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  • Vodka Mom on , 7/8/2009 4:50:00 PM
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1. Connecting with Authors on the Cheap

With budgets being frozen and cut, it can be hard to find the money to host a traditional author visit. Here are six tips to connect with authors – virtually and in person – for little to no money.

1. Piggyback: When you book an author, you don’t just have speaker fees. You also need to pay for travel, lodging, and other expenses. One way to cut costs is to piggy back on book tours. When Jeff Kinney came to our local Border’s, one of our elementary librarians contacted his publisher who put her in touch with his agent. She was able  to schedule a school visit between his other engagements. While this visit was not exactly cheap, it was cheaper than it might have been.

2. Buy Local: Another way to avoid travel fees is to book a local author. YALSA has a wiki which lists YA authors by state. Local authors may be more willing to work with your budget constraints since it is a way for them to support their community.

3. Skype: Author Kate Messner wrote about Skype visits with authors recently for SLJ. As she points out, many authors will do a Skype visit for free as long as the participants have read the book.

4. Let Teens Ask the Questions: At my library, I have started a blog to provide a forum for teens to interview authors. Another way to facilitate interviews is via podcasts. Check out the ones by the librarians at the Mount Kisco Public Library for good examples. How do you get interview subjects? Ask them. Most author websites list their contact information. For the AuthorView blog, so far I’ve made two interview requests. One said he was too busy. Another, Sarah Ockler, gladly agreed, and you can read her interview online now.

5. Promote Author Sites: Individual authors offer opportunities for readers to connect to them via their websites. The most involved site I know of is Nerdfighters, a community started by John Green and his brother Hank. Community members chat, share pictures and videos, and blog. The content ranges far beyond Green’s work, but does have a literary focus. Other authors, such as Maureen Johnson, Melissa Walker, and Justine Larbalestier have lively blogs which encourage comments and participation from teens through contests, advice columns and more. Link to these blogs and communities on your library site.

6. Take Advantage of Author Group Offers: Authors are joining together in groups to reach out to readers, including teachers and librarians. The Class of 2K9 has a program called Authors2Go. They plan on offering the program through the end of this school year. You’ll get a signed copy of the book, plus the opportunity to interact with an author online or in person. The Class of 2K10 plans to offer a similar program in the coming year.

There are six tips to get you started. What would you add to the list?

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2. Interview: Cheryl Renee Herbsman

Cheryl Renee Herbsman's debut novel, Breathing, introduces readers to Savannah, a very likable protagonist whose severe asthma sometimes impedes her. One remarkable summer is punctuated by Savannah's work at the local library, her worries about her younger brother and her father, who left years ago, and the appearance (and later reappearances) of an artistic older boy named Jackson. Thanks to her hardworking mother, her developing awareness of the world beyond her sleepy town, and now this sweet boy, Savannah discovers her own strength. This summer story will sweep readers away and make them wish for simpler times.

Much like Savannah, author Cheryl Renee Herbsman started dating an older boy when she was a teenager. That boy would later become her husband. Just how much of Breathing is based on the author's own experiences? Keep reading to find out!

Do you share any personality traits with your protagonist, Savannah - or her asthma - or did the similarities stop with the premise of the long-distance relationship? How much fact got mixed into this fiction?

Like Savannah, I am a hopeFUL romantic and a dreamer. When I set my mind to a dream, I get tenacious the way she did with getting that job for Jackson. I also share with her a love of books, the beach, lazy summer days, and true love. I don't have asthma myself, but I've worked with hospitalized kids with a variety of illnesses, including asthma. My husband and daughter both have mild asthma, but fortunately nowhere near as intense as Savannah's. Another true life aspect of the story is the way Savannah and Jackson support each other's dreams. I feel so lucky to be married to my best friend, someone who always holds the dream for me, just as I hold it for him.

How did your childhood form the person you are now, and how did it inform your writing?

Growing up, I was the middle child of five kids. I was very sensitive and shy. My room was my safe haven, where I could escape the chaos of noise and commotion that comes with a large family. I think being sensitive makes one more attuned to people's feelings and what's going on for them. So when I write, I use that ability to tune into what's going on for someone else.

Even back then, I was a total dreamer. And although they may have thought I was a little crazy, my parents always allowed that in me. They let me believe in and pursue my dreams. I think it makes a huge difference to have someone in your life make that okay. When I set out to write and publish a novel, it helped that I'd gone after dreams before and even made them come true.

