Happy
Wednesday Everyone! Today I’m excited to have Adrienne Kisner here to share
about her YA contemporary DEAR RACHEL MADDOW. Being a fan of Rachel Maddow
myself, I am excited to read this from the title alone. And it sounds like a
really gripping story about dealing with grief, diversity, sexual identity, and
politics. Before I get to Adrienne’s interview, I have my IWSG post.
IWSG POST
Purpose: To share and encourage. Writers can express doubts and concerns without fear of appearing foolish or weak. Those who have been through the fire can offer assistance and guidance. It’s a safe haven for insecure writers of all kinds!
Posting: The first Wednesday of the month is officially Insecure Writer's Support Group Day.
The co-hosts this month are: Beverly Stowe McClure, Tyrean Martinson, and Ellen @ The Cynical Sailor!
IWSG POST
Posting: The first Wednesday of the month is officially Insecure Writer's Support Group Day.
The co-hosts this month are: Beverly Stowe McClure, Tyrean Martinson, and Ellen @ The Cynical Sailor!
I'll skip the optional question today. I'm feeling pretty good. My mom is adjusting well to her move to independent living where I live. And I actually got a chapter revised and critiqued by my critique group. It was a hard chapter where I introduce the villain. My critique partners basically liked it with some suggestions so YAY!
What I really want to talk about this month is helping our friend C. Lee McKenzie who recently suffered a tragic loss. Many of you already know about this and are helping but in case you don't know about this, I am asking for your help. Lee's newest MG fantasy, SOME VERY MESSY MEDIEVAL MAGIC, released on May 15, 2018. Two days later, Lee suffered the tragic loss of her husband due to a sudden heart attack. I also suffered the sudden loss of my own husband a little over four years ago and know firsthand how heartbreaking this loss is. Many of you helped me through it with your kind support.
While we cannot take away Lee's grief, we could show her kindness and friendship by helping her promote her book. I know you all are book lovers and many have your own blogs. I'm hoping that you can do all or some of these easy things to help Lee:
- Buy Lee's book. An e-book is only $3.99. I just did that.
- Post about Lee's book on your blog and other social media sites. Ask your friends to help do by shouting out about her book and buying it
Pete’s stuck in medieval England! Pete and his friend Weasel thought they’d closed the Timelock.
But a young page from medieval times, Peter of Bramwell, goes missing. His absence during a critical moment will forever alter history unless he’s found. There’s only one solution—fledgling wizard Pete must take the page’s place. He travels to 1173 England accompanied by Weasel and Fanon, Pete’s alligator familiar. But what if the page remains lost? Will Pete know what to do when the critical moment arrives? Toss in a grumpy Fanon, the dukes’s curious niece, a talking horse, and the Circle of Stones, and Pete quickly realizes he’s in over his young wizard head yet again.
And some links:
Website: http://cleemckenziebooks.com
Dancing Lemur Press: http://www.dancinglemurpressllc.com
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/search?query=Some+Very+Messy+Medieval+Magic
I started posting this request for help promoting Lee's book in my Beach Reads Book Giveaway Hop last week because I have about 100 followers who read those posts that do not read many of my other posts. I'm planning to do that again with my next giveaway hop for the same reason. If you can think of a way to help Lee shout out about her book, I know that she would be grateful for the help.
Now
onto my interview with Adrienne.
Here’s a blurb of DEAR RACHEL MADDOW from
Goodreads:
In Adrienne Kisner's Dear Rachel Maddow, a high school girl deals with school politics and life after her brother’s death by drafting emails to MSNBC host Rachel Maddow in this funny and heartfelt YA debut.
Brynn Haper's life has one steadying force--Rachel Maddow.
Brynn Haper's life has one steadying force--Rachel Maddow.
She watches her daily, and after writing to Rachel for a school project--and actually getting a response--Brynn starts drafting e-mails to Rachel but never sending them. Brynn tells Rachel about breaking up with her first serious girlfriend, about her brother Nick's death, about her passive mother and even worse stepfather, about how she's stuck in remedial courses at school and is considering dropping out.
