as good examples, rather than making you feel unstable.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:46 Jersey Librarian
5:46
Django Wexler: 
I sold two novels to a small press, Medallion, which was gratifying but didn't count for much financially.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:46 Django Wexler
5:46
lisa von drasek: 
have you done many school or library visits?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:46 lisa von drasek
5:47
Django Wexler: 
So I decided to try and get an agent so I could write a book for the big publishers.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:47 Django Wexler
5:47
Django Wexler: 
That took a while.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:47 Django Wexler
5:47
Django Wexler: 
I didn't quit my job until I had enough contracts to live on, though, so it wasn't really a leap of faith.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:47 Django Wexler
5:47
Django Wexler: 
Only a few school visits so far, but I love doing them!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:47 Django Wexler
5:48
Django Wexler: 
I'm part of the Skype in the Classroom program, if anybody uses that. I always love talking to kids.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:48 Django Wexler
5:48
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
How can I get you for a school program?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:48 Jersey Librarian
5:48
[Comment From NM LibrarianNM Librarian: ] 
Do you have any other writing projects going on right now (besides the rest of this series) that you can tell us about?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:48 NM Librarian
5:49
Django Wexler: 
Jersey Librarian -- Depends on if its in person or over Skype. Send me an email (there's a form on my website) and I can put you in touch with the right people at Penguin.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:49 Django Wexler
5:50
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
Great, thanks.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:50 Jersey Librarian
5:50
Django Wexler: 
NM Librarian -- well, between my adult series and kids series, I'm kept pretty busy! I do have a humorous urban fantasy series with a small press called Ragnarok: http://djangowexler.com/sto...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:50 Django Wexler
5:50
lisa von drasek: 
This from an on-line participant

how long did it take for you to get this book published?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:50 lisa von drasek
5:51
Django Wexler: 
And I've been doing a few short stories that should start showing up in various anthologies next year. But mostly trying to do one enormous adult book and one kids book a year takes up most of my time!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:51 Django Wexler
5:51
Django Wexler: 
Getting The Forbidden Library published was actually pretty quick, all told! I sent it to Seth, who sent it specifically to Kathy Dawson at Penguin, because he thought it would be a good fit. She liked it, so we were set.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:51 Django Wexler
5:52
Nora - EarlyWord: 
The next one in your adult series is coming out in a few weeks...
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 Nora - EarlyWord
5:52
Django Wexler: 
Maybe a couple of months all told. (Then of course more than a year of waiting for it to actually come out.)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 Django Wexler
5:52
Nora - EarlyWord
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 
5:52
Django Wexler: 
The hard part was getting an agent and my first sale. That took ... maybe five years?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 Django Wexler
5:52
Django Wexler: 
Depends on when you start counting.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 Django Wexler
5:52
[Comment From NM LibrarianNM Librarian: ] 
What differences to you see between writing for children and adults.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:52 NM Librarian
5:53
Django Wexler: 
I try not to write TOO differently. I don't like the idea of writing "down" to kids.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:53 Django Wexler
5:53
Django Wexler: 
Basically, I think of it as leaving out the sex, swearing, and extremes of violence, but otherwise not too different.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:53 Django Wexler
5:53
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
So glad to hear you say that!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:53 Guest
5:53
Django Wexler: 
It's a little simpler in terms of narrative structure -- there's only one POV character, and we follow her story in a pretty straightforward way.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:53 Django Wexler
5:53
[Comment From Jersey LibrarianJersey Librarian: ] 
That explains a lot -- I thnk that is true for all really good children's authors.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:53 Jersey Librarian
5:54
Django Wexler: 
My editor took out some vocabulary she thought was too exotic. "Gnomon", is one I remember.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:54 Django Wexler
5:54
lisa von drasek: 
We have only a few minutes left....any burning questions?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:54 lisa von drasek
5:54
Django Wexler: 
But otherwise it's pretty much just the way I always right.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:54 Django Wexler
5:54
Django Wexler: 
There's even a Shakespeare quote in book 2!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:54 Django Wexler
5:54
Django Wexler: 
I always write, haha.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:54 Django Wexler
5:55
Django Wexler: 
(If I don't get to your question, btw, please feel free to ask me on Twitter or Facebook!)
Monday June 23, 2014 5:55 Django Wexler
5:55
lisa von drasek: 
which brings me to a question I had....this is historic fiction as well as fantasy... why this time period?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:55 lisa von drasek
5:55
Django Wexler: 
Ah, good question.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:55 Django Wexler
5:55
Django Wexler: 
My editor asked me early on, "Why is this set in 1931? Can't we set it in modern day?"
Monday June 23, 2014 5:55 Django Wexler
5:56
Django Wexler: 
And I said, well, the problem is that their magic is based on printing and books. So I don't know how that would work with computers, cell phone, scanners, and whatnot.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:56 Django Wexler
5:56
Django Wexler: 
Makes everything WAY more complicated.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:56 Django Wexler
5:56
Django Wexler: 
So, I wanted a past setting, and I'd been reading a bit about the Depression, and I went with that.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:56 Django Wexler
5:57
Django Wexler: 
It's also close enough to WWII that it gives it a little Chronicles of Narnia feel.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:57 Django Wexler
5:57
lisa von drasek: 
oohhhhh, I didn't think of that... and the loss of money and the decline in their standard of living played a big part in the beginning
Monday June 23, 2014 5:57 lisa von drasek
5:57
Django Wexler: 
Right, exactly. The whole "being shipped off to live with a distant uncle" plot seemed more likely in those days.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:57 Django Wexler
5:57
Django Wexler: 
Today you'd just keep in touch with your friends on Instagram and complain on your blog.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:57 Django Wexler
5:58
lisa von drasek: 
with the understanding of losing everything to "the bankers" and having no where to turn
Monday June 23, 2014 5:58 lisa von drasek
5:58
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I hear many writers, including those for adults, say modern settings are difficult. Things can happen too quickly -- difficult to create tension.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:58 Nora - EarlyWord
5:58
Django Wexler: 
It definitely can be difficult.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:58 Django Wexler
5:58
Django Wexler: 
ONe reason I like fantasy.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:58 Django Wexler
5:58
Django Wexler: 
The real world, especially for kids, also changes so fast that things become dated very quickly.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:58 Django Wexler
5:59
lisa von drasek: 
Final thoughts?
Monday June 23, 2014 5:59 lisa von drasek
5:59
Django Wexler: 
If I'd written about the world of fifteen years ago, with dial-up modems and myspace, it'd be unrecognizable today.
Monday June 23, 2014 5:59 Django Wexler
5:59
Nora - EarlyWord
Before we go, I wanted everyone to see this photo Lisa sent of where she was chatting from today -- the U. of Wisconsin Student Union in Madison -- pretty gorgeous!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:59 
5:59
Django Wexler: 
Thanks to everyone for listening!
Monday June 23, 2014 5:59 Django Wexler
6:00
[Comment From NM LibrarianNM Librarian: ] 
Thanks so much! I really enjoyed the book (as did my 7th grader!)Can't wait for the sequel!
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 NM Librarian
6:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 
The hour has flown by -- thanks everyone!
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 Nora - EarlyWord
6:00
Django Wexler: 
Again, feel free to get in touch, either by social media or emailing me through my site. http://www.djangowexler.com I'm happy to answer any questions you have.
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 Django Wexler
6:00
lisa von drasek: 
Thank you Django- THE FORBIDDEN LIBRARY was a grand adventure and I am looking forward to further adventures with Alice
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 lisa von drasek
6:00
[Comment From GuestGuest: ] 
Thanks so much!
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 Guest
6:00
Django Wexler: 
Thanks for having me on!
Monday June 23, 2014 6:00 Django Wexler
 
