Filed under Interviews

Interview with Margo Rabb By Shaun Vivares


Class: Hi Margo

Margo: Hi

So this is my class… hello’s (introductions)

 

Class: Welcome to our class, we are the young adult literature class and they’ve read three of your stories and we have a few questions… Is How To Survive A Funeral true to your life?


Margo:
I’d say it’s about 50% true, when I started writing fiction I guess the material I was drawn to was the material about my mother’s death. She died when I was in my teens, very suddenly. So all the emotional content of the book, the grief is very close to what I felt. The exact circumstances of the story are not true, so I’d say it’s about 50-50. The problem is that when you write autobiography everyone thinks it’s 100% true, so friends of my sister read the book and said “oh, I feel like I know you so much better.” So that’s the only problem with writing autobiography. I think for me the emotional contents of the characters usually tends to be pretty autobiographical, just because I’d say there’s a little bit of me in most of the characters that I write.

 

Class: I wanted to know something specify about the novel, the part where you wrote about Mia’s mom and Rolf – I wanted to know if that part was true to your life or if it was something you made up.

 

Margo: well actually, I’d say about 50% of that is true too. The germ of that story started when we went on a family vacation when I was a kid. And we met through family friends a girl who had my mother’s name. My mother was named Renée, and the girl was named Renée and her father was my mother’s first boy friend. So that part was true and I don’t know anything else about it, so the rest was made up. But it was true that we went and met a girl that my mother’s first boyfriend had named her after. So that was where that story sprang from.

 

Class: There’s humor in the stories we’ve read. Do you use humor is all of your writing or is it just specific to those stories?

Margo: I guess, as a reader I like it when things are funny – especially if you’re writing about a tragedy. And I think a lot of tragedies from when you’re growing up can be funny, and it’s so horrible that the only way to cope with it is actually laughing. And as a reader I always appreciate it when the author makes me laugh, so as a writer that’s always my goal, to try and make the story have some humor to it, it makes the whole thing more enjoyable to read.

 

Class: I was wondering if you were worried at all about Mia’s character portraying sort-of the Jewish-American-Princess stereotype. And if you were trying to do that when you were writing, or if it just kind of happened?

Margo: No I wasn’t trying to [laughs] I hope she’s not too much.

 

Class: Is your writing to help others grieve, or is it part of your grieving process at all? And who was your intended audience?

Margo: The thing about being a writer. I hate to think of anyone else actually reading it when I’m writing, because I think I could never be totally honest. So when I’m writing I actually don’t think about the reader at all, because then I would never write well. I think to write- one really can’t be self-conscious. And if you start feeling self-conscious you writing just won’t be honest or will start to ring false. So I don’t ever really think about the reader intentionally. But I do after it’s done, then I do hope that it will help someone that’s going through grief. For me, when my mom died, and then later my dad died as well, the first thing I did was go to the library and just look at books and read book after book. And the one that I found as helpful were not the self-help ones, which I find incredibly cheesy and annoying. There are books about mourning and I never found them helpful, but fiction novels or short stories actually were really helpful to me. So to sort of live an experience through someone else’s shoes, I found that really powerful. I’m really glad if my writing’s helped anyone. And I have received letters from people that have lost someone, and that’s meant a lot to me.

Class: I was wondering if you set out to inform the reader on a generational legacy of depression due to the Holocaust. And/or if it evolved organically along with your stories.

Margo: That’s an interesting question. I guess, its something that I find really interesting, and that part of the story is true too. My mother was born in Germany and we did lose a lot of our family in the holocaust and so, when she died there was a real hole. In that I have no relatives on that side of the family because they all were killed, so I am fascinated by the fact that the legacy really goes on. In a way that people don’t think about it. I feel like so much of the holocaust has become this movie, you know the Steven Spielberg movie type history, and that’s how people see it. They don’t really understand how it can affect people generations later. And that you just don’t have that side of your family so, that is something I’m really interested in as a writer- just how that history affects the current generation.

Class: Do you know anything more about Kenyan funerals?

Margo: Kenyan Funerals? [laughs] actually one of my friends from college was from Kenya, and she’s the one who told me they have a party a year after the person dies. So that’s where that came from. Yeah, I’ve never been to one, but that’s what I know about it.

Class: What is the most important lesson you learned from your parent’s death?