Then Brynn is confronted with a moral dilemma. One student representative will be allowed to have a voice among the administration in the selection of a new school superintendent. Brynn's archnemesis, Adam, and ex-girlfriend, Sarah, believe only Honors students are worthy of the selection committee seat. Brynn feels all students deserve a voice. When she runs for the position, the knives are out. So she begins to ask herself: What Would Rachel Maddow Do?
Hi
Adrienne! Thanks so much for joining us.
1.
Tell us about yourself and how you became a writer.
Hello! Thank you so much for having me! I feel I should tell the world I’m a Resident
Director. I live in a high rise with
approximately 1800 undergrads. I’ve
heard tell of people who did this until they sold books. NOT ME.
I’m a lifer.
In
grade school, I remember telling the guidance counselor that I wanted to be a
writer. They asked me why and I said
that I had to write. I couldn’t not do
it. So I wrote. I have stuff from second or third grade and
it’s mostly about Jesus because that’s how I rolled. (Oh. I
also have a Ph.D. in Theology.) Ah, my
youth. And look at me now! I think my book as over 90 instances of the
“F” word alone, and that’s probably not even the most vulgar thing in there. Do I contradict myself? Very well.
I contradict myself. (I am large. I contain multitudes.)
2. I bet you really stay in touch with what teens and young adults think with your job. Where did you get the idea for DEAR RACHEL MADDOW?
By
watching a lot of Chris Hayes.
Just
kidding.
I
love DEAR MR. HENSHAW. And I would
scheme in my head for a way to rip off pay homage to my favorite
book. I started watching Rachel Maddow
in the company of a very (re: VERY) colicky infant. So I’d watch the show on repeat throughout
the day and night since Gilmore Girls was not yet on Netflix and I liked
Rachel’s cheerful company. After a few
years of that (I added a second journalism-loving infant) it just kind of
became the only thing I could write.
3. That's a great way to deal with a colicky baby! You tell your story through a series of e-mails from Brynn to Rachel Maddow.
Where did you get the idea for writing your story like this and what were some
of the challenges you faced using this format.
Leigh
writes to Mr. Henshaw, so too did Brynn write to Dr. Maddow. I date stamped all of the letters, which
helped with time flow but I also had to watch because they correspond with an
actual calendar with holidays when the characters would be off of school. I also had to make up subject lines. That was fun, but man there were a lot of
them.
4.
You tackle a lot of issues in your book—grief over losing a sibling, abusive
parents. Brynn’s breakup with her girlfriend, and more—in a gripping way that
is weaved naturally into the story with a lot of twists. How did you plot all
these storylines into your story?
I’m
not a plotter. I write and am always
shocked by what the heck happens. I try
to keep in mind that people don’t always make the best decisions, and that
these choices will have consequences that can lead to my darlings
suffering. This was also my fourth novel
that I’d written. My first three had
great parents, everybody surviving. This
one I was like, “well let’s just bleed all over the page and wheeeeeee.” I never thought anyone would read this one
either, so I didn’t hold back. But here
we are. When I revise I have to make a
spreadsheet (taught to me by the great A.M. Jenkins) to trace the emotional
through-lines of the characters to make sure they flow evenly throughout the
book.
5. That's a great idea to use a spreadsheet for your revisions. Brynn sounds like a fantastic character that has a great voice that will tug at
readers’ hearts. Voice can be one of the hardest aspects of a story to get
right. How did you develop/find Brynn’s and what advice do you have for
aspiring authors?
I
admit that voice just kind of happens for me.
Brynn likes the sound of words, the shape of them. I think that’s why she swears so much. It communicates exactly the emotion she wants
to convey in one word instead of seven.
Emotion and the truth in her head are always the first things out of her
mouth. She has nothing to hide. So I’d say knowing your characters like this
is essential to voice. What is their
relationship to words? To
communicating? What would they say to
themselves in their head versus what they say out loud? Brynn is from western Pennsylvania and so am
I, so that helped colloquially.
