Afternoon, all!
I'm really excited today, because I get to kick off this run of introductions by interviewing my good friend and co-conspirator Yael Tischler! When I first met Yael, back in September 2012, it was clear within about a minute that we were going to be great friends. Since then we've co-written stories, embarked on numerous adventures, invited you all to join our barricade, and finished some MAs into the bargain.
That alone would be excellent grounds for an interview. But Yael isn't just one of my best friends, she's also someone whose stories always excite me - a fantastically talented writer with a real gift for getting into characters lives and voices. And the reason I'm so excited about today? I honestly can't wait for the rest of the world to get the chance to read her writing.
So, ladies and gentlemen. I give you... Yael Tischler!
Friday, 25 April 2014
Where The Wild Writers Are...
(picture courtesy of the fantastic Harriet Balfour Evans)
But of course, before we can launch the anthology in style, there are a few more preparations to be made. Pitches need honing, some books still need finishing, and we clearly can't start transforming the venue until the day intself. And, while the official countdown runs on the anthology site, we thought we'd do a countdown of our own on the Chronicles of Word and give anyone reading the chance to get to know the writers a bit in advance. In other words, for the next three weeks we will be interviewing each other!
So, are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll begin...
Thursday, 3 April 2014
Summer’s on its way! …Sort of.
Okay, so the picnic blanket is
still mouldy and crumpled up in the shed, temperatures are still verging on arctic,
and your sunglasses are god knows where, BUT things on the YA scene couldn't be hotter (not even counting those pictures of Theo James at the Divergent premiere... enough said).
Here are some latest releases that I can’t wait to get my
hands on:
Aside from having the best title
of 2014 so far, The 57 Lives of Alex Wayfare
revolves around one of the most exciting themes known to books, erm... ever. Of course, any book about time
travel would struggle NOT to be awesome, but this one looks particularly promising. Geeky-yet-quietly-hilarious
Alex is trying to get rid of her weird visions of the past – a task gets
infinitely harder when it turns out they’re actual scenes from her fifty six
various previous lives. And if that
wasn’t enough to deal with, there's someone on her tail, someone who's biding their own time before going in for the kill...
Coming in
a close second for Most Awesome Title of The Year (and arguably, Most Awesome Cover of the
Year) is The Strange and Beautiful
Sorrows of Ava Lavender. It’s a moving account of a girl born with bird
wings, struggling in her innocence to make sense of the world around her. Leslye
Walton’s rich, beautiful language explores love, nostalgia, hope and sorrow. Sure
to be a tearjerker; prepare accordingly.
And if Gayle Forman’s new
instalment Just One Year is filled
with even a smidge of the tension, dialogue and heart-melting detail of its
predecessor, Just One Day, you’re going
to want to keep those tissues out. This time, we’re getting up close and
personal with the charming and somewhat elusive Willem de
Ruiter.
Romantics, please form an orderly queue.
My final recommendation isn’t out
until summer, but I’m sure it’ll be worth the wait…
Kate Karyus Quinn has a knack for
the eerie and the terrifying – if you read her last book, Another Little Piece, you’ll know what I mean. But the concept of (Don't You) Forget About Me is pure,
twisted brilliance.
Gardnerville is an near-utopian
paradise. Except for the fact that, every one year in four, the town’s fuel
source exacts its revenge on its teens, imbuing them with hostile urges that
make them commit horrifying acts. To save her sister - one of its victims -
Skylar must lift herself out of her grief and drug-induced stupor, and find a
way to finally set the town free.
Roll on June! *claps wildly*
So what’s on your YA reading list
this month? Any recommendations? Don't forget to add them in the comments sections
below...
Thursday, 6 February 2014
Beyond the barricade is there a world you long to see?
Friends:
It is time for us all to decide who we are. No, not really. (I seriously hope most of us know this already. If not, probably a good time to hop to it.) It is actually time for us (Yael & Cinders) to introduce you to a concept that is very close to our hearts. It is time to introduce you to the “Diversity Barricade.”
You might be side-eyeing the computer right now, wondering what dead, fictional revolutionaries and barricades have to do with the children’s book industry. We suppose this confusion is warranted, but let us explain.
First, take a look at this wonderfully illustrated chart from Tina Kügler, illustrating the current level of diversity in children’s fiction:
Depressing, no?
We might not be Enjolras*, but recognizing the lack of diversity in children’s publishing gets our blood boiling with revolutionary fervour.
Monday, 13 January 2014
This Post is Rated "R"... for Rejection
Well hello lovely readers! I thought I’d start the New Year
off by posting something nice and cheery.
The topic of this post… drumroll please… is rejection!
Why are you qualified
to write this post, you may ask? Well, surprising but true: I have been
rejected from many things in my life: literary magazines, universities, boyz,
jobs (gosh, a whole lot of jobs actually! Talk to me about last November some
other time… Trying to find a job in London is pretty brutal!). Hec, I’ll probably be able to add agents and
publishers to the list once I start submitting my manuscript later this
year. Rejection is practically an
occupational hazard of being a(n aspiring) published author.
If you’re anything like me (that is, your skin is the
thickness of rice paper and Achieving Things is very very important to your
fragile ego), REJECTION SUCKS. Some
people brush off rejection, as they are bigger than that. I commend those people. I am not bigger than that. In fact, many times, I find myself on the
floor, beating my fists against the carpet, moaning, “Why me? Why me?”
(#toughfirstworldproblems). At the end
of the day, though, I peel myself off the floor and keep going. Why? Because rejection is a side-effect of
the journey to do difficult/awesome things.
It’s a sign that you’re doing something right, because you’re putting
yourself out there in a challenging landscape.
It’d be worrying if you never got rejected, because either you're the
most awesome person to ever be born and better than everyone else (unlikely,
but if that’s the case, congrats!) or you aren’t pushing yourself. Rejection is normal, part of the process of
getting where you want to be, and it happens to basically everyone.
But does rejection still suck? YES.
So, I asked you - my fellow bloggers, readers, and Facebook and Twitter buddies - to weigh in on how
you cope with rejection. The response
was overwhelming – I don’t think I’ve ever had so many comments on a post!
Rejection is such a universal experience that everyone had something to say
about it. (And by the way, thanks to
everyone who wrote back. You’re all
superstars.)
So what did you all have to say?
Tuesday, 24 December 2013
It's that time of year already...
Wishing all our wonderful readers
an excellent, book-filled, Christmas Holiday!
With best wishes,
from all the Chroniclers
xxx
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Put on Your YA-rmulkah, It's Time for Channukah: 8 Crazy Nights of YA (A.K.A. The Chronicles of Word Channukah Special)
Ever feel like there are just SO MANY AWESOME YA BOOKS out
there, it’s like Channukah’s come early this year?
Well, you’d be right.
Channukah has come early this
year. I’ll be lighting the first candle in just under a
week on November 27th, along with everyone who got a nod in Adam Sandler’s classic musical litany.
In fact, in honour of the Festival of Lights, I’ve written my
own version of the Adam Sandler Channukah song, featuring Jewish YA authors past and present. Cuz I’m just that cool:
Meg Rosoff spins the
dreidel
And Cassandra Clare –
what a fine shayna meidel*
Guess who’ll be
lighting a Channukah candler?
David Levithan and
Daniel Handler!**
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