Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Q&A with author Miriam Wenger-Landis



As you may or may not know, I'm going to be releasing my dancer mystery novel (see cover art in "Coming Soon" on sidebar) this spring. While browsing on Amazon to see other novels featuring dancers, I came across a fabulous new YA, "Girl in Motion."



Here's the blurb:
At the School of Ballet New York, the most prestigious ballet school in the country, aspiring ballerina Anna becomes friends with her talented roommate, Hilary, a French exchange student, Marie, a down-to-earth mid-westerner, Jen, and one of the cutest guys in school, Tyler. The competition is intense and Anna works hard to understand her famous teachers and navigate her ups and downs with her friends. Some of the dancers struggle with eating disorders, injuries, and depression. Everyone's goal is a contract with a professional ballet company, and as graduation nears, the pressure intensifies. Although Anna goes to all the ballet companies' annual auditions, she receives not a single offer. Falling for Tyler complicates things, but with the lead in the annual workshop performance, Anna gets one last chance to make her dreams come true.

When I was a tween, my favorite books were the Satin Slippers series by Elizabeth Bernard. I just devoured this overly melodramatic account of girls at the San Francisco Ballet Academy. I never finished the series as a young girl, but I actually sought out used copies as an adult.

Reading them as an adult, I can see they're very outdated (hello, references to dancers defecting from the Soviet Union!) and very soap-opera-y, but I still loved them.

So imagine my delight when I saw that a former ballerina from the Miami City Ballet, who had studied at the prestigious School of American Ballet in NYC, had written a novel about the ups and downs of life in a ballet boarding school. I snapped it up right away, and soon discovered that I couldn't put it down.

When I learned that Miriam had self-published, I decided I needed to help spread the word about this gem. So please welcome Miriam Wenger-Landis!



AB: Thanks for coming to visit! Tell us a little bit about yourself.

MWL: Well, I was a professional ballerina for 4 years with the Miami City Ballet and a year-round student at the School of American Ballet for 2. My family lives in Salt Lake City and that's where I grew up, and after I retired I went on to complete my degree at Stanford University. I left the company at 22 because I wanted to go to school and felt I'd achieved the things I wanted to in dance. After college, I moved back to New York to work as an assistant editor at a publishing house, and eventually I got a job working with books at Amazon and moved back west. I met my husband in Seattle and we got married about a year ago. I spend most of my free time reading, gardening, hanging with the dog, and fixing up our old house.

AB: I'm curious to hear about your dance career. How many years did you study before dancing for the Miami City Ballet?

MWL: It was about 15 years! I started dance classes when I was less than 3, and trained at local schools in Salt Lake City, including the Ballet West Conservatory and the University of Utah dance department. Between 13 and 18 I went away to bigger summer programs at the San Francisco Ballet School and Pennsylvania Ballet. When I was 16 I went to the School of American Ballet's summer school and they invited me to stay on for the year.
Edward Villella picked me for his company, Miami City Ballet, out of
the School of American Ballet's annual workshop two years later. I
moved to Miami right after I graduated high school. Over the course of
4 years I danced increasingly bigger roles, including the Liberty Bell
in "Stars and Stripes," the Flower Festival in Genzano pas de deux,
the Scotch girl in "Scotch Symphony," and the Ballerina Doll in "The
Steadfast Tin Soldier."

AB: You were a student at the School of American Ballet. Is this book inspired by events from your own life?

MWL: Somewhat. Obviously my experience was a big influence. I was more interested in hitting on the general challenges that everyone faced during that competitive experience, so I created different characters and situations to highlight the individual struggles, from eating disorders to injuries to personality conflicts.

AB: How did your high school experience differ from the norm by attending a ballet boarding school?

MWL: Oh it was very different. There were no sports teams or formal dances. The ratio of girls to boys was about 10 to 1. We all had so much in common and so much focus and passion for what we were doing, and yet we were all in competition with each other. Most of our schoolwork was done as independent study, and the high school we went to was made up of child movie stars, kids on Broadway, and up and coming young musicians. I was across the country from my family at 16 and living my own fast-paced life in New York.

