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An Interview with author Wendy McClure

We’re pleased to host author Wendy McClure today on the Mixed-Up Files. Wendy is the author of the three Wanderville books, an historical fiction series about three children who dare to jump off a Kansas-bound orphan train at the turn of the century. After hearing rumors about the terrible lives that await them, Jack, Frances, and Harold leave the train behind and hide in the woods. There, they meet a mysterious boy who will transform their lives forever. Books 1 and 2 are already out, and book 3 publishes in June.

Q: Welcome to the Mixed-Up Files, Wendy! Tell us how you came up with the idea for the series.

A: When I was growing up, I always loved reading about kids on their own. And wendymcclureas an editor of children’s books, I think the idea of kids being independent and having their own world is just one of those essential things that you need for a great story. I started trying to figure out where that notion came from — some of it is just human nature, I guess, but history also is full of times where kids had to work, leave home, fend for themselves. Which led me to the orphan trains, which seemed full of potential for historical adventure.

Q: What were the orphan trains?

A: The orphan trains were one of the first large-scale social programs in the U.S. From the 1850s to 1929, various charities in New York, Boston, Chicago, and other big, mostly eastern cities sent groups of poor and homeless city children on trains out west to be placed in homes — or as it sometimes turned out, work situations. Many of the orphan train riders weren’t orphans at all, but were given 9781595147004Mup by their families; often they were encouraged to forget their old lives. There were both good and bad things about the orphan trains. Thousands of kids escaped urban poverty, but siblings were separated and families broken apart.

Q: You’re a big fan of The Boxcar Children series. Did that influence you as you were writing?

A: It did! I didn’t actually read the books when I was young, but I came to know them VERY well when I started editing the series (at Albert Whitman). It definitely made me think about the ways kids can build their own worlds with just a few objects and some imagination. The trick is getting readers to look at an old cup, or a suitcase, or a fallen tree, and see all the possibilities.

indexQ: Can you share a favorite quote from one of the books?

A: It’s when the kids are taken in by a family involved in the temperance movement, and the youngest kid, Harold, is taught some of their songs:

“They [the songs] were all about how cold water was better than liquor, but everyone knew that, Harold thought. He’d never tasted liquor, of course, but he knew it smelled exactly like shoes on fire. Couldn’t folks tell the difference between that stuff and cold water? Why did they need so many songs to explain?”

Q: What do you hope readers learn or take away from the books?

A: That a lot of things in history were good and bad at the same time. Oh, but that sounds heavy…I really want them to just have a great reading experience.

Q: As a middle grade author, what do you love best about writing for this audience?

A: The school visits! The kids are great — their enthusiasm is fantastic, and they ask great questions.

2Q: Describe the series in three words.

A: OUR OWN TOWN!

Q: What are you working on now?

A: Nothing! I’m enjoying having some time in the evenings right now.

Q: You’re also a children’s book editor at Albert Whitman, as you mentioned. Was it difficult or easy to be both a writer and editor?

A: It was hard in terms of having time and energy to write. But at the same time, knowing the editorial process can make writing easier — I have more perspective on my drafts, and I worry less about certain things (because I know it’s a copy editor’s or proofreader’s job to worry about them). Really, I’ve learned so much about both professions by spending time in the other!

Q: What’s in your to-read pile at the moment?

A: A lot of manuscripts! Also I just tracked down some out-of-print middle grade books I remember reading as a kid, like A Candle in Her Room by Ruth Arthur and What the Neighbours Did by Phillipa Pearce. Very British stuff, and I can’t wait to read.

Q: And finally, what do you like to do in your spare time, when you’re not writing or editing?

A: Read read read!

Thanks so much, Wendy, for joining us! Find Wendy on Twitter @Wendy_Mc.

Michele Weber Hurwitz is the author of The Summer I Saved the World…in 65 Days and Calli Be Gold. Find her at micheleweberhurwitz.com.

 

Anti-Valentine’s Day and Revenge! A perfect Middle-Grade Combo!

