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A Prescription for Cabin Fever

Spring hasn’t sprung yet, but the switch to daylight-savings has us itching for green, growing things, and sunshine. Here are some transporting reads to help combat cabin fever.

Wendy recommends Auntie Poldi and the Sicilian Lions by Mario Girodano. “A super fun mystery set in Sicily! Auntie Poldi and her wig set out to solve the murder of her handyman, a great start to the series, I can’t wait to read the next one!”

Anna recommends the classic A Room with a View by EM Forster as another great book, also set in Italy, that is “just so NOT my life.”

Kasey was bowled over by Bowlaway by Elizabeth McCracken. “A fun, and strange, multigenerational journey” about a highly idiosyncratic family managing a candlepin bowling alley.

Jessica encourages you to truly sail away with Lily King’s Euphoria - a fictionalized account of the life of Margaret Mead - which has the reader, much like the famed anthropologist, examining the mundanity of everyday life, but through the dramatic jungle lens of the south pacific.

For those who have truly had enough, Kris recommends The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck by Mark Manson. This bright orange book will “get you out of your head long enough to appreciate being in the moment. He also has a new book coming out that I'm really excited for!"

Stop in and ask a bookseller what your next great read should be!

 

How Big WAS the Fish?

  “A people are as healthy and confident as the stories they tell themselves. Sick storytellers can make nations sick. Without stories we would go mad. Life would lose its moorings or orientation … Stories can conquer fear, you know. They can make the heart larger."

 

Story Slams, or live storytelling, a la The Moth Podcast, is a new iteration of a very old artform. Our human ancestors, and perhaps those not so human, once congregated to communicate about their experiences as a way to find and give meaning.

Storytelling competitions allot 5 minutes each to the teller to share their story around a theme, with no notes, but also not memorized. There are many forms that tellers can use to frame their story; plain first person narrative, a diary entry, a frame tale, a modernization or setting change, a dialogue, interview or script, or a ballad.

Telling is both of the mind, and of the body, giving dual emphasis to content and performance. The story’s transmission is a collaboration of energy and imagination within both the teller and listeners. The urgency and vulnerability in exposing so much of the self creates a palpable connection that roots our community and sparks empathy.  

I’ve been telling stories for about as long as I can remember. There’s nothing quite like a well told story. We’ve all of us experienced things in our lives that seem unbelievable, astounding, shocking, and heart-wrenching but it’s in the way the story is told that holds the power. There are stories I’ve told everybody to the point that people who know and love me could probably tell them for me. There are stories so dark and secret and precious, only a few people have ever heard me tell them. There are stories so embarrassing that I probably should have kept them to myself and have ended up telling entire audiences. I have stories that have changed and morphed over time and ones I no longer remember. We all of us have a story burning inside us. How will you tell yours? - Harry Jahnke

We can’t wait for Bozeman Untold’s StorySlam honoring One Book One Bozeman on Thursday, February 21st, on the theme of “Love, and Other Consolation Prizes.” This singular way of honoring the spirit of a community reading project invites participants to tell a story, not read one (indeed no notes are allowed), in 5 minutes - much like poetry slams you may be familiar with. The act of storytelling honors the individual experience, challenges dominant narratives, and deepens community connection. Whether a first person narrative, a dear diary entry, or a modernization, you’re invited to hook the audience and build a bridge with your community.

 

Tips:

Make an outline, memorize the bullet points, and play with the details.
Have some stakes.
Have a great first line.
Have an ending - don’t meander.
This is not a space for stand-up, essays or rants.
No fake accents

See you at the mic!

Book Boyfriends with Jennifer Ryan!

Happy Valentine’s Day!!!

I asked a few of my favorite western romance authors…

Who is the book boyfriend you’d like to be your Valentine?

♥♥♥♥♥

Maisey Yates, author of GOOD TIME COWBOY, says, “My Valentine book boyfriend is Jack Armstrong from COWBOY SEAL REDEMPTION by Nicole Helm. He’s a cowboy and a former Navy Seal and an all-around great guy who falls in love with a bad girl bartender. It’s a wonderful book!”

