Showing posts with label Historical YA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Historical YA. Show all posts

11/15/2012

Welcome Victoria Strauss

ABOUT VICTORIA STRAUSS

Victoria Strauss is the author of eight novels for adults and young adults, including the Stone fantasy duology (The Arm of the Stone and The Garden of the Stone) and Passion Blue, a YA historical. In addition, she has written a handful of short stories, hundreds of book reviews, and a number of articles on writing and publishing that have appeared in Writer’s Digest, among others.

She’s co-founder, with Ann Crispin, of Writer Beware, a publishing industry watchdog group that provides information and warnings about the many scams and schemes that threaten writers. She lives in Amherst, Massachusetts.

ABOUT PASSION BLUE

When seventeen-year-old Giulia, the orphaned, illegitimate daughter of a Milanese nobleman, learns she’s to be packed off to a life behind convent walls, she begs an astrologer-sorcerer for a talisman that will secure what she’s certain is her heart’s desire: true love and a place where she belongs. But does she really know the compass of her heart? The convent of Santa Marta is full of surprises, including a workshop of nuns who are creating paintings of astonishing beauty using a luminous blue mixed from a secret formula: Passion Blue. As Giulia’s own artistic self is awakened she’s torn: should she follow the young man who promises to help her escape? Or stay and satisfy her growing desire to paint?

This richly imagined novel of a girl’s daring journey towards self-discovery transports readers into the fascinating world of Renaissance Italy where love and faith and art inspire passion – of many different hues.


A rare, rewarding, sumptuous exploration of artistic passion.  - Kirkus (starred review, editor’s pick for Fall 2012)
Vividly set during the 15th-century Italian Renaissance…a strong and thoroughly likable heroine.  - School Library Journal
I don’t just like Passion Blue, I love it…I simply galloped through it.  - Jane Yolen, author of The Devil’s Arithmetic
An elegant retelling of that old, crucial story of finding one’s place in the world, set against a vivid evocation of the Italian Renaissance. - Robin McKinley, author of The Hero and the Crown
ORDER PASSION BLUE:  Amazon.com 


READ AN EXCERPT FROM PASSION BLUE

http://www.victoriastrauss.com/books-2/young-adult/passion-blue/

GET TO KNOW VICTORIA STRAUSS

MAUREEN:  What’s the first book you remember reading?
VICTORIA:  I don’t remember what it was called, but it was a picture book about a family of teddy bears. I was around 6. It wasn’t the first book I ever experienced—one of my earliest memories is my mom reading aloud to me before bed—but it was the first book I ever read by myself.
I still remember the sense of accomplishment I felt when I finished it--and the absolutely amazing realization that reading was something I could do anytime, anywhere, totally on my own. Not to sound clichéd, but it was like a door opening on a vast new world of entertainment and discovery. I can remember thinking “Now I never have to be bored again.”

MAUREEN:  Do you believe in ghosts?
VICTORIA:  Not with my left brain. My right brain isn’t sure. We recently bought a house, and learned only after we bought it that the previous owner had died there. Part of me keeps waiting for something creepy to happen.

MAUREEN:  Do you write while listening to music? If so what kind?
VICTORIA:  When I first started writing, I always listened to music—usually something classical and baroque. Now, though, I can’t listen to anything—I think it’s a holdover from years of living on an incredibly noisy street, where if I opened my window it was like people were talking and yelling right next to me.
Natural sounds are OK, but if there’s music playing, or a TV droning, or even someone talking in the next room, I can’t concentrate. I have a pair of rifle-range headphones that I wear when my husband is working at home.

MAUREEN:  What was the first story you remember writing?
VICTORIA:  It was called “The Adventures of Stripe” and it was about a marmalade cat who had to save her kittens from a flood. It ended badly for the kittens. Even then, I was torturing my characters.

MAUREEN:  What’s your favorite hobby?
VICTORIA:  Gardening. It’s ironic, because I can remember hating having to help my mom in her vegetable garden when I was a kid.
I got interested in gardening when I was in my early 20s. My first garden was a set of window boxes in my second-floor apartment. I graduated to a small patch of back yard, growing perennials and veggies. Now I have a big perennial garden that’s very labor-intensive--but I absolutely love it, especially the weeks of spring when everything is coming back to life.
Gardening is the one artistic thing I’m able to do: sculpting with living plants, trying to create a landscape that’s harmonious while being always in flux. It’s also a meditation for me, one of the few activities where I can exist purely in the moment, without obsessing about the past or worrying about the future.

Here are some photos of Victoria's beautiful garden. For more photos, check out her blog.



MAUREEN:  If you were given a chance to travel to the past where would you go and why?
VICTORIA:  I’m a total ballet geek, and have been for as long as I can remember. As I child I wanted more than anything to have ballet lessons, but we didn’t live in an area where that was possible. If I could travel in time, I’d zip back to 1909 to see Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes--especially Nijinsky as the Specter of the Rose.

MAUREEN:  What’s the first thing you do when you finish writing a book?
VICTORIA:  Collapse! Not really. But I do take some time off from writing to re-charge the batteries—a couple of weeks if the next book is a sequel, longer if I’m going to be starting a new project. Starting something new means leaving behind the characters I’ve been living with every day for months—and that’s always sad, because they become very real to me and I really do miss them.

