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

Thursday, July 5, 2018

Meet Our 2018-2019 Mentors: Young Adult!

Meet our mentors from our Mentorship Program 2018-2019

Here’s what our Young Adult Mentors – Jillian Anderson Coats, Kelly Jones and Kevin Emerson have to say.









Tell us a little bit about what you are working on now and your current projects.

Jillian: My newest book, R is for Rebel, came out in February and deals with coercion and resistance in a fictional occupied country. Both books I’m working on now have sold but have not yet been formally announced, so it’s still hush-hush for the time being. One is middle-grade, one is YA, and both are historical or historically-flavored secondary worlds.

Kelly: Are You Ready to Hatch an Unusual Chicken? (the sequel to my middle grade novel Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer) is coming out November 2018 from Knopf Books for Young Readers (look for the launch at Third Place Books Lake Forest Park!) I’m getting ready to revise my fourth book, tentatively called Sauerkraut, about a kid who’s haunted by the ghost of his great-great-grandmother, who needs his help with a project. And, while I’m waiting for edits, I’m playing with even more ideas…

Kevin: I am wrapping up revisions on the third book of the CHRONICLE OF THE DARK STAR trilogy, a middle grade sci-fi series. The first book, LAST DAY ON MARS, continues to reach more and more readers. I’m so thrilled with the traction the series is getting, and I cannot wait to bring this final installment to readers, though it has been very tricky to wrap up the various character and plot arcs. Also, I’m getting ready to launch ANY SECOND, a contemporary YA thriller, which comes out in November. This story stars two teens recovering from an attempted suicide bombing at their Seattle mall, and uncovering a copycat plot at their school. It’s a deep dive into a lot of harrowing issues that surround us these days, like domestic terrorism, intolerance, and school violence, but it’s also a deep personal dive into living with anxiety and recovering from trauma. That makes it sound heavy, I know, but so far I’ve been pleased that early readers describe it as fast-paced and un-put-downable.


How does being a mentor influence and inform your work and why do you do it?

Jillian: Being a mentor reminds me how each person brings different strengths to the writing process, regardless of how many books they have out or how long they’re been writing, which means we can all learn from each other. Many talented people took the time to offer me advice, solidarity, and feedback when I was developing my craft, and I hope I can do the same for someone else.

Kelly: When I was a kid, I knew I loved writing, but I never met an author, and had no idea how I could become one. At every stage of my career, I’ve looked for people who might help me figure things out – not just how to write, but how to live a writing life that would be both productive and happy, where I could stretch and grow and imagine, not just worry about proper semicolon usage and live in fear of dangling participles. People who remind me why I do this, not just how to do it.

Every time someone helped me along the way, I promised to pay it forward. And whenever I’m able to help someone else, that’s what I ask in return.

Kevin: I enjoyed getting to step into the role of editor, and trying to learn from the editorial that I’ve received over the years. It has been a valuable and informative exercise to break down story from the outside. And it’s so fun to brainstorm and problem solve about plot, character, and craft, and to see a story improve.


What are some challenges you have encountered in your writing/illustration journey? How did you manage to survive through them and achieve success?

Jillian: One of my biggest challenges has been a constant feeling that I’m behind everyone else and struggling to make up lost ground. In the past, I spent way too much time comparing myself to other writers, and I’ve put a lot of effort into following my own path instead of being hard on myself for not having achieved more sooner.

Kelly: So many challenges!! So much hiding and licking my wounds, often for years at a time. The easy answer is that every time I sent my work out into the world, it was met by challenges. And, every time I met a challenge, it was other writers and readers that pulled me through to the other side. They knew why it mattered. They’d been there before. They thought it was worth doing anyway.

One example is my second book, the young adult historical fantasy Murder, Magic, and What We Wore. I started that book in 2005, worked on it until 2008, queried widely, received mostly form rejections. Except for one revision request, from an agent I really wanted to work with. She loved the world, but thought it would be a much better plot if I turned it into a romance.
I emailed a writer friend, practically in tears. I’d put so much work into this book, and I wanted this next step so badly!

