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UKYA BLOG TOUR: Interview with Kendra Leighton, Author of Glimpse

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I’m very lucky to have Kendra Leighton on the blog tour! Kendra’s debut novel, Glimpse, will be out next year, and I am so excited about it. It sounds so good! Over to you, Kendra…
Hi Kendra! Welcome to Queen of Contemporary! To start, can you introduce yourself?
Hi, Lucy! I’m so happy to be here. I’m Kendra Leighton: YA writer by night, chocolatier by day (writing always goes better with chocolate!). My debut novel’s being published next summer.
I loved ‘The Highwayman’ by Alfred Noyes. What made you set your novel, Glimpse, on it?
‘The Highwayman’ is wonderful, isn’t it? I’m not a huge poetry fan, but ’The Highwayman’ has stuck with me ever since I first read it in school. For anyone who hasn’t read it, it’s a fabulous dark romance and ghost story — I adore everything about it.
I rediscovered ‘The Highwayman’ poem at the same time as I discovered YA. I had a brief career as an English teacher, and was teaching the poem to year 8 as well as reading YA books from the school library. Paranormal romance was huge at the time, and since I’ve always adored gothic fiction, I fell so much in love with it that I decided to write my own. I thought about basing a novel on a real-life ghost story, then I had a brainwave — ’The Highwayman’ is already the perfect romantic ghost story, why not start with that?
I originally planned to write a re-telling, but when my imagination cranked into gear I ended up with a very different story, set in the present day and using ‘The Highwayman’ as a springboard. Glimpse was born!
What would you say to people who don’t read, and don’t want to read?
This is a tough one. I know from my teaching days that when people say they don’t like reading, there are no magic words that can force them to! Not everyone likes the kind of books taught in schools, and sadly that’s enough to put some people off. But I really believe there are stories out there for everyone. If you like films or TV or song lyrics then you already like stories; you just have to find the right books for you.
What was your writing process like when writing Glimpse?
Glimpse was the first novel I’d written. I spent three years writing and re-writing before submitting to agents, so it was a long process! It took me six months to write the first draft, and only then did I start studying the writing craft. Every time I learned something new I would go back and apply what I’d learned to the book, over and over, until it was as good as I could make it. I’m reaching the end of the editing process with my publisher now, and it feels bizarre that there’ll soon be a point where Glimpse can’t be rewritten!
Can you name a few of your favourite UKYA novels?Patrick Ness’s Chaos Walking trilogy, Rachel Ward’s Numbers trilogy, Sharon Jones’s Dead Jealous. There are lots of others I’ve enjoyed too, and I’m on a mission to read more!

What do you think makes UKYA so special?

It’s hard to pin down, but there’s definitely a different ‘feel’ to most UKYA. Having read so much USYA, it’s refreshing to read a book with settings I’ve visited or know about, and to read descriptions of school and being a teen that I can relate to (i.e. no cheerleaders or bleachers or high school cafeterias). There are some really great UKYA books that deserve to be just as big as their US counterparts.
And finally, what’s next for you?
More writing! I have lots of ideas up my sleeve…
Blog Tour UKYA Uncategorized

UKYA BLOG TOUR: Interview with Andy Robb, Author of the Geekhood Books

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Hey everyone! As part of the UKYA blog tour, I have Andy Robb on the blog today! I’m a huge fan of his Geekhood books and I’ve been lucky enough to meet him. You can see another one of my interviews with him and Holly Smale HERE.

 

1.  Hi Andy! Welcome to Queen of Contemporary! Can you tell us a little bit about yourself and your novels to begin with?

 

Hi to you – and thanks for having me aboard. I’m Andy Robb and I spent most of my adult life working as an actor; another form of telling stories. When you are an actor, a lot of your time is spent unemployed so you find other jobs to fill in the gaps. I scan cook a bit and found myself working as a chef on a film set, where I met the writer of the film – an author called Alex Garland. At that time, I’d started writing and asked him for some advice. To cut a long story short, he referred me to his agent, who now represents me.

So far, I’ve written two of the Geekhood books. They’re about a self-confessed Geek, Archie, and his mates. Although they’ve been described as funny books, I’ve tried to cover some serious topics in them – humour’s a good way of getting those points across without getting too heavy. So far, I’ve been told that the books are a romance, given that they chart Archie’s Geeky attempts to win a girl, and that they’re a bromance, because the focus is on how Archie and his mates support each other through difficult times. But they’re definitely written about – and for – Geeks!

