May 232012
 

I want to share this with everyone because I think it’s one of those things that should be embraced and talked about at length.

We have a lot of problems in this world – seeing other human beings who are different than us as somehow less human is a big ugly one. Whether we’re talking about race or gender, religious choices or sexual choices, we have a major problem with accepting people for who they are.

When Hunger Games went up and Cinna and Rue were cast as being black, a lot of discussion happened because of it. Good discussion, bad discussion, maybe some surprising insights for some people into how they view the world.

Now it looks like Finnick may be cast with a black actor and all the same confusion and disbelief and discussion is building again. It’s not an easy topic for a lot of people to talk about – but I am a big believer that talking about it is the only way to take its ugly power away. We are a beautiful crayola box world and I long for a world where you are who you are and there aren’t restrictions on caring about things based on color, sex, gender, body type, or ethnicity.

We should be able to turn to someone who is not like ourselves and say, hey, I have questions. Is it ok if I sound stupid for a minute and just ask them? I don’t have any black friends and I’m confused about some things. I don’t know any one who is Asian, who can I talk to if I don’t understand something? I need to know more about girls. Boys seem really weird to me, why do they act like this? I think we need to get to a point in the world where we can do this. Just talk.

I also hope more authors keep talking about this topic – about writing characters not like us and reading about characters not like us and how a book with a black character doesn’t have to be a story about a character not being white. I think it’s the dialogue that will get us to a new place in our society. Not talking about it is why we have to have a Tumblr called HungerGameTweets specifically designed to highlight the non-discussion we haven’t had so we can start having the ones that need to happen now.

And clearly this topic is too big for one post, so I hope to revisit it again and again and again. Until we don’t need to anymore.

Tips on Writing Race from a Teen Writer

Kate Hart dissects the 2011 YA covers with gender and race in mind

The problem isn’t just covers

Why The Pretty White Girl YA Book Cover Trend Needs to End

The Ongoing Problem of Race in Y.A.

A Complete Guide to ‘Hipster Racism’

The Whitewashing of YA Literature

Straight White Male: The Lowest Difficulty Setting There Is

Queer Women and (In)visibility

All the White Girls

Cover Your Dreams in More Dreams

Race in YA Lit: Wake Up & Smell the Coffee-Colored Skin, White Authors!

Avoiding LGBTQ Stereotypes in YA Fiction, Part 1: Major LGBTQ Stereotypes

I have numbers! Stats on LGBT Young Adult Books Published in the U.S. – Updated 9/15/11

Supporting character whitewashed in film adaptation of “Warm Bodies”

Talking to Teens Who Tweeted Racist Things About The Hunger Games

 

Dec 312010
 

Last Christmas my city was buried by a snow storm that canceled the holiday. A few weeks later, J.D. Salinger died. Just before Valentine’s Day, the final book of the Hunger Games series, Mockingjay, was revealed and a thousand hearts exploded in anticipation. In March I traveled to Indiana to go hiking through the woods in order to discover the landscape of my novel and met John Green at a book signing in Indianapolis. In April bullying was the watch-word and authors, would-be-authors, and celebrities came out to tell their stories about bullying and to encourage kids not to let it define them or destroy them. I did too.

In May I switched from Blogger to WordPress and lost half of my graphics that I’m still trying to reconstruct in my archive. In June I experienced my first major burn out and my plot got lost on its way to chapter fourteen. I abandoned writing for several weeks just to feel normal again.

In July I hit up OSFest 2010 and wrote several extensive posts about character tropes which are what originally started luring new friends to my blog. I realized then I had something to share with the world.

I dedicated August to Hot Dystopian Summer Nights and wrote about some of my favorite books and genres. September was all about banned books and October I wrote every day about haunted things but embarrassed myself by calling it an October Blogfest but really meant a festival of blog posts. Whoops.

November was National Novel Writing Month and I started a new steampunk fantasy though I never hit 50,000 words. I wrote blog posts every day and cross-posted them over at Nathan Bransford’s forums where they were well received.

December I paraded out my Top 5 lists, caught the plague and wished for a swift death. I tried not to get buried beneath the shopping frenzy or be run over by psycho shoppers.*** I succeeded at one of these two things. Santa brought me The Mockingbirds and Anna and the French Kiss so 2011 will begin with some fine YA lit.

There were plenty of book contests out there. I gave away copies of Carrie Ryan’s The Forest of Hands and Teeth, The Looking Glass Wars by Frank Beddor, and lots of others. I won Morgan Matson’s Amy & Roger’s Epic Detour, Shadowed Summer by Saundra Mitchell, Beautiful Darkness by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl, and Fall for Anything by Courtney Summers. I discovered Melina Marchetta and fell in love with words all over again. I met the wonderful Victoria Caswell and I never miss a post by Em and Nora at Love YA Lit, also The Story Siren, or Steph Su Reads.

I discovered that authors are like anyone else (Carrie Ryan, Courtney Summers, Saundra Mitchell, Kiersten White, Melissa Walker), but are also amazing, involved, grateful, lovely and so full of kindness I can hardly put into words but try to model myself after every day.