Like Savannah, I was raised by a single mother who worked hard to make ends meet and take care of her two children. Like Savannah, I knew that some programs or things I'd love to do were too expensive for us, so I didn't pursue them. Did you base the Program for Promising High School Students on any real program for teens in the Carolinas?

I wish I could tell you there really is a program like that in Asheville, but that came from my imagination. I used to go to a summer camp in the Blue Ridge Mountains, which I loved. So that became Savannah's dream, to one day get to see those mountains.

I loved the fact that Savannah worked at the local public library and had an appreciation for books. What is your favorite part of the act of reading? What makes books so special to you?

I love the way books can sweep you away into another world. I get so caught up in it. I can't stand to put a good book down. And then I'm always sad when books end because if the author has created a world I love, I never want to let it go. As a kid, books were my escape to worlds of adventure or bravery or excitement. They let me imagine myself someone else for a while. But I think my favorite thing about books is the subtle way they can open your eyes to new ways of thinking.

At your website, you shared character sketches you'd written for the main characters in Breathing. Do you always (or often) write such sketches? Do you have any writing routines or rituals?

I do try to do character sketches as I'm getting to know them better. It brings them alive to me in a deeper way. I usually write when my kids are at school. I light candles and incense to transport me out of the mundane world and then just listen and see what comes. I'm not the kind of writer who can work in a busy café. I need silence and solitude to get the writing to flow.

Do your kids and husband read your works-in-progress?

Always!! They even offer helpful feedback.

Are you plotting out another story now?

I'm not a plotter, but I am working on another story. It takes place at a summer camp like the one I went to in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

What was your favorite part of living in the South? And now, living on the West Coast?

I love the friendliness of the South and the progressive nature of the west. And they are both naturally beautiful.

What are your top ten favorite books?

Ugh! I don't know if I can answer this one. It's too hard to choose! I'll tell you the books I've re-read the most:

The Harry Potter series by JK Rowling
The Truth About Forever by Sarah Dessen
The Alchemist by Paolo Coelho
Love Walked In by Maria de los Santos
Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series by Anne Brashares
The Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley
One by Richard Bach
Calvin and Hobbes collections
The White Mountains Trilogy by John Christopher (similar to the Uglies
series by Scott Westerfield)

And for #10, I'm going to cheat and name a couple of authors whose books I
love: Laurie Halse Anderson and Jodi Piccoult, and I also have to say there
are an amazing number of debut novels coming out from the 2009 Debs and the Class of 2k9.

Visit Cheryl's website.

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3.

Class of 2k9 Promoting Debut Novel by Albert Borris, Their Class Member Who Cannot...

I've been an infrequent blogger as of late (busy busy busy) but had to take the time to mention this story I spotted on GalleyCat. Debut novelist Albert Borris, a member of the Class of 2k9, had a stroke last December prior to the release of his book Crash Into Me. Now he's unable to promote the book on his own, so the Class is pulling together to get the word out about Crash Into Me.

I've always admired the Class collectives--it's a terrific idea that debut mid-grade and YA authors pool their resources and band together to promote their collective works. And how wonderful that they're there to help Borris, who is thus far unable to communicate correctly. (More proof that authors of books for young readers are awesome.)

Check out Crash Into Me.

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4.

Class of 2k9 Accepting Applications...

An executive member of online marketing collective the Class of 2k9 posted to the CW list on Friday saying that the Class is accepting applications for membership. If you have a mid-grade or YA novel under contract for 2009 publication and have an interest in joining the Class of 2k9, you can e-mail them at theclassof2k9@hotmail.com.

If you're not familiar with the Class of 2k7 and Class of 2k8, visit their websites. Also see Greg Fishbone's 2008 CWIM article: "Class of 2k7: First-Time Authors Band Together for Book Promotion" (pgae 98).

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5. Just a note....

Just a quick announcement that if you need future information for the Class of 2k9, please send an e-mail to theclassof2k9 [@] hotmail [dot] com. I had to withdraw due to the time constraints I realized I'd have in 2009, but for the lowdown on the class and how to apply, check here: http://www.verlakay.com/boards/index.php?topic=25162.0.

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Check back tomorrow for my special Monday Q&A with author Christine Norris!

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6. National Poetry Month: POEM FOR THE OUP

Happy Friday everyone! I’m particularly happy today because the sun is supposed to come out this weekend and I am quite sick of rain. Today we present more stimulating work from The Buffalo Poets. Be sure to check back all day to read their work!

By King Otho (more…)

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