MAUREEN:  Do you read reviews of your books? If so, do you pay any attention to them, or let them influence your writing?
VICTORIA:  I do read reviews. Over time, I’ve learned to pay attention to them without obsessing—to value the positives without getting overconfident and to consider the negatives without beating myself up too much. The reviews I value most are the insightful ones that fully engage with the book--even if they aren’t positive, they help me get a sense of how I am or am not getting through to readers. I wouldn’t say they influence my writing, but they are a reality check for me as a writer.
I’ve also learned to consider the source. When a reader gives you a one-star review because they hated the first chapter, or a blah professional review makes it clear that the reviewer didn’t read the book all the way through, or someone whose ideology conflicts with yours decides to pan you, you just have to shake your head and move on. Negative reviews go with the territory—they are an inevitable consequence of putting ourselves out there in the world, and we have to learn to accept them rationally and deal with them gracefully (which means never, ever engaging with whoever wrote the bad review).

MAUREEN:  Tea or Coffee? And how do you take it?
VICTORIA:  Tea. Hands down. Loose leaf only—no tea bags (I’m a tea snob, I admit it). Super-strong, milk, no sugar.

MAUREEN:  Giulia, the heroine in PASSION BLUE, is an artist. Do you have artistic talent? If so, which do you find more satisfying: painting or writing?
VICTORIA:  How I wish I could paint! I have zero artistic talent—I can barely draw stick figures. But I do think I have an eye for form and color—all my gardening has helped me develop that—and I also think that the creative impulse is similar, whether you’re writing or painting or composing. I used my own experience of the creative process to get inside Giulia’s head, even though our tools and mediums are different.


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6/18/2012

Welcome Katherine Longshore

Today I'm happy to host Young Adult author Katherine Longshore whose debut novel, Gilt, is set in Tudor England!

ABOUT THE BOOK

In the Tudor age, ambition, power and charismatic allure are essential and Catherine Howard has plenty of all three. Not to mention her loyal best friend, Kitty Tylney, to help cover her tracks. Kitty, the abandoned youngest daughter of minor aristocracy, owes everything to Cat—where she is, what she is, even who she is. Friend, flirt, and self-proclaimed Queen of Misrule, Cat reigns supreme in a loyal court of girls under the none-too-watchful eye of the Dowager Duchess of Norfolk.

When Cat worms her way into the heart of Henry VIII and becomes Queen of England, Kitty is thrown into the intoxicating Tudor Court. It's a world of glittering jewels and elegant costumes, of gossip and deception. As the Queen's right-hand-woman, Kitty goes from the girl nobody noticed to being caught between two men—the object of her affection and the object of her desire.

But the atmosphere of the court turns from dazzling to deadly, and Kitty is forced to learn the difference between trust and loyalty, love and lust, secrets and treason. And to accept the consequences when some lessons are learned too late.

BUY THE BOOK:
   IndieBound | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Books-A-Million
BUY THE eBOOK:
    Amazon | Barnes & Noble


"A substantive, sobering historical read, with just a few heaving bodices."
   —Kirkus Reviews
 
"...royally riveting for the reader."
   —Booklist
 
"This is an enjoyable novel to recommend to girls interested in history, love, and betrayal."
   —VOYA


GET TO KNOW KATHERINE LONGSHORE
 
MAUREEN: What’s the first book you remember reading?

KATHERINE:  The Cat in the Hat.  I was six, and had decided at an early age that I would never learn to read because my older sister became boring when she discovered books and stopped playing with me.  Under duress, I brought Dr. Seuss home from the library and read it in one sitting, refusing to play until I finished.

MAUREEN: What really scares you?

KATHERINE:  Indifference. When people don't care, terrible things happen.

MAUREEN: Where in the world would you most like to visit?

KATHERINE:  Today, I'd like to go to Fiji, because the thought of a good book on a white sand beach sounds like heaven.

MAUREEN: What sound or noise do you love?

KATHERINE:  Water.  Waves on the beach, the rush of a river, the lap of a lake on the side of a canoe, the trickle of a fountain…

MAUREEN: Vanilla or chocolate?

KATHERINE:  Chocolate. The darker the better.

MAUREEN: What was your first boyfriend’s name? Would you want to meet him again?

KATHERINE:  Ha, ha.  Not saying.  And no.

MAUREEN: Vampires or werewolves?

KATHERINE:  After reading THE HISTORIAN by Elizabeth Kostova, vampires are more scary. But I think I'd rather be a werewolf.

MAUREEN: Did you belong to a clique in high school? Which one of the standard high school stereotypes did you best fit in to?

KATHERINE:  Theater Geek.  But also a Brain. 

MAUREEN: Tea or Coffee? And how do you take it?

KATHERINE:  Cappuccino. Traditional-style in a small cup, with a single thick shot of espresso and plenty of foam.

MAUREEN: What does it mean to love someone?

KATHERINE:  It means accepting faults, sharing dreams, maintaining independence but also joint responsibility for the relationship. It means being there when you're needed, and knowing when to ask for help. It means your heart soars just knowing this person exists in the world and believing wholeheartedly in the luck or fate that brought you together.

MAUREEN: Which era would you most like to have lived in and why? Least?

KATHERINE:  I've always been fascinated by the 1920s. The fashions, the music, the budding newfound freedom for women - having earned the right to vote, and the ability to discard the corset. It was the time between the wars, when people had hope.

However, for decades directly preceding and following 20s would have been terrible. The horror and tragedy of the first world war, the desperation of the Depression, and the fear leading up to World War II. Of course, history is full of tragedy and desperation, and people will look back on our own era, and wonder how we lived through it.

BOOK GIVEAWAY!

Katherine will give away a signed copy of Gilt to one lucky commenter. North American mailing addresses only. :)
 
Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only unless specifically mentioned in the post. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants. Winners of drawings are responsible for checking this site in a timely manner. If prizes are not claimed in a timely manner, the author may not have a prize available. Get Lost In A Story cannot be responsible for an author's failure to mail the listed prize. GLIAS does not automatically pass email addresses to guest authors unless the commenter publicly posts their email address.