My writer friend wrote back, and reminded me of all the times I’d told her that the entire reason I’d written this book was to write a girl spy story that was about work, not love – that wasn’t a romance. Her reminder of my own words, not her feelings on my goal, and her perspective gave me the courage to step away and say thank you, but no.
That book sat in a drawer until 2014, after my first book had been published, when I needed another idea. I pulled it out, saw how terrible the draft was (despite So Many Revisions before!), and ended up rewriting the idea from scratch. My editor loved the new version, and was perfectly fine with it not being a romance; it was published in 2017.

It wasn’t easier to rewrite an idea than to write a new one. But I’m so proud of myself for staying true to the heart of that story, even though it added a good five years to my journey to publication.

Kevin: Over ten years and eighteen books I think I’ve had nearly every problem you can have: bad covers, lack of publisher support, wayward drafts that required heavy rewrites and delayed pub dates, editor changes mid-production, rejections-rejections-rejections, the whole Goodreads thing, lame events, lame events where I spent a lot of money to get there, lame events where I was made to feel like a total unknown, remaindered books, fighting to not get a book cancelled… the biggest cost of all of these was to my sense of self confidence and self worth. I’ve learned that self-care is really important. Also, while I was good enough to get published way back when, one of the reasons my books are doing better now is that I am writing better books. I had to get better not just at the business side, but at craft. I hope I’m still getting better. But through everything, I have been able to keep the whole thing in perspective: no one owes you anything. Getting a book published is a significant achievement in its own right, regardless of how the book sells. Any readers who contact you, or good reviews you get, really are special fortunate things, and need to be weighed just as heavily as the disappointments, ideally more so. Also, one of the biggest reasons why I have been able to keep this perspective is my family of author colleagues and pals. It’s important to seek out community, your tribe of people who feed your soul and support you, and you do the same for them. It’s not easy, as writers are mostly reclusive by nature. But when you find those people who are right for you, you really need to nurture those relationships. It makes you all better, and happier.


What advice would you give to your beginner self who is just starting out to make a creative career?

Jillian: I would encourage baby writer me to become more involved in the writing community earlier on. When I was starting out, I had a serious case of imposter syndrome, and I didn’t feel like I would be welcome around “real” writers or taken seriously until I had a publishing contract and a book of my own. All I did was deprive myself of potential mentors, good advice, and solid friendships, as well as a community of people who faced similar struggles and celebrated similar joys.

Kelly: To find friends who are also serious about doing creative work. Most of my good friends in the creative world weren’t published when I met them – we figured it out together, and we continue to support each other. It isn’t just those further down the path who can show you the way. And, even introverts like me really need friends and colleagues who understand why a perfectly nice email can make you jump for joy, or sob with despair.

Also, to pick at least one person in your life whose job is only to be your cheerleader, without any constructive feedback whatsoever. My partner and my mom have strict instructions not to tell me what they really think. I only want to know that they believe I can do it, no matter how hard it is. That way, someone else believes it, even when I don’t.

Kevin: I would advise my debut-author self to hustle four times as hard at self-promotion, networking, and making connections with librarians, booksellers, and other authors. I caught on to that eventually, but in the beginning, I sort of thought that my publisher would take care of it. By the time I realized that they wouldn’t, it was too late. Also, like I said above, seek out other writers who you connect with. Also, most of the authors I know who have actually made writing their full time career are writing in more than one genre or for more than one age group. They work on their own ideas but also seek out chances for collaboration, work for hire, and so on. They pitch and submit on proposal and usually have more than one thing under contract at once. You can never predict how a book is going to sell, so it’s important not to bank on the back end. If that ends up working out, it’s a bonus.

For more details of the mentorship program check here.