6. Ooh, I know that more writers than me wish we could say voice happens for us. Your agent is Catherine Drayton. How did she become your agent and what was
your road to publication like?
Catherine
Drayton is a goddess among women and I love her. Is that over the top? I don’t care.
She surfs, you know. In
Australia. I feel that makes it more bad
ass. I basically queried her in the
slush (okay, DEAR RACHEL MADDOW was the fourth book with which I queried her
but who’s counting). She requested the
full and was the first agent to offer. A
few other amazing agents offered and I was so torn. But Catherine represents some of my absolute
favorite authors ever, and was the first one to take a chance on me, and that
meant a lot. I did one revision with her
over the summer and went on submission in September. I sold a few weeks later. Did I have about 300 rejections for various
books before that (AGAIN WHO’S COUNTING?) yes I did. But. Again. Here we are now.
7.
You also have been going to college and working there, including living in a
dormitory setting. What is your writing workspace like and how have you
balanced college, college work, and your writing schedule?
I
think the key to my productivity thus far is an utter lack of balance. I go hard from morning till night and then
listen to a bedtime story on my Calm app to fall asleep so I can do it again
the next day. Unless an undergraduate
decides to burn popcorn in the middle of the night or something and then I
don’t get enough sleep. It’s not a great
system. I don’t think I’d recommend
it. But I have a desk in my
bedroom. You aren’t supposed to write
where you sleep, I’ve read. But it’s
where the desk fits. My computer is often
sticky because my son sneaks on to play Roblox after eating Nutella
sandwiches. I also do not recommend
this.
8. I break the rule about not doing anything but sleeping in my bedroom too. Okay I have to ask this “dumb” question that I’m dying to know. Does Rachel
Maddow know about your book and have you had any communication with her about
it? I have these fantastic images of you being on her show talking about your
book.
I
try not to think about that, lest I dissolve into an unfortunate, awkward
heap. The short answer to that is, kind
of, I think? The longer answer is that
DEAR RACHEL MADDOW won the 2016 PEN New England Susan P. Bloom Award. I think the college where I worked put out a
press release or something, so she caught wind of that. And she sent and Susan Mikula sent me very
fancy flowers, which I carried around campus and made everyone look at. I sent her a thank you card to Rockefeller
Center. And someone sent someone who
knew someone an ARC, and people occasionally @ her on Twitter about it. So it’s
out there. Around 9pm every weekday I
think, “Oh my God you wrote a book to Rachel Maddow and SHE IS A REAL PERSON
WHAT WERE YOU EVEN THINKING?” I can only
hope that it at least doesn’t offend her.
I wrote it out of love.
9.
How are you planning to market your book? What advice do you have for other
writers who have signed a publishing contract and are preparing to debut as an
author?
Welllll
. . . I have like three to five day jobs at any given time, two young children
all the time, and another book to write in between all that. So I think my own marketing plan is kind of
like how I write books: put myself out
there without a specific plan and hope for the best! Advice—my writer people with day jobs, I feel
you. I say don’t fret. Don’t kill yourself. Do what brings you life and joy or in which
you find fun (like blog interviews!) Try
to be brave and step outside your comfort zone if you can. I try to do readings when someone asks,
whereas I’m not big on public speaking. But
if you have to work or take a kid to pottery class, don’t beat yourself
up. You wrote a book. You are freaking amazing. Write another one as a reward. Also never, ever look at your reviews on
Goodreads.
10. Thank you! I have a day job, and you're taking away some of my insecurities on how to handle it all. What are you working on now?
A
book about queer girl birders/nature photographers who reluctantly become
environmental activists. Dare I say it’s
a lot of fun and just little hawkward. Hee.
Thanks
for sharing all your advice, Adrienne. You can find Adrienne at www.adriennekisner.com
Adrienne generously offered an ARC of DEAR RACHEL MADDOW for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment through June 23rd. If your e-mail is not on your Google Profile, you must leave it in the comments to enter the contest.
