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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Rebecca Serle, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Rebecca Serle Talks About her Debut YA Novel “When You Were Mine”

By Nicki Richesin, The Children’s Book Review
Published: March , 2012

Rebecca Serle

Looking for your next hot summer read? Rebecca Serle’s debut YA novel When You Were Mine is the perfect vacation get-away, beach/ poolside, and even backcountry camping book. Although you may have to stay up all night to finish it since once you begin, it’s impossible to stop reading. To learn more about Ms. Serle, read on fair friends.

Nicki Richesin: Congratulations on your heartbreaking first novel When You Were Mine. I found it exquisite torture turning the pages fast enough to find out what happens next. The book is largely about Rosaline’s journey finding confidence and happiness for herself. Do you believe in choosing to be happy in this way, that we’re not ruled by fate, but we make our own destiny?

Rebecca Serle: Well first of all thank you so much! I believe that life is a dialogue between fate and free will. As Charlie says we can’t always choose what happens to us, but we can choose how we react…we can choose happiness. Joy. Love. Too many books for young women show love as destiny. You are fated to be with this person! He is the only one for you! Quick! Die on his behalf! I just don’t buy that. Choice is an incredibly powerful force. Choosing to be with someone is also extremely romantic. Not because of fate. Not because of destiny. But because you want to. Of your own free will and accord, this is the person you choose.

NR: You indicated in your Acknowledgments that Stephen Barbara had encouraged you to pursue writing YA novels. How did you first begin writing for a YA audience?

RS: My first love is really picture books and Stephen was a wonderful advocate of my work in that arena. It’s something that I hope to come back to! So my introduction to children’s literature really sprung from the very beginning—from picture books. But I had two shelved novels and a short story collection, as well. I found that YA really suited my voice. I loved it, and felt a lot of freedom doing it. But I’m a curious writer by nature. I drive my agent crazy because I’m always looking for the next thing—I want to do it all.

NR: Rosaline is a teenage A+ student with dreams of one day attending Stanford. She has always dutifully checked off items on her to-do list, but learns along the way to live in the moment and not plan her whole life before she’s twenty. How did this character first appear to you?

RS: At a very young age…maybe birth? Because, well, she is me. I was Rosaline in High School. Paranoid about college, grades, doing the right thing. I have learned over time to let go a bit. Writing is so good for that. It teaches you how to surrender to what is.

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2. Best Young Adult Books with Forever Young Adult

Best Young Adult Books: Top Picks from YA Bloggers in the Know, #2

By Nicki Richesin, The Children’s Book Review
Published: May 9, 2012

We asked the sassy ladies at Forever Young Adult (you know Sarah, Jenny, Erin, Meghan and Megan) to choose the five books they’re most anticipating reading this spring and summer. A website devoted to all things YA, Forever Young Adult consists of five women who say they haven’t yet grown up. They write a mix of book reviews, movie analysis, TV posts and fashion, all with a hefty dose of sarcasm and hyperbole, that can be found at foreveryoungadult.com. We’ve enjoyed reading their hilarious accounts from everything to an obsessive love of Dolly Parton to their guilty confession about secretly reading novels by Nora Roberts.


 

At Forever Young Adult, the only thing we love more than new books is an early summer vacation in which to read those books.  Here are five books that are piled at the very top of our suitcases.

Underworld

By Meg Cabot

In this second book of Meg Cabot’s Abandon series, seventeen-year-old Pierce Olivia is being held captive in what we’re pretty sure is hell.  Not metaphorical Hell.  Actual Hell.  Her captor’s the mysterious (and scorching hot) John Hayden, who claims that he’s keeping her safe from the malicious Furies haunting Pierce’s life.  But can John Hayden be trusted?  And can Pierce manage to escape Hell for a second time?  This book is from reigning YA Queen, Meg Cabot, so expect a lot of humor, some super-swoony love scenes and an ending that has you begging for more.

Ages 14 and up | Publisher: Scholastic, Inc | May 8, 2012

When You Were Mine

By Rebecca Serle

In this refreshing twist on Shakespeare’s classic play, author Rebecca Serle explores the perspective of Rosaline, the girl Romeo kicked to the curb after he met Juliet. Heartbroken after being dumped by her long-time crush, Rosaline must pick up the pieces and redefine herself, even as tragedy unfolds around her. Set in present day, this novel is a deeply compelling look at adolescent identity and transformation, and Serle manages to breathe new life into the cliché of star-crossed lovers. Every character’s voice hums with authenticity, and the romance is intense enough to make even Shakespeare jealous.

Ages 14-17 | Publisher: Simon Pulse | May 1, 2012

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