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Best-Selling Author Jodi Picoult

Jodi Picoult is a best-selling author with 17 titles published. Picoult studied creative writing at Princeton, and excelled quickly, having two short stories published in Seventeen magazine while still a student. After graduating, she went on to work as a technical writer for a Wall Street brokerage firm, as a copywriter at an ad agency, as an editor at a textbook publisher, and as an 8th grade English teacher. She also received her Master’s degree in education before having her first child and writing her first novel.
Picoult’s seventeen titles are: Songs of the Humpback Whale, Harvesting the Heart, Picture Perfect, Mercy, The Pact, Keeping Faith, Plain Truth, Salem Falls, Perfect Match, Second Glance, My Sister’s Keeper, Vanishing Acts, The Tenth Circle, Nineteen Minutes, Change of Heart, Handle With Care, and her latest- House Rules. Jodi Picoult currently lives in Hanover, New Hampshire with her husband and their three children.

Interview with Deborah Blumenthal

Q: You have works published with a variety of topics: beauty, health, fitness, travel, etc. Where do you gain all the knowledge to write on these subjects?

I always do lots of research, but to me it’s fun digging into fields that I’m personally interested in.

Q: Do you have one favorite subject that you write about?

My background is in nutrition, so healthy eating is of particular interest to me.

Q: I just finished reading Fat Chance. Where did the inspiration for Maggie’s character come from?

Maggie’s a character who’s close to my heart because she suffers from vanity issues, as I think all women do, whether or not they are overweight. To me the book is about the larger issue of self-acceptance, not just about what the scale reads.

Q: Did you study journalism in college? I wasn’t able to find what you majored in!

No, I majored in English.

Q: You don’t only write books for adults, you have published books for young adults and children. How do you find the ideas to write for so many different audiences?

When you’re a writer the ideas are everywhere. I try to read a lot of newspapers and magazines, and often the ideas come from the short, off-beat little items.

Q: How were you able to break into the writing industry?

Actually I married a journalist and I began to see the world the way he does and see news stories everywhere.

Q: I saw that you hold reading and writing workshops at schools and libraries. Why do you think this is important to do?

Writing is such a lonely profession that it’s fun and inspiring to get away from the computer and interact with real people. When I go to schools I learn so much from kids about what works and what doesn’t in terms of picture books.

Q: You are not only a journalist and published author, but a nutritionist. In your opinion, what do you think is one of the most important nutrition lessons we should be aware of?

I think of food as medicine and believe that we have a great deal of control over our own health. I also think we have to respect the body and give it the best possible food,.

Q: What would be your best advice for aspiring writers?

Keep reading, and closely examine your favorite books to find out how the authors tell the stories and create the characters. Also, force yourself to sit down every day and write.

Q: What would be your favorite place to vacation to?
Venice!

Interview with Karen White

Q: I read that you aspired to be a writer after reading Gone With the Wind. What about that novel made you want to write?
It completely took me to another world where I wasn’t aware of time passing around me until I’d turned the last page. I lived in London at the time and I remember leaving for the Tube in the morning to go to school and instead going to the roof of our building of flats and staying there all day and doing nothing but reading. I continued to read late into the night until it was done. I _became_ Scarlet O’Hara and I fell in love with Rhett Butler. I laughed, I cried–I actually lived that story. And it left me with the feeling that I wanted to somehow recreate that feeling, which is probably what prompted me to write my first book.
Q: Why did you choose a business degree over pursing writing?
Because my father paid for my college education. 🙂 I have a bachelor’s in management with a concentration in marketing, and I will never regret having that degree. Marketing a book is a lot like marketing shampoo, and everything I learned in business school applies to my writer’s life, too.
Q: How were you able to get break into the writing industry?
I entered my first book into a writer’s contest in which the finalist judges were top New York literary agents. I didn’t really expect to win, but I did and the finalist judge offered to represent me. She sold my first book to the second publisher she sent it to and is still my agent ten years later!
Q: You will have 13 books published by the end of the year. How do you keep finding fresh ideas for plots and characters?
Oh my gosh, you’re right! How did that happen?? Seriously, I’m never at a loss for story ideas. Mostly I owe that to my two teenagers who force me to disappear into the “happy place” in my head quite often which is where I find my inspirations. I also find cool tidbits everywhere. For instance, today in a news flash on AOL I read the story about a woman who found a key and a note about locating the treasure box the key went to inside an antique rocking chair she was restoring. I just might have to put that in my next Tradd Street mystery book!
Q: Do you have a favorite book you have written? One that maybe you enjoyed writing just a bit more than the others, or enjoyed the research more?
Even though picking a favorite book is a lot like picking a favorite child (and for the record, the answer to that is my dog), I have to admit that I love The House on Tradd street and its sequels. I think it’s because I simply love the characters, and because they’re in four books, I get to keep them around me for a very long time. As for research, I absolutely LOVED researching ON FOLLY BEACH (my May 2010 book). Half of the book takes place during 1942 and I just love WWII history. I had way more fun with that than I probably should have. But I’m a history geek, so it couldn’t be helped.
Q: Is there a certain area that you need to be at to get your writing done?
Not really–I think that comes from having children around since I wrote my first book. I just learned to type wherever I was. I still do that and bring my laptop everywhere. I recently discovered that being on an airplane, with all of the ambient noise of the plane’s engines, is very conducive to writing!
Q: Would you say you have any bad habits, either personally or professionally?
Of course! I wouldn’t be human otherwise. What’s ironic is that my bad habits in both of my lives (writing and non-writing) are polar opposites. In my personal life, I’m extremely organized and efficient–almost to the point of being overbearing and dictatorial. In my writing life, I take a very haphazard approach and don’t outline or plan or anything–I just sit down and spit it out.
Q: What are some of your favorite genres to read?
I read it all! I love general fiction, some mystery, some espionage, southern fiction, historical romance, and memoirs.
Q: Where would you love to travel to?
I’ve always traveled. As a matter of fact, I just got back from Costa Rica and this summer we’re going to England, Scotland and France. I’ve been to Egypt, most western European countries, and several South American countries (I lived in Venezuela for 2 years when I was younger). After reading MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA years ago I decided I’d like to travel to Japan. Would also like to go to Australia, although the long plane trip is a big turn off for me. There’s only so much sitting still I can manage!
Q: What would be your best advice for aspiring writers?
To borrow from Nike: JUST DO IT! Talking about it, or thinking about why you don’t have time to do it will not get a book written. Sitting down in front of your computer or note pad is the only thing that will write the book.

