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See my reading, win a classroom visit!

Posted in Bookstore visits, Give-aways!, Promotion of Self and Others, School Visits on 08/15/2010 12:30 pm by jess

First of all, I am pleased to announce that I will be appearing at two more bookstores in the area this fall!

Saturday, August 21, 2pm

Desinations Booksellers

604 East Spring Street * New Albany, Indiana

Saturday, September 11, 4pm

Carmichael’s Bookstore

2720 Frankfort Avenue * Louisville, KY

I must be straightforward and report that there will not be cake.  (I know! And you were told there’d be cake!)  However, there will be something pretty much as good: a chance to win a free classroom visit from an author!  (Well, this is good if you are a parent, teacher or librarian.  If you are a childless plumber not taking any extension classes anywhere, I imagine that this offer doesn’t appeal as much as cake.  But moving on…)

It’s pretty simple: come to a Nice and Mean event (I will read and dazzle you with my super-secret strategy for spritely Q&A), and if you are a parent, teacher or librarian, you can enter a drawing to win a classroom visit from me. I’ll talk about the process of becoming a writer, discuss the skills that are crucial to being an artist (revision and attention to detail–sound familiar, teachers?), and answer questions.  (I can also read from the book, but often, the Q&A takes a while.)

What if you’re thinking, Oh woe, I do not live near enough to attend, so I cannot enter the drawing! or I am occupied both of those days!  Fear not.  Next month or so, I will hold a drawing online for those interested in a Skype visit.

Go, go, Nice and Mean!  See ya real soon!

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Not That Girl, Part 2

Posted in Not That Girl, Promotion of Self and Others on 08/09/2010 07:58 am by jess

Just wanted y’all to know that the second part of my middle-grade story, Not That Girl, is available online at http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20100809/FEATURES06/308090003/-1/COMICS/

They have part 1 there, too, in case you missed last week’s.  This week, you will learn the deep and hidden meaning behind the line, “Where’s your butt?”

Enjoy!

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Why I Sound Like I Have No Life

Posted in Who is Jessica Leader?, Writerliness on 08/06/2010 09:32 am by jess

[note: this post was originally titled, “My first Friday Five!” but by the time I had reached 500 words, no Fives had yet appeared.  So it’ll be the Saturday Five. Or maybe Sunday.  We’ll see.]

No way!  I am participating in a meme–Friday Five! 

When an esteemed grad school classmate asked, “Jess, what is a meme?” I was not very well prepared to answer.  (“In literature, it’s like a theme, although I don’t know why they don’t just call it a theme.  But on the web, a ‘meme’ is like a thing you participate in–kind of like a theme.  Um, yeah.”)  So maybe I’ll just teach by example and say that Friday Five is a meme in which bloggers note on Fridays the top five things they’re grateful for that week.  (At least, I think that’s what they are. Quick, nobody disabuse me before I write this next post.)

Before I go ahead with my list (I know, you’re just dying of anticipation; I am, too, to see whether I have five or actually ten), I wanted to note that I’ve been thinking lately about how if all you knew about me was from the web, you’d probably think I did nothing but read, write, occasionally give readings, and watch Mad Men.  Not that I don’t spend a ton of time on these things, but there is so much of my life that doesn’t even enter in here because it seems like so much is verboten on the web, and with good reason.  I don’t want to jeopardize anything at any of my freelance jobs, and I don’t want friends to feel like they have to watch themselves around me because they might be quoted on here.  I also don’t want friends to feel left out if I write about other friends!  With all these things I don’t want to discuss, it leaves precious little that I can include.

And this is sad to me.  Because I really wish I could have written about the  afternoon a few weeks ago when I ended up hanging out with some people who had previously intimidated me and we had such a rockingly hilarious time that I’m still thinking about some of our jokes and cracking up.  Or the way a recent interaction with a previously prickly person turned out to be really terrific.  Because what if these women read this and thought, “Hey, why do you say I’m intimidating?” or “Well, I never knew you found me so annoying before!”  Argh argh argh.  I mean, it’s a good thing I write fiction, so I can get out some of these ya-yas, but when I’m supposed to have a public blog persona and then feel like I can’t write about anything that’s actually emotionally important to me, I think I end up sounding like a total hermit.

Hm. 437 words and still no Friday Five.  I think I’ll save them for tomorrow.  But at least now you may think I have some kind of social life.  But do any of you bloggers either worry about the impact of what you post, or fear that you seem like you have no life?

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Not That Girl now available online!

