Showing posts with label j. Show all posts
Showing posts with label j. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Interview with J. Albert Mann for The Degenerates



The Degenerates

by J. Albert Mann
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Release Date: March 17th 2020
Genre: Young Adult, Historical Fiction
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Synopsis:

In the tradition of Girl, Interrupted, this fiery historical novel follows four young women in the early 20th century whose lives intersect when they are locked up by a world that took the poor, the disabled, the marginalized—and institutionalized them for life.

The Massachusetts School for the Feeble-Minded is not a happy place. The young women who are already there certainly don’t think so. Not Maxine, who is doing everything she can to protect her younger sister Rose in an institution where vicious attendants and bullying older girls treat them as the morons, imbeciles, and idiots the doctors have deemed them to be. Not Alice, either, who was left there when her brother couldn’t bring himself to support a sister with a club foot. And not London, who has just been dragged there from the best foster situation she’s ever had, thanks to one unexpected, life altering moment. Each girl is determined to change her fate, no matter what it takes.


Can you briefly describe THE DEGENERATES and its characters?

THE DEGENERATES takes on disability in the United States circa 1928.

At the turn of the 20th century, eugenics – a false science – was used to cast people with disabilities (physical, mental, intellectual, and “moral”) as having “undesirable traits” which needed to be wiped out of the human condition through segregation. In other words, the U.S. government (for the “health and safety” of the non-disabled population) institutionalized people with disabilities for life.

The novel is told in the voices of four young women inside what was first called The Massachusetts School for Idiotic and Feebleminded Youth founded in South Boston. Diagnosed by doctors as idiots, morons, and imbeciles (actual medical terms of the day), Maxine is gay, Alice has a physical disability, Rose has Down Syndrome, and London is poor, unmarried, and pregnant. Together, they endure the harsh conditions of the institution while continuing to live deeply meaningful lives.

Who would you say is your favourite character from the story and why?

I waffle when it comes to my favorite character.

I adore Alice’s inner strength and unending patience. I’m in awe of Rose’s propensity to take life as it comes. London’s ability to act is amazing. And Maxine’s willingness to continue to dream against all odds is not only moving but extraordinarily powerful.

But I hold a special place in my heart for Thelma Dumas. She’s lived a long and difficult life, yet her natural inclination is to continue to open her door and help.


How did the story occur to you? Did you find inspiration anywhere?

All my life I’ve played a what-if game—relocating myself to other moments in history. For example: What if I had been born in a hunter-gatherer society? As a woman, I’d have been a gatherer. This always makes me happy because there is nothing I love more than a long walk with a purpose.

I began writing THE DEGENERATES by playing this very game. What if I had been born during the height of the eugenics movement in the United States? As someone born with an orthopedic disorder causing extreme body difference, I might very well have been institutionalized for life along with Alice, Maxine, Rose, and London.


If you could choose one song to describe your book, which one would it be?

Skwod by Nadia Rose. Rose’s lyrics are bold and unapologetic, and her take on female empowerment—surrounding herself with her Skwod—is as lovely as it is strong and sure. THE DEGENERATES is told in four voices because none of us overcomes institutionalized ableism (racism, sexism, gender binarism) alone. We need our Skwods. 



If your book was going to be made into a movie, who would play your characters?

People with disabilities are the most underrepresented group on screen. And when we are represented, this representation is often by non-disabled actors. My only wish for casting THE DEGENERATES is for the diversity of disability, race, and gender identity which exists in the novel (because it exists in history) be represented by those with these lived experiences.


What drink and place do you think will go with your book to have a perfect book date?

There is no place more perfect for a book date than your very own couch. Add a warm cider and your slippers, and they’re sure to make the descriptions of the cold institution incarcerating my characters a little less harsh.


Can you recommend your readers any other books in case they are left hungry for more once they finish THE DEGENERATES?

For readers hungry for more, let me suggest some fabulous non-fiction starting with Erving Goffman’s Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates. It sounds a bit heavy, and it is. But it’s also absolutely fascinating as Goffman likens being committed to an asylum to those working for large corporations and government institutions. Another classic read would be Angela Davis’ Women, Race & Class. It’s thirty-seven years old, and sadly incredibly relevant. Finally, I’d suggest James Trent’s Inventing the Feeble Mind: A History of Intellectual Disability in the United States. This slim read is a complete eye-opener, and one you won’t be able to put down.


