Author Interviews

It’s Freak Out Season! An Interview with Dr. Carla Naumburg

It’s back to school time! For many students, teachers, and parents, this part of the year brings a mixture of excitement and anxiety, so it’s the perfect time to dig into a middle grade selection all about dealing with those “freak out” moments. Dr. Carla Naumburg was kind enough to chat with me about her new book, How to Stop Freaking Out: The Ultimate Guide to Keeping Cool When Life Feels Chaotic. Carla is a clinical social worker and the author of five books, including the bestselling How to Stop Losing Your Sh*t With Your Kids and its middle-grade companion How to Stop Freaking Out. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Huffington Post, CNN, and Mindful Magazine, among other places.

Her newest book is a fantastic read, with plenty of tips and tricks we’ve already put to good use in my house! Our interview is below, and be sure to check the book out here — its out everywhere tomorrow!

Chris: Thanks so much for taking some time to talk with me! Let’s start with your background as a clinical social worker…how did you make the leap from that career into writing?

Carla: I would actually say I made the leap from writing into clinical social work. I’ve wanted to write books since I was eight years old… or maybe younger! I took a psychology elective in high school, which led to a psychology degree in college, which led to my masters and PhD in clinical social work. But I never stopped thinking about writing books, and when I became a mother, my clinical background and parenting experience led to the publication of my first book in 2014… and I haven’t looked back since!

 

Chris: I get it! When you have a writer inside you, it always finds its way out eventually! So this book is actually a middle-grade companion to a book you wrote for grown-ups with similar themes. How did this project evolve from that original concept?

Carla: How to Stop Freaking Out explores the same information, ideas, and practices for managing your emotions as the parenting book you linked to above, but without the salty language and with many more illustrations! The idea for this book came from my amazing agent, Gillian MacKenzie. The minute she suggested a middle-grade version, I knew she was right. Kids freak out just as often as adults, and we all need help figuring out how to stay calm when life gets overwhelming.

 

Chris: Most of us probably have our own personal definition of a “freak out”, but how would you explain freaking out as it relates to the ideas in the book?

Carla: I use the acronym F.A.R.T. to help readers figure out if they’re freaking out. Our explosions are fueled by strong Feelings, they’re Automatic and Reactive, and, perhaps most importantly, our freak outs go Too far. I go into more detail in the book, but hopefully this silly acronym can help readers identify their freak outs and remember not to take themselves too seriously.

 

Chris: You can never go wrong with fart references in middle grade — love the acronym 🙂 As a lot of our readers know, writing and publishing can sometimes feel chaotic and stressful. Have you ever had to use any the techniques from the book in your life as an author?

Carla: All the time! Some of my favorite habits for preventing freak outs include: doing whatever I can to get enough sleep every night, exercising or moving my body every day, and ending the day by watching a TV show that makes me laugh (our current family favorite is Abbot Elementary!) When I’m trying to stay calm when life gets chaotic, I focus on breathing (and noticing that I’m breathing), going out to the front porch for a few minutes (and breathing some more), dropping my shoulders (which are almost up by my ears when I’m stressing out), and turning on a song that makes me happy.

 

Chris: Awesome thanks for sharing those tips! I’ve been reading through a really interesting book by Jonathan Haidt about the rise of anxiety in young people since the advent of the smartphone. Are there portions of this book that could be applied specifically to technology and social media?

Carla: I haven’t read that book, but yes, smartphones and social media are definitely related to freakouts! The posts and videos on social media can trigger adults and kids alike in a variety of ways, making us more prone to flipping our lids. In addition, if we pull out our smartphones every time we feel bored, anxious, frustrated, and otherwise unhappy, we’ll never figure out what our feelings really feel like and how to respond to them in skillful ways — rather than just losing ourselves in posts and videos that are likely to trigger us further!

 

Chris: Good call — I find myself often fighting the temptation to jump to my phone whenever I’m bored…love the idea of figuring out what my feelings really feel like! Okay, so what’s next for you as an author? Can you give us any clues about new projects you’re working on? 

Carla: I always have a million books bouncing around in my brain. Currently, I’m considering another self-help book for parents, another non-fiction book for kids, or maybe the ever-elusive novel… who knows?