Author Event: Jennifer Weiner

On Thursday, May 13th, best-selling author Jennifer Weiner will be speaking, answering questions, and signing books at BORDERS (10 Columbus Circle) at 7:00PM.

WHO: Best-selling author Jennifer Weiner

WHAT: Jennifer Weiner will be speaking, answering questions and signing books from her New York Times #1 bestselling novel – Best Friends Forever

WHERE: BORDERS # 592 – 10 Columbus Circle – NYC

WHEN: Thursday, May 13th at 7:00PM

Meet Author Deborah Blumenthal

Deborah Blumenthal is a journalist and nutritionist, and writes books for adults, young adults, and children. She also routinely writes for The New York Times and has written columns on topics such as health, fitness, beauty, and travel. Other feature stories of Blumenthal’s have been printed in newspapers and magazines, including: New York’s Daily News, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, Bazaar, Cosmopolitan, Woman’s Day, Family Circle, Self, and Vogue.
Deborah Blumenthal has four published works for adults: The New York Book of Beauty, Beauty: The Little Black Book for New York Glamour Girls, Fat Chance, and What Men Want. Blumenthal currently lives in New York City.

Chick Lit Author Sarah Pekkanen

Sarah Pekkanen was born in New York City, and moved to Bethesda, Maryland as a young girl. From the start, Pekkanen wanted to write, often writing her own stories and poems, and after college she began work as a journalist for Capitol Hill coverage. Before the birth of her children, Pekkanen married and took on jobs as at Gannett New Service/USAToday, covering Capitol Hill, and writing features for the Baltimore Sun. Sarah Pekkanen now stays home full-time with her three sons, Jackson, Will, and Dylan, and her debut novel, The Opposite of Me, was published in 2010.

Interview with Katie Fforde

1. What I like most about the stories I write is exploring other lives and professions. It’s a way of having all the jobs I can’t have now. I can also give myself skills I don’t have, like being able to turn a tatty cardigan into a stylish shrug with just a few bugle beads. (That’s in my next book, A Perfect Proposal, that has a lovely preppy American lawyer hero.)

2. I keep thinking I’ll run out of ideas and then I’ll hear a snatch of conversation, or someone will tell me something about themselves that make my antenna twitch. People who know me recognize ‘the look’ which means the wheels are turning and another idea for a book is being formed.

3. I think readers will enjoy Wedding Season because it’s about weddings, which most of us enjoy. It also has lovely dresses, women trying new things and discovering things about each other, and especially women having a lot of fun. Also, there are some cute men, too!

4. I can’t start a book until I’ve decided exactly where the story starts. I can have the characters, the theme, the setting, but until I know exactly that pivotal moment in their lives that sets the story going.

5. How do I get over writers’ block? I take the day off, go shopping, or go for a walk, or read someone else’s book. Basically, if I give my conscious mind a rest the subconscious will sort out the problem. Time off between books is good, but not always possible.

6. My early married life was spent on the water for two reasons. My new husband was an officer in the Merchant Navy and I went to sea with him just after we were married. (I was very seasick!). And later, we set up a business on the canals on Britain. We had a pair of boats and ran them as a hotel. I did all the cooking. Very hard work!