What would you say is the most difficult part of writing a book?

Let me start with the best part of writing a book—the research. I love it! I’m in my happy place when I’m digging into gloriously written non-fiction. Sketching my characters is another fun moment in the writing process. Drafting and revising is where I begin to sweat. I equate it to the headache/stomach ache dilemma. When I have a headache, I’m like, “Headaches are the worst!” And when I have a stomach-ache, I can’t help moaning that I had no idea what I was talking about when I had that headache. Bottom line, I’m a fickle lover: when I’m drafting, I’m in love with revision, and when I’m revising, I’m in love with drafting. But I’ll commit. The most difficult part of writing a book (for me) is the end of revision where I’m so bound to every word on the page that I can feel the fear of making even the smallest of changes pulsating in all 100,000 of my hair follicles!


What’s next for you?

My next novel—FIX—is a young adult contemporary fiction from Little, Brown. It’s the story of a friendship between two teens with physical difference whose relationship is stretched to the breaking point by their own ableism.






J. Albert Mann is the author of six novels for children, with S&S Atheneum Books for Young Readers set to publish her next work of historical fiction about the Eugenics Movement and the rise of institutionalism in the United States. She is also the author of short stories and poems for children featured in Highlights for Children, where she won the Highlights Fiction Award, as well as the Highlights Editors’ Choice Award. She has an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts in Writing for Children and Young Adults, and is the Director of the WNDB Internship Grant Committee. 

Jennifer is represented by Kerry Sparks at Levine Greenberg Rostan Literary Agency.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Book Blitz + Giveaway: Eighteen (18) by J.A. Huss


Eighteen (18)
by J.A. Huss
Release Date: November 18th 2015
Genres: New Adult Taboo Romance
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Synopsis:

Eighteen is hard.
And so is Mateo Alesci.
He’s hard to read, hard to predict, hard in every way that counts. He wants things from me.
Dirty things, nasty things, forbidden things.
And I have to give in.
His attention is completely inappropriate, but I can’t say no. The way he looks at me… the way he watches me through my bedroom window… the way he drags me deeper and deeper into his completely forbidden fantasy world just… turns me on.
He knows it turns me on.
He holds all the power. He holds all the cards.
He holds my entire future in his hands.
And I have to give in.
Because Mr. Alesci is my teacher.
And I need everything he’s offering.


“You came,” he says, after a few moments of rest. His eyes open and he looks straight at me. “You came in my mouth.”
I just stare back. Unable to talk. Unable to comprehend what he’s saying. “You’re a liar.”
He smiles. “But I’m a good one, right?”

“What?”
“You believed me. And you know why you believed me, Shannon?”
“That never happened?”
He scoffs. “Please, how drunk would you have to be for me to suck you off and never wake you up? Do you know why you believed me?”
“You’re a psycho,” I say, floored.
“Because you want to believe me.”
I shake my head slowly. “I don’t believe you. You’re a very good liar, Mateo. And that’s not something to be proud of.”
“Right. So why are you so sure Danny Alexander is the nice one, and not me?”
“Because look at you,” I scoff. “You’re such a fucking freak.”
“I’m sitting here in a chair, masturbating as I tell you a fantasy, Shannon. It’s hot.” And then he laughs. “You know it is.”
“It’s weird,” I say. “I’m speechless with you most of the time because you’re blowing my fucking mind. You make no sense to me. You don’t follow the rules.”
“Whose rules? Your rules?”
“School rules, for one. You’re my fucking teacher!”
“Technically, no. I’m a subcontractor. But ethically, yes.”
“It’s the ethics that count, don’t you think?”
“So walk out. Report me to Bowman. Call the police. Do whatever the fuck you want.”
My thoughts are racing around in my head. “Maybe I will.”
“At least you’d be invested. At least you’d stop just sitting here, begging me to get you out of this.”
“Beg you!” Holy shit. “To get me out of what?” I just want to punch him in the fucking face right now.
“Life.”
“OK,” I huff. “I’m done here.” I push my chair back to stand, but his words stop me.
“You want to skate through school, you said, take tests and call it learning. You want the prize without the work that goes into it. You want things you don’t deserve.”
“You don’t know what I deserve,” I say quietly. “You have no idea what I deserve.”
“I know,” he says, nodding. “But I do know what you don’t deserve. And you can deny it all you want, it won’t change the fact that you didn’t earn it. I’m asking you to earn it.”
“Earn what, Mateo? You make no sense.”
“It.” he replies. And then he lifts his hands up towards the ceiling.
“What’s any of this,” I say, lifting my hands up in the same way, “have to do with sex?”
He just smiles. “Nothing at all. It’s got nothing at all to do with sex. I just like you and I want to fuck you, and tease you, and play you. Not like that,” he says, seeing the anger inside me building. “Not like a victim, Shannon. Like an instrument.”
He reaches over for a roll of paper towels sitting on the table next to him, rips one off, and cleans up the mess on his stomach. He throws it into the trash, stands up, and puts himself back together.
“If you want to walk away,” he says, grabbing his book from the table, “go ahead. Report me to Bowman, tell the police, do whatever the fuck you want. But I’m trying to tell you, I’m invested. So go date Danny Alexander if you want. You can quit this class and drop out of school. You can fuck everything up. You’re a grown woman, you can make whatever choice you feel is best. But when you look back in ten years and wonder where it all went wrong, don’t blame me, Shannon. Because I gave a fuck and you walked out.”
And then he walks out. He’s got that stupid book in his hand and he just walks out and leaves me there.
Stunned.