 2.     What would you say to people who use ‘geek’ or ‘nerd’ as a derogatory term?

 I think I’d say what Matt says in Geekhood: Close Encounters of the Girl Kind:

“Everyone’s a Geek of some sort. Football, films, music – it doesn’t matter what the interest is; if you’re fascinated by it, then you’re a Geek. Simple as that. In fact, the people who are the best at what they do are all Geeks. Scientists, sportsmen, actors, musicians – the best ones are Super-Geeks; they’ve turned their obsession into a career, doing things they love. What’s wrong with that? ”

In fact, there’s a movement online, spearheaded by Stephen Fry, to change the definition of the word and remove all the connotations that suggest social ineptitude and focus on the passion for a chosen subject.

In my humble opinion,Geeks are those who can see beauty where others can’t and want to explore it.

 

3.     Can you name a few of your favourite UKYA novels?

 

So many to choose from! But I’m a huge fan of the Mortal Engines books, by Philip Reeve; they’re works of genius. I also love the Bartimaeus books by Jonathon Stroud. And one from my youth: The Borribles by Michael de Larrabeiti. 

4. Has your writing process varied with each novel you’ve written, or do you have particular habits that you’ve always stuck to?

 Music plays a huge part in the way I write; it can really take you back to a specific time and place. Geekhood: CEoTGK was written with Jeff Wayne’s War of the Worlds on repeat and Geekhood: Mission Improbable was written against Deacon Blue’s Raintown. I don’t have any real habits other than that; just open the laptop, give my head a scratch and go! I probably ought to do a bit more plotting, but I enjoy the discovery side of things; chasing an idea that comes to you and seeing where you end up.

 4.     Apart from the writing, what is your favourite thing about being an author?

 

I’m loving the whole festivals thing; you get to turn up, meet nice people and talk to people about what you’ve written. School visits tick the same boxes. I suppose what I really enjoy, though, is meeting other authors and bloggers. So far, all the authors I’ve met have been impossibly nice people and it’s fun to chat about what they’re doing. It helps if you’re a fan, too; I’ve met Philip Reeve a few times now and I still can’t believe it! And the bloggers I’ve met have been wonderful, humbling lunatics; they’re support has been overwhelming.

 

6. What’s next for you?

 I’m two-thirds of the way through my next book. It’s not Geekhood – I’m waiting for that to be signed-off – but it’s going well at the moment. There’s also a secret Geekhood something bubbling away, but I’ll let everyone know about it as it comes together.

 

Thanks for having me on this fabulous tour – hope I didn’t waffle too much. It is a problem of mine…

Blog Tour Guest Post UKYA Uncategorized

UKYA BLOG TOUR: Guest post from Alexia Casale, author of The Bone Dragon

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I’m very pleased to welcome the lovely Alexia Casale to the blog today. Alexia wrote The Bone Dragon which I adored and she has written a guest post for me to share today. Enjoy!

Picking which book to write

Most people have hundreds if not thousands of daydreams every day. Some you enjoy once and never return to. Some keep coming back again and again. I suspect that this is how most books start: with a daydream that just won’t let go. One that you return to so often that it gradually expands and develops into a whole world.

I’ve got lots of recurring daydreams. Some are single-scenes, while other have long and complicated storylines. Some are no more than individual incidents or images. Some are to do with more abstract ideas and still others are about relationships.

Often when a daydream recurs to the point that it becomes a potential book idea, I’ll find that the characters have shifted a little, the nature of what they’re after has become more defined and the story has grown far more convincing. These are the daydreams that I spend the most time on, trying to work out what core element or elements make the daydream worth all that time and effort. As I start to understand why I love the daydream, I start discarding minor elements that don’t support the core of the story.

When one of these daydreams finally feels complete, it’s either time to reject it as a potential book… or to start working to get it down on paper. In terms of which to do, the first thing I consider is whether the story and the people in it will appeal to anyone but me. Some daydreams are ways of working out things in our own lives, and not all of those are going to be meaningful or interesting to any other person on the planet.

If an idea isn’t too much about my own life and my own needs, then I start to ask myself if the story is big enough, exciting enough… not just for readers to like it but for me to spend hundreds if not thousands of hours on it.16116963

And finally I ask myself ‘is it ready’? I often get lost when I start writing too early: when I haven’t given the idea long enough to ‘marinate’ in my head. Can I really explain in a few sentences what the heart of the book is? Can I clearly and succinctly describe how the plot works? Do I understand why all the things in the book happen? Is some of it all a bit foggy and vague or do I know how every part connects to every other part? Am I attached to scenes without knowing why? If I can’t answer any of those questions in a satisfactory way, the idea probably needs longer in my head before I start putting words down on paper because otherwise I may end up with a lot of material I care about but shouldn’t use if I want to write the best book possible.