Margo: Oh geeze. Um. That’s a big one, gosh. You know what I hate to think of stuff like that as lessons. Just because I feel like so much of our culture is always… you know whenever something bad happens, I think maybe it’s a response. People always think ‘what’s the lesson in this bad thing, what’s the… you know what have you learned from it,’ and I don’t like to think of it as a lesson so much. It’s just, um something… that you learn from. I guess the biggest thing is that when you’ve lost someone it kind of changes the way you do everything. You sort of… you don’t take things for granted anymore. You don’t take the people that you love for granted in quite the same way. Only sometimes, sometimes you still take them for granted, but I do think it’s less so. Especially now that I have children of my own. Because I think my parents…um, I’m their age so I think I appreciate every moment in a way that I would not otherwise. I think when you lose someone that quickly, and you know, before you’re used to it… I think it makes you lose your sense that ‘everything will always be okay.’ And often I remember being, I mean you don’t think about it very often, but once you’re confronted with it, then it’s hard not to think about it. And you realize… and I put in the book, I mean its one page that you read, but it’s the book when she said, ‘when you’re close to death (and im just paraphrasing it but) you realize how easy it is to slip through. How easy it is to die,’ and once you do realize that I think you stop taking things for granted quite as much.

 

Class: Your work deals a lot with touchy subjects, and I’m wondering has your work ever been censored, have you ever had to go through censorship battles. And what do you think about literature being censored? Especially Y.A. literature?

Margo: It’s a tough call because within a cult called the writers community, there’s actually quite an ongoing conversation about it, for young adult writers. Because some people are very conscious not to put bad words in it, and you know I have the word ‘fuck’ on page two. But you know a lot of people don’t like that. A lot of, especially librarians or gatekeepers, and there’s teachers and parents, who are a huge market for buying the books. And you know if they don’t buy the books they can hurt the sales of an author and it can affect the amount you’re paying off of that, so some authors will be very careful not to include any bad language or not including sex scenes or anything. On the other end of the spectrum, a writing friend of mine David Levithan, I think you’re reading The Hunger Games and he’s the editor of that. And he’s also a writer himself, he wrote Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist and a whole bunch of other books, you know if you ask him if he ever censors himself while writing, his answer is ‘fuck no!’ [laughs] you know he doesn’t think about… especially as a writer I believe the work is most important. You have to not worry too much about censorship. Beyond that there are definitely librarians and teachers that are not happy with that language or sexual scenes, but I feel like it’s their choice then – not to read it. But it is something that a lot of authors are thinking about, especially in this climate when you know the sales are difficult. It’s difficult to be a writer right now.

Class: How did you react when you found out your book was categorized under Young Adult and do you think this influenced your future writing?

Margo: I was simply surprised, because my agent thought it was an adult book. She actually sent it around as adult, and we had an offer from Random House Publishing’s editor in chief who thought it would do better as Y.A. which is actually happening to a lot of books now. There’s a book that I love by Peter Cameron, Someday This Pain Will Be Useful to You, and the same exact thing happened to him. So it’s happening to a lot of novels just because the young adult market is very strong and they’re selling a lot more books through young adults. So it’s happening to a lot of books these days.

 

Class: Could you talk a little bit about straddling those two different genres because you have published in both literary fiction and young adult, do you feel like you’re treated differently sometimes? Or do you find differences in leadership and authors, and the experience of being published?

Margo: Yeah it is tricky actually. At the McDowell Colony in New Hampshire I was talking to a writer, poet who writes for the New Yorker. And I was telling her my book was being published and she said ‘Oh that’s great, who’s publishing it?’ and I said ‘Random House is publishing it as Young Adult,’ and she said ‘Ugh, such a shame.’ [laughs] It’s this attitude among adult writers that can be very anti Y.A, very condescending. I wrote a piece for the New York Times about the whole experience of having a book that I thought was Adult getting published as Young Adult. And they interviewed Sherman Alexie who’s another author and he said ‘it was the most comments he’d ever received in his life, was for writing a young adult book’ and he couldn’t believe it just how people would say when he won the national book award for Young Adult Book, ‘Oh that’s too bad that you didn’t win adult.’ [laughs] so people can be very condescending about it. But the strange thing is, now that I’m part of the young adult writers there’s a lot of anti-adult literary sentiment. So you can’t win and I realize that I do both, so when I go to a lot of young adult writers they’re like ‘this adult writer sucks,’ so I just have to keep my mouth shut and go back and forth. But it’s interesting how it’s becoming that way and it’s very divided. The authors don’t mean to mingle as much and there’s very separate friendship. Even in Austin Texas, there’s a book festival here, there’s a separate party for the children’s and young adult book authors one night and then a joint party for all the authors for the festival. And some of the authors like Tom Perrotta, who wrote Election and Little Children, he started hanging out with our young adult book club and I thought that was really funny that he sort of joined over to the other side. So it’s a very strange cultural phenomenon.