release price
650everything_is_Hard



JA Huss is the New York Times and USA Today bestselling author of more than twenty romances. She likes stories about family, loyalty, and extraordinary characters who struggle with basic human emotions while dealing with bigger than life problems. JA loves writing heroes who make you swoon, heroines who makes you jealous, and the perfect Happily Ever After ending.

You can chat with her on Facebook (www.facebook.com/AuthorJAHuss), Twitter (@jahuss), and her kick-ass romance blog, New Adult Addiction (www.newadultaddiction.com).

If you're interested in getting your hands on an advanced release copy of her upcoming books, sneak peek teasers, or information on her upcoming personal appearances, you can join her newsletter list (http://eepurl.com/JVhAr) and get those details delivered right to your inbox.






Tuesday, October 6, 2015

FFBC: Welcome to the club, It's a Wonderful Death by Sarah J. Schmitt




It's a Wonderful Death
Publisher: Sky Pony Press
Release Date: October 6th, 2015
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary, Fantasy, Paranormal, Supernatural, Teen
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Synopsis:

Seventeen-year-old RJ always gets what she wants. So when her soul is accidentally collected by a distracted Grim Reaper, somebody in the afterlife better figure out a way to send her back from the dead or heads will roll. But in her quest for mortality, she becomes a pawn in a power struggle between an overzealous archangel and Death Himself. The tribunal presents her with two options: she can remain in the lobby, where souls wait to be processed, until her original lifeline expires, or she can replay three moments in her life in an effort to make choices that will result in a future deemed worthy of being saved. It sounds like a no-brainer. She’ll take a walk down memory lane. How hard can changing her future be?

But with each changing moment, RJ’s life begins to unravel, until this self-proclaimed queen bee is a social pariah. She begins to wonder if walking among the living is worth it if she has to spend the next sixty years as an outcast. Too quickly, RJ finds herself back in limbo, her time on Earth once again up for debate.

RJ is a snarky, unapologetic, almost unredeemable, very real girl. Her story is funny and moving, and teens will easily connect with her plight. Prepare to meet the Grim Reaper, who’s cuter than you’d expect; Hawaiian shirt–wearing Death Himself; Saint Peter (who likes to play Cornhole); and Al, the handler for the three-headed hound that guards the gates of Hell. This cast of characters accompanies RJ through her time in the afterlife and will do their best to gently shove her in the right direction.




There are so many. But I’m going to go with a safe one: Harry Potter. And I’m going to just say the whole series because asking me to pick is cruel.


Buffy the Vampire Slayer.



This is almost as bad as the book question, but I’m going to stick with Harry Potter.




Wow. I am starting to think I might be a fickle girl because I can think of so many. The ones racing around my brain right now are Bad Blood by Taylor Swift, The End by The Doors and What You Wish For by Guster.


 Bourbon Chicken with fried rice


Hogwarts, Hogwarts, Hogwarts.




Mr. Darcy from Pride and Prejudice. 





All the authors that I have been meeting over the last year. I especially had a hard time keeping it together when I met Rainbow Rowell at BEA when she signed Fangirl for me and I’m signing at a book festival she’s going to be at. I can only pray that I manage to come off with even the smallest amount of cool factor left intact. 