Anyway, this is the point where an idea becomes a serious prospect as a book. Before I know for sure, I have to polish the idea up, shape the corners, work out what happens in the gaps between bits of the story… As I work on these things, it starts to become clear if the idea will actually work on paper.

At the moment I’m having fun with idea development and considering all sorts of projects – many of which I will probably end up writing eventually as they’ve already stood the test of time floating around my imagination. But the question right now is ‘What is Book 3 going to be?’ And I sort of know, though I haven’t made a final, firm decision.

It’s the idea that’s felt ready for a while: the one I’m confident about because I can spell out why I’m writing it, how it works, what the high points are, where the fun is… There are still gaps and issues but I already *know* that none of them are insurmountable: there is enough already in place to write a book I believe will be worth reading. Above all, it’s the book that’s been waiting to be written: the one that has had its hand in the air for a while.

The feeling that this idea has been ‘waiting’ is something I can actually put my finger on because it’s measurable in the way I daydream: this daydream is the one that’s there before all the others whenever I let my mind roam. The rest are ‘on and off’ dreams: I keep abandoning them when I get to a tricky point I haven’t worked out yet. And that tells me they’re not ready, partly because they’re not developed enough but mostly because I’m not committed enough to figuring out those tricky bits… yet. When that starts to change – when I stick at a new idea long enough to work out the problems – I’ll know that idea is inching to the front of the queue.

So if you’re not sure which idea you should turn into a book, start looking at your daydreams. If there isn’t one dream that features more than all the others, one you get being pulled back to, maybe the ideas you have aren’t ready yet. That said, sometimes you have to *make* ideas ready by sitting down and hammering out the tricky bits of your plot, fixing up the plot-holes and working out how to make it all believable. This means sticking with an idea, pursuing it, hounding it until you corner it and can force it to make itself clear… or you realise that, instead of gaining on it, it’s escaping from you. But you won’t know if it’s one you need to let get away until you’ve chased it with a reasonable degree of commitment.

At the end of the day, you have to passionate about a book to have a good shot at writing it well. You’ll hate it so violently and so often before you’re done that unless there’s a lot of love underneath you won’t end up finishing. So never write a book purely because you think it will hit a trend or because you think ‘it’s the right book for X stage in my career’: write the book you care about.

Think about it like a romantic relationship. You can have great chemistry but if you never bother to get to know each other, the relationship will fizzle out… So it is with a great idea that stays vague and formless: good for the odd date/daydream but not for a marriage/book. Alternatively, you might feel that an idea is a good prospect, if boring: if you press ahead, you may end up with part of a book or even a whole book, but the chances that it’ll be really good aren’t great. OR… chemistry can be accompanied by an interest in getting to know each other, little by little, more and more until you know enough to take a leap… provided the chemistry is still there of course.

There is always a leap and it’s important to feel a real drive to take it, otherwise you’re unlikely to make it to the other side of the hundreds, if not thousands, of hours needed to write a novel. So check your chemistry and your understanding of your book idea before you commit to it, but remember that both need work to develop in the first place.

In other words, go forth and daydream. A lot.

About The Bone Dragon:  Evie’s shattered ribs have been a secret for the last four years. Now she has found the strength to tell her adoptive parents, and the physical traces of her past are fixed – the only remaining signs a scar on her side and a fragment of bone taken home from the hospital, which her uncle Ben helps her to carve into a dragon as a sign of her strength.
Soon this ivory talisman begins to come to life at night, offering wisdom and encouragement in roaming dreams of smoke and moonlight that come to feel ever more real.
As Evie grows stronger there remains one problem her new parents can’t fix for her: a revenge that must be taken. And it seems that the Dragon is the one to take it.
This subtly unsettling novel is told from the viewpoint of a fourteen-year-old girl damaged by a past she can’t talk about, in a hypnotic narrative that, while giving increasing insight, also becomes increasingly unreliable.
A blend of psychological thriller and fairytale, The Bone Dragon explores the fragile boundaries between real life and fantasy, and the darkest corners of the human mind.