Jillian Anderson Coats is the author of The Wicked and the Just, one of Kirkus’s Best Teen Books of 2012, a 2013 YALSA Best for Young Adults (BFYA) winner, and a School Library Journal Best Books of 2012 selection. It also won the 2013 Washington State Book Award for Young Adults. Her newest book is R is for Rebel, a middle-grade novel about coercion and resistance in a reform school in a fictional occupied country. She is also the author of The Many Reflections of Miss Jane Deming, a 2017 Junior Library Guild selection and one of Kirkus’s Best Historical Middle-Grade Books of 2017.

Kelly Jones worked as a librarian and a bookseller before becoming an author. Her first book, the middle grade contemporary fantasy Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer, was an Indies Introduce Pick, an ALA Notable Book, an SLJ Best Book, and a Kirkus Reviews Best Book. Her second book, the YA Regency fantasy Murder, Magic, and What We Wore, made the 2018 Amelia Bloomer List of the best feminist books for young readers and received a starred review from School Library Journal. You can find her at her website: www.curiosityjones.net, or on Twitter and Instagram: @curiosityjones.

Kevin Emerson is the author of numerous middle grade and YA novels, including the Chronicle of the Dark Star series, and the forthcoming ANY SECOND. His recent release, LAST DAY ON MARS received starred reviews from Kirkus and Booklist, and was selected for ALA’s LITA List for science fiction and the TLA Lone Star List. Kevin is a former K-8 science teacher and teaching artist with Writers in the Schools and Richard Hugo House. He has won a spelling bee, lost a beauty pageant, and once appeared in a Swedish TV commercial. Learn more at http://www.kevinemerson.net/

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Upcoming Events for July and August

July 23
Lynn Brunelle has some craft projects for Big Science for Little People at University Bookstore.




July 28
Chris Colfer visits Jackson High School to talk about The Land of Stories: Worlds Collide. This is a ticketed event, via UBS.

July 29
Play Truth or Dare with YA authors like J. Anderson Coats, Lish McBride, Breeana Shields, and more at the new Brick & Mortar Books in Redmond.



August 1
Suzanne Kaufman gets Confiscated! Help Suzanne launch her newest picture book at Secret Garden!

August 3
#1 New York Times bestselling author Meg Cabot rolls into the U district University Bookstore for Royal Crush, the third installment in her middle grade Princess Diaries spin-off.



August 16
Danielle Davis talks about her middle grade debut, Zinnia and the Bees, at the Seward Park Third Place Books.


Double-check times and dates with bookstores before you set out for events. If you snap a great picture, tag us at @scbwiwwa on Instagram and/or Twitter, and we'll try to repost. If we missed something, or you have an event coming up, let us know at wwa@scbwi.org!

Support book culture.
Support independent bookstores and libraries.
Support authors.
❤️








Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Petticoat junction

Now THIS looks Uh-Maze-Ing!



Please join Marissa Meyer, Leslye Walton, and J. Anderson Coats at the
University Book Store in Bellevue on March 8 at 6 pm for the Pacific
Northwest launch of the historical anthology, A TYRANNY OF PETTICOATS!
We'll be talking about women in history, discussing the creative process,
and answering your questions. Hope to see you there!

For all the information, click HERE

WHEN: Tuesday, March 8 at 6pm
WHERE: University Book Store, Bellevue


Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Everything you wanted to know about sex...

...and YA but were afraid to ask!
J. Anderson Coats, Martha Brockenbrough, Jeanne Ryan, Lish McBride, and Rory Shay are doing a book panel this Saturday night  on sex. Yep, it’s going to pretty much be a high school sex class where teenagers are allowed to ask anything they want. They’ll talk about everything subversive related to YA books, from how far the thrills and chills go to the degree of intimacy. Please come on out and heckle/ask questions! 

WHAT: YA After Hours: The Secret World of YA: Sex, Scandal, and Shame
WHEN: Saturday, January 9 at 6pm
WHERE: University Book Store, U-District



       

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Great news for Jillian!

