Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Monday, June 6, 2016

FFBC: Welcome to the club, Autofocus by Lauren Gibaldi


Autofocus
by Lauren Gibaldi
Publisher: Harper Teen
Release Date: June 14th 2016
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary, Romance, Realistic Fiction, Adoption, Coming of Age, Family
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Synopsis:

Family.

It’s always been a loaded word for Maude. And when she is given a senior photography assignment—to create a portfolio that shows the meaning of family—she doesn’t quite know where to begin. But she knows one thing: without the story of her birth mother, who died when Maude was born, her project will be incomplete.

So Maude decides to visit her best friend, Treena, at college in Tallahassee, Florida, where Maude’s birth mother once lived. But when Maude arrives, she quickly discovers that Treena has changed. With a new boyfriend and a packed social calendar, Treena doesn’t seem to have time for Maude—or helping Maude in her search.

Enter Bennett, a cute guy who lives in Treena’s dorm. He understands Maude’s need to find her mother. And as Bennett helps Maude in her search, she starts to find that her mother’s past doesn’t have to define her own future.

Lauren Gibaldi has crafted a beautiful and timely coming-of-age story that poses the question: Is who we are determined at birth, or can we change as we grow?


Hello Lauren! We are super excited to have you in our FFBC tours.


Could you tell our Book Addicts a little bit about Autofocus?

Sure! AUTOFOCUS follows Maude as she searches for information on her deceased birth mother. She’s never known her, and doesn’t have much information, so she goes to Tallahassee, Florida, to try to track down old friends. While there, she stays with her best friend, Treena, who’s changed a bit since graduating high school, and meets Bennett, a boy who helps her on her quest. 


Can you tell us a bit more about Maude and her personality? And what about Bennett?

Maude is artistic. She’s a photographer and loves seeing things through the lens. She always wants to find the perfect shot, and the perfect view of a person. She’s a bit single-minded, but aren’t we all at one point? And she’s very determined to figure out more about her mother, and how her mother’s life may relate to her own. Bennett is a boy who’s friends with Maude’s best friend Treena. He’s into Star Wars and Doctor Who and wants to be an animator for Pixar. He’s kind of dorky, super understanding, and really just wants to find good in everyone. 


So, as a personal opinion, do you think that we are determined at birth? Why?

Yes and no. I think some things—physical things, of course and some personality traits. I see this every day raising my own daughter. But I think other people around you, that aren’t family, also shape you. I think you become the person you want to be, and only some of it is from birth. (It’s why I like writing YA—it’s that stage where you’re figuring out who you are, and what you want to do with that.) 


How did you come up with the story? Did you find inspiration in any other story/movie/show and how has this affected your writing?

I thought of the place first, actually. I love Tallahassee, and starting thinking about why someone would visit. I wanted the person to be on a quest, be trying to find something, or in this case, someone. And then I thought of a girl trying to find herself and everything kind of fell into place. 


Tell us your favorite quote from Autofocus.

I actually just made a graphic to go with it! “I'm a blur. I'm not clear and crisp like some people; instead I'm messy on the edges and not quite formed. I'm many pieces all put into one, and one day I'll figure them all out.” I think that sums up the book nicely. 


Is there a specific scene that you had the most fun to write?

Two. There’s a scene at Lichgate that was super fun to write. It’s a real place, so it was fun, for me, to revisit it in writing. And it’s a sweet scene. The Pineview scene (which includes a possibly haunted building) was the hardest to write because I’m not good at writing anything scary, apparently. Ha!


If you had to pick one song to be the Theme Song for Autofocus – Which one would you pick? 

I don’t know! I really like “Photograph” by Ed Sheeran, but not for Maude and Bennett, but for Maude and Treena. Strip the romance love out of it, and instead think of it as that strong best friendship love that grows and changes and becomes complicated but always lovely. I think that’s them. 


Imagine that we get to see your book on the big screen (how awesome would that be?). Who would you pick to play your characters?

I’m SO not good at this question. For my last book, bloggers always had better responses to this than me, so I’m going to go with…who do YOU think? 


Is there any recommendations you could give your readers to be in the “perfect mood” to read Autofocus (specific music, snacks…)?

Hmm. I can’t read with music on, so I’d say no music. I think you need a nice cup of tea (for relaxation, of course), or some ice cream (because ice cream means friendship in my opinion). The girls in enjoy both in the book. 


What’s next for you?

I have a third book coming out with HarperTeen / HarperCollins coming out in 2017, titled THIS TINY PERFECT WORLD. It deals with an acting camp, and I’m so excited to share it with everyone!


Thank you so much for everything, Lauren!




Follow the Autofocus by Lauren Gibaldi Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.