Class: And you don’t think the quality of writing is different among the two groups right?

Margo: I think in both parties there’s a spectrum, there’s a lot of dumb, bad Y.A. books, but then there’s also very dumb bad Adult novels. I think there’s a spectrum because there’s really amazing, amazing young adult books and amazing adult novels too. I do think that the standards can be good for a great young adult novel… sometimes they’ll overlook beautiful writing, very lyrical beautiful sentences are not as important. Where as in an adult novel if the writing itself is not wonderful it’ll be looked down on immediately. In adult novels they forgive a lot of the books thought, for the slowness. Where as in Y.A. they wont forgive a slower story as much. But one thing if you think about Y.A. too, within the Y.A. genera everyone’s on the shelf right next to each other: Y.A. Mystery, or Y.A. Thriller, or Y.A. Romance and they’ll all be next to each other in one section. Whereas in adult they’ll keep separate genres so, that’s interesting too… that they’re two different genres.

Class: And what about your readers? How are they different?

Margo: There are actually still a lot of adults reading Y.A. so I still get a lot of reader mail from adults. But I do feel like there’s something really powerful about hearing from teenagers that read your book, because I know for me that the books I read at that age were so important and I remember more clearly and more passionately than I remember stuff I read a year ago. So I think that can be really powerful. And also just getting people hooked on reading is pretty amazing as a writer. Makes me feel really good. I mean having kids read and teens read, and I’d like to do picture books too someday and I think that it’s just so amazing to create books for children and teens.

Class: something that struck me was the fan mail you talked to me about, how is your fan mail different?

Margo: the mail I got from adults is just not as emotional, young adults can be so much more passionate. One of the letters that someone wrote to me after this book was published…a girl wrote to me who was fifteen and her mother had been diagnosed with cancer on Christmas Eve she had six tumors in her brain and her father had also had cancer, and she was facing the prospect of losing both of her parents. And it was just a really moving letter, and she said she was in a bookstore and her friend picked my book off the shelf and gave it to her. And she told me that it meant a lot to her to read it. And we’re still in touch, we still e-mail each other a lot, and that was years ago. She’s in college now and so it’s really powerful to be in touch with readers like that. And I don’t know that many adult writer friends who have that same relationship with their readers.

Teacher: one of the first assignments I gave my class was to go to a bookstore and check out the young adult book section, and write their impressions of it. And I’m sure you’ve seen them too, and I wanted you to talk a little bit about it… it’s really exploding, I feel like I see articles all the time about the state of Y.A. fiction, and how to get boys to read and about Twilight and The Hunger Games phenomenon, could you talk a little bit about the trends happening in the Young Adult fiction or the future of Y.A. Literature?

Margo: I think historically we’re in an interesting place, for Y.A. because it is exploding. I talked to a librarian and he said we’re in the renaissance of the Y.A. Literature. You know there’s an amazing amount of books, and amazing quality of books being published that haven’t been published before. It used to be that in this genre there were some amazing books… I’m thinking Robert Cormier I Am the Cheese and The Chocolate War, these are really powerful books. And there’s Judy Blume, of course there’s a few books that stand out, but now there’s so much being published, and so much really high quality stuff. So that’s changed a lot. Honestly I think a lot of it is marketing, publishers have suddenly realized that it’s a really profitable huge market. And so a lot of writers who’ve done their MFA in English are made fun of or a lot of Y.A literary writers are looked down upon. And now it’s different, I just taught a writing workshop here in Austin and the students have sneakily been though adult MFA programs and written Y.A novels and published them as Y.A writers. So I think there’s specifically a Y.A. MFA programs that have formed, so it’s all changed a lot. Bigger issue is to see if it keeps up that way. Also a lot of books, I’ve heard from many publishers that To Kill A Mocking Bird and Catcher In The Rye, which were published as adult books, would be without a doubt published as Y.A. today. So there are a lot of books that could go either way. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak is a great novel and that way actually published simultaneous in Adult and Y.A editions in the U.K. and Australia. And here it was published as Y.A., only because the editor who’s actually my publishing- won the auction. So they have a bunch of different publishers bid on it and adult publishing wanted to publish it, but Beverly- the vice president of Random House children, won the auction and had enough money to buy it, so that’s why the book is Y.A. and in that case if the adult publishers have enough money to buy it, it would’ve been adult, so it’s totally marketing.

