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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: gae polisner, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Classroom Connections: THE PULL OF GRAVITY

Classroom Connections is a recurring series meant to introduce teachers to new books.
The Pull of Gravity
Gae Polisner's THE PULL OF GRAVITY
YA contemporary fiction
Farrar, Straus, and Giroux
released May 2011

“Polisner’s first novel begins with a bang and ends with another . . . . There is a great deal to enjoy throughout, and literary kids will surely enjoy a subplot involving John Steinbeck.” –Booklist

“Characters feel real . . . and the plot zips along, championing strength in adversity.” –School Library Journal

“She [Gae Polisner] is a writer young adult readers will surely want to hear more from.” –examiner.com

“Although the teens’ best laid plans go oft awry, they discover that the force of the universe is with them—or at least friendship, family and romance. Pulls the heart in all the right places.” –Kirkus Reviews

Please tell us about your book. 

The Pull of Gravity is about two teens who, armed only with the wisdom of Yoda and a rare, first-edition copy of Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, set off on a secret, whirlwind journey to keep a promise to their dying friend. I wrote it as an homage to the character-driven fiction I loved as a tween and teen. I hope I’ve done those wonderful books justice.

What inspired you to write this story? 

First and foremost, my own boys. We had always read aloud nightly from the time they were babies into their early teens (they’re 15 and 13 now. I still read aloud with my 13 year old once in a while; the 15 year old, not so much).

From the time we started chapter books and then novels, they loved realistic, contemporary fiction, and weren’t really interested in most of the genre fiction (sci-fi or fantasy or magic like Harry Potter which frightened them). We enjoyed endless Kate DiCamillo, Sharon Creech, Deborah Wiles, Lynne Rae Perkins, to name a few. But the older they got, the more they wanted their books to have male MC’s – characters they could directly relate to in body and mind. And, outside of genre fiction, it got harder and harder to find those relatable male protagonists in contemporary MG and YA. So much was told from a female lead character. So, I decided to write a book for them, narrated by a teen boy. Your average teen boy, who is extraordinary only in the quiet way we are each capable of being.

Could you share with readers

5 Comments on Classroom Connections: THE PULL OF GRAVITY, last added: 7/30/2011
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2. One Sentence Debut Reviews: July

Comment below for a chance to win Elevensie and 2k11 bookmarks! Contest closes Monday, 31 July.

Possession -- Elana Johnson
Possession
Vi rebels against the Thinkers' control while wrestling with choice, ethics, and a boy with great hair in this fast-paced and surprisingly funny debut.

The Pull of Gravity -- Gae Polisner
The Pull of Gravity
In this tender book about a promise to a dying friend, Nick learns trust trumps security and plans that go awry can lead to second chances.

Sparrow Road -- Sheila O'Connor
Sparrow Road
Raine's summer at Sparrow Road introduces her to the beauty of silence, the art of listening, the courage to face the truth, and the father she's never known in this honest, lovely read.

2 Comments on One Sentence Debut Reviews: July, last added: 7/25/2011
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3. Gae Polisner: 2k11

Introduced first in 2007, debut children’s authors have formed a cooperative effort to market their books. I featured Revision Stories from the Classes of 2k8 and 2k9 and this feature returns this year with the Class of 2k11.

On Revisions and The Pull of Gravity

Guest post by Gae Polisner


I have revised The Pull of Gravity (Frances Foster Books/Farrar Straus Giroux, May 2011) at least four times, including two major overhauls and two significant clean-up revisions. As for the two major overhauls, during those, I rewrote, added, removed, and, um, then restored, scenes and changed the entire chronology (as further described below), and yet, ultimately, it remains the original book I shopped to my publisher on Day One. Only – I’m pretty sure – better.

Revision Struggle Invisible to Readers

I think maybe that is the key to revision – that the hours of sweaty frustration, doubt, exhausted temper tantrums and sometimes tears cannot be tangibly seen – or picked out – in the final version, only viscerally felt as you read a more cohesive, engaging story.
At any rate, here’s the shaggy-dog tale of revisions in my case.
Through serendipity, my editor (the eponymous Frances Foster) got her hands on a very early version of my manuscript (then called, Steinbeck, The Scoot, and the Pull of Gravity). She loved and adored it (while I’m sure feeling it needed some good hard work), and so passed it around “the house” in anticipation of resounding agreement. Which it did not get. Instead, one well-regarded editor in particular had some harsh criticism and strong reservations, and, as a result, my editor reluctantly passed on it.

Battered but not deterred, I set to work revising so we could send it out wide to other publishers, bearing in mind the harsh, yes, but at times insightful, criticism of the Editor-Who-Did-Not-Love. At that time, at my then-agent’s recommendation (and despite my own concerns), I also monkeyed with the chronology of the story.
As my agent and I were about to shop it wide, Frances came back asking if revisions had been made and if she might see it again. From there, it passed muster house-wide.

A book deal was made (hooray!) and then I sat down with Frances.
She loved some of the revisions that had been made, some fleshing out of the story, some fixes of you-know-who’s issues, BUT she missed the original chronology and wanted it restored. Easier said than done, to keep the new but restore the old and seamlessly weave it together.
I’m guessing that one revision back took a hundred hours. But without the full exercise, I wouldn’t have had some of the great new scenes and fleshing out, and, moreover, I wouldn’t have had a book deal.
The thing with revisions is you have to breathe, and you have to be patient and painstaking. And you have to be willing to put in the time. Because, for most of us, the first draft is just that: drafty. It’s the revisions that make the book.

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4. The Pull of Gravity – Where Characters and Story Come From

Before I tackled The Pull of Gravity, I had been writing women’s fiction for years, but had always wanted to write a children’s novel, especially YA, because, to me, the teen years are so very potent and layered. We forget a lot of things in life, but we never forget what it felt like to be a teen. Whether we want to or not. ;)

The Pull of Gravity is about two teens, Nick & Jaycee, who, armed only with the wisdom of Yoda, a rare, first-edition copy of John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, and the vaguest of plans, set out on a secret, whirlwind road trip to keep a promise to their dying friend.

But where did the characters come from? Since I have two boys of my own, and since, especially in my teens, I had always preferred males even as friends, it was natural to make my main character male. Nick Gardner was my natural MC. And, yes, in my mind at least, he is sort of a combination of how I thought my sons might be at age 15: shy, yearning, funny, and good.

Jaycee is more me back then, only bolder and more secure than I ever was as a teen. And, you know, with darker hair. But her snarky tongue, and some of her quirkier traits, like her troll doll necklaces and Slinky bracelets, definitely come from me – for example, there was my "Mrs. Bartholomew" pin (don't ask) or the powder blue and white, 1960s bowling bag I used as a book bag when I was a freshman in college. Seriously, I loved that bag.

As for Nick’s big fat dad who sets out to walk to New York City, he came from a real guy I read about years ago, who set out to walk from California to New York in an effort to lose weight. “But what about his family?” is all I kept thinking each time I read about the progress of his journey.

And the fever scene when they reach the hotel in Rochester? A TOTAL nod to my favorite book as a child – the first novel that kept me awake late at night frantically turning pages – 1969 Mildred L. Batchelder Award winner, Don’t Take Teddy, by Babbis Friis-Baastad. I read that book when I was 7 and it still comes back to me now.

Hey, maybe if I’m lucky, someday someone will write that same thing about The Pull of Gravity.

--Gae Polisner

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