Public librarian and author of THE NIGHT WE SAID YES, MATT'S STORY (a Night We Said Yes novella), and AUTOFOCUS (out 6/14/16), all with HarperTeen / HarperCollins. Fan of dinosaurs and cheesy jokes. And you.







Thursday, January 7, 2016

Blog Tour: Worlds of Ink and Shadow by Lena Coakley



Worlds of Ink and Shadow
Publisher: Amulet Books
Release Date: January 5th 2016
Genre: Young Adult, Historical Fiction, Fantasy, Paranormal, Family, Romance, Retellings
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Synopsis:

Charlotte, Branwell, Emily, and Anne. The Brontë siblings have always been inseparable. After all, nothing can bond four siblings quite like life in an isolated parsonage out on the moors. Their vivid imaginations lend them escape from their strict upbringing, actually transporting them into their created worlds: the glittering Verdopolis and the romantic and melancholy Gondal. But at what price? As Branwell begins to slip into madness and the sisters feel their real lives slipping away, they must weigh the cost of their powerful imaginations, even as their characters—the brooding Rogue and dashing Duke of Zamorna—refuse to let them go.

Gorgeously written and based on the Brontës’ juvenilia, Worlds of Ink & Shadow brings to life one of history’s most celebrated literary families.


by Lena Coakley


1) Cosmicomics by Italo Calvino

Quirky and delightful short stories unlike anything you’ve ever read by a master of the absurd.


2) A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula LeGuin

A childhood favourite that still holds up. I also love The Left Hand of Darkness, which just missed making this list.


3) A Face Like Glass by Frances Hardinge 

A must-read middle grade novel if you like weird and whimsical fantasy.


4) David Copperfield by Charles Dickens

Dickens at his best. I reread this book every few years and I always find something new.


5) In the Night Kitchen by Maurice Sendak

As fascinatingly surreal and absurd as any work for adults on this list!


6) Dictionary of the Khazars by Milorad Pavić

Mysterious, lyrical, and strange. Written like a dictionary, this novel presents three interpretations of dream. 

7) One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez

The greatest novel by the king of magical realism.


8) Embassytown by China Miéville

Part science-fiction story, part meditation on language, lying and the very nature of reality. 


9) Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë

Another book I could read again and again. (Someday I might even understand what Joseph is saying.)


10) Sabriel by Garth Nix

A gorgeous and inventive YA fantasy. The sequel, Lirael, might be even better.


Follow the The World of Ink and Shadow Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.



Lena Coakley was born in Milford, Connecticut and grew up on Long Island. In High School, Creative Writing was the only course she ever failed (nothing was ever good enough to hand in!), but, undeterred, she went on to study writing at Sarah Lawrence College. She lives in Toronto, Canada. Witchlanders is her debut novel.



ENDS ON JANUARY 29TH

10 winners will receive a copy of Worlds of Ink and Shadow by Lena Coakley

5 winners will receive a black bonnet (similar to the one found on the Canadian cover)

1 Grand Prize Winner will receive: A Copy of WORLDS OF INK AND SHADOW (Canadian or US edition dependent on country of winner), A Hardcover Everyman's Library edition of JANE EYRE by Charlotte Brontë, A Hardcover Everyman's Library edition of WUTHERING HEIGHTS by Emily Brontë, A softcover Penguin edition of THE TENANT OF WILDFELL HALL by Anne Brontë, A softcover Hesperus edition of THE SPELL, juvenilia of Charlotte Brontë
Toasty Almond Tea from Tealish, A cloth ornament of Charlotte Brontë's childhood hero, The Duke of Wellington, inspiration for her character, Zamorna




Monday, November 23, 2015

FFBC: Welcome to the club, The Family by Marissa Kennerson




The Family
by Marissa Kennerson
Publisher: Full Fathom Five Digital
Release Date: October 8th 2014
Genre: Young Adult, Realistic Fiction, Cult
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Synopsis:

Just like any average seventeen year old, Twig loves her family. She has a caring mother and a controlling father. Her brothers are sisters are committed to her family’s prosperity…

All one hundred and eighty three of them.

Twig lives in the Family, a collective society located in the rainforest of Costa Rica. The Family members coexist with the values of complete openness and honesty, and a shared fear of contagious infection in the outside world.

So when Adam, their Father, prophet, and savior, announces that Twig will be his new bride, she is overjoyed and honored. But when an injury forces her to leave the grounds, Twig finds that the world outside is not necessarily as toxic as she was made to believe. When she meets Leo, an American boy with a killer smile, she begins to question everything about her life within the Family, and the cult to which she belongs.

But when it comes to your Family, you don’t always get a choice.


Hello Marissa! We are super excited to have you in our FFBC tours.


