Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Romance. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Middle Grade Ninja Episode 54: Editor Lauren Smulski

To watch new episodes as they air, go to YouTube and subscribe.

Middle Grade Ninja is available on SoundcloudStitcheritunesPodbeanPodblasterRadioPublicblubrryListen NotesGoogle Play, and many other fine locations.

Lauren Smulski reveals candid details about her career in NYC publishing, including salary specifics, as she rose from assistant editor to an editor with Harlequin Teen. We discuss her new role as a freelance editor, the types of services she’s offering, and the ways writers should go about evaluating editors. We also chat about the indie publishing revolution, the need for traditional publishing to decentralize, and piñata cakes. Lauren offers many tips for world building, writing dialogue, building emotional depth, and so much more.






From the moment she learned how to read, Lauren brought books with her everywhere. She flew through story after story while curled up with fuzzy blankets, while lying in hammocks, while at the beach with her toes in the sand, even while her parents scolded her for hiding yet another book under the table at dinner. But it wasn’t until her junior year at Ithaca College, where she studied journalism and English, that Lauren realized making books was an actual job.

After earning her master’s degree in publishing from Pace University, Lauren went on to intern at Dorchester Publishing and freelance for Skyhorse Publishing before landing her first job as an editorial assistant at Harlequin. There, she worked her way up the ladder to become an associate editor for Inkyard Press, specializing in stories for young adults, ranging from epic fantasy, science fiction, and thrillers to contemporary, historical, and nonfiction. Her books have been New York Times bestsellers, Indie Next Picks, award-winners, and received multiple starred reviews.

With nearly a decade of editorial experience under her belt, Lauren has now made the shift into a career as a freelance editor, so she can spend more time working directly with authors to nurture their writing and bring their stories to the next level. She is thrilled to be able to do this from her home in eastern Connecticut, where she lives with her husband, her daughter, and her Shakespearean cat, Tybalt. In her spare time, she loves to invent new cupcake recipes, play lots of board games, and relax by the fire pit in her backyard.


Sunday, February 28, 2010

7 Questions For: Author Alyson Noel


Alyson Noel is the best-selling author of Fly Me to the Moon, a book for adults, and several books for teens including Cruel Summer, Saving Zoe, Kiss and Blog, Laguna Cove, Art Geeks and Prom Queens, Faking 19, and The Immortals Series: Evermore, Blue Moon, and the upcoming Shadowland (available November 17). Here is the official bio from her site: “I was born and raised in The OC (although I never actually called it that until the TV show), but after high school I was so desperate to flee suburbia and see the world I took off for Europe, eventually settling in Mykonos, Greece where I lived for several years before moving to Manhattan where I worked as a flight attendant for a major airline, writing my debut novel, Faking 19, during long weather delays and boring layovers until the day I visited a friend in Newport Beach where I met my future husband and found myself right back in The OC where I live and write full time. There! Whew!” Alyson Noel is an incredible talent and her books provoke thoughts worth having in the minds of her readers just as surely as they keep the reader in suspense from start to finish. She’s a big-time writer and I’m honored she took the time to do this interview.

And now Alyson Noel faces the 7 Questions:


Question Seven: What are your top three favorite books?

Well, believe it or not this list is constantly changing, but this week’s top three are: 

WUTHERING HEIGHTS - by Emily Brontë
CATCHER IN THE RYE – by JD Salinge
THE ALCHEMIST- by Paul Coelho




Question Six: How much time do you spend each week writing? Reading?

Writing- Well, I’m on a pretty intense deadline schedule so I write everyday, pretty much all day, so my guess would be around 60 hours a week.

Reading- Well, the only downside to being an author is that I don’t read near as much as I used to, and most of the books I do read are of the research variety. I read them while I work out, while I’m waiting in line, and before bed—it’s sort of an accumulative thing that’s hard to track!


Question Five: What was the path that led you to publication?

The day I finished reading Judy Blume’s ARE YOU THERE GOD? IT’S ME, MARGARET, I knew I wanted to be a writer. Judy Blume was one of the first to approach adolescence in such an open, real, frank way and I aspired to do the same. So I started writing poetry (really—bad—poetry) back in junior high, and short stories in high school, and though I took the occasional writing class through the years, it wasn’t until 9/11 when I was working as a NYC flight attendant, that I thought it might be a good time to change careers and pursue my dream. So I took some online writing classes where I expanded a short story I’d written years ago into a novel (which ultimately became my debut novel, FAKING 19), and met up with a fellow student who led me to my first agent, who, after a major revision, landed me my first, two-book deal with St Martin’s Press and I’ve been writing for them ever since.


Question Four: Do you believe writers are born, taught or both? Which was true for you?

Born. I think you can teach the fundamentals of writing, show someone how to structure a story, and all that—but that special way writers (all artists really) have of looking at the world, noticing all the details, assimilating them, adding, subtracting, and adding their own, unique, storytelling spin—that’s something one is born with. It’s a way of living, of being, that cannot be taught.