 

Nancy Pearl On NPR — Summer Reading

Monday, June 23rd, 2014

Nancy Pearl picks “under-the-radar” titles (e.g., you have a crack at finding copies on the shelf to recommend) for summer reading, on today’s NPR Morning Edition:

UnderstoriesUnderstories, Tim Horvath, (Bellevue Literary Press, 2012) — Nancy calls this her “favorite collection of short stories.” She cracks up host Steve Inskeep by reading from one of them in which a group of people are “trying to teach animals the concept of extinction because they are ‘tired of having to bail out endangered species. It’s high time they learned individual responsibility!'”

AstoriaAstoria: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Jefferson’s Lost Pacific Empire: A Story of Wealth, Ambition, and Survival, Peter Stark, (HarperCollins/Ecco; March, 2014) — about the little-known story of expeditions sent by John Jacob Astor in an effort to establish a colony in the Pacific Northwest. Nancy says it’s great to read because it’s a “a period of history a lot of people are unfamiliar with, but more importantly… it’s really good reading.”

T.S. SpivetThe Selected Works Of T. S. Spivet, Reif Larsen, (Penguin Press, 2009) — Nancy often calls books “fabulous,” but she goes beyond that in describing this novel, calling it a “fabulous, fabulous novel.”

It was not under the radar when it was published in 2009. Reportedly acquired by the publisher for $900,000, it was heavily promoted and was an NPR summer pick that year.

A film adaptation by French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet (Amelie), renamed The Young and Prodigious T. S. Spivet, starring Helena Bonham Carter as Spivet’s mother, was released earlier this month in the U.K., but as yet has no U.S. release date, even though distribution rights were acquired last year by the Weinstein Co.

The Glass SentenceNancy recommends additional titles on the NPR Web Site, including the Y.A. title, The Glass Sentence, by S. E. Grove (Penguin/Viking Juvenile), saying it is “so wonderful. It has pirates, it has a chocolate-maker, it has a very brave girl, it has an evil woman who might not really be as evil as she seems. This author’s imagination is just amazing.”

You can meet that author next month during our Penguin Young Readers live online chat, moderated by Lisa Von Drasek.