♥♥♥♥♥

My sweet friend, Lori Wilde, author of HOW THE COWBOY WAS WON, sent me two recommendations!

“My western romance pick is Jodi Thomas's TALL, DARK AND TEXAN. The perfect marriage of convenience story. The hero is such a strong protector. Gotta love a man who'll take on another man's children to raise as his own. Romantic, tender and heartfelt.

My book boyfriend is from an oldie but a goodie, Bobby Tom Denton from Susan Elizabeth Phillips’s HEAVEN, TEXAS. He is so hot and the way he grovels to get the heroine back! Be still my heart.”

♥♥♥♥♥

Carolyn Brown, author of COWBOY BRAVE, came back with another great recommendation. “The book boyfriend I’d like to be my Valentine is sexy Austin Davis from Laura Drake’s book, THE LAST TRUE COWBOY!”

♥♥♥♥♥

If you love the romance of Valentine’s Day – dinner for two, heart shaped boxes of chocolates, flowers, and the perfect date – I’ve got 3 great stories for you in CONFESSIONS OF A SECRET ADMIRER.

Find your book boyfriend in my very own WAITING FOR YOU, Candis Terry’s SWEET FORTUNE, and Jennifer Season’s MAJOR LEAGUE CRUSH.

♥♥♥♥♥

In case you missed it, DIRTY LITTLE SECRET – Wild Rose Ranch, came out in December. Noah inherits his step-father’s ranch, but has to share it with a woman he’s never met and knows nothing about – but he’s drawn to her like no other woman he’s ever met. What will happen when he discovers her dirty little secret?

I hope you enjoy all of these recommendations.

 

Happy reading!

 

Jennifer Ryan

Sign up for my newsletter – www.jennifer-ryan.com/newsletter

Follow me on Twitter @jenryan_author and on

Facebook https://www.facebook.com/jenniferryanauthor/

 

 

Holiday Romance Recommendations from Jennifer Ryan

Something Old

If you believe in fate and soulmates, you’ll love Cathy Maxwell’s A SEDUCTION AT CHRISTMAS. They locked eyes across a ballroom once, but when Fiona Lachlan meets the Duke of Holburn she has next to nothing in this world except her beloved hound Tad – and someone is trying to kill him. If he doesn’t find out who and stop them, he’ll miss his Christmas wedding and a life with the only woman he ever loved.  

Something New

I love discovering a new author. And this debut hooked me.

Carly Bloom’s BIG BAD COWBOY is sweet and naughty, sexy and heartwarming, a thoroughly enjoyable – and a little bit wicked – read.

Something Borrowed

My very good friend and fellow Avon author Lori Wilde writes a Christmas book every year for her fans. This year is no exception - THE CHRISTMAS KEY received a starred review from Publishers Weekly! “The magnetism between Naomi and Mark is breathtaking and real, the magic of Christmas enhances their romance. Readers will cheer for the wounded warrior who may have found a place to call home.”  

So it’s no wonder I asked Lori for her favorite Christmas read…

“I recommend Annie Rain's CHRISTMAS ON MISTLETOE LANE. I love her writing and the book just gives you all the feel-good tingles of the holiday season. It's heartwarming, emotional and sweetly captures the spirit of Christmas.” Lori Wilde

Something Blue

If you want to laugh and have your heart melt, I highly recommend you read a Jill Shalvis book. Once I start reading, I can’t put them down. SWEET LITTLE LIES starts off her Heartbreaker Bay series. San Francisco is the perfect romantic backdrop to this heartwarming friends-to-lovers story. Sometimes your heart’s desire is only a wish away.

Look for my upcoming release DIRTY LITTLE SECRET – book 1 of my brand new Wild Rose Ranch series that’s all about romance and scandal for the women who grew up at the notorious Nevada brothel as they try to make a life outside their mothers’ world.

I hope you enjoy all of these recommendations.