 Looks like some serious congratulations are in order!

Jillian Coats, who writes as J. Anderson Coats, was just awarded one of two 2013 Scanduzzi Children's Book Awards for her young adult novel, The Wicked and the Just. Check out the article featuring all the winners of this year's Washington State Book Awards. The exciting announcement was made today by the Seattle Public Library's Washington Center for the Book.

Well done!

Sunday, April 21, 2013

CONFERENCE 2013: Local Success Panel

Featuring:

Kim Baker, Pickle
Stacey R. Campbell, Hush
J. Anderson Coats, The Wicked and the Just
Suzanne Kaufmann, I Love Monkey




Introductions:

JAC - Wrote 11 completed novels until Wicked and the Just.

KB - I failed miserably. I tried to be a PB writer and failed miserably.

SK - Came from animation, video games. Discovered when selling her paintings at a craft fair!

SC - Dyslexic, told she could never be a writer in third grade.








What has kept you going? How did you get past obstacles?

SC - Teen girls in the house, getting inside their heads, pumping them with questions. There's no wall you can't break through.

SK - Draws and paints every day.

KB - If I'm not writing I'm grouchy. I hit walls all the time. Self-doubt, months of not writing during Pickle. My character traits aren't accepted in "normal" society. I think of giving up all the time! But you want to be inspired, right? (laughs) But hey, don't give up!

JAC - All of us think about giving up about once a day, it's part of the process. When I was pursuing publication, right before you're about to have success, you think you're going to give up. "Great story, but I don't think I can sell it." Then agent involvement, back and forth courtship, making changes over nine months. Than, an offer of representation. An offer came soon after: within one wk of signing with agent!

KB - Critique partners convinced her to keep writing, keep going. Conference one-on-one with Grace Lin, who saw something in an early draft.


What are your favorite and least favorite aspects of creating kids' books?

SK - I absolutely hate the query, and I hate sending the work in, I get so nervous.

JAC - I hate the waiting. You send something out...contract, copyedits., etc. You distract yoruself by writing more stuff. Finding my tribe was a huge component. Ever since I got my contract I've met so many amazing people who've been so welcoming, making me feel like a writer.

SC - Query sucks. I love the writing process, editing you define your characters, research. The thing I hate the most is the marketing aspect, the going to the bookstores, trying to sell this piece of your soul. I'm an introvert, would rather be in front of my computer.

KB - Favorites: thinking of new ideas, finishing projects. Talking to kids. I get to go talk to kids about books, and they get so excited. Hanging out with writers, writers are the best people. The bad parts - the middle of the draft is bad - and trying to find the balance between promotion and authenticity. Trying to appreciate every aspect of this, I'm very fortunate. My main goal is that a kid will put down my book and pick up another book.


                                                              If you could give advice, what would it be?

KB - It took me a while to figure out my voice, versus watching the market and seeing what kids read. You need to find your uniqueness, what you liked to read as a kid. You have to tap into YOU. If you're going to succeed, it's going to be with YOU.

SC - Stick with it. Don't be afraid to chop words, chapters. Your book is only going to get better. Constantly learn. There's so much out there to make you better, to make you connect more.

JAC - I would have told myself, "Learn to write this book." I thought I had a formula, but really, you do start over with every book, start the process over every time. Learn to write THIS book.

SK - Focus. I come from animation, but I love picture books. I have to do picture books, and even if I don't publish another book, I have to keep making stuff. I'd now rather do this than animation.

What or who has influenced you the most?

JAC - Cliche, but it was my misspent youth. (laughter) Moved to the East Coast, learned to be there, and it's when I really started to produce writing that became more real ad close to tbe bone.

SC - My kids. Hush came about at the dinner table. Family origins.  Family collaboration, teen feedback. Working with her kids, bribery: If you don't clean your room, I'm going to write a scene where you have gas!