Here's what's coming up:
Monday, June 11th I have an interview with debut author Kit Frick and a giveaway of her YA thriller SEE ALL THE STARS
Wednesday, June 13th I have an agent spotlight interview and query critique giveaway with Gabrielle Piraino
Thursday, June 14th I'm participating in the Splash Into Summer Giveaway Hop
Monday, June 18th I have a guest post by author Chrys Frey to celebrate the release of Write with Fey: 10 Sparks to Guide You From Idea to Publication
Monday, June 25th I have a guest post by MG author Diane Magras and her agent Adriann Ranta Zurhellen with a query critique giveaway by Adriann and a book giveaway of THE MAD WOLF'S DAUGHTER by Diane
Wednesday, June 27th I have an agent spotlight interview and query critique giveaway with Colleen Oefelein
Hope to see you on Monday!
A most interesting post. Good to know your mother is adjusting where she is living.
ReplyDeleteC Lee's sudden loss is a most terrible situation, like yourself I lost my husband twenty years ago but one never forgets. I do wish Lee every success with her book.
Thank you for a wonderful interview, very interesting to read.
Have a good month.
Yvonne.
Glad your mother is settling in. I know that's a weight off your mind.
ReplyDeleteSo tragic about Lee, but everyone has really stepped in and helped spread the word.
I love how you're encouraging others to help Lee. <3 I can't imagine what she's going through. It's wonderful to hear that your mom is adjusting well to her move. It can be stressful on them.
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to hear your mother is settling in. Situations like that can be so exhausting for the children. I'm especially glad to hear you made progress on your book.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear your mother is settling in. :) Congrats to Adrienne. Her book sounds fantastic! My son always goes on my computer to play Roblox too.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for featuring Lee's book. You know what she's dealing with.
ReplyDeletePleased to hear your mother is settling in nicely.
Way to support Lee! So glad your mom is settling. That must take a great deal of stress off, and a favorable response to a chapter is always a great thing.
ReplyDeleteDear Rachel Maddow sounds like a lot of drama. LOL.
It was so sad about Lee's husband. I lost mine when I was 26. It's kind of you to feature her book.
ReplyDeleteGlad to hear your mother is settling in, Natalie!
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Adrienne! Your book sounds awesome!
I'm stunned and had no idea of Lee's loss. Since you're in touch pass on my condolences. What a horrible shock.
ReplyDeleteAnna from elements of emaginette
This news still saddens me. I only heard about it last week. Sending prayers!!
ReplyDeleteHi Natalie, I'm very happy that you are making progress with your writing :)
ReplyDeleteLee's book sounds super.
My heart is sad for Lee, but I'm uplifted by the fact that your life is doing well at the moment. I'm glad your mom is adjusting and that you've gotten some writing in.
ReplyDeleteI am so sad for Lee, but I'm glad to see the support for her! Thank you, Natalie!
ReplyDeleteAnd, way to go with your mom and your writing!!!
Rachel - I love that you can encompass both faith and writing about tough subjects!
The support for Lee has been fantastic. Thank you for helping, too. Also happy your mom is adjusting. Makes life much easier for both of you.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry to hear of Lee's loss. I haven't been around my blog much recently and have only just learnt of this.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear your mother is settling in well. And well done on the writing.
I can't tell you what all of this means to me, Natalie. I never expected our community to do what it has, and I'm still overwhelmed by all of the kindness and support. It has truly helped me through the worst weeks of my life. I know you understand.
ReplyDeleteI also know how much energy it takes to help out Mom while trying to carry on with your own life. We've both had a load, but we're managing it. It has helped me to watch you go through such similar situations. Here's to some beautiful days for each of us and you mom in her new place.
I read the interview with Adrienne. What a great sense of humor she has. I'll be her book is a great read. Glad to meet here here today. She made me laugh.
You're so awesome for featuring Lee & her wonderful book. It's a 5 star read. Pete & Weasel messing things up in medieval times is so much fun!
ReplyDeleteI'm glad your mom is settling in well :)
Love the sound of Adrienne's book - so many great themes and topics - definitely a buy for my classroom!