Happy reading!
-Jennifer Ryan
Sign up for my newsletter – www.jennifer-ryan.com/newsletter
Follow me on Twitter @jenryan_author and on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/jenniferryanauthor/

Fall Reading Guide

Leaves are falling, temperatures are dropping, and curling up with a good book is sounding more and more appealing. We've compiled a list of our favorite autumnal reads to get you in the mood for all things spooky, dark, and magical.

 


Harry
The World of Lore: Monstrous Creatures by Aaron Mahnke 

I grew up as a kid who could not handle horror movies and was terrified of ghost stories. And yet I was fascinated with the world of the paranormal. I studied werewolves and witches and looked up the true history behind them and went ghost hunting and I thought I had learned everything there was to know about monsters and spirits. 

How delightful to be wrong. This book is full of historical accounts and eye-witness accounts of people's brush with the world beyond the veil. Fan of the podcast or no, you will be fascinated with the folklore of fear from around the world and it's ripples on history. And just in time for Samhain! 


Jamie
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

“The circus arrives without warning.”

Gates opening as night falls, Le Cirque des Rêves is home to attractions of great mystery and allure. Acts so fantastical that it is difficult to believe they are rooted in reality. Some are not. Two rival magicians use the circus to house an ongoing competition between their students to showcase incredible feats of magic. Erin Morgenstern crafts a setting of immense beauty and lyricism that is perfect year round, but is the quintessential autumn novel.

Serving suggestions: apple cider and popcorn.


Jess
A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness

“It begins with absence and desire.
It begins with blood and fear.
It begins with a discovery of witches.”

Avoiding the harvest festival of Mabon in Oxfords Bodleian Library, closeted Witch and Science Historian Dr. Diana Bishop calls up an ancient alchemical manuscript that shakes eldritch creature community. As the mercurial Daemons begin to follow her with unwanted prophecy Diana finds she must accept the protection, and ultimately an All Souls date with a brilliant Scientist Vampire. With action, history, magic and romance this trilogy FEELS like an Edinburgh autumn, full of witches and vampires and engaging history this is perfect for cozy sweaters, tea, and blustery nights.

#AllSoulsRead twitter read-a-long for month of Oct culminating in a fandom Con.


Caitlin
Three Dark Crowns by Kendare Blake

Three sisters must fight to the death to claim the crown. Separated as children they are raised to understand their own special abilities; poisoner, elementalist, and naturalist.  The story is told through multiple perspectives with each character having defined voice. This book is dark and brooding with great character development throughout the novel. While not set during autumn, it definitely has gloomy vibes that I always crave this time of year.


Wendy
The Names of the Stars by Pete Fromm

25 years after babysitting fish in the River of No Return Wilderness (Indian Creek Chronicles) Pete Fromm is hired by Montana FWP to babysit fish over the winter in the Bob Marshall Wilderness. Trekking into the wilderness in the autumn, he encounters deer, elk, and bears. Now the father of two boys, he reflects on fatherhood and his journey from Indian Creek to the Bob.


Matt
Tales of Horror by H.P. Lovecraft

A collection of Lovecraft’s greatest works which is perfect for all your Halloween horror needs. With his most iconic stories like Call of Cthulhu and The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, delve into the unknown and discover the chaos and insanity that comes when secrets which are better left unknown unearth. “Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn”.


Katie
The Cove by Ron Rash

Not your typical spooky fall read, but a dark tale nonetheless, The Cove crosses off some of the necessary bullet points for autumnal literary consumption: a dark and forbidding setting, a possible witch, and a stranger appearing out of the forest bearing secrets. But it also delivers more than that, with a striking love story and probing moral questions wound into the fabric of the novel. This is a great read with characters, a setting, and an ending that will stay with you…or, you might say, haunt you!

 

 

 

Wendy's Not-to-be-Missed Mysteries

If you’ve perused our mystery section you’ve undoubtedly seen staff picks from our mystery expert, Wendy. She’s a lover of mystery novels, reads more than the rest of the staff combined, and will also be leading the Wonderlust Mystery Book Discussion through MSU Extended University. We asked her for ten not-to-be-missed mystery reads that will be perfect for your autumn reading.