KB - I was a troublemaker, and I was poor, I was kind of invisible. I remember the teachers and librarians who encouraged me to read. My school librarian made a job for me after school. But having somebody on your side, aligning themselves with you. I had that. When I thought about who inspired me career-wise, I wanted to be weird like Adam Rex. It was important to me to have an Hispanic protagonist, because I'm Hispanic and there just aren't that many books available. A kid might pick my book up at the store and think, "This character is like me!" Think about what kind of writer you want to be, be inspired by those around you.

Some story of what happened on the journey to publication you haven't shared yet?

SK - Comi-con, kid comes every year, loves my book.

JAC - Last year I did a school visit, hosted by the teen book club. Tall linebacker kind of guy among the girls. Guy was the most animated, excited. I was amazed and charmed by this kid who wasn't ashamed to admit his excitement about teen books.

SC - Volunteered for "I Love to Read" program in Anacortes. Skippy John Jones, reading aloud is so fun, so important. Little girl was reluctant to keep book, didn't have any others, her mother didn't let her keep books because she ruined them. "It's a treasure, show her you can take good care of it."

KB - Park Place Books in Kirkland. Saw an old man pick up my book, first time I'd seen anyone pick my book up. Watched him from afar. He read the flap copy, wife asked if he was going to buy it. Then he said, "No! It's about troublemakers, and kids don't need that." I thought, "Yes, they do!" Which made me determined to always write about rabble-rousers and troublemakers. I was inspired by his rejection.







Friday, December 14, 2012

What's news this week

And now, on to all the good news that's fit to print!

Martha Brockenbrough's Devine Intervention, J. Anderson Coats' The Wicked and the Just, and Kelly Milner Halls' Girl Meets Boy were included in Kirkus Reviews' Best Teen Books of 2012. Cheers to you all!

Chadwick Gillenwater, aka "Professor Watermelon" announces the release of his new children's chapter book, Herbert. For more details about this book and how to find a copy, click here. Congrats, Chadwick!
 

Necromancing the Stone author Lish McBride appears this Tuesday, Decemebr 17 from 7-8pm at Third Place Books in Lake Forest Park to discuss the much-anticipated follow-up to Hold Me Closer, Necromancer. Come support Lish and her Necromancer series.


December's Kid Lit Drink Night on December 7 was a convivial event for all! Dana Arnim recaps:
Gathering at Hale's Brewery in Ballard, my husband Bill and I were joined by 8 other SCBWI-ers for a great evening of talk and beer. A mix of both veteran and new members, we enjoyed the cheery mood at Hale's. I even snagged an "emergency business card" coaster––what clever folks. Thanks to all for coming out!




Lois Harris' My Maxfield Parrish: Painter of Magical Make-Believe book received a lovely review from Fran Lewis. Lois also shared that her biographies of artists Mary Cassatt, Charlie Russell, and Maxfield Parrish are mentioned in local artist Ellen Clark’s Bellingham Herald blog. To find out more about Lois' books, Discussion Guides for which were developed by SCBWI Northern Network Coordinator and teacher Rebecca Van Slyke, can be found on Lois's website





Laurie O'Keefe's picture book, Gopher to the Rescue: A Volcano R
ecovery Story (written by Terry Catasus Jennings, illustrated by Laurie O'Keefe), has been named to the 2013 list of Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12. The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA), in combination with the Children's Book Council (CBC) collaborate each year to choose top reads for children in grades K-12 that promote science and literacy.


Andrea Lawson has a new store on  Etsy, Flying Selki Art Studio.
Please visit! SCBWI members get a holiday coupon!  (coupon code: FlyingSeDec2012Art)
 

Children's book illustration classes with local illustrator Craig Orback begin in January, both in Seattle and Bellevue. Check his website for details on Children's Book Illustration I and II, to be held at Bellevue College (Saturdays, January 19–March 9) and North Seattle Community College
(I: Tuesdays, January 15-March 5; II: Mondays, January 14–March 18).