I read 73 novels, 80 if you include how many times I reread Jellicoe Road and The Sky is Everywhere. I think this says something about my dedication to reading, but I also think it says something about the quality of books that are being published these days, particularly in YA.

I discovered Nathan Bransford’s forums and the crazy personalities that populate its streets and I can honestly say I will never be the same person I was before I met them. They forced me, at linguistical gun point, to become a better thinker. My writing became deeper, more complicated, my characters more diverse and complex, and during those moments where I thought I was done, couldn’t go on, wasn’t even sure I still wanted to, there they were with a hanky and hot chocolate, kind words, naughty jokes, and giant emoticon eyerolls that said “Oh hell girl, we’ve all be there. And we’re all still here. You’ll be fine.” They might not mean anything to you, but the names Margo, Mira, Quill, Polymath, Watcher55, J.T. Shea, bcomet, and sierramcconnell and so many others will always stand out in my mind as people who helped me Take The Next Step, question myself, and speak up without fear of reprisal or derision. I. Am. In. Awe.

And now.

Now we come to the final days. These final hours. One more day is gone and I wonder how many people realize there is no going back. No reset button, no do-over. I wonder if the people who say, “I do not have time to write a novel today,” understand that tomorrow is just as temporary? I’m not very old, 31 is the new 21 and all that, but I can’t help but think – did I make the last year worth every last second? Did I waste any of it and if I did, why? It isn’t like we can get it back when it is gone. And I think – am I going to waste any moment of 2011? Will my novel go another year without being finished and why would I allow that to happen? We cannot get back the time we’ve spent and I believe that if we do not spend it well we do not really deserve it.

Did you spend it well? Will you spend it better?

No resolutions.+ This isn’t a competition when you are only competing against your own ability to make excuses. If I do not finish that novel this year, then why am I writing it? Go big or go home right?

2011 will be the year I get out of my own way.

*** True story – a friend of mine got cussed out in a parking lot when he got to a parking spot before another shopper. She then stalked him and tried to run him over after he came out. People never cease to amaze me.

+ I lied, there is one resolution. For two years I have made a resolution to learn how to sew a button and for two years I’ve put it off and avoided the Closet of Coats with Lost Buttons. No more! This year I will learn to fix my own bloody buttons or I’m switching out all my clothes to Velcro.

Aug 252010
 

Exciting news!

Well, exciting news for you, anyway!

I preordered Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins from Amazon and got a message release day saying that it was in my home city but it would not be delivered on time. Imagine how insane I went when I heard that news! So on my way home we stopped and picked up another copy at Borders (along with an awesome mockingjay keychain) but lo and behold, when I got home a package was waiting for me. They’d managed to deliver the book anyway!

So I’m going to give away my second copy to one lucky reader! This is my first contest so please, go easy on me.

Here are the rules

  • US residents only
  • Fill out the form below
  • One entry per person
  • Entrants must be 13 years or older (and it’s a good idea to get your parent’s permission before you enter if you’re still living with mom and dad!)
  • Contest deadline is September 3rd, 2010!
  • And finally, please tell someone about the contest! Put a link in your blog, Facebook, Twitter…tell your best friend, your dog, your mom, your little brother, anyone who’d like to own their own hardback copy of Mockingjay. Pass on the contest to at least one other person!

Privacy stuff:

I’ll randomly pick one winner and drop the box ASAP. All other entries will be deleted entirely. I won’t be sharing any personal info with anyone and when I announce the winner it’ll just be your first name and last initial.

If you want to share your website, blog, Facebook, or twitter account with me after you enter, leave it in the comments! Who doesn’t love meeting new people?

Good luck!

Aug 242010
 

The Romance of Filth and Oppression

Why oh why oh why do we like stories about characters that are unwashed, half-starved, and oppressed financially, socially, culturally and sexually? Why do we enjoy that? It sounds terrible right? No one wants their main character to have to deal with lice and rotting food and constant pain. Ugh.

And yet. And yet. And yet. Dystopian fiction is EVERYWHERE in all shapes, sizes and colors, for all types of dispositions.

There’s a Dirty, Miserable Dystopia for Everyone.

  • The-worlds-gone-to-hell-in-a-handbasket, all financial sectors in all major countries have collapsed leaving scary barter systems and massive movements of organized crime and corruption as in Restoring Harmony by Joelle Anthony.
  • Your horror dystopians with zombie apocalypses (The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan) vampire apocalypses (The Passage by Justin Cronin).
  • Speculative resource loss (Empty by Suzanne Weyn, Carbon Diaries 2015 by Saci Lloyd, etc etc)
  • You’ve got your 1984 type dystopias like, well ugh, 1984, but also CANDOR by Pam Bachorz, The Maze Runner by James Dashner, The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, etc etc.
  • There are plenty of fatal stories about all the men dying out or all the women dying out or some variation there of (The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness, Nomansland by Lesley Hauge, Epitaph Road by David Patneaude)
  • There are dirty Mad Max style dystopias and super regulated Bladerunner style dystopias.

