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Interview with Aliza Layne, Author of Beetle & the Hollowbones!

Hello Mixed-Up Filers!

Today, I am pleased to welcome to our site, Aliza Layne, author of the Graphic Novel, Beetle & the Hollowbones, from Simon & Schuster which came out on August 4th.

JR: Hi, Aliza and thanks for joining us today!

AL: Thanks so much for chatting with me!

JR: First off, for those who don’t know about the book, can you tell us a little bit about Beetle & the Hollowbones and where the idea for this story came from?

AL: Beetle is a story about a young witch whose routine of bumming around at the mall with her best friend is shaken up when she realizes that Blob Ghost not only is a kid living by themselves in a mall, but is actually trapped there by a wall of necro-energy. So when the mall is about to be torn down, the only thing to do is get B.G. out of there. Beetle has a lot on her plate with this and it doesn’t help that her crush might be evil! It’s a story about unforgivable birds, rowdy grandmothers and trying not to be awful at magic. The idea started with the characters, I made up some Halloween kids who had great chemistry and just figured everything else out from there!

JR: The crush is always evil! I learned that in high school. This started as a web comics, which you do a lot of as well, such as the popular Demon Street. What are the pros and cons of doing a web comic as opposed to a more traditional format?

AL: Webcomics are really incredible! Almost anybody can do one if they have an internet connection, a camera or a scanner, and a pen and paper. You find a place to put it up and you put it up! The problem with webcomics is, not to get too down to brass tax, that you don’t make very much money at it, usually. You also don’t have as much access to collaboration and editors so it’s difficult to put something out that’s super slick. And because people are generally not being paid enough for their time, most of them are passion projects that take a really long time to finish, because you have to focus on other stuff! But when it comes to showing everybody your raw talent, they can’t be beat. I see things being done in webcomics that are raw and weird and brilliant all the time and I wouldn’t trade my time in webcomics for anything!

JR: Much of the action takes place at a mall, which right there had me hooked. Malls were a huge part of my childhood. So much so, that I made it an important in one of my books, as well. What is it about a mall that appealed to you and also made you think it made for a good story?

AL: There’s this thing that’s happening to malls around the country that is SO spooky, where they are becoming the kind of gothic that’s really funny, because we DID used to have mall goths. For the benefit of your readers who might not know, in the late 1700s the genre of romanticism in literature gave way to the genre of gothic; that is to say, there was (I’m kind of paraphrasing here) a loosely-defined era where art dominated that had this focus on beauty and prosperity, followed by an era where a genre showed up in response to that. Beautiful castles and manors became spooky, crumbing ruins. Poetic heroes got twisted became wicked, bizarre creeps, and sometimes people who were the wicked, bizarre creeps of the story became poetic heroes! It was really cool! For people who grew up hanging out in malls, they used to have these pretty palace-like facades where you were supposed to spend money and forget what time it is, but in a lot of rural areas (and other places) they’re just kind of being abandoned and left to rot. So I think there’s so much room for a weird new kind of gothic there! What’s left to get all crumbling and nasty after the mall isn’t cool anymore? I also find the idea of treating this so seriously to be super funny.

 

JR: You used to work in a mall. What store, and did any of your experiences influence anything in this story?

AL: I used to work at a bookstore! The pumpkinhead person in chapter one is just me. At some point while I was working there, some teens upended a puck of yellow dinosaur slime onto the carpet in the back and it hardened into amber, I tried to chip it off the floor with a sticker scraper but I couldn’t even get the dinosaur out of it, let alone the whole dried puck. It’s STILL back there. I go back and visit the store sometimes if one of my friends is working there. They tried to hide the dinosaur slime puck, but I know where it is.

 

JR: Now I need to go search for dinosaur slime puck! I also read on your website, https://beetlebones.net/  that you’re known for your Halloween costumes. What are some of your better costumes, and what goes into making a great Halloween costume?

AL: The main thing about Halloween costumes is passion and it also helps to go with the classics. Last year I was a wizard, I made a big yellow and orange and pink beard out of needlefelt fiber and wore a pink wig and kids got a kick out of it! But a couple of years I have been a pumpkinhead, and THAT always gets em. I made the pumpkinhead costume myself out of half a carvable fake craft pumpkin carved into a jack-o-lantern face and full of those little electric tealights so it’d look like it was lit up, and I put some plastic netting inside so you couldn’t see in.