AB: Why did you decide to write "Girl in Motion"?

MWL: I started the book my junior year of college (about ten years ago) when I started teaching ballet regularly and as a way of working through my whole ballet experience. I read so many ballet books growing up and there simply wasn't the kind of book I wanted to read--most of the literature is restricted to stories of the ballets and biographies of great dancers or choreographers. Nothing seemed to encapsulate my experience, and I wanted to write something for the students and aspiring dancers I was watching grow up into the system.

AB: Is there a character you identify with the most?

MWL: Anna is the main character, and the biggest thing about her I relate to is the challenge with her height. That was my challenge too, and as I saw my friends struggle to lose weight I was almost jealous of them. I always knew my height was completely beyond my control. I identify with Anna's friend Jen a lot too, because she has this sense that even when she accomplishes something huge it still isn't good enough. There's a general mentality of that in ballet; that no matter what you do it isn't good enough.

AB: What authors or books have influenced your writing?

MWL: The work I do now in the book industry means I read a ton of books, so there are things I admire about so many authors. For "Girl in Motion," probably the writer I was most influenced by was Curtis Sittenfeld, who wrote "Prep." That book is about a girl coming of age at a boarding school and she completely captured all the feelings, even the ugly ones, that encapsulated the experience.

AB: If you could go back in time and talk to your teenage self, what would you tell her?

MWL: I would say, life just gets better as you get older. The one sure
thing in life is change, and you can count on good things happening
eventually. It's cliche, but things work out--they just do.

AB: What are you working on now?

MWL: At the moment, I'm teaching a little bit of ballet and working at Amazon. We just bought a new fixer-upper house, so a lot of my energy has gone into that and just enjoying my husband and being married. Eventually I hope to write a sequel to "Girl in Motion" and some other things and hopefully I'll find time to do that in the years to come.


Thanks, Miriam for joing us here at Fictionistas!

You can find Miriam's book here: http://www.amazon.com/Girl-Motion-Novel-Miriam-Wenger-Landis/dp/1451591659/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1298411081&sr=8-1

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

To Age or Not To Age, That is the Question

My good friend Gemma Halliday posted a question on Romance Divas yesterday, and it got me thinking.

If you're reading a YA series, do you expect the characters to grow up?

JK Rowling did it in her Harry Potter series, of course, which correlated nicely with how her original readers were aging. But that was a fantasy world, and the characters were dealing with fantasy issues very far removed from our own everyday world.

For a contemporary, if the main character is 16 in the first book, would you expect her to be in college by the end of the series? Is this a good idea?

On the one hand, if you're putting out 1 book a year, and your target audience starts out in the 12-15 age group, then by the time you're 3 or 4 books in, your readership has "outgrown" this type of book, so aging your character might be a good idea.

On the other hand, what about your readers who find you once you already have a backlist? As a mom, would you want your 12-year-old daughter to start off reading books with a 16-year-old protagonist and then continue reading that series all in a row, even if the main character is now in college? It wouldn't be a big deal if your daughter is now 16 or 17, of course, but if she came upon the entire series while she's a preteen, it could get awkward.

But then again, keeping your main character in a vaccuum and never aging her, Nancy Drew style, is unrealistic.

YA writers...what do you do?

YA readers...what do you prefer?

Friday, April 23, 2010

Falling Under

I spent a weekend making a book trailer and found it to be not only fun--but helpful. It was like connecting a different part of my brain to the writing process. Searching the web for pictures that made me "feel" my setting, characters, and mood has been good for my revisions I think. And the MUSIC--I love this song so much.

So, as a reader--do you ever look for book trailers? I confess, I never have. I've seen some really bad ones though, and they turned me off. I'm going to start checking youtube for more now--if nothing else than to give me ideas.

As a writer--have you ever made book trailers and what was your experience with them?