 

The Child by Fiona Barton

The stories of a baby skeleton found in a building site and a child stolen years ago intertwine. Kate Waters makes a great protagonist and the ending is one you won’t see coming.
 

Gone by Mo Hayder

Officer Jack Caffery and police diver Flea Marley try to locate an 11 year old girl, stolen during a carjacking. The diving aspect really sets this series apart. It’s dark, but so good.
 

Out of Bounds by Val McDermid

This new series by longtime journalist and mystery writer McDermid follows cold case detective Karen Pirie. The DNA of a teenager put into a coma after a joyriding car crash is suddenly linked to a 22-year-old unsolved murder and Pirie is called in to solve it.
 

Since We Fell by Dennis Lehane

An agoraphobic woman finally ventures outside her home only to find her husband, who is supposed to be out of town. She must continue facing her fear to figure out what is happening in this story by the ultimate thriller writer.
 

Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz

A mystery within a mystery. While the reader is reading the mystery novel the author is murdered. His editor vows to solve his murder in this fun homage to Agatha Christie.
 

You Will Know Me by Megan Abbott

Devon Knox is a high school student and Olympic gymnastics hopeful. When one of the coaches at the gym is killed in a hit and run, the jealousies and rivalries ramp up. The Olympic hopeful storyline is realistic and the ending is twisty and SHOCKING.
 

A Song of Shadows by John Connolly

PI Charlie Parker is recovering in Maine, living next door to a young girl and her mother. Darkness follows Charlie, but so does his helpful, dead daughter. Supernatural and scary!
 

King Maybe by Timothy Hallinan

LA Burglar Junior Bender finds himself in trouble when he is hired to burgle a ruthless studio mogul. This series is both dark and funny.
 

Stealing People by Robert Wilson

Six children of wealthy international families are kidnapped in London. Kidnap consultant Charlie Boxer finds that case intersecting with his own. Robert Wilson’s thrillers always deliver and keep you guessing all the way through.
 

The Coroner’s Lunch by Colin Cotterill

Dr. Siri Paiboun is the elderly national coroner in 1978 Laos. He is underfunded, understaffed, and possessed by the soul of a Hmong shaman. Wickedly funny, this series has a loveable cast of characters making do (and sometimes making mayhem!).


Top Ten Graphic Novels for Summer

Summertime is the time for all comic book characters to hit the silver screen so while you're on the beach this summer, why not take add one of these secret origins to your reading list? Our bookseller and graphic novel aficionado Harry lists his top ten graphic novels for Summer 2017.

Books for All Ages

1. Bone by Jeff Smith

Bone is truly one of the great fantasy epics of our times. We follow three creatures from a town called Bonville who have been exiled from their homes. They soon find themselves in a rich world filled with people and monsters like they've never seen before. Complete with dragons, necromancers, and a tough as nails grandma, it's fun all the way through.

2. The Adventures of TIntin by Herge

Tintin is one of those timeless comics that appeal to every kid. Tintin is a Belgian reporter who finds himself embroiled in adventure after adventure. Picture Indiana Jones meets the Hardy Boys. Tintin features a colorful cast of characters and hi jinks around the globe to the desert to the jungle to the bottom of the ocean and to the moon. 

3. Amulet by Kazu Kibuishi

Magic amulets, mysterious family members, robots, if you haven't read this series yet, you really should. Perfect for those who love books similar to Harry Potter and fun for all ages.

4. Hilda and the Troll by Luke Pearson

Hilda is another series that parents will enjoy as much as children. HIlda is a wonderful mixture of childhood curiosity and Northern folklore. The stories are engaging, sweet, and simple. The artwork is incredibly expressive and stylized and lends itself perfectly to Hilda's adventures. 