7. My bad habit (well one of them) is playing Spider Patience on my computer. I always start the day with a game and quite often play for a while before I start work. Sometimes I am thinking about what to write (which is good) but sometimes I’m just listening to the radio, which is bad! Although I might easily get an idea from a radio program.

8. My free time is spent doing flamenco dancing, singing in a choir, playing with my grandchild, shopping – the usual stuff really.

9. My best advice for aspiring writers is to read a lot and write. Don’t worry if you don’t get your first, fifth or tenth novel published, if you keep going you’ll make it. Also read ‘how to write’ books as they may make the process a bit quicker.

10. I love traveling and so far haven’t been to Australia. However before I can do that, I’m hoping to visit the Hudson Valley in Upstate New York as two of my books have been turned into German TV films, and they have set them there. If they do a third, I want to go and appear as an extra, for my Alfred Hitchock moment.

Interview with Carol Snow

Q: I read on your website that at first you didn’t try to make it as a writer for fear of failure. What finally made you change your mind and go for it? Partly it was failure of another sort. After going into debt to get a teaching degree, I realized that teaching really is the most important job in the world … but I’d never be happy in a classroom. And partly – mostly – it was because no matter what job I did, my brain insisted on making up stories. At a certain point, they just had to make their way onto paper.

Q: How did you celebrate landing your first publishing deal? I’d been dreaming about the Big Moment for years. There’d be a phone call, and I’d jump up and down with excitement, then I’d call my husband at home, and we’d pop open a bottle of Dom Perignon. (Which we’d have to buy first – I don’t exactly have Dom sitting around the house.) But it didn’t work out that way. My agent received an offer long before I expected to hear anything, but it was for much less than we’d hoped for, so we countered. Rather than celebrating, I spent the weekend worrying that the offer would be withdrawn (even though my agent assured me it wouldn’t). After a few days, the money got a little better, but before I’d decided to accept it, another editor jumped into the bidding. There was a lot of back-and-forthing until I wound up with a nice two-book deal. By then, the initial excitement had passed, and my husband was out of town on a business trip. I think we drank a belated bottle of champagne (nothing too expensive), but I can’t really remember.

Q: You write books for both teens and adults. What do you enjoy about writing for both? While the books are quite different, my experience of writing them is pretty much the same. I’ll start with a primary character and a unique situation and go from there. I do enjoy getting to write about a greater range of characters and topics, plus I get a kick out of my teen fan mail. Teens are far less inhibited about contacting authors than their adult counterparts (or maybe they just have more time). An awful lot of them request help with book reports.

Q: What do you hope readers take away from your novels? If my readers come away from my books with a greater or different understanding of themselves or their worlds, great – but my only solid goal is to provide a happy escape from reality. The best letter I ever received was from a soldier’s wife. She said she and her best friend lived in constant fear for what could happen to their husbands in Iraq, but that they loved my books because they made them laugh and forget their troubles, at least for a little while.

Q: Just Like Me, Only Better will be out in April. What can you tell us about this book? I’m really excited about this book, and not just because in its review, Booklist called me “an author to watch.” (Up until now, apparently, I have been an author to ignore.) Just Like Me, Only Better tells the story of Veronica Czaplicki, a suburban single mom and substitute teacher who gets hired as a part-time celebrity double for an imploding young starlet named Haley Rush. Since Veronica is forbidden to tell anyone about her job, she must live a kind of double life: getting spray tans and going to film premieres during the day; eating macaroni and cheese and watching videos at night (because she can’t afford cable). The story is filled with twists and turns, Hollywood glamour and Hollywood dysfunction.

Q: Are you currently working on another novel? I’m writing a book about three women dealing with parenthood issues. The story is told from three different points of view, which is a first for me.

Q: Where do you find your ideas for characters and plots? I’m always looking for plot ideas, so pretty much everything that I read or observe goes through my “Can I use this?” filter. A few years ago, my husband told me about a business associate who bears such a striking resemblance to Jack Nicholson that people ask him for his autograph – and who has a daughter who works as an Angelina Jolie impersonator. I didn’t immediately say, “Hey! I’m going to write a book about a celebrity double!” But the inspiration was there when I needed it.

Q: What is one of your greatest personal achievements? I have a happy marriage and two great kids.

Q: What would be your advice to aspiring writers? Understand that it takes years to develop your craft, and don’t rush to publication. Also, be prepared to take criticism – and learn from it.

Q: You have lived a bit all over the US. Which was your favorite, and where would you love traveling to? After college, I spent five years in Boston. I love it there: the sense of history, the architecture, the intellectual spirit. I even like the weather. I never would have left, but I fell in love with my now-husband, which kind of messed up my plans. As for traveling, I went to France last spring – Paris and the Loire Valley – and I can’t wait to go back … someday.