 

JR: That’s an awesome costume! Can you tell us a little bit about your writing journey getting to this point? 

AL: I cold-emailed for agents to represent my pitch for Beetle for about a year before I connected with Susan Graham, who I instantly bonded with over our shared love for illustrated novels. Susan was representing some of my friends, so I was happy to get to know them too! At that point it was a very traditional search for the right editor and the right publisher. We were lucky to connect with some really lovely people along the way! But before Beetle was ever a book, it was actually a cartoon pitch! You can still read my storyboards for it on my website.

JR: What’s your writing process like?

AL: I always start with the seed of an idea (or a character) and then go from there, keeping in mind a couple of things: the themes I want to touch on with the story (which make themselves known as I’m writing it) and how I can make it as satisfying as possible. I like to create stories that feel like they’re coming from the heart, so a good compass is whether the story I’m writing can evoke the same emotions in me as I mean for it to do in the reader. I pay attention to what makes me cry or pine or laugh or feel joy, and if I’m writing a scene that is meant to make me feel a strong emotion and it doesn’t, I need to find out why!

JR: What’s your favorite book from childhood?

AL: That’s such a difficult question! I think I’d be lying, though, if I said it wasn’t the first two Abarat books, by Clive Barker. They were exactly the books I needed the most when I was 12 years old, and the lush oil paintings that came in the illustrated edition of the book are still an artistic influence for me.

 

JR: What’s your favorite childhood movie?

Another super tough one! The first thing that comes to mind is Mirrormask, which is a movie I still love a lot, and another really big visual influence for me. I really respect the purity of the feelings in that movie, it was another one that felt like it had been made for me when I was 12/13. I love weird art about earnest feelings and I really respect the intense way that kids feel things, even when people don’t think they do, or aren’t paying attention to the fact that they do.

JR: I think that’s the first time we’ve got either of those answers, so it’s nice to be exposed to new things to check out. Something people would be surprised to learn about you?

AL: I’m a self-taught cartoonist! I got to learn a lot of disciplines going to college locally, but I learned all the cartooning I know from seeing things I liked and figuring out what worked about them. I’m really glad I got to learn watercolor and collage and sculpting and pottery, on top of being useful when I apply what I learned to the art I do for work, they’re all fun and fulfilling!

JR: That’s amazing that you’ve taught yourself! What’s the best piece of writing advice you’ve received and is there any advice you can give to writers looking to break in?

AL: Telling a story and writing for your job is only hard because life around it makes it hard. The pressure of trying to survive while you’re writing make a lot of people have to give up, and they don’t deserve to have to compromise that to stay alive. So if anyone reading is looking for advice: if you have to give up on writing for a while to survive, just understand that that’s because of the pressures of the world, not because you weren’t good enough. I’m lucky to be where I am, even when I’m struggling. Everything else about it is just working and making it happen.

JR: That’s great advice! What are you working on next?

AL: That’s a secret for now, but I’m excited and I hope readers will stick around!

JR: Can’t wait to find out! How can people follow you on social media?            

AL: I have a website for kids at beetlebones.net and twitter at @alizabees!

 

JR: Thanks again to Aliza Layne and make sure you go out and get Beetle & the Hollowbones!

Amy Hest Interview + Giveaway

I recently had the pleasure of interviewing acclaimed author Amy Hest about her new novel, The Summer We Found the Baby.

Read all about Amy and the inspiration behind the novel. And for a chance to win a copy, drop us a line below. I’ll pick a winner from the comments section on Saturday at noon.

Here’s a bit about The Summer We Found the Baby: On the morning of the dedication of the new children’s library in Belle Beach, Long Island, eleven-year-old Julie Sweet and her six-year-old sister, Martha, find a baby in a basket on the library steps. At the same time, twelve-year-old Bruno Ben-Eli is on his way to the train station to catch the 9:15 train into New York City. He is on an important errand for his brother, who is a soldier overseas in World War II. But when Bruno spies Julie, the same Julie who hasn’t spoken to him for sixteen days, heading away from the library with a baby in her arms, he has to follow her. Holy everything, he thinks. Julie Sweet is a kidnapper. Of course, the truth is much more complicated than the children know in this heartwarming and beautifully textured family story by award-winning author Amy Hest. Told in three distinct voices, each with a different take on events, the novel captures the moments and emotions of a life-changing summer – a summer in which a baby gives a family hope and brings a community together.