Blog Tour Uncategorized

United We Spy Blog Tour ~ It’s All About Bex

I’m very excited to be on the United We Spy blog tour today! My review will be up on Thursday, but for now I have a post all about one of my favourite characters in the Gallagher Girls series, Bex Baxter.

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Cammie Morgan has lost her father and her memory, but in the heart-pounding conclusion to the best-selling Gallagher Girls series, she finds her greatest mission yet. Cammie and her friends finally know why the terrorist organization called the Circle of Cavan has been hunting her. Now the spy girls and Zach must track down the Circle’s elite members to stop them before they implement a master plan that will change Cammie—and her country—forever.

 

Why do I like Bex? I think that’s a very good question. I’m going to try and answer this question as best I can today in this post.

Bex is certainly a very memorable character. She was one of the first characters that popped into my head when I was asked to write this post and my favourite secondary character from the series.

Bex really adds humour to the books, with witty lines and her so-cool attitude that makes me want to either be her, or be friends with her. And she’s English, which makes her all the more relatable. We could even talk about the weather!

Bex is also extremely loyal to her friends. It’s a quality that I greatly admire because it’s not always that you find someone who would do anything for you. If anybody is in trouble, you will find Bex rushing to their side. Where can I buy a Bex?

My favourite Bex quotes:

“The only way Bex would miss this would be if she were unconscious. And tied up. And in a concrete bunker. In Siberia.”

“Most little girls in England grow up wanting to marry
a prince. Bex grew up wanting to kick James Bond’s butt and assume his double-0 ranking.”

“‘Well…” [Liz] said, stumbling over the obvious, “Bex has always been kind of  rules-optional.”

“Bex was a natural born spy.”

“Bex was the bravest person I knew. I’m not exaggerating when I say that. It is the honest truth. And I knew a lot of seriously brave people.”

“Bex had spent six hours on a private jet, but her cappuccino-coloured skin was glowing, and she looked as if she’d walked out of a skincare commercial.”

You’ll notice that a lot of these quotes are written in third person and I think this demonstrates the point that Bex is dearly loved. Her parents care about her, the Gallagher Girls do and readers love Bex, as shown in this post here. If you haven’t read these books yet, you need to so that you can find out for yourself just how much of a bright character Bex is.

Have you read the Gallagher Girls books? What did you like most about Bex?

Blog Tour UKYA Uncategorized

The Super Secret Project REVEAL!

If you follow me on Twitter, then you may have heard me mention the super secret project that I’m planning. I’ve kept things under tight wraps, until now when I’m going to reveal what it’s all about!

I’ve been working this week to get as many authors as possible on board and now that I’ve reached the number of people that make the super secret project able to happen, I can finally start getting other people on board.

So… Drum roll please!

The super secret project is going to be a  blog tour full of guest posts, giveaways and interviews from UKYA authors, lasting the whole month of November. In that month, I’ll be staging Twitter chats and lots of fun little events within it. There are some very awesome authors signed up and I’ve spent this week dancing around my house every time I get an email.

I have over thirty authors signed up, with blogger emails being sent out anytime soon. I still haven’t had replies to all the emails, so I’m hoping I’ll get even more people on board.

Here is the tour banner, and I’ll be creating more for sidebars when I have all of the dates sorted out. Your sidebars will all be very pretty when I’ve finished with you!

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I can’t wait to share more details with you soon, because this is a project I’m so enthusiastic about. Getting more people to read UKYA is something I’m very passionate about and I know all of the authors on the tour have amazing books.

Tell me your thoughts below! Are you looking forward to November?

Blog Tour Book Review

BLOG TOUR: Click to Subscribe by L.M Augustine- REVIEW + GIVEAWAY

I’ve been lucky enough to be able to host a stop on the Click to Subscribe blog tour today. I really loved the book and I’ll be sharing my review with you.

Summary via Goodreads:

 Page Count: 252 pages
Published May 9th 2013.
Author: L.M. Augustine
Acquired: Through author for review

1,135,789. That’s how many subscribers sixteen-year-old West Ryder has on his web vlog series. But he only has eyes for one of them.

As one of the internet’s most prestigious video bloggers, West talks about high school relationships under the name “Sam Green.” As far as he knows, no one from school, not even his best friend, Cat, has seen his videos. But the highlight of the whole thing is Harper Knight, who comments every day at exactly 2:02 in the afternoon. He doesn’t know anything about her aside from the occasional deep philosophical messaging on why pizza tastes so delicious, but as stupid as it sounds, he might be falling for her. So when they finally agree to meet in real life, West’s hope for romance seems more and more in reach. But that all changes as soon as he arrives at their meeting spot and sees Cat walking toward him, wearing the same “I <3 Sam Green” T-shirt Harper promised she'd have on. To his alarm, West realizes he is falling in love with the best friend who has always been a sister to him.