Teacher: we’re following up the question on censorship, within Y.A. I brought in the article from publisher’s weekly blog, two writers were talking about how they had submitted a manuscript, it was a young adult post-apocalyptic novel.. and the story was that the agent asked if the gay character could be removed. Or if the gay-ness of the character could…

Margo: Oh, okay. I think I heard that story.

Class: And so they were talking about the pressures of young adult writers too in a way, to mainstream characters. You know, white-wash their identities their personalities, so that they wouldn’t have this difference. Which in a way we’ve been reading all this young adult literature that actually celebrates it. So I was wondering if you had any thoughts about that. Is that more so in Y.A or is that a concern in general fiction, where if you have a character that is gay and a minority, and so they just felt like- who could relate to this character? There’s this idea of relate-ability, which I think is pretty powerful in Young Adult Fiction. This idea of relating to the character. So.. any thoughts on that?

Margo: Yeah, I honestly think a lot depends on the editor. It is a very subjective business, and it’s hard to get… I mean you have to have an editor who believes in the manuscript and has a lot of power, so that if they like it they push it past the marketing and negotiate the profit and loss. Cheat on the stuff, so I imagine that the agent would go to the market meeting and say the right thing. All of it is all the crazy marketing stuff that drives it. That’s why I have to say I really like a lot of the small pressing studios, because they don’t have a lot of the same concerns. You know a lot of the major publishers are owned by Timer Warner and gigantic corporations. So publishing has become corporate. Whereas it used to be that a lot of the publishers were small boutique houses where they had a lot of autonomy. And now they’re owned by giant corporations, and in some ways it’s not too different from Hollywood studios, you can’t really picture them making a movie about a gay disabled character either. So I think in the same way, independent moviemakers have risen up and take more risks, I think the same thing is happening in publishing. Some editors are visionaries and some are not, and they will not think that way, and it’s just such a subjective business. But things do fall through the cracks and sometimes they don’t really know what’s going to be a big hit or not.

Class: So one of the young adult assignments for the class was to create a Y.A. book collection. So we were hoping you would help us out and we’ve nominated some books as we read as kids and so we would like to ask you what you read as a kid and would like to nominate for our collection.. what Y.A. authors inspired you when you were growing up?

Margo: Of course! Some of my favorites.. I loved Judy Blume’s Tiger Eyes, which was also about a teen who loses her father. And its one of my favorites, I love that book. I love Diary of Anne Frank, which was published as adult actually. But that’s one of my all time favorites, that book meant so much to me. And more recently, I mentioned Peter Cameron’s Someday This Pain Will Be Useful To You is one of my favorite Y.A. novels that have been published recently. It’s such a beautiful, beautiful book. It has an interesting back-story too, he submitted the book to his publisher and he’s written a lot of stories for the New Yorker in the eighty’s in Teen Voice, and it was not a common thing. And they said ‘now days that’s not adult anymore,’ and he was like ‘what are you talking about I published my stuff in the New Yorker,’ and they said not anymore. And so that book was Y.A and it sold better than all of his adult books. So it’s very strange, it’s hard to figure out the marketing thing. I really love that novel, so I nominate that. I love Sherman Alexie’s An Absolutely True Diary of A Part-Time Indian, Moraine House Anderson’s Seek is a beautiful book, and there’s this book by Rebecca Stead which won the Newberry, it’s called When You Reach Me, even for younger kids, but for teens it’s a really beautiful book. It’s written as sort of homage to Wrinkle in Time. What did you guys put in the list?