Eight Tip-of-the-Tongue Titles for the Week of 6/23/14

Friday, June 20th, 2014

9780316405409_f8cb1   9780345547491_86cb3   9780345545930_a6dd1

The watchword for next week is “stand-alones” as many brand-name authors publish books that are not part of their well-known series.

Leading in terms of holds is James Patterson’s Invisible, (Hachette/Little, Brown; Hachette Large Print; Hachette Audio), a standalone and his third collaboration with David Ellis, following Guilty Wives and Mistress.

Coming in second, averaging half as many holds, is Karin Slaughter’s stand-alone, Cop Town, (RH/Delacorte).

The prolific Dean Koontz makes his latest appearance in the standalone The City (RH/Bantam; Recorded Books; Thorndike), hard on the heels of Innocence, which came out in December. He has yet another coming this December, the next in his Odd Thomas series, Saint Odd, (RH/Bantam). If you’re wondering what happened to the Odd Thomas movie, after some legal struggles, it was released on demand and DVD in February.

Readers Advisory Tips

9780062220509_0271eJacqueline Winspear is known for her Maisie Dobbs series, mysteries featuring WWI nurse turned private investigator in London between the wars. The books have arrived in quick succession since the first was published in 2003, and have grown in popularity, hitting best seller lists. Her new book is her first stand-alone, with an intriguing title, The Care and Management of Lies: A Novel of the Great War  (Harper; HarperLuxe; Blackstone Audio). The “lies” are the half-truths people tell each other to help them through difficult times. In this case, a woman tries to keep her husband’s spirits up at the front during WWI, through letters that recount sumptuous meals she imagines preparing for him.

This is a stand-alone that may prove to bring new readers to the author, enticing those who came late to the party and may not have been willing to tackle the entire Maisie series. Fans of Maisie need not worry, however, the author is under contract for two more, with the next one, The White Lady, scheduled for some time in 2015

Everything I NeverEverything I Never Told You, Celeste Ng, (Penguin Press)

Debuts don’t often get featured on Entertainment Weekly’s “Must List,” so it’s significant that reading this one is on their list of ten necessary things to do in the upcoming week. The book is described as “a propulsive mystery … an explosive debut.”

Many librarians were introduced to the author through our Penguin Debut Authors program; read our online chat with the author here. It’s about a young girl who goes missing, but don’t let readers be put off by the subject; it’s much more than a “ripped from the headlines” novel, using that event as a way to reveal the family dynamics.

The peer reviews on Edelweiss give clues on how to recommend it; “the reader uncovers the truth one person at a time … as each person moves through the tragedy that has befallen them,” and “The first line draws you in, and the multiple perspectives make it compelling reading, which is well worth the journey.”  The author is scheduled to appear on NPR/Weekend All Things Considered on 6/28.

9780399162138_2980bIdentity, Ingrid Thoft, (Penguin/Putnam)

The Cleveland Plain Dealer review clearly made believers, causing holds to rise in local libraries on this second book in a series, after Loyalty, “a craftily plotted page-turner. Identity …  is even better …  sexy modern noir – and readers [will be] cheering on a new-generation, kick-ass heroine. Grade: A”

 

In The Media

9781476761787_69760Unfriending My Ex: And Other Things I’ll Never Do, Kim Stolz, (S&S/Scribner)

A book by a youg media-savvy author (an MTV VJ and contestant on America’s Next Top Model) about how her generation needs to follow her lead and quit social media, which she says has become an “addiction.” Sounds like catnip for the media and in fact, she is scheduled for an appearance on CBS This Morning, June 24 and for coverage in People magazine, among others.

Tie-Ins

9780062344618_2f013   9780062344625_46d4d   9780062344632_1efa9
After all those creepy teasers and trailers, the FX series, The Strain, will finally debut on July 17. Harper is releasing Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan’s entire vampire trilogy  as tie-ins:

The Strain TV Tie-in Edition

The Fall TV Tie-in Edition

The Night Eternal TV Tie-in Edition

The John Green Effect

Thursday, June 19th, 2014

Will there be more movies based on John Green novels?

Don’t bother answering that.

Now that The Fault in Our Stars is a certified hit, The Hollywood Reporter gives details on the “frenzy of interest” in his other novels.

Paper Towns   Wonder    Behind the Beautiful Forevers

The one most likely to hit screens first is Paper Towns, (Penguin/Speak), which has Nat Wolff, (Isaac in TFIOS), set to star. Fox 2000 is on the search for a director.

THR also reports on the “ripple effect” for other “grounded” Y.A. adaptations (which have the advantage of not requiring expensive special effects). On the heels of the success of TFIOS, Lionsgate says they are close to hiring a director for an adaptation of R.J. Palacio’s Wonder, (RH/Knopf)

Note to Hollywood: Green is currently promoting a much different book, one that is not yet a movie, but should be, he says, Katherine Boo’s Behind the Beautiful Forevers (Random House).