 

Books for Young Adults (and Adults Who Read Young Adult)

5. Teen Titans by Geoff Johns

It’s dark, it’s edgy, it’s teens with weird powers and adolescent problems. Teen Titans is great for DC fans who are looking for a cool, action packed YA graphic novel.

6. Snotgirl by Bryan Lee O'Malley 

A fashion blogger runs into #drama when she goes to a club and accidentally kills her new best friend. Things get even more complicated when her dead best friend keeps texting her from beyond the grave and shows up that the same party she's at. Ugh, life totally sucks sometimes. The artwork is superb in this absolute nail-biter of a mystery. 

7. Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind by Hayao Miyazaki

Fans of Hayao Miyazaki’s movies and new readers alike will love this manga. Everything from how Nausicaa grows as a person, to the incredible world building, to the breathtaking detail in the artwork makes it one of my absolute favorites to read again and again.

8. Lumberjanes by Noelle Stevenson

As our bookseller Jessica beautifully sums up: "It's girls! Doing things!" There aren't a ton of female-centric comics in the industry, but this is one of the best. A group of girls at a summer camp get into supernatural shenanigans and hilarity, female affirmation ensues. Funny series, great art, great read.

 

Books for Adults

9. Saga by Brian K. Vaughn

Saga is wonderful. It's visually beautiful, super creative, and entirely relatable. Anyone who has ever gone to incredible lengths for someone they love will know how the people in this book feel. Two alien planets, two forbidden lovers, one war that threatens to tear them apart and their newborn child. A sci-fi adventure with real heart. 

10. Descender by Jeff Lemire

Sort of like the movie AI but better and also it's a comic. A small robot boy wakes up after a decades-long sleep on a small mining outpost on a backwater planet. His family and every human there is dead. He soon learns that the entire galaxy has turned against robot-kind but he may also be the key to saving everyone. 

 

Meet an Author — Grady Hendrix

 

 

 

 

 

Grady Hendrix writes fiction, also called "lies," and he writes non-fiction, which people sometimes accidentally pay him for. He is the author of Horrorstör, the only novel about a haunted Scandinavian furniture store you'll ever need. It has been translated into 14 languages and is being turned into a television show. His most recent novel is called My Best Friend's Exorcism, about demonic possession, friendship, exorcism, and the Eighties.

Grady used to be a journalist, which means that he was completely irrelevant and could be killed and turned into food at any time. He is one of the founders of the New York Asian Film Festival, but he is not responsible for the bad parts of it. He is also not Asian. For years he was a regular film critic for the New York Sun but then it went out of business. He has written for Playboy Magazine, Slate, The Village Voice, the New York Post, Film Comment, and Variety.

The New Yorker once ran a short profile on him, and this means that when the time comes and they are lining people up for the Space Arks he will be guaranteed a seat ahead of you.

 

Both Horrorstör and My Best Friend's Exorcism are incredibly unique, riding a delicate line between full-fledged horror and more mainstream fiction. Where do you find inspiration for your stories?

With books I really like taking clichés and digging into them, taking them literally. I mean, Horrorstör is just a haunted house story, and My Best Friend’s Exorcism is a straight-up exorcism narrative. But those stories are only clichés if you don’t think about them too hard. Once you take them seriously, weird contradictions arise. I’ve always been freaked out by the end of The Exorcist when the MacNeils are saying goodbye to the priests. I mean, sure, Regan is no longer possessed, but what’s breakfast like the next morning after you kill a priest, rub your mom’s face into your bloody crotch, and spray bystanders with green vomit? 

Tell us a bit about what it was like to write from the perspective of teenage girls.

The most important thing that happened to me writing this book was when I gave my wife the first 50,000 words to read. I was super proud and thought she was going to be blown away and all “You’re the world’s greatest writer.” Instead she told me it was hot garbage. We pretty much almost got divorced over that conversation. But when I got over my wounded ego, I realized she was right. My head was so stuffed with pop culture depictions of the 80s and high school from movies and other books that I’d forgotten what the real thing was like, so I pulled out all my old letters and journals, all my wife’s old letters, all the yearbooks and photos we had, and I just dove into them for 3 weeks. At one point I started copying letters over to get into the mindset (I copied so many of them that my handwriting actually changed and I reverted to some weird ways to write “a” and “e” that I had in high school). It reminded me that high school in the 80s was so much stranger and so much scarier than I remembered. Writing from the POV of two girls wasn’t very difficult after I got that part down. I mean, we’re both people. 