 

Amy Hest is the author of many beloved books for young readers, including Remembering Mrs. Rossi, Letters to Leo, and the Katie Roberts novels. She is also the author of many picture books, including Kiss Good Night, When Jessie Came Across the Sea, and the Baby Duck books. Her more recent titles include Buster and the Baby, On the Night of the Shooting Star, and Are You Sure, Mother Bear? Amy lives in New York City.

 

What was the inspiration behind this book?

This story is loosely based on some family history. Think New York City, 1942.  My Aunt Harriet, age 18, goes to a party. Meets a boy, also 18. Love happens. And war. Harriet’s boy enlists and off he goes, to Biloxi, Mississippi, for basic training. Letters are written. Promises are made. Tears flow. Time passes. One night, Harriet packs a small bag and sneaks off on a train to see her boyfriend in Biloxi. A few days later, her soldier goes to war.

As for Aunt Harriet, she returns to the city married. That story (I heard it from a reliable source, my mother) about two young people getting married on the brink of war has always spoken to me. Romance! Of course, they were young. Very, very young, but still. Romance! I wasn’t there, of course, in 1942, but if I had been, I surely would have been rooting for them, cheering them on.

Perhaps, all these years later, that’s what I’ve done by writing The Summer We Found the Baby. It starts with a soldier going off to war. I add a baby to the mix, a beach, and three kids. A dog. A jeep. A library. I add layer upon layer of pain and joy, friendship and promises, broken hearts, and healing hearts. A love story, for sure.

 

What a great story! What do you hope readers take away from reading this book?

I would like my readers to care about Julie, Martha, and Bruno, and to understand that their points of view are all valid. I would like my readers to leave the book with a feeling that they have just made three new friends, and maybe even to think every now and then: “Hey, I wonder what’s happening these days with Julie … Martha … Bruno …”

 

How did writing a middle-grade novel differ from writing picture books?

The hard part is sitting down. I work at home, so I have this need to make sure all the household stuff is in place before I sit down. Bed made! Dishes washed! Laundry in dryer! Dog walked! That kind of thing. Also, I’m an early riser and I swim lots of laps every day in a nearby gym. So, before sitting down to write, I make sure that’s done, too. Coffee, bagel, and finally – miracle of miracles – I’m there. At my desk.

The actual process of writing a book is pretty much the same for me, whether it’s a chapter or picture book. It goes something like this: I type a while. Read what I’ve typed. Delete what I’ve typed. Type for a while. Read what I’ve typed.  Delete what I’ve typed. Three little words: Type. Read. Delete. That goes on for minutes … hours … days on end, even years!  But occasionally, very occasionally, I delete less. And while my computer screen might be filled with a lot of terrible sentences that don’t amount to anything resembling a decent story, I get the feeling that maybe, just maybe, there is a story in there. Somewhere. So, I keep at it. Type. Read. Delete. Delete less, type more, read out loud to hear how it sounds. Rewrite. Rewrite. Rewrite. And then one day – and this often is years after my first attempt (yes, even the picture book that looks so easy to write can take more than a year to write) – a viable story!

 

What is one of your favorite writing exercises?

I do not do actual writing exercises. Ever! I just write. Pretty much every day. And every single day, I strive to be a better writer than I was the day before. For me, the act of writing is an act of love. And since I love what I do, I don’t think of it as work. I love getting to know my characters, and the only way to do that is to just keep Writing. Deleting. Rewriting. I am constantly going back to the beginning and starting all over again. I rewrite and rewrite and rewrite, but that’s okay. With every word or sentence or paragraph or chapter that I delete, I can go back and try again and again, to make it better. I always want to make it better, so that in the end, it is the best possible story it can be. There are no shortcuts!

 

What is your process for writing dialogue?

Basically, I write it. Read it out loud. Rewrite it. Delete it. Then start all over again. Write. Read out loud. Rewrite. Delete. Start all over again. The reading out loud is so important. If it doesn’t sound natural, delete, delete, delete!!

 

Thanks so much, Amy, for taking the time out for the interview!

Readers: Don’t forget to leave a comment for a chance to win a copy of The Summer We Found the Baby.