Class: so some of those are already on our list, but… The Weetzie Bat series, His Dark Materials, we have a lot of different fantasy, sci-fi… and then we also have: The Kite Runner, Cirque du Freak, The Basketball Diaries, Blankets, Chocolate War, A Horse And His Boy, Ringer, Across the Universe, The Giver, The Adventures Of The Blue Avenger, Ender’s Game, White Oleander. That’s what we have so far, we also have some graphic novels in there, that we will give to this high school which does not have a library.

Margo: That’s so great!

Class: Well, thank you very much Margo, for talking to us!

Margo: Aw, Thank You!

Interview with Margo Rabb By Colleen McMahon

When and why did you start writing stories? When did you decide to write professionally?


I’ve been writing for as long as I can remember–I started keeping a diary when I was around ten, and began writing daily (or almost daily) when I was seventeen. After college I started taking writing workshops, and it was then that I decided to take it seriously as a career.

Who Encouraged you to write? Who were your biggest critics?


One of my early mentors was the writer Pinckney Benedict, who is an amazingly gifted author. His short stories are staggeringly beautiful–I learned a lot from just reading them, and from his craft lectures on fiction. He encouraged me early on to take my work seriously. For critics, there were plenty in my MFA program…and a lot of their criticism was really helpful in making me a better writer (and a better self-critic of my own work.)

Do you have any advice for aspiring young YA writers?


Read as much as you can. Read books of all sorts, classic and contemporary–novels, short stories, and poetry. Try keeping a journal to see what it’s like to write privately. We’re so consumed with email and blogging these days that I think it’s easy to forget what it’s like to write without feeling self-conscious. The best writing usually isn’t self-conscious, so keeping a private journal that nobody reads besides you is a great way to teach yourself to write freely, without worrying what others might think of it.

Where do you think the future of Young Adult Literature is headed?


We’re lucky to be witnessing an amazing flourishing of YA literature right now, with so many incredible books being published. I think, and hope, it will keep growing.

How do you think the internet has / will change the publishing industry? Has it effected your work?


Things are definitely changing…I think no one is certain how it will turn out, though. Personally, I love paper and ink. In my dream world, all books would be published on beautiful thick paper, letterpressed, deckle-edged, with illustrated covers…but I’m pretty old-fashioned that way. I think it’s nice to have it both ways–some books stored digitally, to make it easy to travel with them and reference them, and beautiful cloth-bound copies of the books you especially love.

Interview with David Baker BY Benjamin Croft

YA Literature Interview with: David Baker

Occupation: Correctional Officer

 

-What was your most memorable YA novel you read when you were young?

Dave: Well I would have to say that it would probably be the Hardy Boys series. I remember getting into those stories so much as an early teen.  At one point I thought I wanted to be a detective when I grew up.  That series of books is something that will always be dear to me.

-What kind of impact did young adult literature have on you as a child?

Dave: I know that if it wasn’t for books like the Hardy Boys I probably would have gotten into a lot more trouble than I did.  I grew up in kind of a rough family and I know if I didn’t have my books as a distraction my older brothers probably would have influenced me to go down a less desirable path in life than the one that I chose.

-Do you feel that YA literature was a crucial part of your education?

Dave: Well I guess when I think about it I would have to answer yes to that question.  The books that I read growing up really were a positive influence for me.  In a way many of the books that I read taught me many valuable lessons that my parents were never there to teach.   Many of the stories I read taught me the importance of an education.  All of the characters that I admired the most were the ones who used their brains to over come the challenges they had to face.

-Who influenced you the most to start reading when you were younger?

Dave: Surprisingly enough it was my oldest brother.  I always saw him reading when I was really young and I remember taking some of his books and trying to read them even though I was a first grader or something.  I don’t remember what books they were exactly, but I do remember my brother Geno smiling at me while I was acting like I could actually read all the words that I was looking at.

-Do you think that certain books should be censored from young adults?

Dave: No.  I think that young adults should be able to have the freedom to read what they want without any restrictions.  I would rather see more censorship on T.V. and video games so kids would have to read about adult matters rather than ingest them visually.

 

Interview with Colin Clark By Benjamin Croft

Young Adult Literature Interview: Colin Clark

Occupation: Visual Artist/ Story teller

Hometown: Chicago

-Do you know what defines the boundaries of Young Adult literature?

Colin: Yes. Books like the Hardy Boys, Sherlock Holms and even up to the Twilight saga. But that is pretty much something I’m repeating from a talk show about YA lit that I just heard on MPR.