Question Three: What is your favorite thing about writing? What is your least favorite thing?

My favorite part is when I’m so immersed in the world I’m creating that everything around me fades into the background and the words are flowing faster than I can type them—those moments are magical!

My least favorite part is plotting. I’m always eager to just jump in and get going! But plotting is essential, it’s the map that’ll get me through the rocky terrain I inevitably find myself in, so, I plot, whether I like it or not!


Question Two: What one bit of wisdom would you impart to an aspiring writer? (feel free to include as many other bits of wisdom as you like)

I think it’s important to just let yourself write without judging. Nothing’s ever perfect the first time around or even the fifth. Writing is all about rewriting, but you can’t revise a blank page so you have to allow yourself to start somewhere.

Also, if you truly want to write for a living then it’s important to educate yourself about the business. Join professional writer’s groups, read agent blogs, read books on writing, whatever you can to learn the ropes. It’s a really tough business filled with lots of rejections and a long line of people who seem like they’re just waiting for the opportunity to say No to you. But if you really want it, you’ll learn to scale those brick walls, and keep going. Stay positive, stay focused, and remember it only takes one Yes to get you where you want to go!


Question One: If you could have lunch with any writer, living or dead, who would it be? Why?

David Sedaris, and it’s my treat! Because he is absolutely hilarious and brilliant and has the ability to make me laugh and cry in the span of one paragraph!


Actual Interview Date: 9/20/2009





7 Questions For: Author Kristan Higgins

Kristan Higgins is the author of Fools Rush In, Catch of the Day, Just one of the Guys, and Too Good to be True. Here is her official biography: “Kristan lives with her family in a small Connecticut town that boasts a wonderful library, a great agricultural fair, a really good ice cream stand and not much else. She is the mother of two lovely kids and the wife of a brave firefighter who is, perhaps more importantly, a fantastic cook. Pets include a cheerful Lab mutt, two cats and the occasional, short-lived beta fish. Previously a copywriter, Kristan began writing fiction when her children graced her life with simultaneous afternoon naps. Writing, she found, was infinitely more satisfying than folding laundry, and so began her first novel. Kristan holds a BA in English from the College of the Holy Cross, which enables her to identify dangling participles and quote many great novels. Kristan and her crew spend as much time as possible at the family home on Cape Cod, where they shiver in the Atlantic, ride bikes, swat horseflies and don't catch any fish.” 

 And now Kristan Higgins faces the 7 Questions:


Question Seven: What are your top three favorite books?

Abide with Me by Elizabeth Strout
Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
The Shipping News by E. Annie Proulx


Question Six: How much time do you spend each week writing? Reading?

Too much time writing, not enough reading...I write five or six hours a day, read maybe 1-2. Argue with my imagination about 19 hours a day...


Question Five: What was the path that led you to publication?

I always loved romance novels, wanted to stay at home with my kids and so wrote a book I thought would sell. I'd always written for a living (ad agencies, PR, that kind of thing), so the jump to fiction wasn't that far for me. Wrote a manuscript, spent lots of time revising and polishing it, came up with a killer query letter and got an agent, who then sold the book. It's not the usual path, but I had a leg up, having been a writer for 12 years already, so please don't throw sticks at me.


Question Four: Do you believe writers are born, taught or both? Which was true for you?

Oh, both, definitely. I'm always open to learning new things about writing. That being said, you really can't learn creativity...craft, sure, but the inspiration...nope.


Question Three: What is your favorite thing about writing? What is your least favorite thing?

I love when my manuscript comes to life. I dislike the wrestling that comes before that! I love revising, because that's when my manuscripts become really good. And I love fan mail!


Question Two: What one bit of wisdom would you impart to an aspiring writer? (feel free to include as many other bits of wisdom as you like)

Keep trying, keep learning, try new techniques and don't quit till you get the results you want.


Question One: If you could have lunch with any writer, living or dead, who would it be? Why?

Dr. Seuss. I think the reason is self explanatory. :-)


Actual Interview Date: 11/16/2009


7 Questions For: Author Christine Blevins

Christine Blevins is the author of Midwife of the Blue Ridge and The Tory Widow, both historical novels. From the bio section of her website: “Christine Blevins grew up on the south side of Chicago. She is the youngest of four children born to Ukrainian immigrants. Like most immigrant kids, she was expected to study hard and excel in school. She spent a lot of time with her nose in a book, and in her beloved books, she found the pathways to worlds beyond the grimy neighborhood she lived in. Christine eventually left the old neighborhood, completed design school, landed a job as an interior designer, fell in love with Brian Blevins (a wonderful guy), married him, had children (four great kids), veered into the graphic design business (partners with Brian), all the while never losing her ability to become wholeheartedly immersed in a good story.” Mrs. Blevins lives in Illinois with her family and their golden retriever, Dude. 

