Showing posts with label The Next Big Thing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Next Big Thing. Show all posts

Monday, February 18, 2013

Next Big Thing Roundup

Here is the Next Big Thing round-up I promised last month. Some of these writers are NESCBWI members, some are author/bloggers I know, and a few are authors whose work I've liked, so when I saw they were taking part in this meme, I linked them up. Yes, I am in the list, in alphabetical order, so you can read, once again, about my Next Big Thing, which is coming very soon.

Linda Crotta Brennan

Leslie Bulion

Tanita S. Davis 

Erin Dionne

Matt Forrest Esenwine

A.C. Gaughen

Gail Gauthier

Julia True Kingsley
 
Margo Lanagan

Dawn Metcalf

Laurie Smith Murphy 

Joyce Ray

Sarah Stevenson

Linda Booth Sweeney

Elizabeth Wein




Saturday, January 05, 2013

The Next Big Thing

For the last few months, I've been interested in community-building for writers. So I was delighted when Sarah Stevenson, author of The Latte Rebellion and a long-time blogger at Finding Wonderland, tagged me to be part of the Next Big Thing Author Meme. Not only is this meme about writing and a promotional opportunity for authors, it gives me another chance to reconnect with the blogger community I was part of years back as well as connect with writers I'm acquainted with now. For readers, this meme provides you with information on books that are in the pipeline toward publication or, even, in the most early stages of work.

I'm going to be talking about Saving the Planet & Stuff, which will be republished at the end of this  month as an e-book. Then I'll be linking to three more authors who will carry on with this project.

What is the working title of the book?

Well, back in 2001, when my editor, Kathy Dawson, and I were first discussing the book, I was thinking of calling it Summer Work. According to an e-mail I found, I thought that was sort of deep because the main character (named Edmund at that point) had a summer job, but just what was the real work he was doing that summer? Kathy's response was, "Let's sit tight on the title for now." And it ended up being called Saving the Planet & Stuff, a title I'm very happy with, when it was published in 2003.

Where did the idea come from for the book?

My family dropped in on my in-laws and found that they had company, an older couple on their way to their cabin in Maine. The husband told my preteen son that he ought to come to their cabin with them and help him set up his laptop. That definitely didn't happen, but the idea of a young person being thrown in with older people he barely knew intrigued me, and I thought about it for a couple of years. 

What genre does your book fall under? 

This is mainstream fiction for older YAs and adults. I say that not because the content is so incredibly mature, but because much of the humor involves the office/workplace and environmentalism. The work world is something teenagers are beginning to take an interest in. Middle grade and younger kids? Not so much. Committed environmentalists have made a lifestyle choice that sometimes puts them at odds with the rest of the world, and that conflict is the basis for much of the humor in Saving the Planet & Stuff. Teenagers are beginning to understand that life is going to involve some decision making. 

What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?

I'm embarrassed to say that this is something I have fantasized about. I can't say I've thought about it for my other books, but definitely for this one. The young main character, Michael Racine, is the hardest part to cast because young actors age out fast. Frankie Muniz is way too old, though he would have been good in his youthful heyday. Charlie McDermott of The Middle still plays a teenager. You need somebody who can project an attitude and who can be amazed that there are people in the world who are not of his world. The two pivotal adults are much easier. Blythe Danner with a long braid for Nora Blake and, if he would let his hair go gray and grow a ponytail, Tom Selleck for Walt Marcello. Big. Imposing. Sly wit. I wouldn't even object to the 'stache so long as it was gray.

What is the one sentence synopsis of your book?

A twenty-first century mall child and two aging environmentalists experience culture clash when they're thrown together for the summer.

Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?

This question is phrased oddly. I am going to answer it in this way: I am self-publishing an e-book edition in order to keep Saving the Planet available as a back list title. It was originally published by G. P. Putnam's Sons in 2003.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of the manuscript?

I don't know if I could work that out even if I went through all the old e-mails. I can tell you it takes me a long time to write a book--months, if I'm lucky. Then there are many revisions. I know my editor and I were e-mailing about the book in 2001, which means she must have had a manuscript to look at at that point. Then it was published in 2003.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

This is always a difficult question for me because I write a lot of humor within mainstream fiction, and I don't always see much of that to compare myself with. I'm going to throw out the title I Am a Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want to Be Your Class President. Though that is a school-based story, whereas Saving the Planet is workplace and environmental humor, I found the humor in I Am a Genius mature in the same way that I think the humor in Saving the Planet is mature.

Who or what inspired you to write this book? 

My older son liked YA fiction when he was a teenager, and I was his book shopper. I understood his humor and was able to bring things back from the library that he actually liked. One day he said to me, "All the books you bring me are about girls."  I realized he was right. At that time, funny books tended to be about girls. Books about boys were about sports or something violent or dark, which he had no interest in whatsoever. So I set out to write a funny book about a teenage boy for my teenage boy. 


What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

This is a funny book not just about environmentalism and office politics but about what people choose to do with their lives. That theme should work for both teen and adult readers. Michael, the teenager, is faced with questions about what he is going to do with his life. Three male models are available to him over the course of the story. Walt and Nora, the much older adults, are faced with questions about what they've been doing with their lives. (I would say did, except this couple is definitely not done living.)

Who Else Has A Next Big Thing To Blog About? 

Sarah Albee, who has written a number of children's books (and is the only writer I know, personally, who has published under more than one name), will be continuing with The Next Big Thing at her blog. While you're waiting to hear about what's coming up in her writing world, check out her blog post about hunting for bathrooms at the Mark Twain House

Crissa-Jean Chappell, the author of  Total Constant Order as well as Narc and a contributor to Dear Bully, will be writing about her Next Big Thing at her journal.  

And I believe we'll be hearing about Dawn Metcalf's Next Big Thing, as well.  Dawn's first book, Luminous, was published in 2011, and her next book, Indelible, comes out this summer.

Watch their blogs for their Next Big Thing. 

Later this month, I hope to do a Next Big Thing roundup of NBT posts from other writers.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Blog Culture AndThe Next Big Thing Author Meme

I am taking part in The Next Big Thing Author Meme, thanks to Sarah Stevenson. Google "The Next Big Thing" and authors. It's all over the place.

This very professionally focused meme is an example of the collaborative nature of blog culture. I think a lot of authors don't understand the blogging world. They hook up with Blogger or Wordpress, post some stuff occasionally, and say they have a blog and, thus, a platform. But they don't really understand the networking aspect of blogging. Yeah, they hope for some kind of viral thing to happen to their book. Somehow. But blogging remains apart from them. It's something they do because the marketing books and many, many how-to articles say they should.

I haven't even done my Next Big Thing blog post yet. I've only been mentioned as doing one in the future. The stats for this blog have jumped these last two days. That, my lads and lasses, is blog culture at work.

You have to be part of the culture to have things like that happen. You have to be somebody who has connected with other somebodies in the blogosphere. You can't just treat blogging like ordering post cards and bookmarks, part of the marketing plan that you're forced to do.