When Lisa Kline asked me if she and Joyce Hostetter could interview each other about their recent books, of course, I said yes! Both authors are North Carolina friends, terrific writers, and have been featured on my blog several times. Without further ado, here they are--interviewing one another!
LISA KLINE's INTERVIEW With JOYCE HOSTETTER
I read and loved Joyce Moyer Hostetter’s historical story Blue, which has become a classic, become required reading for many schools, and has even inspired a play. On her website, she says that she writes about tough topics because she is trying to understand the world’s sorrows. I so admire the way she addresses these tough topics in such an authentic and straightforward way.
LISA: Jackie Honeycutt, your main character in Equal, is an appealing and earnest young man who wants to do the right thing. Tell me a little about how you developed his character. Was he in any of the previous Baker’s Mountain books?
JOYCE: Jackie shows up at the end of Comfort but the reader doesn’t know much about him until they read Drive, the 4th book in the series. As the youngest member of the Honeycutt family, he had to wait his turn to be the main character. Once the series was underway, Equal, the 5th book was always going to be Jackie’s story.
LISA: You drop Jackie, your fictional hero, into a real protest march in Greensboro in 1960. That must have been a fun scene to write. Tell me a little about that decision.
JOYCE: Ha! It was a necessary decision but my first draft didn’t include it. Since Jackie doesn’t live in Greensboro, I assumed he’d be reporting on the movement as seen through the eyes of his activist sister. But, of course, that doesn’t work! The protagonist has to get in on the action. So, I dug a little deeper and found a way to get him to Greensboro at a critical moment in history. In the end, it all worked well and yes, it was fun to write! Because, as you know, conflict creates the story.
LISA: You’ve said this is the final book in the Bakers Mountain series. Many readers will be sad to hear this. What project is next for you?
JOYCE: I’m writing another North Carolina story set during WWI when several thousand German “enemy aliens” were interned in the small town of Hot Springs. In more ways than one it is a “friendship with the enemy” story. I am so psyched about this and am close to submitting my editor’s requested revisions. Maybe I’ll blog about that soon at www.joycemoyerhostetter.blogspot.com
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JOYCE HOSTETTER's INTERVIEW WITH LISA KLINE
Filled with dreams of publication, in the early 2000's I attended a writing session on historical fiction. The presenter, Lisa Williams Kline had recently won the NC Juvenile Literature Award for her historical novel, Eleanor Hill. I soaked up her wisdom and made it my goal to write as well as she did so I could win that award myself one day. Clearly she set me on the right path because I actually did a few years later! I've been writing historical fiction ever since. (Carol's note: I attended that session and still have my notes--somewhere. That's before Joyce and I knew each other--and before the three of us became friends.)
JOYCE: I loved reading One Week of the Heart and One Week of You! Both were poignant and funny and written with a lively, authentically teen voice. And they made me wonder, how'd she do that? Which of these stories did you conceive of and write first and where did your idea come from?
LISA I wrote One Week of You first. The idea came from two real-life situations. The first was that both of my daughters had to carry “flour babies” as part of their 8th grade health curriculum. Both boys and girls had to carry five pound bags of flour for a week, ostensibly to show them the meaning of having to be responsible for a baby 24/7. I found this curriculum kind of funny, and I thought it would make a funny story to have my main character forgetting her flour baby all the time, ironically because of a romantic relationship she was considering.
The second real-life event was when there were three bomb threats in one week at my younger daughter’s high school. It was, needless to say, a chaotic and scary and emotional week, and I wanted to write about it. I wondered, could I combine a humorous story line with a serious one? I decided to try that challenge, and One Week of You was the result.
After One Week of You came out, my publishers asked me if they could have more of Lizzy, the main character, which really made me feel good, of course! They wanted possibly a series, but said a novella would work also. And so I decided to write One Week of the Heart, a novella, which is actually a prequel to One Week of You. Getting back into Lizzy’s flaky character was a delight.
JOYCE: Did you know, at the outset, that the whole story would take place in one week? What challenges are involved in fully plotting a story that takes place in a week?