-Do you have any favorite authors or books?

Colin: Dr. Suess… I really don’t read enough to tell you the truth.

-What do you think that young adult literature?

Colin: Yes, I think that stories are a necessary part of a young person’s life.  I just listened to a radio talk show on YA lit and I thought it was interesting to hear that today’s YA lit is targeted towards girls.

-Has anyone every discouraged you from reading?

Colin: Not directly. But I feel that in today’s world there are so many other sources of entertainment that it indirectly discourages me and many others from reading.

-Do you think that certain books should be censored from young adults?

Colin: No. Because technically a young adult is age 13 and up. By the age of thirteen kids shouldn’t be censored from what the world has to offer.

Interview with Alexander Croft By Benjamin Croft

Young Adult Literature Interview: Alexander Croft

Hometown: Grass Valley

-Has Young Adult literature served as any kind of inspiration in your life?

Alex: Yes, in the book, Call of the Wild, Jack London describes courage, perseverance, the desire to succeed despite all odds. Some fail, some are successful, but all the main characters try no matter what the odds. Also, in the novel, Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry, the author writes about the importance of family, the cruelty of prejudice, and again the courage to succeed despite enormous obstacles.

 -Do you have any favorite authors or books?

Alex: The Call of the Wild, Jack London, Old Man in the Sea and Ernest Hemingway.

-As a teacher, what do you feel is the importance of YA literature?

Alex: I think much of the importance is for young adults to begin to be aware of the world around them, of injustice, of courage, to awaken inside of young adults to see and to begin to think about the world and not just themselves.

-Do you think that certain books should be censored from young adults?

Alex: Hell yes. Playboy, Hustler and any other kind of dirty reading material… We censor movies don’t we? We shouldn’t allow young adults to read anything that isn’t going to be a good influence.  I think all adults needs to remember how sensitive kids are they are when they are still young. There is always a balance, but some books are simply not appropriate your middle schoolers.

 -Are today’s schools doing an adequate job in promoting students to read YA lit?

Alex: I can only speak for our school, Magnolia Intermediate, and I think we do a really good job. Whether we are reading a short story or a novel, virtually all of them challenge the student’s worldview and encourages them to think about issues that they normally would not be discussing in the lunchroom.

Interview with Children’s Book Illustrator D. Cheetham By S.V.

*Answers are summarized, not necessarily verbatim.

1) Why do you want to be a children’s book illustrator?

D: I always liked drawing as a kid. I guess children’s books have so much imagination compared to adult books. Adults don’t care as much for illustrations.

2) Do you have any favorite authors or books that inspire you? What did you read when you were younger? What were your favorites?

D: I love Harry Potter like a lot of people. I like reading myths and fairytales, so the Grimm Brothers for sure. I read a lot of graphic novels, like Flight and the AllStar series. And of course Tolkien, there’s so much imagination in his work.

3) Favorite genre?

D: I don’t think I have a favorite genre to read. But to illustrate I would say fantasy. That’s the most fun for me. So maybe it’s fantasy.

4) What do you think about young adult literature? Why is it important?

D: I’m not really sure what makes a book YA, but I want to illustrate youth books because I feel like there is so much more room to get crazy. But I don’t mean that I want my illustrations to be only for kids. I want everyone to be able to appreciate them.

5) Should certain books be censored from young adults? Which ones? Why?

D: No I don’t think so, I think readers should have the choice to read what they want. If something is inappropriate for their age, that’s their parents’ job to censor it from them, not an institution.

6) What if your work was censored? How would that make you feel?

D: I don’t think anyone will censor me. I don’t dumb down my work for kids because I think their imaginations need some high quality vivid work to feed on, but I also don’t do anything inappropriate just to be provocative.

7) How do you feel about e-books and blogs?

D: I don’t think it’s the same thing as a book. It’s a totally different experience reading and looking at images online instead of a book. I’d prefer my work was in a book.

8) Is there a specific age range you want to illustrate for?

D: Not really, I like doing a lot of fantasy work. But that’s not just for kids. Lots of kids like it but it’s for adults too. I guess I just want to do really good work that anyone can appreciate. Like Tolkien, his books aren’t just for kids, anyone can read them. They’re just really good books.