 

Chris: We’ll be excited to see what comes next! Okay…as always, I like to do a lightning round of questions, so here we go…

Favorite place to write?

My office, preferably with two cats and a seltzer on my desk and a good police procedural playing on my iPad. (I always write with the TV on!)

Favorite authors?

In no particular order: Larry McMurtry, Kimberly Brubaker Bradley, and Sandra Boynton, but I reserve the right to add to that list!

Best desert?

Coffee ice cream with Oreo chunks.

Do you have any pets?

Yes, two rescue cats: Gertie and Gittel. They are incredibly annoying and I can’t even tell you how much I love them.

Favorite elementary school memory?

Garbage Pail Kids, of course! I collected the cards, and they even had one named Carla. Nobody ever has

anything named Carla (except my parents, I guess)!

Favorite piece of advice for other writers:

It’s impossible to write a book that everyone will love, so don’t worry about that. Write the book you love!

 

Many thanks to Carla for taking some time to chat with the Mixed up Files! You can learn more about Dr. Naumburg on her website, and of course check out How to Stop Freaking Out when it’s released on September 10th. As always, happy reading!

 

Interview with New York Times Best Selling Author James Ponti and Book Giveaway!

We are thrilled that middle-grade Author James Ponti took time away from his writing, researching, and traveling to join us. His newest book, The Sherlock Society, was just released yesterday and is certain to be a hit with young sleuths.  Welcome to From the Mixed-Up Files of Middle-Grade Authors, James! We are honored to have you with us to talk about The Sherlock Society.

 

In the first chapter, we are introduced to this unlikely cast, including Alex Sherlock, his sister, Zoe, their grandfather, and their
two friends, Lina and Yadi. All five of them are caught up in a scheme that leads to an exploding boat,
a rescue by a Miami Patrol Boat, and being detained by Special Agents. The fast-paced mystery never
lets up pace through the story. How did you come up with this cast and the exciting mystery?
I knew I wanted to come up with a new series, so I went out for a walk and decided to try an
experiment. There’s a lake near my house with benches all around it. As I walked around the lake, I sat
at each bench and asked myself a question. The rules were that I couldn’t get up until I had a good
answer and that each question had to be harder than the last. I started with basics like what type of
book I wanted to write (mystery) and where I wanted to set it (my home state of Florida). This
progressed for a dozen or so benches and I was on my second lap when I asked, “How do these siblings
come to be involved with solving mysteries?” That’s the key. How do you kickstart the plot? My answer
was a paragraph. “If our last name was Baker, we would’ve sold cupcakes. If it was Walker, we would’ve
taken care of people’s dogs while they were on vacation. But it’s Sherlock, so starting a detective agency
just seemed like the thing to do.” That was the point when I knew what I wanted to write. And
amazingly, it became the opening paragraph of the book.

The Nancy Drew Mystery Stories and The Hardy Boys, created by Edward Stratemeyer, featured
young, adventuresome detectives. Did these series inspire you?
My brothers read the Hardy Boys, but I was all about Encyclopedia Brown. I wasn’t a strong reader and I
loved the fact that in each book Encyclopedia solved a series of short mysteries rather than one really
long one. That said, the book that truly launched my lifelong love of mysteries is the same one that gave
this website its name, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. When I do school visits I
jokingly tell kids it’s the thirteenth greatest book ever written. I pause for a moment before adding,
“because I’ve only written twelve.”

The Sherlock Society initially consists of Alex, Lina and Yadi, yet you cleverly draw in the character of
Alex’s sister, Zoe. Tell us about your characters and the importance of the sibling dynamic.

I think for most middle schoolers, life is dominated by family, school, and friends; so, I wanted all three
to be the central ingredients of the book. The team is made up of Alex’s two best (and really only)
friends, his sister (with whom he has a typical tween love-hate relationship), and his grandfather. I really
wanted a strong sibling dynamic, but also a multi-generational one with Grandpa. As for the siblings,
they very go with the theory that “I can say anything I want about the other, but no one else can talk
about them without facing my wrath.”