 

STEM Tuesday — STEM Activity Books– Book List

Summer is still here and you might be running out of activities for the young people in your life. Whether you are looking for projects to tie-in with your homeschooling curriculum or just want a fun STEM project to pass the time on a hot summer day, these titles will inspire you.

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Darwin and Evolution for Kids: His Life and Ideas with 21 Activities by Kristan Lawson

Try your hand at a Darwin-inspired activity with this book by Kristan Lawson. It’s a great title to pair-up with Deborah Heiligman’s Charles and Emma.

 

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Isaac Newton and Physics for Kids: His Life and Ideas with 21 Activities by Kerrie Logan Hollihan

Activities are a great way to learn the principles of physics. Read this one with a snack of apple slices.

 

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Awesome Snake Science! 40 Activities for Learning About Snakes by Cindy Blobaum

Snakes might seem threatening, but Blobaum has some activities that will introduce readers to these fascinating creatures. A great pairing for Kate Messner’s Tracking Pythons: The Quest to Catch an Invasive Predator and Save an Ecosystem.

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Rainforests and Deserts both by Nancy Castaldo

If the pandemic has changed your summer travel plans, discover some new places in the US and abroad with these two titles by Nancy Castaldo that include, STEM activities, folktales, and recipes.

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Destroy This Book in the Name of Science by Mike Barfield

The Brainiac and Galileo editions of this series are meant to be literally pulled apart.

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Smithsonian: STEM Lab by Jack Challoner

Readers will find 25 activities to excite their imaginations. Great illustrations accompany each activity.

 

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Calling All Minds: How To Think and Create Like an Inventor by Temple Grandin

Learn from a master inventor through personal stories, acts, and inventions. Readers will come away inspired!

 

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Recycled Science: Bring Out Your Science Genius with Soda Bottles, Potato Chip Bags, and More Unexpected Stuff by Tammy Enz and Jodi Wheeler-Toppen

Readers see how to recycle stuff around their homes and then use it for science projects and experiments. Entertaining and informative.

 

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Albert Einstein and Relativity for Kids: His Life and Ideas with 21 Activities and Thought Experiments by Jerome Pohlen

Learn all about one of the greatest inventors in history through text and 21 activities to try at home.

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Alexander Graham Bell for Kids: HIs Life and Inventions with 21 Activities by Mary Kay Carson

Your cell phone may be lightyears away from Bell’s first phone, but his invention changed our lives forever. Find out more and try the great activities in the book.

 

 

Extreme Garage Science for Kids! by James and Joanna Orgill

 

If you followed the author’s You Tube channel, you’ll love the activities and projects in this book. Readers can try their hand at drawing on water, removing the iron from their Cheerios, and even more.

 

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Everything You Need to Ace Chemistry in One Big Fat Notebook

The title says it all. Inside this book is what students need to rock that chemistry class.

 

 

 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org Also by Jennifer Swanson — Explore Forces and Motion! With 25 Great Projects and Bridges With 25 Science Projects for Kids 

Get ready for some hands-on physics with these two titles from Nomad’s Explore Your World series.

 

 

STEM Tuesday book lists prepared by

Nancy Castaldo has written books about our planet for over 20 years including, THE STORY OF SEEDS, which earned the Green Earth Book Award, Junior Library Guild Selection, and other honors. Nancy’s research has taken her all over the world from the Galapagos to Russia.  She strives to inform, inspire, and empower her readers. Nancy also serves as Regional Advisor Emeritus of the Eastern NY SCBWI region. Her 2018 multi-starred title is BACK FROM THE BRINK: Saving Animals from Extinction. Visit her at www.nancycastaldo.com. 

Patricia Newman writes middle-grade nonfiction that empowers young readers to act on behalf of the environment and their communities. The Sibert Honor author of Sea Otter Heroes, Newman has also received an NSTA Outstanding Science Trade Book Award for Eavesdropping on Elephants, a Green Earth Book Award for Plastic, Ahoy!, and a Eureka! Gold Medal from the California Reading Association for Zoo Scientists to the Rescue. Her books have received starred reviews, been honored as Junior Library Guild Selections, and included on Bank Street College’s Best Books lists. During author visits, she demonstrates how young readers can use writing to be the voice of change. Visit her at www.patriciamnewman.com. Stay tuned for her upcoming Planet Ocean – spring 2021.