OSA Interview with Rosali By S.V.

*Answers are summarized, not necessarily verbatim.

 

1) How do your teachers and parents feel about your writing? Do they support you?

 

R: Neither parent really interested—indifferent. Teachers of other classes get upset if I write in their class.

 

2) Anyone else who encourages you to write?

R: Authors like John Steinbeck, Vladimir Nabokov

 

3) Do you have any favorite authors or books that inspire you?

R: Tolkien, I really like the Lord of the Rings.

 

4) What did you read when you were younger? What were your favorites?

R: A Series of Unfortunate Events, Harry Potter, Roald Dahl.

 

5) Favorite genre?

R: Classic 20th century literature like Lolita.

 

6) What do you think about young adult literature? Why is it important?

R: Never been a fan of literature classified as YA, too dramatic and full of complaining.

 

7) What books should be in the YA Book collection at OSA? IS there one book or series that you would nominate?

R: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, The Lord of the Rings.

 

8) Should certain books be censored from young adults? Which ones? Why?

R: No literature should be censored. Especially with the internet it won’t make a difference. Teens will do everything they already do anyway like drink and have sex.

 

9) What if your work was censored? How would that make you feel?

R: I’d be upset, if it really was inappropriate material I wouldn’t care. I just don’t like censorship.

10) How do you feel about e-books and blogs?

R: I don’t think there’s a good market for blogs, don’t like e-readers, prefer to have a copy in my hand.

 

11) Has anyone ever discouraged your reading and/or writing? Why?

R: My writing, no. Teachers don’t like outside reading in their classes. But people are generally supportive of reading.

 

12) Would you ever want to write young adult literature? Why or why not?

R: I don’t write for young adults or any specific audience, and I’m not necessarily interested in YA literature. Anyone can read my work.

OSA Interviews with Malea Jones, Kristina Rose, and Calder Marchman By Allison Hummel

Malea Jones, 15, Berkeley.

Teachers are supportive, parents not so much. Still, Mom had her audition as Malea wrote poetry, but she doesn’t read most of Malea’s writing.

Malea’s grandmother’s girlfriend is supportive.

Push by Sapphire is her favorite novel of late.

As a child she liked the Hungry Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle.

She thinks YA lit is important when taken seriously but doesn’t enjoy it as much as adult fiction.

She would like to include Of Mice and Men in the YA library.

She doesn’t support censorship and thinks that the decision should be up to the reader.

If she were censored she would feel disrespected. She feels all writing has a purpose.

She thinks that with Kindles the format of the novel is changed, prefers paper.

 

Kristina Rose Adaire Midgett, 16, Rodanthe, NC.

Her parents support her. She found OSA online.

She lives with her aunt and uncle in Richmond who also support her.

She enjoyed the Hunger Games by Robert Cormier as well as Mark Twain, Poe, and VC Andrews.

When she was little she read Little House on the Prairie, Harry Potter and Gathering Blue.

She reads a lot of YA lit and thinks that it is good if it is done well but does not think that as a genre it is particularly important.

She would nominate the Mortal Instruments series, Inkheart by Cornelia Funke, and the Percy Jackson series.

She does not support censorship.

She would feel pissed off if her work was censored.

She thinks that Kindles are convenient and save trees.

She was discouraged from writing as a kid by peers, who thought it was a nerdy thing to do from 8th grade under.

She says she ‘kind of’ writes YA already, and might pursue it in the future.

 

Calder Marchman, 17, Oakland

He is supported, for the most part.

Could not think of anyone besides parents and teachers who encourage his writing.

Favorite authors include Hemingway, Bukowski, HS Thompson, and Daniel Alarcon.

When he was younger he read A Series of Unfortunate Events.

Calder thinks a lot of YA  lit ‘blows’, but that a few stand out. He thinks that for some readers it could be important.

He would nominate A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving and Cometbus by Aaron Cometbus.

He doesn’t believe books should be censored.

If his were, he’d be ‘pretty mad’.

He is indifferent toward ebooks and kindles. He doubts the publishing industry will combust as a result of ebooks.

His parents are occasionally dismissive of his writing.

He might want to write YA one day, secretly. Would not want work to be blatantly YA as he believes there is a stigma.

OSA Interviews with Alani, Chloe, Rosalie and Andre By Crystal Collins

How do your parents and teachers feel about your writing? Do they support you?