I'm so glad you got good feedback from your critique group. Thanks for helping Lee and for sharing her story, which was spotlighted on my blog last week. I was so intrigued by the title I had to buy it.
ReplyDeleteAdrienne, your book sounds great. Wishing you much success.
many prayers going to Lee. It's wonderful to see all the support.
ReplyDeleteCongrats to Adrienne too. Your book sounds great!
That is a neat way to go about a book indeed. Congrats to Adrienne.
ReplyDeleteGreat that your mom has settled in well and good feedback on a chapter is a win too.
Very entertaining interview. Congratulations on your new release, Adrienne!
ReplyDeleteGlad you’re doing well, Natalie! I’ve been sharing Lee’s new book here and there, and of course I have my copy!
What a great thing you are doing! I loved the interview with Adrienne. Am a big fan of Rachel Maddow. Retweeted this post and included @maddow.
ReplyDeleteDear Rachel Maddow sounds really great, but I'm too busy processing what happened to C. Lee. I had no idea.
ReplyDeleteSo good of you to help Lee out. And I'm glad things are going well in both your writing and personal life.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your new book! Sounds fraught with emotion and turmoil! Just like real life!
ReplyDeleteAs a HUGE Rachel Maddow fan, I am so excited to read this book! Your protagonist sounds like quite an interesting character! Looking forward to reading it. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteCongrats on getting a chapter revised and critiqued by your critique group, Natalie!
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad to read that your mom is settling in nicely. It takes some of the pressure off you.
I've read and reviewed the first two books in the Pete and Weasel trilogy, so I'll definitely be buying SVMMM. I'm looking forward to reading it.
Prayers & thoughts to Lee always. Her book is awesome isn't?
ReplyDeleteGreat interview and congrats on the book.
Glad to hear you mom is settling in.
I just got Lee's book and am looking forward to reading it. This was such a fun interview to read. I would really like to have coffee with Adrienne, but in lieu of that, I hope to read her book soon. It sounds like a great read. Thanks for this awesome interview.
ReplyDeleteCongratulation Adrienne! Great interview -- YOU are the badass! Can't wait to start your book which just arrived yesterday!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the interview and chance to win a copy of this book. I shared on tumblr: http://yesreaderwriterpoetmusician.tumblr.com/post/174669682257/adrienne-kisner-interview-and-dear-rachel-maddow
ReplyDeleteWhat a great post, Natalie - so much here. Thank you for letting us know about Lee and this challenging time.
ReplyDeleteGood for you for finding time for your writing!
And what a fun interview with Adrienne - I love how her voice shines through.
Adrienne's book sounds great. Thanks for posting this interview.
ReplyDeleteHi Natalie, best wishes to Adrienne Kisner Funny and heartfelt are essential in just about every genre. Maybe not slasher and horror. But pretty much everything else.
ReplyDeleteYou are truly amazing, Adrienne, 2 young kids, college, work outside the home. You put me to shame. All the luck with this new release. And thanks for the opportunity to win a copy. I'm so excited. Thanks, Natalie, for interviewing Adrienne. What an intriguing interview.
ReplyDeleteThat was a fun interview and it shows Adrienne has a great voice. Congrats! Also great to see the support for Lee at a difficult time and glad things are going well for you, Natalie.
ReplyDeleteI love seeing your support for Lee. :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful interview with Adrienne. I imagine living in a building with so many undergrads helps keep her in touch with what younger generations are thinking and doing. Wishing her all the best!
~Jess
This sounds like a really cool book--would love to read it!
ReplyDeleteThe title on its own is charming enough to hook me in to read this book, and now this interview has showcased the author's contagious energy and delightful humor. This is now a must-read situation! ;-)
ReplyDeleteI follow on GFC as well as bloglovin, and if you want to award me this gem of a new release, try shamy at post dot Harvard dot edu if no other method jumps out at you. Many thanks, Kara S
Looking forward to reading this one!
ReplyDelete