And now Christine Blevens faces the 7 Questions:


Question Seven: What are your top three favorite books?

Oy! I hate this question. I have too many! In keeping with me being a historical novelist and all, my three favorites books today are stories that absolutely swept me away to another time and place:

THE HOBBIT by J.R.R. Tolkien
THE THREE MUSKETEERS by Alexander Dumas
SHOGUN by James Clavell


Question Six: How much time do you spend each week writing? Reading?

With a job (I’m a marketing director for a construction company) and a family that I like to spend time with (happily married for almost 30 years, four grown kids, and one lovely granddaughter) I have to maintain a pretty structured routine in order to meet my writing deadlines. I have recently shifted to a four-day workweek, and I devote most of my three-day weekend to writing, and to writing-business stuff, like answering these questions ;-).

I do “write” on workdays from about 7 pm to 11, but that time is mainly spent tuning up whatever I accomplished on the weekend, and compiling research for the upcoming segment.

I have to say I’m extraordinarily lucky to have a very supportive family that pitches in to help me keep the house in order, the laundry done, and the fridge stocked, otherwise, I’d be at wits end.

Reading?

Unfortunately, to keep up a pace of producing a book a year, reading for pleasure is something I don’t have much time for. As a historical fiction writer, I have to read an awful lot of non-fiction in order to really “know” my time period, my setting, and how my characters exist within it. My WIP is a sequel to THE TORY WIDOW—published this past April, it’s a story set in New York City at the onset of the American Revolution—and even though I do have a good handle on Revolutionary America, I still end up having to do a lot of research to keep the details alive and accurate. I do read for pleasure when I’m on vacation though.

We just spent a week in Mexico, and I gobbled up four books. Yum!


Question Five: What was the path that led you to publication?

About 8 years ago, when my younger two became old enough to require less of my attention, I began writing fiction as a hobby. I floundered around on my own for a while, and then joined a writer’s group that met once a week at my local community college. In group, I began to write a novel in my favorite genre—historical fiction.

The group was essential in providing me the camaraderie and structure I needed. Three years later, the novel was finished and polished, and I looked at the stack of 487 manuscript pages and thought, “Now what?”

My husband Brian’s hobby is painting, and when he finishes a piece, it is hung on a wall to be admired and enjoyed. Well, it’s hard to hang a manuscript on the wall! Though I enjoy the writing process, I realized my greatest pleasure is derived in sharing my stories. I write to entertain, and I decided I had to at least try to pursue publication. I figured, what the heck?

So I dove into the business of getting published. I researched the process, compiled a list of literary agents and began sending out query letters. After eight months, and about a zillion rejections, I landed a wonderful agent, Nancy Coffey. Seven months after signing with Nancy, we had a two-book deal from Jackie Cantor at Berkley.

That was a surprise! I had to get cracking on writing THE TORY WIDOW, which Nancy sold based on a five-page synopsis I cobbled together at the eleventh hour in answer to the question “What else does she have?”

This last January, I signed a new contract with Berkley for two sequels to TORY, and so before I knew it, my dream of getting the one book published had turned into a writing career.


Question Four: Do you believe writers are born, taught or both? Which was true for you?

I think people are born with talents that need to be developed with guidance and dedication. A talented musician might take lessons and spend hours practicing to master his instrument. A fine artist might need to be taught theory and technique. A writer might take classes to learn how to command the elements storytelling and language. These paths of development will vary in method and in intensity, but the talent—the ability to create—I think that is innate.

Which was true for me? Both. I think I am a born storyteller who developed into a good writer by observing life, by reading a ton of good writing, by being part of a great writer’s group, and by being lucky enough to get advice from a wonderful editor. I continue to work hard to better my abilities, and I am always learning.




Question Three: What is your favorite thing about writing? What is your least favorite thing?

I love when my characters surprise me.

What is my least favorite thing? Those not-so-positive reviews. I don’t like those very much at all. I put a ton of effort into writing the kind of book I like to read, and I totally understand that I can’t please ‘em all, but still—reading a negative review can be quite painful. I am happy to add that the pain is made bearable by way more oh-so-positive reviews, and lots of email from readers who enjoy my stories.


Question Two: What one bit of wisdom would you impart to an aspiring writer? (feel free to include as many other bits of wisdom as you like)

Grow a thick skin.


Question One: If you could have lunch with any writer, living or dead, who would it be? Why?

I would love to buy lunch for Bernard Cornwell on his birthday. Why? Four reasons:

1- I so admire his work.
2- We have the same birthday.
3- He was kind enough to read my debut novel MIDWIFE OF THE BLUE RIDGE, and give me a great blurb for the cover.
4- He seems like a really cool guy.


Actual Interview Date: 8/27/2009