FIFTY SHADES OF GREY Promo

Thursday, June 19th, 2014

dornan-interview   1286EW-cover

The movie doesn’t arrive until Valentine’s Day next year, but promo for the adaptation of Fifty Shades of Grey, began last November with an Entertainment Weekly cover, followed by the release of the first poster in January.

A new round has begun, focusing on a steamier Jamie Dornan as Christian Grey, featured on the cover of Interview magazine and in a still released on the film’s Facebook page which has been picked up by nearly every celeb site (according to People magazine, Dornan “smolders in a black leather jacket while sitting behind the wheel of his Audi R8”).

The trailer may not arrive as quickly as fans hoped. It’s being reported widely that it won’t arrive until at least September, even though a teaser was shown at CinemaCon in Las Vegas in March. It seems new rules prohibit releasing trailers more than five months in advance of the film (although there’s confusion on where those rules originate, which makes us doubtful that the studio will bother to adhere to them).

Penguin Debut Authors Live Chat Wednesday, June 18

Wednesday, June 18th, 2014
 Live Chat with Laura Lane McNeal, DOLLBABY(06/18/2014) 
3:48
Nora - EarlyWord: 
We will begin our live online chat with Laura Lane McNeal, author of DOLLBABY in about 15 minutes.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:48 Nora - EarlyWord
3:49
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Meanwhile, here’s the cover of the book …
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:49 Nora - EarlyWord
3:50
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:50 
3:52
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Good news, we learned last week that DOLLBABY is a LibraryReads pick:

LibraryReads: “In this coming-of-age story set in the Civil Rights era, Ibby is dropped off at the home of her eccentric grandmother in New Orleans after the death of her beloved father. Filled with colorful characters, family secrets and lots of New Orleans tidbits, this book will appeal to fans of Saving Ceecee Honeycutt.” Vicki Nesting, St. Charles Parish Library, Destrehan, LA
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:52 Nora - EarlyWord
3:52
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Laura recoded a video message for First Flights members.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:52 Nora - EarlyWord
3:52
Nora - EarlyWordNora - EarlyWord
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:52 
3:55
Nora - EarlyWord: 
LIBRARY JOURNAL gave it a starred review, saying,

"...it's hard to believe that it's a debut. A vivid portrayal of post-war New Orleans, lush and evocative in its descriptions, McNeal's unique voice shines through surprising and pleasing the reader. Fans of Pat Conroy and Sue Monk Kidd will enjoy this new Southern talent."
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:55 Nora - EarlyWord
3:57
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You may also want to explore Laura's interactive map of New Orleans during the time the book is set -
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:57 Nora - EarlyWord
3:57
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Laura's Interactive Map of New Orleans in 1964
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:57 Nora - EarlyWord
3:57
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Here's what it looks like:
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:57 Nora - EarlyWord
3:58
Nora - EarlyWord
Wednesday June 18, 2014 3:58 
4:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I see several chat participants gathering. You can send your questions through at any time. They'll go into a queue, and we'll submit as many of them as we can to Laura before the end of the chat. Don’t worry about typos – and please forgive ours!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:00 Nora - EarlyWord
4:00
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Laura is here, too -- say hello, Laura!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:00 Nora - EarlyWord
4:01
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Hi Nora! So happy to be here with you. I look forward to chatting with everyone and answering their questions. Hello everyone!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:01 Laura Lane McNeal
4:02
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I'll let everyone out there say hello --
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:02 Nora - EarlyWord
4:02
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Hi Laura!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:02 VNesting
4:03
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Hey, Vicki -- thanks for joining. You wrote the LibraryReads annotation for Laura's book.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:03 Nora - EarlyWord
4:03
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Hi Vicki! Glad you joined us! Thanl you for all your wonderful comments.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:03 Laura Lane McNeal
4:03
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
Hi Laura! New Orleans is such a fabulous setting for a book. A very complicated place to describe, isn't it?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:03 Kelly C
4:03
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Very complicated!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:03 Laura Lane McNeal
4:04
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
HI Laura! it is a pleasure to meet you.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 Dominique
4:04
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
So happy to be joining the chat.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 bookclubreader
4:04
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Hello Dominique!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 Laura Lane McNeal
4:04
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Hey, BookClubReader -- great to see you again.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 Nora - EarlyWord
4:04
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
You're welcome, Laura! I'm looking forward to chatting with you about the book.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 VNesting
4:04
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
Thanks, Nora.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 bookclubreader
4:04
Laura Lane McNeal: 
And welcome bookclubreader!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:04 Laura Lane McNeal
4:05
[Comment From AnneAnne: ] 
Hi Laura - So enjoyed the book - especially since I recently was in NO for 2 weeks.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:05 Anne
4:05
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Oh great!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:05 Laura Lane McNeal
4:05
Nora - EarlyWord: 
I'd like to start with a question we got in advance...