Alani: Mother does- tells her how to improve. She writes children stories- mother encourages her to branch out.

Chloe: Both parents support her. They also write. Non-writing teachers want her to stop writing/ reading in their classes.

Rosalie: Parents not interested but she doesn’t mind.

Andre: Parents don’t seem to care.

Anyone else who encourages you to write?

Alani: Victoria Holmes inspired her to write “Warrior Cats”.

Chloe: Her sister, she is younger and gives her ideas.

Rosalie: No one real.

Andre: Friends

Do you have any favorite authors or books that inspire you?

Alani: Anne Rice

Chloe: Harry Potter Series- she wants to be someone’s addiction.

Rosalie: John Steinbeck, Lord of the Rings

Andre: Judy Blume

What did you read when you were younger? What were your favorites?

Alani: Berenstain Bears, fable books

Chloe: Harry Potter, Dr. Seuss, Charlotte’s Web

Rosalie: A Series of Unfortunate Events, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings

Andre: Pokemon, Yugoh

What did you think of YAL? Why is it important?

Alani: Haven’t read it so much but interesting. Might get into.

Chloe: Helpful or harmful. Likes identification with the character.

Rosalie: Not a big fan- doesn’t like the characters. Wants something less dramatic like children or adult.

Andre: Important for teens to relate to

**Favorite genres**

Alani: Drama, romance, mystery, adventure, fantasy

Chloe: Introspective, fantasy

Rosalie: Classic literature

Andre: sports

What books should be in the YA book collection at OSA? Is there one book you would nominate?

Alani: Pretty Little Liars

Chloe: The Maximum Pride Series

Rosalie: A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

Should certain books be censored from YA? Which ones? Why?

Alani: Some. They make teens depressed and influence suicide. They need encouragement.

Chloe: Should not be censored- help teens cope.

Rosalie: Never censor- kids will do anything anyway because of the internet.

Andre: Can help someone with the same problems and they can see someone who has it worse.

What if your work was censored? How would that make you feel?

Alani: Offended and surprised.

Chloe: Nifty- you did something to be censored.

Rosalie: Upset that people weren’t mature enough.

Andre: Would not like, he’s not censoring you.

How do you feel about eBooks and blogs?

Alani: Into the idea but does not read them often.

Chloe: Likes them but doesn’t consider them fine literature. Not a fan of eBooks, likes the real thing.

Rosalie: blogs useful, no on eBooks.

Andre: no on blogs and e books

Has anyone discouraged you from reading/writing?

Alani: some say her writing is too innocent- childrens books.

Chloe: mothers would decide what she could/ could not watch when she was younger.

Rosalie: own self, reading in class

Andre: no one. Mom wishes he would read more.

Would you ever want to write YAL?

Alani: Yes and even has an idea.

Chloe: Doesn’t put her writing into genres.

Rosalie: Not necessary.

Andre: Wouldn’t mind.

OSA Interview with Sophie By Claudia Marquez

Student Name, Age, Hometown:

Sophie, 15 New York

How do your teachers and parents feel about your writing? Do they support you?

I don’t know how my teachers feel, but I think they like it since I got into the school. My dad likes it.

Anyone else who encourages you to write?

Friends

Do you have any favorite authors or books that inspire you?

Patti Smith, Elaine Canty, Kite Runner, High Fidelity

What did you read when you were younger? What were your favorites?

Where the Wild Thing Are, Graphic Novels

What do you think about Y.A.L? Why is it important?

I don’t really like it, its adult (authors) trying to relate to teens, while they put themselves in a teen character. I get why others read it, they can relate to characters or escape into someone totally opposite, But for me its hard to get passed the phony stuff.

What books should be in the Y.A Book Collection at OSA? Is there one book or series that you nominate?

John Green- Looking for Alaska

Should certain books be censored from young adults? Which ones? Why?

No, not from anyone. Everyone should be able to read what he or she wants, just at the appropriate age.

What if your work was censored? How would that make you feel?

Like shit

How do you feel about e-books and blogs?

I don’t like e-books and blogs can be annoying yet you can find stuff on them that you can’t find anywhere else

Has anyone ever discouraged your reading and/or writing? Why?

Yes because it’s personal

Would you ever want to write Y.A.L? Why or why not?

No. I like fiction.

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