Posted in Not That Girl, Promotion of Self and Others on 08/02/2010 11:07 am by jess

The serialized story I mentioned, Not That Girl, is now available online!  Especially if you’re a fan of Marina and Sachi, I hope you’ll check out the adventures of Jackie, Mel, Zoe and Becky, four best friends who prepare for the beginning of eighth grade–and some big changes.*

*Teaser/synopsis courtesy of the Louisville Courier-Journal.  I used to be good at writing those for my own work.  But I just tried to write one for this and it stunk so badly that I just went to the hard copy and ripped it off.  Thanks, Editor Dave!

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More Great Nice and Mean Reviews!

Posted in Give-aways!, Nice and Mean on 07/30/2010 08:54 am by jess

Thanks to Traveling ARC Tours (I spelled ‘traveling’ right!  No, that’s not what I have to thank them for)–Nice and Mean has been getting some lovely reviews of late.  You might want to read some of these and check out the other informative reviews on the blogs:

My favorite observation from Tiffany’s Bookshelf:  “The tolerance taught in the book is more than just cultural.  It is tolerance of anyone different from you, which, let’s face it, to a middle school reader, that is everyone.”  I just think that is so pithy and hilarious.

The Bookshipper writes, “I read this book in one sitting – it was fun, deep in some spots and funny in others – a perfect blend – just like our two main characters.”

Thank you, Bookshipper!  I’m bedazzled to think of you reading the book in one sitting.  Although maybe that’s partly because I find it so hard to read some of my own writing without wanting a cheese sandwich.

I hope these reviews will translate into actual tweens getting their hands on the book!  One approach I’m going to undertake will be a giveaway to teachers or school librarians in August or September–free books and free Skype visits to the lucky winner!  If you are a teacher or school librarian, feel free to email me at jess@jessicaleader.com so I can be sure to include you when I spread the word.

Now, back to the woods!

  • Tags: Nice and Mean reviews 
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A Writing Lesson: Emotional Residue

Posted in Not That Girl, Writerliness on 07/29/2010 11:17 am by jess

Talk about stepping in the same river twice.  I did, a few weeks ago, with regard to my Vermont College MFA reunion (it was great, by the way.  None of my worries came to pass.  I am kind of a nudnik.)  I stepped in another familiar river this week when I went back to an old-but-not-dead piece of writing to revise it for its appearance in the Sunday paper.

Yes, you read that right!  The Louisville Courier-Journal, which (who?) featured Nice and Mean when it first came out, invited me to provide their August Sunday serial, so over the next four weeks, my friends and neighbors and anyone with the internet can read the first few chapters of what I hope will be my next middle-grade novel, NOT THAT GIRL, potentially with groovy art.  (At least, I think there might be some art.  Might have to check on this.)

There was so much craziness involved revisiting the story, including the fact that the request came while I was travelling [no–traveling; I always misspell that], and I had to ask my partner to brave my Extremely Messy, Filled with Deep-Dark Secret Documents that are Likely to Fall On You Shelf and extract my notes from when I workshopped this piece last summer, along with one of about a bijillion Clairefontaine notebooks.  (Do you use these?  Are they not a superior piece of notebookture?)  A side-note on this challenge is that she succeeded the first time around!  Go, A!

The biggest source of craziness, though, was how ridiculous some of the writing was.  The prose was spiffy enough; the characters, distinct; there’s a passage of dialogue whose punchline is “Where’s your butt?” that I enjoyed again, as though I hadn’t written it.   But what was sorely lacking was something that Grad School Advisor Margaret calls Emotional Residue.

Case in point: Not that Girl starts out with Jackie and Mel being shocked when their friend Zoe, previously uninterested in boys, unexpectedly brings an older guy to the movies with them.  Then, in the next chapter, I had a guy–an adorable one, unfortunately nicknamed Nathaniel the Spaniel, crossing Jackie’s path and Zoe and Mel strategizing about how Jackie can pursue him.  I had this line to the effect of, “I’ve been feeling a little weird about Zoe since the movies the other night, but I’m willing to listen to her advice.”

Um, really?  Just “a little weird”? So glad I chose to make that event the focus of your first chapter, Jackie, because I can see that it brought a lot of emotional residue to your subsequent interactions.

Why aren’t Jackie and Mel more upset?  Why don’t they talk about this–instead of nothing relevant–in the scene before Nathaniel comes along? Jackie’s feeling of being caught between Mel and Zoe should drive the emotion in the strategy session, because it becomes the heart of the story.