You’re too young to have grown up during that time in New Orleans, how were you able to create such a feel for the time?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:05 Nora - EarlyWord
4:05
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora, I'm sure that is a question I will be getting a lot...
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:05 Laura Lane McNeal
4:06
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
Such a great story, Laura. Can you tell us what inspired you to write it?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:06 bookclubreader
4:06
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I was a small child in the early 60’s, but I do have some recollection of the time. These memories were added to, or reinforced, by traditional research as well as oral histories from older generations that were able to give me a feel for the different attitudes that existed back then. While I may have been around to witness many of these things, I was to young to understand them. That was the kind of perspective I gave Ibby in the beginning of the novel, a perspective that changes as she grows older and becomes accustomed to the ways of the South.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:06 Laura Lane McNeal
4:07
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I had always wanted to write a novel but one life changing event did it -- Hurricane Katrina! I felt I needed to recapture a time and place, my way of 'saving' memories.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:07 Laura Lane McNeal
4:07
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Did people really talk about the "Holy Trinity" of New Orleans cooking back in the 60s? I thought that expression was contemporary.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:07 VNesting
4:07
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Lord no. That has been around a long time. Frank Davis made it popular recently..
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:07 Laura Lane McNeal
4:08
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
"Holy Trinity" reminds us that everything old is new again :-)
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:08 bookclubreader
4:08
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I heard it from my grandmother's cook.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:08 Laura Lane McNeal
4:08
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
the choice you made about Ibby's mom was painful. i felt like she left Ibby with Fannie because she knew she was dying and to be malicious. Why did you choose to write her this way?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:08 Dominique
4:08
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Exactly right… what goes around
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:08 Laura Lane McNeal
4:09
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vidrine was complicated. She hated Fannie because she knew Fannie hated her. She didn't knw she was dying when she left Ibby. She was distraught.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:09 Laura Lane McNeal
4:10
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I think she felt Ibby would be better off with Fannie in the long run, given her predicament.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:10 Laura Lane McNeal
4:11
[Comment From Jennifer W.Jennifer W.: ] 
Did Vidrine intend to come back for Ibby once she mourned her husband?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:11 Jennifer W.
4:11
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
some moms (mine included) understood both sides -my mom said she understood Vidrine's grief, but as a mother, she could not see her abandoning her child.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:11 Dominique
4:12
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vidrine didn't know what she wanted when she dropped Ibby off. She went off to find herself. Then she found she was ill. She had hard choices to make.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:12 Laura Lane McNeal
4:12
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Hey, Dominique, sounds like you did a mother/daughter book club for the book.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:12 Nora - EarlyWord
4:12
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
One of the things that struck me about the story and characters were the issues of sadness and strength. This made for a very relate-able story.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:12 bookclubreader
4:12
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
You did a great job with character development. I thought the characters reflected the City itself -- rich, interesting, complex, and multi-layered.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:12 VNesting
4:13
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
Nora, my mom and I talked about it a lot- she really loved the book, Laura.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:13 Dominique
4:13
Laura Lane McNeal: 
One of the things I try to stress it "you got to dance even when their ain't no music", kind of the theme.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:13 Laura Lane McNeal
4:13
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Speaking of Vidrine -- here's another advance question:

Fannie has distain for her daughter-in-law as a possible gold digger, but the same might have been thought of Fannie. Why was she so quick to be judge?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:13 Nora - EarlyWord
4:14
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora, that's a good question.Fannie started from nothing. She made her own way in the world and ended up being pretty good at it, carving out a name for herself in certain circles of the city. The last thing she wanted was for her son to marry ‘someone like her’. She wanted him to marry someone better, and Vidrine, in her view, was not the caliber person she intended for her son to end up with. Their similarities were the very reason these two never got along. Fannie had a good heart. We are never sure where Vidrine’ s heart lies.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:14 Laura Lane McNeal
4:15
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Another advance question:

There’s several strong women characters in the book – why is it titled for just one of them?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:15 Nora - EarlyWord
4:15
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thank you Dominique. I hope it's a book that will translate well to several generations.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:15 Laura Lane McNeal
4:16
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora, another good question… I named the novel Dollbaby because it tells the story of Dollbaby. Her very existence touches each character’s life in a different way, so in a sense, she is the common thread that inextricably binds each of the characters. Having said that, Dollbaby allows each of the other characters to have their own story. While it is certainly a coming of age story for Ibby, it’s a novel of self-discovery on many levels -- each character is on her own quest to find out who she is and how she fits into this world. It’s a question everyone asks of themselves at some point in their lives.

Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:16 Laura Lane McNeal
4:16
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
I think it's an excellent choice for book clubs.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:16 bookclubreader
4:16
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I like to hear the bookclubreader!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:16 Laura Lane McNeal
4:17
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You mentioned talking to people who lived during that time while doing your research -- What was most surprising thing you learned?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:17 Nora - EarlyWord
4:17
Laura Lane McNeal: 
To answer Vicki above..
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:17 Laura Lane McNeal
4:17
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I think New Orleans is as much a character as any
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:17 Laura Lane McNeal
4:18
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora,I was surprised at how strongly people of all walks of life felt about this era in New Orleans, about a way of life that had existed, both good and bad, unchanged for so long. I try to draw these differing attitudes out in the novel, particularly among the three generations of black women (Queenie, Dollbaby and Birdelia) who have differing ideas as to what civil rights may mean to them. I also incorporate Fannie’s view, which may seem to be indifferent at times but as we find out further into the novel, she is very aware of what is going on. And Ibby, a newcomer to the city who has had very little exposure to racism or prejudice, finds out first hand how differently people can be treated, whether it’s due to ignorance or bias or both.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:18 Laura Lane McNeal
4:20
[Comment From Jennifer W.Jennifer W.: ] 
Did any of your characters surprise you as you were writing and not react to something as you had planned for them to react or do something they were supposed to do?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:20 Jennifer W.
4:20
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Jennifer, good question..
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:20 Laura Lane McNeal
4:21
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I don't do an outline. I know the story in my head as I write so sometimes the characters lead me to where I'm going… like Doll talking to herself in Fannie's bedroom when Vidrine shows up. That's the fun part of writing!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:21 Laura Lane McNeal
4:21
[Comment From AnneAnne: ] 
I thought a lot of the book could be summed up in what Doll told Liberty - You can't choose the day or time when you will fully bloom. It happens when you least expect it. - I thought all of these wonderful characters expressed this sentiment.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:21 Anne
4:22
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
The novel poignantly captures the human experience--which I think is the reason we read.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:22 bookclubreader
4:22
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Yes, I found it fascinating to read the different characters' responses to the Civil Rights protests and the President's announcement about the Civil Rights Act.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:22 VNesting
4:22
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thank you Anne. I guess that's why I put that at the end of the book. It did sum up everything. You can't plan it, it happens when you least expect it. Haven't we all felt that?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:22 Laura Lane McNeal
4:23
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
Hard to believe the Civil Rights Act is 50 years old. Perfect time to publish this book!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:23 Kelly C
4:23
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thank you bookclubreader! Human experience… there is a lot of that here.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:23 Laura Lane McNeal
4:23
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
How much time did you spend writing everyday?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:23 Kelly C
4:23
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Yes, 50 years old Kelly. There will be a lot written about it soon
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:23 Laura Lane McNeal
4:24
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
Laura, did your grandparents take part in the civil rights movement at all?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:24 Dominique
4:25
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Kelly, I researched the novel for two years and decided to sit down the day my son went back to school and write every day until I finished. Eight hours a day. It took me three months for the first draft. I think everyone thought I was crazy!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:25 Laura Lane McNeal
4:25
Nora - EarlyWord: 
How difficult was it to get it published?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:25 Nora - EarlyWord
4:25
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
That's an impressive writing schedule, Laura!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:25 bookclubreader
4:26
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Dominique
The first newspaper I started reading from 1964, which by happen chance was the day the Civil Rights Acts was signed, there was an ad with my dad's name on it asking for calm. I almost felt like it was an omen
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:26 Laura Lane McNeal
4:26
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
wow! that is an omen.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:26 Dominique
4:27
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Wow! That is amazing -- leads to a question we got in advance --

There seems to be fear about what might happen “now that the President has signed the bill” in other words, what would happen after Johnson signed the Civil Rights Bill, What were they worried about?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:27 Nora - EarlyWord
4:27
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
Wow is right! You must have felt very inspired at that point!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:27 Kelly C
4:27
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora
I am among the fortunate ones. I submitted 25 pages to be critiqued at a literary festival and a publishing house said they wanted it right then and there. I already had an agent so we tweaked and sent i out a few months later where we got a handful of offers!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:27 Laura Lane McNeal
4:28
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora, let me just say tis..The months leading up to the President signing the Civil Rights Act were fraught with civil unrest, and tensions were high. Known as the Freedom Summer when the Freedom Riders tried to register Negroes to vote In Mississippi, many of these busses carrying the riders were bombed or burned. At this point in time, several of the Freedom Riders were missing and feared dead. People were afraid that the signing of the bill might cause more violence, and people were justifiably scared. The president, as well as the mayor of the city, asked for calm after the signing of the bill, but people were fearing the worst.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:28 Laura Lane McNeal
4:29
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Let's go back to getting the book published -- was this your very first book?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:29 Nora - EarlyWord
4:29
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
Laura, you are too humble. I'm sure your talent had a great deal to do with it!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:29 Kelly C
4:29
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thanks Kelly :)
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:29 Laura Lane McNeal
4:30
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora
This was my first book to be published. I had written an earlier one, a thriller, which is how I got my agent.. but then the ebook market made the publishing world sit back. It was then that I decided I needed to go ahead and write DOLLBABY
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:30 Laura Lane McNeal
4:31
Nora - EarlyWord: 
A thriller? I wouldn't have guessed that. What made you change genres?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:31 Nora - EarlyWord
4:32
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora I never intended to write a thriller but it incorporated a lot of personal experiences I wanted to get out after dealing with our corrupt governor on some issues when I handled the advertising for the Lottery account. I had this story, DOLLBABY, already to go, just had to get that one out first!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:32 Laura Lane McNeal
4:33
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
will you consider publishing the thriller now that Dollbaby has published?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:33 Dominique
4:34
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Dominique
My agent keeps saying its a great book and that it will be published however because it is a different genre I'd have to use a different name. AND now that ebooks are out readers expect thriller writers to write about a book a year. For literary it's about every 5 years. Who knows. Maybe I'll do both!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:34 Laura Lane McNeal
4:35
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Did you decide on the title DOLLBABY while you were writing or did it come to you later?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:35 VNesting
4:36
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vicki
I was taking a writing class, a workshop, and they decided that it should be called that. They were pretty adamant. Then my agent loved it. My editor, she wasn't so sure until she came down to NO for SIBA as realized how common those nicknames are! Everyone calls you BABY!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:36 Laura Lane McNeal
4:37
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You chose to make the Civil Rights movement the backdrop, but not the centerpiece of the story -- which seems to be behind this advance question:


Dollbaby joins a civil rights protest, but doesn’t seem to get any further involved in the movement. Why is that?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:37 Nora - EarlyWord
4:38
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora
If I'd made the book all about Civil Rights it would have taken over the whole book..Queenie feared for her daughter and made no bones about telling her so. The summer of 1964 was called Freedom Summer because there was so much civil unrest. At that point in time, several Freedom Riders were missing in Mississippi, feared dead. Businesses that catered to Negroes were being bombed, churches burned. Queenie alludes to some of these things in her talks with Doll, including the vandalism that was taking place in their neighborhoods. People were scared. Dollbaby wanted to join in the protest, but she too was scared. As Queenie says to Doll, she had a daughter to think about. Doll continued to participate in the movement when possible, but it had to be without her mother’s knowledge, but always carrying the fear that she might be ‘the next’ to go.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:38 Laura Lane McNeal
4:39
Nora - EarlyWord: 
How difficult was it to write dialect?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:39 Nora - EarlyWord
4:39
Laura Lane McNeal: 
New Orleans is a cultural gumbo, and just about as many dialects exist as ingredients in this famous dish, which is one reason it’s really hard for outsiders to pin the dialect down. Having grown up here, in a city that is majority black with a mix of just about everything else, I live and breathe it every day, attuned to the nuances and cadence of the voices. While I was hesitant at first to do the black dialect, once I got into the characters, it flowed easily. I tried to make the voices as authentic as possible without bogging down the dialogue. As a writer, I believe you should be able to write from any perspective, if you really know the character.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:39 Laura Lane McNeal
4:40
[Comment From Sue D.Sue D.: ] 
do you think your novel could be recommended to the young adult market?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:40 Sue D.
4:41
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
Laura, growing up in a household 'of color', i completely understood that Doll was doing things without Queenie knowing, but also had to weigh the pros and cons of continuing to participate. thank you for capturing that.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:41 Dominique
4:41
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Sue Yes, the novel has a bit of YA to it. But there is a rape seen so it would have to be age appropriate. I think the YA market would like it and I like the feeling of giving them a glimpse of a world they don't know about.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:41 Laura Lane McNeal
4:41
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Having lived in New Orleans for 22 years and just outside of it for another 12, I think you did a great job with the accents, Laura.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:41 VNesting
4:42
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Domonique
Thank you. I tried really hard to balance how each of these characters might feel
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:42 Laura Lane McNeal
4:42
[Comment From Jennifer W.Jennifer W.: ] 
Even though in the end, your book is very different, did you have any fear of being compared to THE HELP?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:42 Jennifer W.
4:42
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vicki
Thank you . Coming from someone who lives here that means a lot!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:42 Laura Lane McNeal
4:43
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Jennifer
I knew because the book contained domestics and takes place in the early 60's that there would be comparisons, which on one level is good, however, I feel my novel is something comepletly different.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:43 Laura Lane McNeal
4:43
Nora - EarlyWord: 
How did you feel when you found out your book is one of just ten books librarians picked as their favorites for the month of July?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:43 Nora - EarlyWord
4:44
Laura Lane McNeal: 
I was truly blown away and overwhelmed! To have my novel chosen as a top read by this marvelous group gave me some real validation on several levels – that it’s a story people will take to their hearts, and that it has universal appeal.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:44 Laura Lane McNeal
4:45
Nora - EarlyWord: 
For those of you going to ALA -- Laura will be signing at the Penguin group booth #449 on Friday, June 27th during the opening of the ALA conference (5:30 – 7).
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:45 Nora - EarlyWord
4:45
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Yes please come see me! I'll have king cake babies!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:45 Laura Lane McNeal
4:45
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Speaking of accents, did I read somewhere that there will be an audiobook of DOLLBABY? If so, who is doing the narrating and are you happy with it?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:45 VNesting
4:45
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
woo hoo! King Cake babies!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:45 Dominique
4:46
Nora - EarlyWord: 
You have to tell this Northerner what King Cake babies are!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:46 Nora - EarlyWord
4:46
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vicki
I was so pleased that they let me choose the talent. January LaVoy read the book for the audio and is AMAZING! We had several dialect phone calls, which were really a hoot for me but very necessary! They did a great job with it.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:46 Laura Lane McNeal
4:47
[Comment From Sue D.Sue D.: ] 
Are you planning a tour, like coming to the St. Louis/Charles area?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:47 Sue D.
4:48
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
That's great, Laura! Wish I was going to be at ALA to meet you in person.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:48 VNesting
4:48
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Dollbaby got her name because her mother thought she looked like a little king cake doll. King cakes are something we have during the Mardi Gras Season. They have a small doll hidden in them. Whoever gets the doll is King (or Queen) for the day
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:48 Laura Lane McNeal
4:49
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
ALA attendees have a real treat waiting for them. Wish I could be there, too.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:49 bookclubreader
4:49
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Sue
Viking has planned an initial Southern Tour. I hope to have another after this initial one. If you want me to come to your area just have one of the reps request it. I'd love to come see all of you!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:49 Laura Lane McNeal
4:49
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thank you bookclubreader!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:49 Laura Lane McNeal
4:49
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Also my tour schedule is on my website
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:49 Laura Lane McNeal
4:50
Nora - EarlyWord: 
If libraries want to book you for a program, how can they do that?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:50 Nora - EarlyWord
4:50
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Vicki
Perhaps you could come to my first book signing on July 10!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:50 Laura Lane McNeal
4:50
Nora - EarlyWord: 
We're getting close to the end, so get your questions in.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:50 Nora - EarlyWord
4:51
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Laura, you got a great blurb from Walter Isaacson – we think of him as the writer of big, deeply research, serious bios., so it might be suprising that he reads, let alone appreciates fiction:

"This flavorful and enthralling novel brilliantly captures New Orleans during the civil rights era. It's a deeply personal tale about growing up and searching for family as well as a provocative exploration of race and kinship. I found it both thrilling and poignant."
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:51 Nora - EarlyWord
4:51
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora
I'd love to visit librariesFeel free to contact my publicist with any inquiries:

Kristin Matzen, Publicist
Viking/ Penguin
212-366-2226
Kristin.Matzen@us.penguingroup.com
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:51 Laura Lane McNeal
4:52
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora
He liked my book because he said it brought back great memories of growing up in New Orleans! I didn't ask for the blurb. He offered it. I was humbled!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:52 Laura Lane McNeal
4:52
Nora - EarlyWord: 
That must have been VERY gratifying!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:52 Nora - EarlyWord
4:52
Laura Lane McNeal: 
To say the least!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:52 Laura Lane McNeal
4:53
Nora - EarlyWord: 
On your site, you mention you're working on another book -- can you tell us anything about it?
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:53 Nora - EarlyWord
4:55
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora. yes, it's somewhat about my family. It takes place during the Depression on an old plantation on River Road outside of Baton Rouge. No one has a job, and people keep showing up to stay at the home. There is no electricity, no running water, and a lot of spare time and uncertainty. It will bring in a lot of history at that time, like when big oil was first making an appearance and Huey Long became governor. I see it as a cross between Downton abbey and Gone with the Wind some 60 years later
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:55 Laura Lane McNeal
4:56
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Great references!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:56 Nora - EarlyWord
4:56
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Thanks so much, Laura and Nora! It's been a pleasure chatting with you all.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:56 VNesting
4:56
[Comment From Jennifer W.Jennifer W.: ] 
Thank you for taking time with us this afternoon. Looking forward to reading more from you.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:56 Jennifer W.
4:56
[Comment From Kelly CKelly C: ] 
Thanks Laura and Nora!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:56 Kelly C
4:56
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Nora and everyone.. it has been a pleasure for sure!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:56 Laura Lane McNeal
4:57
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Yes; thank you so much, Laura. We're so please your book is a LibraryReads pick and are looking forward to great things for it.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 Nora - EarlyWord
4:57
[Comment From AnneAnne: ] 
Thank you for talking with you. Good luck on your book tour and I look forward to reading your next novel - sounds really interesting.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 Anne
4:57
[Comment From bookclubreaderbookclubreader: ] 
I'll be recommending Dollbaby to readers and look forward to your next novel, Laura. It sounds like another great read!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 bookclubreader
4:57
[Comment From VNestingVNesting: ] 
Ooooo, can't wait to read the next one!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 VNesting
4:57
[Comment From DominiqueDominique: ] 
that sounds very intriguing! thank you for chatting with us, and look forward to seeing you at ALA.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 Dominique
4:57
Laura Lane McNeal: 
Thank you everyone! It was a real treat!
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:57 Laura Lane McNeal
4:58
Nora - EarlyWord: 
Bye everyone -- thanks for making this so lively.
Wednesday June 18, 2014 4:58 Nora - EarlyWord