A reviewer has called My Best Friend's Exorcism, "a great mixture of nostalgia and horror." How does that assessment strike you?

I’ll take any assessment anyone’s willing to give me! I write these books alone in a room then seal them up in bottles and throw them out into the world, so it’s nice to hear from someone who’s found one washed up on the beach. Even if they don’t like something I’ve written, I’m grateful they’re taking the time to engage.

If My Best Friend's Exorcism were to be made into a movie, who do you hope would play Abby and Gretchen?

Zendaya as Gretchen and Willow Smith as Abby.

My Best Friend’s Exorcism includes some really intense and suspenseful scenes, but there are added elements of humor and a lovely friendship between your main characters. Do you consider yourself a part of the horror genre? Or is there another label that you think better captures what you’ve created?

I just write books about the world I see around me. Afterwards, people tell me it’s horror. But I am aware that I’m writing in a horror tradition and I’m happy with that. Horror is the mulch down deep in the dark where all the other genres have their roots. It’s the most flexible genre that talks about the most important things: life, death, love, werewolves. 

Who are your top five favorite authors?

I’ll read anything by Elmore Leonard and any of Ed McBain’s 87th Precinct novels. Once a year, or every other year, I re-read Charles Willeford’s Miami-set Hoke Mosely novels. I keep finding new things to love in Shirley Jackson. And I’ve been doing a massive re-read of Stephen King and it’s given me a new appreciation of what he’s done and is still doing.

Which books are in your to-be-read pile right now? 

Right now, I’m working on a book about books, so I’m reading a ton of horror paperbacks from the 70s and 80s. My to-be-read pile has about 100 books in it, and I’m reading 2-3 per day, which hurts my brain. But in terms of what I’ve read in the past five days, Satan’s Mistress, Satan’s Seductress, Satan’s Sleuth, Satan’s Pets, Satan’s Love Child, Satan Sublets, Satan’s Bride, and Satan’s Daughter. Basically, I’m reading about all of Satan’s relationships.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

It doesn’t exist until you put it down on paper. That’s the only way to do it. There are no shortcuts.

Can we look forward to another book from you in the future?

I’ve got a new book due in October, and then a new novel due in February. I can’t talk about them right now because I don’t want to make any promises until they’re finished, but there will be new books from me in 2017 and 2018 at the very least.

 

 

Meet a Bookseller — Wendy

 

What do you do at the bookstore?

My job is to socialize and talk about books. I also carry books around, alphabetize, and clean shelves. All books, all the time!  I need to be as knowledgeable as possible about many different genres of books, although my favorite sections are mystery, cooking, adventure/travel and nature.

What do you do outside of the bookstore?

I’m a wife, mother, and my family’s chief cook and organizer. I read a lot at home, and I’m a political junkie so I read quite a few newspapers and political blogs. I was on the editorial board of the Bozeman Daily Chronical for two and a half years, so I had to know a lot about local and state politics. I also like to hike, ski, fish, and river raft. I love cooking, especially Indian food.

What are a few of your favorite books?

Because I am a mystery reader, I end up reading a lot of series, so it’s harder to pick favorite books. I would say my favorite authors are C.J. Box, Craig Johnson, Jussi Adler-Olsen, Elly Griffiths, and Mo Hayder. As far as individual books go, Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner and Time and Again by Jack Finney are two of my favorites.

A book about your life would be called...

So Many Books, So Little Thyme. It would be entirely about reading and cooking. I cannot remember not knowing how to read. I got my first library card when I was three years old, and I have been a voracious reader ever since. On the other hand, I only learned how to cook when I started grad school, got my own apartment, and I had to feed myself. But I’ve made up for lost time!  