Thankfully, I fixed these things.  I’m still kind of appalled that it took me so long to see them, and I await with dread the missteps I will find when I go back to The Novel Formerly Known as The Book of the Dead, which I will do tomorrow or so (today is maintenance day, as you can see.)  I guess I can just hope that even if I face-plant in the river, I will have plenty of chances to cross it again, because that seems to be what writers do.

  • Tags: Not That Girl, Writerliness 
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A Little Levity

Posted in Uncategorized on 07/27/2010 05:20 pm by jess

Things have been getting a little serious, what with this Stepping in the Same River business and Musings on Gurgi , so I’m going to add a little levity.  I was just reading the funny phrases on the back cover of my notebook, and I thought I’d share some of the faves. 

“I don’t know.   I’m not, like, a professional smellologist.”  — Dick Casablancas on Veronica Mars

“…and he doesn’t demand apologies from people who criticize him, because what is there to criticize?”  — Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me! Host Peter Sagol, on Carl Kassel

(or is it Karl Cassel?  And am I going to be divorced for not knowing?)

“I had to be very mature and very tolerant, and those are not my usual qualities.”  — Someone Benedictus, on the experience of writing a new Winnie the Pooh Story

“Milkshakes!”  Ariana snapped to attention.  “Double back.  We need to get some milkshakes.”  — New York Times Article on driving the Oregon Fruit Loop, where you can get fresh cherries

“Managed to avoid the hoyden Emily Thompkinson, who has purloined my creation and added things of her own. Nefarious Creature!”

–From Emma Thompson’s Golden Globe acceptance speech, in the style of Jane Austen, for adapting Sense and Sensibility

I hope you enjoyed.  They certainly cheered me up!

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I Sing of Arms and the Gurgi

Posted in Book talk on 07/25/2010 11:10 am by jess

Cano arma virumque, says Virgil–“I sing of arms and the man.”  But today, I sing of arms and The Gurg.

Did you read those Lloyd Alexander books growing up–The Book of Three, The Black Cauldron, The High King, and others?  I didn’t.  They emitted an ugly glow in my elementary-school library: high fantasy.  I liked Jane Langton, but I didn’t like the pictures of men on horses.  Moved on from that!

But a few years ago, I was in a friend’s apartment alone for a few hours, and I did what I usually do: browsed her children’s books shelf.  I think I had started the MFA at Vermont College by then (it’s the finest grad school in all the land) so I was into reading classics that I’d missed.  And what did you know?  The books weren’t so geeky after all.  In fact, they were kind of fun, although the fun was frequently interrupted by this really annoying creature sidekick named Gurgi. 

Gurgi.  Even his name is cloying.  I’ll quote The American Spectator’s obituary of Lloyd Alexander here:

“With a scent that has “the distressing odor of a wet wolfhound” — [he] is also a creature with a simple mind, prone to talking in silly rhymes such as “crunchings and munchings” for food and “seekings and peekings” for reconnaissance. Not only that, but Gurgi is first described [as]…”not a quarter as fierce as he should like to be, and more a nuisance than anything else.”

But when the wife picked up a copy of The High King in the used bookstore the other night, I remembered Gurgi with a kind of fondness, and I didn’t know why.  I don’t usually have that experience; when I first dislike something–a character, a joke, a TV show–I often continue to dislike it.  Was it just that, in retrospect, i liked his rhymes?  Or something more?  I got a little clue when she read me this passage from the final pages:

Fflewddur gave a low whistle.  “Who owns these secrets is truly master of Prydain.  Taran, old friend, the proudest cantrev lord will be at your beck and call, begging for anything you choose to grant him.”

“And Gurgi found it!” shouted Gurgi, springing into the air and whirling madly about.  “Yes, oh yes!  Bold, clever, faithful, valiant Gurgi always finds things!  Once he found a lost piggy and once he found evil black cauldron!  Now he finds mighty secrets for kindly master!”

Is Gurgi maybe the horrible, annoying part of one’s subconscious–maybe even the writer’s subconscious?  The stupid, over-emotional segment that eggs you on, saying, “This book I’m writing is awesome!  I should already have a star on the walk of fame!” and then the part that tears its hair out in despair saying, “I stink!  I only wrote a good book once, but it will never happen again.”  I’m sure Lloyd Alexander had something rather different in mind, but note that Gurgi found The Book in the end.  Maybe he felt some gratitude toward The Gurg–the id–after all.

And maybe I’m soo stretching. Maybe I just like the annoying rhymes.  In any case, I will try to bear in mind, as I struggle through revision, that even The Gurg can find The Book and may make you Master of Prydain. 

Gurg on!

  • Tags: Gurgi, The Book of Three 
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Piles of Nice News!