I know it’s easy to get swept up with all the big name authors releasing fantastic titles but I highly recommend keeping your eyes on the debut authors coming up the ranks. Seriously, there is some wicked talent out there. I’ve had the pleasure to meet some of them and whew… I’m just happy to be a part of the talent pool.


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

Aww, thanks! But I think I am “superer” excited. This is going to be a fun tour!


RJ is a lot more complicated then she comes off at first. She starts out as your stereotypical mean girl who got a raw deal. Boo hoo, right? But as you dig in to her past, you see how much of her mean girl persona developed because of fear. She uses her quick sarcastic wit to protect her but sometimes, there are casualties. 


I think I would be terrified of the butterfly effect, but, if I was in RJ’s shoes, I would still do it. If it had been my time to go, then so be it, but if I had a chance to change a few things, from my teen years, I probably would. Now the mom in me is screaming NO WAY! Because if I change one thing, even in the interest of doing a good deed for humanity, then the kidlets (aka my two boys) don’t exist. And you don’t know this yet, but you do not want to be in a world where the kidlets don’t exist. 


There were so many little things that came together in the creation of IAWD. First, I had already written two complete manuscript but they just weren’t right. They were serious end of the world stuff and by the time National Novel Writing Month 2012 came along, I just wanted to write a book that made me laugh. I wanted to write something that was me: sarcastic and funny but still able to sneak in a grain of truth in the plot to think about later. Plus, with all the saving the world I’d been doing in the previous books, I just wanted to save the cheerleader. 


I think everything I experience affects my writing. Whenever I come across something that I love, I try to figure out what is it that I liked and then fold that in to my style. For example, Marcus Sakey, who is a phenom author, writes crime thrillers. I’m not a crime girl and honestly don’t have time to read a lot of adult fiction, but I did read several of his books and learned the art of building suspense, especially at the end of chapters. Movie and TV have influenced my dialogue so much, as well as describing non-verbal communication. I’ve been known to listen to teens talking so I can try to keep up with not just what they’re saying, but how they’re saying it. As a writer, I have an obligation to constantly trying to be as authentic as I can be.


“You can’t expect a seat at the concert if you don’t buy a ticket.” – Madeline Quinn.


The scene at The Gates where RJ first meets St. Peter and Al, the handler of the guard dog overseeing the Gates of Hell. There’s a lull in the new arrivals and so the duo pepper RJ with questions while playing cornhole. It’s got some great lines and you can see not only the competitiveness of these two pillars in the afterlife but also how much they like each other.


I Lived by OneRepublic



I highly recommend reading it in public. Actually, there are still a couple scenes that make me cry, so scratch that. However, if you are drinking Diet Dr. Pepper and eating Twizzlers, I will be with you in spirit. 


The next few months have a lot of travel promoting the book and then there’s the release of IAWD on Audiobook, which I am so excited about! And of course, writing another book. 


Thank you so much for everything, Sarah!

No, thank you! I am so excited to have FFBC coordinating this book tour! I know I’ve said it before, but it’s going to be so much fun!


Follow the It's A Wonderful Death by Sarah J. Schmitt Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.




Sarah J. Schmitt is a K-8 school librarian and Youth Service Professional for Teens at a public library who, in addition to planning a variety of events, enjoys opening up the world of books to reluctant readers. She runs a teen writing program that combines Skype visits from well-known authors and screenwriters and critique group style feedback.


Prior to immersing herself in the world of the written word, Sarah earned her Masters of Science in Higher Education Administration and Student Affairs from Indiana University where she worked with first year college students as they acclimated to college life. Sarah lives outside of Indianapolis with her husband, two kidlets and a cat who might actually be a secret agent. She is an active member of SCBWI, ALA and the Indiana Library Federation and is a regular participant at the Midwest Writer's Workshop. Her debut novel, IT'S A WONDERFUL DEATH, comes out Fall 2015 from Sky Pony Press.


One winner will win (US ONLY):



A SIGNED copy of The Heir by Kiera Cass OR a SIGNED copy of HOOK'S REVENGE by Heidi Shultz
A Handmade bracelet in RJ's favorite color: purple
A IT'S A WONDERFUL DEATH swag pack
A Funko Pop! Pocket Keychain (Game of Thrones Daenerys Targaryen)