Showing posts with label all about vee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all about vee. Show all posts

October 19, 2009

Contest and Guest Blog: Read Beyond Reality


Among other things, I have two essays due this week, so I wouldn't expect my current posting track record to improve. To make up for it, I have a treat: C. Leigh Purtill discussing her short story writing, Teen Read Week, and offering a signed hardcover of LOVE, MEG.

Also, I'll be at the Austin Teen Book Festival this Saturday. Hopefully I'll be able to check out a camera from the Fine Arts Library and share videos of the panels with ya'll.

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Not long ago, I wrote a short story called “I Brake For Whales.” A tale of conservation gone horribly, terribly wrong, it’s about a guy who takes increasingly drastic steps to save the planet with his Prius. It’s not anything like my published works, LOVE, MEG and ALL ABOUT VEE, both bildungsroman for teen girls.

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And it scared the heck out of my husband.

Now, don’t get me wrong: my husband is a tough guy, a real manly man who likes to read horror stories, watch zombie movies, and play gory videogames on line with his friends. It’s just that he never expected his wife, the woman who wrote two very girly books, to have such dark thoughts in her head. Had the story come from the pen of Stephen King or Dean Koontz, he would have expected the creepiness and little bit of blood but certainly not from me!

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Scratch the surface of any writer and you’ll find a reader underneath and what that reader may truly enjoy could be at odds with what he or she writes. I, for example, have always loved reading science fiction and fantasy books by authors like Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein and Shirley Jackson and Douglas Adams. When I began writing screenplays, I naturally gravitated toward telling stories that had a particular Twilight Zone-ish bent to them. I loved writing scripts that had O. Henry-like twists at the end, things that made you go, “Oh wow, that’s cool!”

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So when I had the idea for what I called “my Prius story,” it didn’t bother me that it had a disturbing element or two. In fact, I liked how disturbing it got. And I wanted to write more stuff like it. So I did. A few months later, I wrote a short called “Murder Weather” about what happens when the temperature outside heats the brain inside. It’s not as disturbing the first one but it certainly doesn’t flinch from an ending. And once again, my husband got a little creeped out by my willingness to go that extra mile to entertain.

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Real readers enjoy reading. They enjoy the story, the dialogue, the transportation to another world, another life, another worldview. I don’t entirely trust someone who claims to never read horror or crime fiction or romance or fantasy – or YA. Why wouldn’t you want to explore new paths with new people regardless of the genre they’re in? I am the literary equivalent of Anthony Bourdain: I am willing to read just about anything you put in front of me. I may not like it but I’ll try it.

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And I think that’s the most important thing to take from an annual event like Teen Read Week: be open to all kinds of books, all kinds of stories. Try a short story or two. Sample an e-book. Creation is creation, whether a character is a sweet fifteen year old discovering her family roots or a middle-aged guy who’s willing to do anything to reduce his carbon footprint. This TRW, be willing to go beyond your own reality.

Want to read that disturbing short? Check it out on my website, http://www.leighpurtill.com/ or Scribd: I Brake for Whales.

I’ll get “Murder Weather” up there soon. In the meantime, read some of my favorite books for some more inspiration to get Beyond Reality:

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The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson
Something Wicked This Way Comes, Ray Bradbury
The Shining, Stephen King
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams
Stranger in a Strange Land, Robert Heinlein

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I haven't read LOVE, MEG, but you can read my review of ALL ABOUT VEE. But here's your chance to read it:
Comment on this blog with the title of a favorite horror story.
Get a bonus entry by linking to this contest.

The contest ends with Teen Read Week 2009, on October 24.

Other open contests: Cirque du Freak pack, Nancy Holder pack

March 4, 2009

Interview with C. Leigh Purtill

Here's another friend, met when I first asked her about legwarmers. Relationships have started from less. C. Leigh Purtill is the author of LOVE, MEG and ALL ABOUT VEE. Born in Germany, she now lives in Los Angeles, where she routinely spots movie stars. Not only does she know her pop culture, she's worked as a standards editor for shows like Gilmore Girls. Currently, she teaches dance. You can find out more at her blog, website, or MySpace.

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1. You're now doing two things you love: writing and teaching ballet. What was the journey to that point like?

Excruciatingly slow, painful and circuitous – like slogging uphill during a snowstorm while wearing flip-flops. My writing career began in film school when I thought my scripts would ignite Hollywood. While living in New York, the literary capital of the world, I wrote a dozen screenplays with little luck but then, after moving to Los Angeles, the movie capital of the world, I began writing novels. A bit backwards, wouldn’t you say? But I had been frustrated with screenwriting and thought perhaps a novel might be the back door into the movies: write a novel, get it published, then have it made into a film. So far that hasn’t happened but I’ve been much happier writing novels, although I do still harbor the delusion that I will one day see my stories grace the silver screen.

As for ballet, I taught years ago and always loved it but felt I was too young to be a teacher. I wanted to experience some life and dance myself before I taught others. When an opportunity presented itself about a year ago, I figured hey, I’ve gotten old, I’ve had my chance, now it’s time to teach. And I love every minute of it. I’m a much better instructor now than I was when I was younger.

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2. You've obviously set your novels in a place you're familiar with. How do you think living in Los Angeles has affected your life?

The very first novel I wrote (it was called FAT GIRLS IN LA and eventually was re-titled ALL ABOUT VEE after it was sold) was a fish-out-of-water story and stemmed from a personal experience I had not long after moving out here and taking a job in Beverly Hills. When I began developing the idea into a story, I knew that it was (no pun intended) too small for a movie so I started writing it as a novel. Another great thing that LA afforded me was perfect weather to write: I would take a pad of paper with me on my lunch hours and sit outside and write. Had I been back in NYC working my freelance script supervising jobs, I might not have started that habit. I needed the discipline of a regular day job to get the words down. Huh, I never thought about it that way before. Excellent question.