 

Hello, Mixed-Up Filers and welcome to my February post!

Before I begin, I would like to wish everyone a very Happy Valentine’s Day for tomorrow. As you know, Valentine’s Day is for being happy and spending time with the one you love. Unless, of course, you’re alone, in which case Valentine’s Day becomes just the absolute worst. But, that’s neither here nor there right now. What is here, is this column. And that’s what this is all about.

For the two of you who regularly read my posts, you know what I’m talking about. You know, that I always have a very difficult time deciding what to write about. But, I’m proud to report, not this time. Nope…this time I knew. This time would be easy. It was a no-brainer. My post was to come out February 13th and Valentine’s Day was February 14th. Could it be spelled out any simpler for me? I would write about books with a Valentine’s Day theme!

Oh, how fantastic it would be! Both my readers would be excited and feel all the emotion that only books associated with a holiday of love could bring. And that’s where my mistake was, in assuming anything could be that easy. And you know what happens when you assume things? Well, I can’t tell you the answer to that, it is a site for Middle Graders after all, but needless to say, it isn’t good.

Because in life, sometimes things happen and all of our best laid plans don’t always go as they should and this was one of those times. You see, earlier this week as I did my daily perusal of our wonderful, Mixed-Up Files site, I saw that my esteemed colleague, Michele Weber Hurwitz, did her post on Valentine’s Day books. I guess I really need to start attending the Mixed-Up Files meetings. So, instead of my meticulously researched list of Valentine’s Day books, I was left scrambling. I was panicky, deflated and bitter. And the more I thought about it, the more I realized that I wasn’t alone. On Valentine’s Day, if you’re not happy and gooey in love, you were bitter.

wilted roses

And bitterness can either lead to depression, or to feelings of revenge. I’m not into letting depression take over, so here, in honor of Valentine’s Day, are my top Middle-Grade books about revenge!

 

In no particular order, here they are:

hook

 Hook’s Revenge

by Heidi Shulz- This is a fun book about the daughter of Captain Hook, who must avenge him by defeating the Neverland Crocodile. Along the way, he must deal with leading inept pirates, avoiding cannibals,   the lost boys and that pesky Peter Pan.

Revenge of the Flower Girls by Jennifer Ziegler-

revenge flower girls

This book is about The Brewster triplets — Dawn, Darby, and Delaney, who prefer the guy their older sister used to date instead of the one she is set to marry. So, they take it upon themselves to stop the wedding and restore things to how they’re “supposed to be”.

Revenge of the Bully (How to Beat the Bully) by Scott Starkey-

revenge of the bully

This is the third in the How to Beat the Bully series, and it finds the main character, Rodney, on the football team, having to deal with kids twice his size as well as contend with the team bully. It is a fast-paced and funny book.

Rapunzel’s Revenge by Shannon Hale-

rapunzel

This is a graphic novel with a twist on the fairy tale, by placing Rapunzel in the wild west and teaming her up with Jack from beanstalk fame and having them try to defeat the wicked witch who posed as her mother. It is a fun book with funny dialogue.

The Loser List #2: Revenge of the Loser by H.N. Kowitt-

revenge of the loser

This is a notebook style novel, with pictures and charts, and features Danny Shine who has gotten his name off the Loser List in the girls’ bathroom, but he’s still got problems — like the new kid, Ty Randall. Ty seems perfect: handsome, serious, committed to worthy causes — everything Danny’s not. Danny has to deal with jealousy and undoing damage he’s done.

That’s it for now. As for Michele Weber Hurwitz, revenge will be mine! And by that, I of course mean, that I’ll do absolutely nothing and sit and sulk for the next half-hour and forget all about it until I can’t remember the reason why I wrote this to begin with.

And, as for the rest of you,  I hope you all have a great Valentine’s Day, but for those of you with no interest in it, why not go the other route and check out one of these books about revenge and payback, because after all, isn’t that what Valentine’s Day is all about?

no val 2