What is your biggest accomplishment?

Raising my two boys to be kind and honest young men.

What is a fun fact about yourself?

For my 40th birthday, I wanted to go to Hawaii. Instead, I found myself salmon fishing in Alaska. I had to tie all my flies myself!

 

Read Wendy's Staff Picks

Meet an Author — Kent Davis

Kent Davis is an actor, a game designer, and a teacher. He lives in Bozeman, Montana, with his wife and a wily dog ninja named Bobo. Kent Davis teaches in the Honors College at Montana State University, a fact by which he is constantly surprised.

How does writing a sequel compare to working on your first book? Do you have a plan laid out for the entire trilogy, or are you figuring it out as you go along?

It was thrilling! It's one thing to chart out a single story from beginning to end, but in Book 2 the characters sort of took off on their own. It was kind of like that sweet spot in a relationship, where you feel comfortable enough around each other to start revealing your true selves and how you eat ice cream in the middle of the night and hold fiercely to strange superstitions. Everyone does that, right? I had several epiphanies while writing The Changer's Key where a character would take off in a completely unexpected direction or reveal some mad, hidden depths that I never expected. It was a lot of "Oh, so that's who you are." Weird, but beautiful.

There has definitely been a plan laid out for where Book 3 will end up, but the path is winding and still subject to drastic and delightful change. Ruby and her crew have full veto power over what they'll try next: they independently come up with much more interesting solutions than I could ever plan out for them.

Do you have any writing rituals? What helps you get those creative juices flowing?

It's very challenging to write at home. I'm distractible to the nth degree. I do most of my work in an office space at the Emerson, and before that I kept many of Bozeman's coffee shops solvent through a truly massive Americano purchasing program.
 
As for the juices flowing, I do have a set of clear-out-the-cobwebs songs I use to get right for writing. I will not list any of them here, because they will embarrass me.
 

Do you have any advice for young writers?

Find the writers who you just can’t do without and study their stuff. Drill down to the page, the paragraph, the sentence, the word. When I first started writing I took pages from Ursula LeGuin, George Martin, and Terry Pratchett and I typed them out into blank documents and tried to figure out the why of their choices. You can discover out a lot about writing by channeling whoever you think is great. 
 
At the same time, trust yourself and don't be in too much of a hurry. I think one of the difficult myths of American culture is that brilliance just flows out of some people onto the page or the stage or the screen. I don’t know anyone who just rolls out of bed and channels something finished and astonishing. I don’t really think I’d want to, either, because that would make me jealous and full of self-hatred. For me, making something good usually starts with something bad. If you accept the bad as part of the process and keep making it a little bit better and then a little bit better and just do not stop you’ll eventually get to something that works. I’d like to think that could be comforting for anyone starting to make things, no matter what their age.  
 
Also, if anyone tells you there’s only one, best way to do it, run away screaming.
 

What is something you wish you’d known about publishing when you started this process? 

I’m just blown away by how hard people in the publishing industry work. Weekends, holidays, late nights. It’s possible that one of them who I will not name has discovered some sort of time-slowing pocket dimension. I suspect that I may just have gotten very lucky, but my agent, my editor and also pretty much everyone who works at my imprint are just ferocious, tireless, book-loving berserkers. I wish I’d known that, so I could have gotten deeper into the book business before I did.

Which books are on your to-be read pile right now? 

The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemison, The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin, about a jillion things by China Mieville, Like a River Glorious by Rae Carson, a re-read of Stuart Gibbs’ Spy School books, and The Tiger by John Vaillant.
 

What is a book that you have pretended to read but haven’t really?

This is an awesome question! Stegner. I love the little I’ve read, but I’ve totally nodded and waggled my eyebrows significantly through numerous Wallace Stegner conversations….

If you had to recommend one book that everyone should read, what would you pick?

I’m not sure I’d call any book a universal match for all humans, but hoo doggie, I do love If On a Winter’s Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino
 
 
 
 

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