New favorite: The Distance by Helen Giltrow (can't stop thinking about it!) 


Old: Alias


New: The Good Wife



My seven year old just said, "I think your favorite movie is Star Wars." I think he is right.



Omg! That is hard to choose! "Cowboy Take Me Away" Dixie Chicks and "You Got Me" Erykah Badu and the Roots. The other day my son and I were going through the drive through car wash with the disco lights and soap and jamming to Wilco's Nothingsgonnastandinmyway - so good. 



Sushi and chocolate - but not together!


Stars Hollow in the Gilmore Girls

Oz (Okay I just want to visit - probably not move there!)

Jane Austen's English countryside - especially Sense and Sensibility (but can I take my heater?)


I'm racking my brain for my last literary crush...I'll tell you who it is NOT: Christian...what's his name? I'll think of it, but he's strong and demands honesty from himself and others and he's got great jeans. (Sounds a bit like my husband. Lol.) Wait - I got it. Leo from the Family. Is that okay to say? Read below to hear more about him.


"The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams." - Eleanor Roosevelt and "The only thing to fear is fear itself." FDR - have affected me the most in my life. (Smart couple!)


It happens just way too often. Lol. Recently over Helen Giltrow for her searing, literary thriller, The Distance. But it happened with B.J. Novak when my son was in stitches over The Book with No Pictures. Oh and Tracy Ellis Ross of Blackish (check out how fun and generous her website is: fangirl over here.)


I would really love to sit down with Alan Furst - master of the literary spy thriller.



The Family is a story about finding your own identity outside of your family. Only Twig's family is 183 brothers and sisters and one domineering, charismatic, over-the-top father. Can you say cult? It's a sweet love story set in a sinister setting. It's a total page-turner.


Twig is an artist. She's a natural individualist living in a totally conformist, dangerous community. She is sweet and brave, smart and very very human.


Leo is so full of life, love and happiness. He's based very loosely on a friend of mine (and his family is based on a family I know and love who introduced me to so much when I moved from a conservative small town to Santa Monica in high school.) Leo is strong and sexy. He's got groove and intellect. Twig meeting Leo: basically her whole world comes crashing down. But he's there to help her pick up the pieces. And life looks pretty damn good when they start to clear way the rubble.


I was very interested to write about how an artist would survive in a cult. Someone who was intrinsically different but never had any nourishment for those differences. Would the creativity bubble up anyway? How would they survive emotionally? Twig started to sneak out to make art with the nature in her surroundings...

I researched some pretty awful scary stuff about WACO and Jonestown and South Korea to build the world of the cult. All of it helped to build Adam and the world of The Family.

I was really scared to go down these roads historically and down this road myself. But it was very educational and brainwashing is fascinating and scary. I don't think I"ll ever quite fear going to those dark places inside myself again. My intentions are good, I'm a good person. Okay -to explore a bit. But I do take my writing responsibilities seriously. There is just certain stuff I will not put out in the world. No way.


This is going to sound a little red state out of context, but I swear I'm a big old democrat. Leo is defending America to Twig - because she's been brainwashed to think America is this horrible place. Leo says,

"I’m willing to bet that pound for pound America has probably given more people the opportunity for a better life than any other country in the world." 

Sigh.


Yes! Twig getting dressed for Thanksgiving in the woods! The whole dinner party was so fun to write! Fashion porn!


Side of the Road by Lucinda Williams - it's such a heart wrenching WRENCHING song about needing to leave the situation you're in - for Lucinda a relationship - just for a minute to figure out who you are without it. That's really how Twig needs things to be as she explores the world outside the Family.




Elle Fanning for Twig! Tom Cruise for Adam or Edward Norton.


What a fun question! Someone said the other day, "Make sure you have some time because it is nearly impossible to put down." That was nice! I think a cozy spot on the couch with either sunshine streaming in or pouring down rain would work great. Coffee. Hot cocoa. Popcorn. Enjoy!


I felt much more free with language writing for a young adult audience. I think sometimes writing for adults we can get a little precious. I also just loved pulling from that time in my own life. Being a teen is such a time of passion!


I would really love to write a thriller next. Something super psychological but action packed. A bit like the Family. But totally different.


Thank you so much for having me! I hope you are doing something you love on a daily basis. Even if it is for 10 minutes. Write, do art, meditate, exercise, whatever you love!


Thank you so much for everything, Marissa!

The pleasure and honor are all mine!


Follow the The Family by Marissa Kennerson Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.



Marissa Kennerson received her B.A. in English Literature from the University of California at Berkeley. Before earning her master’s degree in psychology and art therapy, she worked for Wired and Glamour. She lives in California with her family. The Family is her first novel (Full Fathom Five Digital) and will be coming out October 2014.