LISA: I did know that the story would take place in one week, because the students had to carry the flour babies for a week, and the bomb threats also took place in one week. And, of course, many teen-age romances last about a week, haha! I like using compressed time periods for my novels. It can keep the tension high, your reader doesn’t have to wait months or years for a resolution, and you still have freedom to explore the past through flashbacks.
JOYCE: I always wanted to write funny and you do it so naturally. Got any tips for me and others who want to tickle the reader’s funny bone?
LISA: That’s a very nice compliment, thank you! I think the concept of the flour babies is inherently funny, so I had that going for me in this book. I found the irony of Lizzy repeatedly losing her flour baby because of her crush –the very thing the flour baby was supposed to be training her to guard against– to be funny. Also, Lizzy is a very flawed main character – she is forgetful, she is susceptible to flattery, she is overly competitive – and I think flawed characters can lend themselves well to comedy. Some things that I write just come out funny, and I have no idea how it works. I tried studying humor once – I read articles by really hilariously brilliant writers like Tobin Anderson – but found that being analytical about it didn’t work for me. When I try to make something funny it never seems to work. I’ve written several serious novels, but have seemed to have more luck with the ones that just turned out to be humorous.
Learn some fun tidbits about Lisa at her Website's About Page.
25 comments:
ONE WEEK OF YOU sounds like a fun read as well as a great mentor text. I've struggled with putting humor into books. It's always good to learn from a master.
Lois Bartholomew
Your name starts the list! It is a fun book, Lois.
Both books sound amazing! I loved the dual interview...authors interviewing each other. Please add me to the list.
You're in, Sandra!
How to decide between 2 wonderful sounding stories! I would be excited to win either of them. Though I have retired as a school librarian, my daughter is one in her children's school. She would be thrilled with either, unless I just keep it for myself. Thanks, Carol.
Carol, I also shared on my facebook--never sure if I've done that correctly.
Gwen
Thanks Gwen and Danielle. Your names are both in, and thanks for sharing it Danielle!
This is such a perfect storm! My favorite blogger interviewing two of my favorite authors! I have Lisa's but not Joyce's book, so I would love to be put in "Equal's" drawing. Lovely idea for this interview, dear friends!
Lisa Kline is a new author for me. Her books sound exciting. Please enter me in the drawing.
PLEASE whoever just posted a comment (obviously a friend of Lisa and Joyce) Please identify yourself with a name and email address! I can't enter you without that.
Gail, you're in!
My kids had the same experience. they needed to care for a life-size doll that wet, cried, and did everything as a really would so. One boy in the class learned he was hard of hearing in one ear because the recording tape inside the doll showed the baby cried all night and he didn't wake up to take care of it now he is a father of two youngsters and he's learned to sleep on his good side to hear the babies at night!
What an interesting story, Terri. I added your name to the giveaway.
Loved reading these interviews! Such wonderful insights into writing. Thank you for sharing these, Carol. I've read all of Lisa's books, so I'd love a chance to win Joyce's. -- Ann C.
Thanks, ANn. You're in!
I would love a chance to win Lisa's book. I have Joyce's book. Thanks for entering my name!
Gail
You're in, Gail!
Carol, thank you for inviting Joyce and Lisa to your blog to interview each other. Joyce and Lisa, thank you so much for sharing about your writing and about these books. Both of them sound wonderful!
Thanks Esther, you're in!
What great reviews! Each book sounds wonderful, but my preference would be One Week of You. Something about that flour sack baby!
I enjoyed the interview. It is always nice to see authors supporting authors. I have not read Lisa Kline's book yet.
Thanks for your comment and for following my blog, Nancy. I'll put you in for One Week of You as first choice-- you get two entries!
Theresa --Sorry, entries just closed and I just picked a winner. I hope you get to read Lisa's book, it's a fun one!
Carol, Love this idea to have Lisa and Joyce interview each other for your blog. (I also like your info about that session and you still have the notes! ) I consider both Lisa and Joyce my mentors. I had read BLUE and ELEANOR HILL as well as attended one of their SCBWI sessions before I began writing The Last Cherry Blossom. I learned so much about writing and historical fiction from them. And now to be able to say they're my good friends is such a blessing (as is my friendship with you). 😊
Thank you, Kathleen!
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