3. What skill have you developed that you’re most proud of? What skill do you wish you had?

I have become a fairly decent public speaker. As myself, I am still quite shy but as C. Leigh Purtill, I can talk about pretty much anything for any length of time and in just about any venue.

What I can’t do is communicate in a language other than English! Speaking a foreign language is definitely something I wish I could do. I have always wanted to speak Italian, since I loved traveling to Italy, but even if I could be fluent in Spanish, I would be grateful. I’ve studied in high school and college but somehow, it just doesn’t stick.

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4. If you were to pick one of your characters to hang out with, who would it be and what would you do?

Of the characters in my published novels, I would choose Valeria Maria Carmellita Padilla y Lopez, one of Veronica’s best friends in ALL ABOUT VEE. Val is charming and sweet and totally self-centered but I think she would be a blast to hang out with, especially if I let her do whatever she wants. First, she would probably dress me in much better clothes, and fix my hair and makeup, then she’d feed me fantastic Mexican food – homemade because she disdains anyone else’s cooking but her mami’s. She’d give me a quick salsa lesson and then we’d hop into her fab BMW, which she wouldn’t let me drive but that’s okay, and tool around town looking for hot guys to flirt with at bars and make them buy us drinks. The next day, we’d jet to a spa and pamper our hangovers away.

5. If a book you loved were going to be made into a movie, which would you want it to be? Who would star? Direct? Produce?

I have always loved “A Conspiracy of Dunces” by John Kennedy Toole. Me and the rest of Hollywood, that is. People have tried to make this book into a movie for a long time – probably since it won the Pulitzer Prize in 1981 – but so far, no one has ever been successful at putting together the right team and the right script. Frankly, I don’t think a movie could ever capture the hilarity and brilliance of the written word but it would be fun to try.

I would cast Philip Seymour Hoffman as Ignatius Reilly, although he is – right now – far too small and a little old. He’d have to gain weight since Ignatius is a really big guy. But Hoffman is fantastic and could pull it off anyway. Wes Anderson, director of “Rushmore,” has a really quirky yet romantic sensibility and I think he could interpret the book for the big screen. And as producer, I’d name George Clooney, who is famous for getting behind projects that he believes in personally and making them come together.

You forgot to mention screenwriter – who would capture this story for the movies? I would ask Charlie Kaufman to write it. He’s the genius behind “Being John Malkovich” and “Adaptation.” A brilliant writer.

6. If you learned your life were a television show, what product would you suspect of being the biggest sponsor?

“Leigh’s Life” is brought to you by Starbucks, Capezio, and Barbara’s Puffins…

7. You can knit, which I find beyond cool. How did you learn? Do you think it improves your life in anyway beside the obvious (that is, fabulous hand-knitted goods)?

My mom taught me to knit – she’s terrific and can do sweaters and cables and all sorts of amazing things I can’t. I’m really thankful to her for that and glad that I enjoy it because, as you mentioned, it comes in handy at Christmas time. From a philosophical point of view, it teaches you patience, since it does take a while to actually knit something. Practically speaking, it also teaches you to plan ahead, since you have to know what size you’re making, what your gauge is, and how much yarn you will need in order to make what you want. Metaphorically speaking, it has taught me not to be afraid to rip something out and try again when something isn’t working. And oh yeah, it keeps your hands busy at night so you don’t snack while you watch TV. I only wish I could knit and read at the same time! That would be ideal.

8. What is the best part of being a YA author? ( . . . and the worst?)

Ah, the big bucks, naturally. Ahahahaha…no. Seriously, the best part of writing YA is tapping into my teen years and reliving my days as a high school student.

And the worst part of writing YA is…tapping into my teen years and reliving my days as a high school student. (Can I put a winking smiley face here?)

Actually, my years in high school were pretty tame, the controversy minimal, my days mild and in many ways, blessed. I had friends, boyfriends, good grades, etc. Played varsity tennis, was captain of my cheerleading squad, acted on stage. And yet…I had the same angst everyone else did. So on the surface, it looked like a pretty great life but underneath, I experienced my share of misery too. That’s not the most fun stuff to access when you’re an adult but if you can, it makes for some good writing.

9. Blogging, writing, dancing, knitting . . . how do you manage your time?

My husband says I’m so disciplined because I was born in Germany. Honestly, though, if you look at my answer to question 8, you’ll see I had a lot of interests in high school. That continued through my college years and beyond. I have always done lots of different things (writing, painting, dancing, reading, knitting, etc.) and in order to do them all, I have had to be disciplined about my time. I use my calendar and Post-It’s and lots and lots of lists. Sometimes I write on my hand when I really need to remember to do something. So far, I have not made the electronic jump. That’s because I love the way crossing things out feels and I fear I wouldn’t get the same rush by clicking a mouse or hitting the delete button.

10. Do people ever disparage your job? If so, how do you react?

People do at times refer to my work as “writing for kids.” Not that there’s anything wrong with that, to paraphrase a great Seinfeld bit, but that’s not what I do. If I’m in a generous mood, I will explain to them what YA is all about and how (if they’re from a different generation) young adult books aren’t the same as when they were teens, that the genre is filled with tremendous literary talent and deals with the same issues, themes, characters, and plots as books written for a mainstream adult audience. I’ll take the time to elaborate on how my research is no different than an “adult” writer’s, how my efforts and resources, my publicity, my marketing, my sales, my editing process, all that are required to get a book written and published are just the same as any other writer’s.

If I’m not being so kind, I will simply say, “I don’t write for kids. I write.”

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So, got anything to say to Leigh? I think she left off Charlie Kaufmann's best movie, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

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