Posted in Book Reviews, Friday Buzz, Nice and Mean on 07/15/2010 12:39 pm by jess

1) Nice and Mean will be featured as New Moon Magazine’s September/October book of the month!  The issue’s theme is popularity, and I agree with the books editor that Nice and Mean could spark some useful discussions of that issue.  There will also be a video contest, since the book focuses on a video class, and if you win the contest, you win a copy of the book!  I can’t wait to see what the readers come up with here.

2) The Louisville-Courier Journal will feature a new story of mine, NOT THAT GIRL, in its August issue–in serial, no less!  The story is set in Kentucky during the back-to-school season, and I love the thought of knowing that readers will experience it during the appropriate season.  There’s just something about going back to school–or even back to work after summer–that makes you/one/me reevaluate priorities and open fresh wounds–and I like the thought of readers being in that mode when they read the story. 

(It’s also a little nerve-wracking to think of putting a story in print without the 20-month waiting period that Nice and Mean has gotten me accustomed to, but I guess I will just have to deal.)

3) My fantastic web designer, WebsyDaisy (aka Jenny Medford), reconfigured my “books” page to include reviews.  I love having all the reviews of Nice and Mean in one place, and if you want to see what people are saying, head on over and say hi.

4) The 3rd bit of good news I can’t really talk about at this moment because I haven’t made a decision about it, but I suspect it will be good news, so I throw it into the Yay pile here, too! 

Have a good weekend, everyone!  I’m writing this on Thursday, but when this reaches you, I will be stepping in that river (see yesterday’s post.)

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Stepping in the Same River Twice

Posted in Who is Jessica Leader? on 07/14/2010 01:39 pm by jess

Does everyone learn that quotation in high school?  Or college, maybe, as I did from Waterland, about stepping in the same river twice?  It was Heraclitus, and I’m sure his observations were more metaphysical than the context in which i learned them, but it’s basically another way of saying, You can’t go home again.  Any time you step in a river, it’s a different river than the last time you stepped there.

I’ve had a couple of fun recent river steppings with another on the horizon.  This past weekend, my partner and I went up to the B&B where we got married last year.  It was so wonderful–the smell of the breakfast nook!  The main building lit with fairy lights!  the falls, which we finally got to hike to–but there was also a sense of what had passed.  Walking from our little cottage up to the barn where we got married, my insides twisted a little that I couldn’t see the rest of our guests, hiking up their dresses in the mud, on the way up to the ceremony.  My whole life, I will wish that I could recapture the Saturday morning I walked into the breakfast nook and knew and loved every single person in there.  I even missed the unbelievable sloven that A. and I had accrued from a few days of staying in the lodge–half-drafted cards and wilting flowers, cake with melted frosting, tissue paper and wrappings…that, too, was one of my favorite images from our wedding.

Now I’m about to step into a different kind of river: a reunion.  Vermont College, the best grad school in all the land, has a mini-residency for its graduates, which I think is very smart–keeps us involved and feeds our minds.  Lest you think it’s all a big fest of NECI cookies (sorry, joke for insiders), the mini-rez features master classes by Jacqueline Woodson and talks on fantasy by superstars no less than Gregory Maguire and Holly Black!  I am not very knowledgeable in the world of fantasy writing, though I do like to read in that genre, and I can’t wait to see what I learn by going outside of my usual realm of knowledge.

But I’m also nervous.  If I live my live occasionally nostalgic for that Saturday morning last summer, I also live it in deep regret that I did not preserve for posterity a scrap of paper I found at my little sister’s bedside before she went off to summer camp for the first time.  In her uneven third-grade handwriting,  it said, “What will it be like?  Will it be fun?”

I can’t even tell you how many times those words have come to mind as I contemplated any of the big occasions life has set before me, and, I must admit, the extremely minor ones as well.  I’m pretty sure the weekend will be fun, but what will it be like, to have my position as an actual student displaced, with others running the roost?  Will the faculty remember me?  Care?  (Okay, I have pretty much no doubt that they’ll remember me, since it’s a small program, but still.)  What will it be like to talk with my former classmates about the real-world events in our lives, instead of the business of grad school that takes over your life when you are there?  I am grateful for the chance to step in the river again; not everyone can find time and money to go to the mini-rez, and not every program is thoughtful enough to provide alums with a river path.  But still: What will it be like?  Will it be fun?

I bought some Chacos this year for my honeymoon–excellent water shoes, better than Tevas, so comfortable.  With luck, I will have my metaphorical Chacos on, too.

Riverbound!

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