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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Megan Bostic, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Classroom Connections: NEVER EIGHTEEN

Classroom connections is a recurring series meant to introduce teachers to new books.

Never Eighteen -- Megan Bostic

"Bostic writes this graceful, affecting tale without pretension...Perhaps it's because of that simplicity that the story concludes with such a powerful emotional punch." --Kirkus review

Please tell us about your book.  
Austin Parker is never going to see his eighteenth birthday. At the rate he’s going, he probably won’t even see the end of the year. But in the short time he has left there’s one thing he can do: He can try to help the people he loves live—even though he never will.
What inspired you to write this story? 
Watching someone I loved die of cancer opened my eyes.  So many people waste their lives away.  They’re standing still while the world passes them by.  I think it’s important to remind people that you only have one shot at life; you should live it like you mean it.
Could you share with readers how you conducted your research or share a few interesting tidbits you learned while researching?   
There wasn’t much research involved since I’d been a first-hand witness to the effects cancer has on the body.  However, I did have to look up some of the specific forms of cancer, which I did online.  I also visited the Space Needle and EMP, which I’m ashamed to say, having lived here all my life, I’d never been.  I revisited the hike at Comet Falls.  I hadn’t done it in a few years, and I wanted to get it just right.
What topics does your book touch upon

1 Comments on Classroom Connections: NEVER EIGHTEEN, last added: 2/2/2012
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2. WOW Wednesday: Megan Bostic on Always Working to Improve

Megan (that’s with a long “e”) Bostic is a mere human trying to find her place in the universe. Despite the rain and gray (she’s truly solar powered) making her extremely angsty, she’s lived in the Pacific Northwest her whole life, and still does, with her two crazy beautiful girls. You can find her Chronicles of an Aspiring Writer on Youtube, or find her on her website, Facebook, blog, or Twitter account.

I started writing novels in 2002, but will fast forward to the particular novel being published, Never Eighteen. I wrote Never Eighteen, then called Mending Fences, during NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) in 2008. Any book written in 30 days is going to be a real mess. I polished it up a little and entered it in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award Contest (ABNA) for that year. I’d entered the year before and made the semi-finals. That year, um, nope. Got ousted after the first round. I sat down and did some major revisions then sent it to different people to read—from readers to writers to people in the business I’d connected with. I took their suggestions to do yet another draft and another. By the time I felt I was finished, I was at Mending Fences, version 15.0 (that’s how I name all my novels to keep the rewrites straight)

I began querying to agents in March 2009. While many requested partial or full reviews, I got no takers. I kept going religiously for a year, taking breaks only twice to write two more YA novels (which thus far both sit collecting dust). In February of 2010, I’d decided to take the book off the market, and do another set of revisions before sending it out again.

But wait, there’s more.

A friend of mine sent me the name of another agent, Irene Kraas. He said that even though she ended up rejecting him, she gave him some good feedback, which is something agents don’t often do. I thought, what the heck, what’s one more rejection, and sent her a query. She asked to see the first fifteen pages, then the first fifty, then the entire manuscript. Within ten days of sending her the initial query, I had a contract for representation in my hands.

I did a couple more rounds of revisions at Irene’s request, and by the end of March, she was sending the manuscript out to publishers, five of them to be exact. I was in Disneyland at the time, and remember constantly checking email on my phone to keep up with what was going on. April 9, 2010, we received an offer from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. It was awesome that I was in Disneyland with my husband and daughters to celebrate.

I think what made the most difference for me in the shift from writer to author was being able to take constructive criticism and using it to make my novel the best it could be. We think of our novels as our “babies”, and having someone tell you your baby is ugly, hurts. I’ve learned to take a step back from criticism for a day or two, absorb it, then take what is useful, and disregard the rest.

I think the worst thing an aspiring writer can do is to give up. You can’t get there if you don’t try. Yes, the critiques are hard, yes rejection is hard, but if you want to achieve your dreams, you have to keep going. I have one more very important bit of advice, and that is, never stop trying to be better. You will never reach perfection, but if you keep practicing and keep learning, you will continue to grow as a writer.

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3. One Sentence Debut Reviews: June

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The Sweetest Thing - Christina Mandelski
The Sweetest Thing
Sheridan's father's reality tv show changes her world, her cake business, and her understanding of love as she comes to terms with the bitter and the sweet things in her life.

OyMG - Amy Fellner Dominy
OyMG
Debate dynamo Ellie grapples with faith, bigotry, boys, grandparents, the perfect matzo ball soup recipe, and staying true to herself when it counts most.

Never Eighteen - Megan Bostic
Never Eighteen
In the last stages of terminal cancer, Austin lives for the moment by mending fences in his own life and allowing others to begin the process for themselves in this intense, spare read.

8 Comments on One Sentence Debut Reviews: June, last added: 6/15/2011
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