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

My Fav YA Blogs

It may be a shocker to everyone here, but we're not the only YA blog in town (*gasp*!). LOL. Since I read a lot of blogs daily, especially YA-related ones, I figured I'd share some of my favs:


http://community.livejournal.com/debut2009/ -- I belong to this community of debuting authors. We're a cool group, and I highly recommend you check us out. We also have contests every month where you can win cool swag!


http://author2author.blogspot.com/ -- I love this group! It's several YA writers, all in different stages of their career/journey, and they always have such fun posts and helpful tips.


http://yawriters.blogspot.com/ -- Here's another group of authors, all from different publishers. They talk about...well, books, boys, and buzz. LOL


http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/ -- Cynthia has a HUUUUGE wealth of info on YA. You have to read this blog!


http://rhondastapleton.blogspot.com/ -- Geeeeee, how did this one sneak in here? ROFL


http://community.livejournal.com/enchantedinkpot/ -- This blog is a group of middle-grade and YA fantasy writers. Love their posts!


http://thenovelgirls.blogspot.com/ -- another group of YA authors, doin' their thang.


http://simonpulseromanticcomedies.blogspot.com/ -- a big group of the Simon Pulse romantic comedy line authors.


http://teenfictioncafe.blogspot.com/ -- a wonderful lineup of YA authors on here!


http://yathenaeum.blogspot.com/ -- they're a group of readers and writers and do great summaries of what's happening in YA, as well as news/info/reviews, etc.


http://thefiverandoms.livejournal.com/ -- a group of great YA authors blogging.


Well, there are more I look at, of course (this list doesn't show any of the awesomesauce YA book review blogs I haunt every day--I'll do another post on those in the future), but right now I'm more interested in hearing from you. What are your favorite YA blogs, and why? I'm always looking to add to my blogroll! :D

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Adults reading YA--a big fuss?




There's been a flurry on the Interweb lately about adults reading YA books and shopping for them in the YA section of bookstores. All the cool authors are buzzing about it!


Okay, some cool authors are, and I wanted to jump on the bandwagon. haha


Anyway, from what I can glean of the situation, some adults have no problem heading right over to the YA section of a bookstore and browsing/buying a YA book. However, some feel differently--they worry they look creepy/perverted shopping in the YA section, or they're turned off by the YA covers and thus don't care to read the book.


Me? I always, always, always hit the YA section of a bookstore (and the manga/graphic novel section, too). It's like a beacon...an unholy beacon, if you will, that beckons me to spend money. Haha. And personally, I love YA covers and am not turned off by them at all. I think they're innovative and eye-catching.




For some reason, though, I do feel weird browsing the YA and manga/graphic novel sections of my library. I still do it (duh), but I'm more painfully aware of my adult age in the library than I am in the bookstore...maybe being able to purchase a book makes me more self-confident and less self-conscious.


What about you--if you're an adult, do you feel awkward/weird/turned off in the YA section of your local bookstore or library? Or are you all over it like white on rice?


Or, if you're a teen, does it make you feel weird to see an adult buying YA or manga, or browsing those sections in the library? Or is it no big thing for you?

Monday, May 05, 2008

boston

Today's blog is gonna be short and sweet.

I just returned from an awesome launch party in Boston. Debut YA Author, Marley Gibson (aka Kate Harmon) launched her career in style, so of course, I had to be there. Go, buy her books now: Zeta or Omega and The New Sisters

Here I am getting my books signed:
Isn't she lovely?

While in Boston, I did a little sight seeing and I also got a chance to hang with several of my writing friends and blog buddies.
Crit Partners and TKA Sistahs: Maria, Louisa, and Kristen

Me, Kwana, and KristenKwana and Maureen

I hung out with my lovely agent, Deidre Knight and fellow partner in crime Elaine Spencer and I met several other writers than I've "known" in the blogosphere. It was fab.

But best of all, Kristen and I met another fellow Fictionista: Chrissy. How awesome is that?
All in all, I had a superb weekend. Did y'all do anything awesome this weekend?

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Welcome

We are the Fictionistas and we will be launching on March 31st!

We hope to have comments from you in the coming weeks and months.

We, The Six (Melissa Francis, Kristen Painter, Rhonda Stapleton, Amanda Brice, Gwen Hayes, and Chrissy Olinger) are an elite team of YA authors at different points in our publishing careers. We cracked each other up so much that one day we decided it would be nice to share with the world our unique perspectives.

Let the mayhem begin......