Review:

Even pre-release, this book has been spreading around the blogosphere like wildfire. So many of my Goodreads friends have added this to their wishlists and this makes me really happy because I loved this book.
West Ryder is a vlogger. With 1, 135, 789 followers, it’s only natural that he’d feels some sort of emotion for them. But what he feels for Harper Knight isn’t something that would be considered normal. Who is this girl, and why is he so fascinated with her?
Where do I start? This was such a fun and quirky book and I finished it really quickly. It may have caused an argument or two, me not wanting to put it down and my parents forcing me to sleep.
I loved the interacting between West and Cat. It was clear how much their friendship meant to each other and I felt comfortable reading about them both. 
Although a little predictable in places and with a few cheesy lines, I really enjoyed Click to Subscribe and will definitely be looking out for more by the author. 
RATING: 4.5/5


Author Bio:

L.M. Augustine is a YA romance author who is obsessed with writing about dorky teenagers, love, and happy endings. He currently lives in New England, where he spends far too much time reading books and screaming at his computer, and he believes that the solution to the world’s problems can be found in chocolate cake. Click To Subscribe is his first novel, but it won’t be his last.


Find L.M. on Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads | Blog


Giveaway



Blog Tour Guest Post

THE DROWNING BLOG TOUR: The Low Down on The Drowning

I am a huge fan of Rachel Ward and her books. After meeting her at an event back in February, I quickly read Numbers and loved it. I’m really excited to be kicking off The Drowning blog tour, because I loved it even more than Numbers, and that’s hard to beat.
I’m really hoping that you will all go away and buy this book after seeing this post, because I know I would want to if I were you!

What happens if you’ve done something terrible? But you can’t remember what. And you don’t know how to put it right …When Carl opens his eyes on the banks of a lake, his brother is being zipped into a body bag. What happened in the water? He can’t remember And when he glimpses a beautiful girl he thinks he recognizes, she runs away. Suddenly he knows he must find her – because together they must face the truth before it drowns them.




What’s The Drowning about? 

With ‘Numbers’ it was easy. ‘‘Numbers’ is about a girl who can see people’s death dates.’ See, all done in one sentence. But ‘The Drowning’ is more difficult to sum up. It’s a thriller about a boy who wakes up to see his older brother being zipped into a body bag. It’s a psychological drama. It’s a contemporary ghost story. It’s a twisted love story. It’s about families, and brothers. It’s about grief and regret. It’s about the power of water, something we all need, something that’s an essential element of our physical selves, but something that can frighten, harm, even kill.

There’s something else, too, a thread running through it that I didn’t even know was there until the second draft. And then it was staring me in the face. ‘The Drowning’ is about domestic violence – abuse between people in a relationship, which can often be repeated through the generations. Abuse can range from verbal intimidation right through to murder – in the UK two women are killed every week by a partner or ex-partner.

Traditionally the focus in the media and in professional support on domestic violence has focused on adults but in 2009, the NSPCC published a report which first identified the scale of abuse in intimate relationships of people aged 13-17. They found that nearly 75% of the girls that they interviewed had experienced some form of emotional abuse from a partner, and a third reported some form of sexual violence.

The Race on the Agenda (ROTA) report in 2011 echoed this and had some disturbing case studies. One 18-year-old girl from Manchester told her interviewer, ‘My boyfriend broke my nose when I was 15 and no one helped, no one has ever helped and I don’t know what they would have done to help anyway, he watched me all the time, especially at school.’

Often the abuser will try to isolate their victim, undermine their self-worth, blame them for the abuse. Increasingly, social media are used as tools to intimidate and bully. Facebook pages and other sites are mechanisms to extend exploitation, control and revenge.

‘The Drowning’ isn’t a book purely about domestic abuse, but it’s in there and it’s an important element. I write books which are grounded in reality, and sadly, part of our reality today is domestic violence.

No-one should suffer abuse within a relationship. It doesn’t matter if you’re 15 or 55. It’s wrong for another person to abuse, control, intimidate or hurt you. If it’s happening to you, tell someone. If you’re under 18, a friend is a good start but then tell an adult, someone you trust, or call Childline on 0800 1111. And get some help. 

The Drowning is out now, available to buy as a physical book, e-copy and audiobook.