There’s Something Romantic About Survival

The one thing they all have in common is one character glances up from the dark tunnel of their miserable life and dreams of something more. Maybe they are forced into this dream, maybe it is one of necessity or one of hope, but they all have it. The character is resourceful and resilient and defies the status quo in order to find the light.

We like following these characters because we all like to think we could be them if it came to it.

There’s something romantic about survival.

The Future as It Could Be

Lots of people love historical fiction because it is something we’ll never be able to experience (Unless historical = within our lifetime and that’s really more contemporary or out-dated contemporary)

But the future holds all the possibilities of the world. All that is possible is probable and all that is probably is easily romanticized.

Dystopia is never about what was, it is always about what could be, and so no matter how improbable the zombie/vampire/robot apocalypse might seem, because it HASN’T happened yet there’s always a chance that it COULD happen. And there’s something very satisfying to our ego when we daydream about not just surviving but kicking zombie/vampire/robot ass in the coming war. How will our trusty iPads serve us in the coming dystopia? What crazy Fifth Element fashions will we be wearing? How will we be thrown together with our passionate romantic lead? Will they live? Will I live? Will we go down in a blaze of glory together?

Games to Play with Your Friends

Ok, here’s another little exercise. Think back to the hype that surrounded the first episode of LOST. Everyone and their mother wanted to see the show about a group of people stranded on a deserted island. Why? Well, everyone raise their hand if they remember watching that first episode and imagining all the things YOU would do to survive such an ordeal. How many of you thought Sawyer had the right idea about hording? Or were you with the group that wanted to build a bigger bonfire in an effort to be spotted by a plane or ship? Were you thinking you’d run around helping people or were you the one thinking you’d organize everyone, find shelter, food, and water?

The way you watched the first episode of LOST is the reason we like to read about dystopias. We want to imagine what we’d do if we were put in such a terrible situation (without actually being put in it) and then how we’d survive.

There’s something romantic about survival.

Here’s another exercise: If you were stranded on a deserted island, and you could only have three items, what items would you take with you?

Hard question, right? Most people would think of the easy things: Food, Water, Weapon. Or they’d think nostalgic things: Notebook, Favorite Book, Picture of their kids. Someone very resourceful would say: Backpack, Bowie knife, and an extra pair of underwear. Most people could play this game with friends for hours. It’s fun to imagine and whittle your list down.

Would you survive the coming dark times? It’s a very important meme floating around Facebook these days. I know I wouldn’t. Mentally and creatively sure, but physically I need to lose some weight and join a gym first if I’m running (from zombies, crazy neighbors, radioactive clouds WHATEVER). If I don’t have to run from anything I’ll probably be ok.

Would you join the resistance movement or just plod along in the hopes it might get better?  Would you do whatever was necessary to survive? Man, I could play this game for HOURS.

I think I’m more of a resistance joiner myself, but who knows? I don’t think I’d be very good at starving, or drinking ditch water, or lying to robots, or living without soap, or shooting my thieving neighbors when they sneak into my secret backyard vegetable garden.

I think I’m just better at reading and writing an imaginary world of Very Bad Things.

Aug 232010
 

There is an Official 13 District Blog Tour going on as promotion for the release of Mockingjay. I kind of knew this was going on, but I found so little information on what the different stops were and what was going on that I didn’t really jump on it until some of the contests were already over. Sorry guys! But just in case you haven’t heard about it all already, I have a schedule of stops posted below. Some of the contests are over, but not all! So go check them out, the posts are awesome! Also, some of these book bloggers are absolutely amazing, and I was excited to discover some new ones I’d never checked out before.

p.s. I’m a particularly BIG fan of Presenting Lenore, so if you click on no other blog below, please check her out! She’s simply lovely!

p.p.s Another reason to check out Presenting Lenore, she’s been doing Dystopian August with a ton of awesome posts and reviews on dystopian fiction. Run, don’t walk, over to her blog and say hi!!

Aug 082010
 

I know I said I wasn’t going to post this weekend due to birthday partying and hat wearing and cake eating, but I just couldn’t wait to share this news.

I’m gearing up for the release of Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins, the much anticipated third and final book of the Hunger Games trilogy. I’m so excited I took the day after its release off work so that I could stay up all night reading. That’s the kind of fanatic I am.

Well that week is a theme week here at Tell Great Stories. It’ll be Dystopian literature all day, all the time. I’ve got a bunch of great posts lined up, some book reviews, and other great stuff I haven’t quite pulled together yet. Last night I was working on the graphic for the theme week and this is what I came up with. I have to tell you I’m so smitten with this banner that I’m thinking about redoing my Tell Great Stories banner in a similar style. Let’s here it for dystopian storytelling where no one bathes enough and everyone is running from something terrible!

Tell your friends to stop by if they like that sort of thing. Hot Dystopian Summer Nights begins August 23rd!

*And yes. Today is my birthday. I am 31 years old. I will be celebrating it in my pajamas eating pizza, cake, and playing board games with friends.