You pay tribute to a number of classic books written for middle-grade readers in the library scene.
(Including our inspiration, From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler). Were these titles
favorites of yours?
I love to namedrop personal kid lit favorites in my books. It’s like winking at the reader and saying, “I bet
we love a lot of the same things.” In this book, there are two chapters involving an escape room in the
school library. This lets me mention some all-time personal favorites.

I loved that Alex and Zoe’s parents serve supporting roles in The Sherlock Society. As parents are often
absent in stories for younger readers, why did you feel it important to feature their parents in the
story?
In real life, I never knew my father and had absolutely no connection with him. As a result, the dynamic
of a missing parent was key to my first three series – Dead City, Framed, and City Spies. I think many
people assumed I was just doing this as a plot device, but it really was a way for me to address and
explore some profoundly personal issues. That said, with The Sherlock Society, I decided to write about a
family not like the one I grew up in, but like the one in which my wife and I raised our children. It’s been
an interesting change of dynamics for me.

Without a spoiler alert, the story shifts about halfway through, as the team of detectives begin to
pursue solving a mystery other than the one they intended to, and for entirely different reasons. Tell
us about this plot twist.
I think there is a tendency in many of my books for the mystery to evolve and pivot mid-course. I like
doing that because it’s then not a mystery that’s thrust upon our characters but one that is uncovered
by them. That makes them more proactive and connected to the eventual solution. If done right, it also
raises the stakes, which is always good. In The Sherlock Society, the team starts off looking into an old
cold case involving Al Capone, which is fun and exciting, but they discover a current one that is affecting
the world right now that they can remedy. It goes from being an activity to a mission.

I’ve learned through my research of the creators and writers of The Nancy Drew Mystery Stories, that
creating cliffhangers at the end of chapters will hook and keep the reader engaged. You’ve
mastered this technique in spades! Does this come naturally to you as a writer?
My career started as a television scriptwriter for Nickelodeon, Disney Channel, and PBS. Television
format is built on the idea of a cliffhanger at the end of each act. I think after years of doing it, it just
became second nature. Also, like I said, I wasn’t a strong reader and I loved it when the story would
compel me to keep going on. I get jazzed when parents and teachers tell me their kids get upset when
they have to stop reading for the night or the class because the cliffhanger leaves them wanting more.
Equally important to cliffhangers, but almost never talked about, are chapter openings. In the same way,
they need to be a springboard that propels the reader. I once read an interview with Garry Trudeau, the
author of the Doonesbury comics. He talked about how difficult it was to write and compose the first
panel of the comic strip, because it has to grab the reader, recap the story, and start the new story all
with a single image and a few words. I think about that a lot when I start each chapter. Probably more
than half of the time I spend writing is specifically spent on the first page and a half of the chapters.

This story is based in Miami, Florida. Your other works are based in Washington, D.C., Manhattan, and
around the world. Do you visit your story locales as part of your research?
I try to visit them as often as I can. I did research trips to New York (Dead City) and Washington (Framed)
all the time. I also try to visit the international locales from City Spies, but those are usually one offs
because of time and expense. After I wrote the first draft of Sherlock Society, I went to Miami and spent
an intensive three days visiting every single location from the book. The book starts with a rescue with
the Miami Police Department’s Marine Patrol, so I went for a ride-along with them. Alex and Zoe’s
father is a marine biologist at the University of Miami, so I hung out with a marine biologist at the
University of Miami. I even visited fictional places from the book. I reached out to a realtor and told her
about the kids, their family income, and history, and she helped me find likely houses and apartments
where they might live.

Here’s a little fun fact about setting. At Nickelodeon we kind of had a rule that each show had to have a
character who was at least sixteen years old so that in theory, that character could drive everyone
around. One of the biggest challenges in writing a kids’ adventure book is handling the logistics of how
the characters get around. That said, you can’t have 16-year-old characters in a middle-grade book
without turning it into Young Adult. That was part of why my first two series were set in New York and
Washington. Both have really good subway systems that kids can ride on their own. But there is not
good mass transit in Miami, and that was a problem. And that problem led to the inclusion of Grandpa
on the team, which I love. It’s amazing how often the problems turn into highlights.

A variety of subtle lessons are offered throughout The Sherlock Society, i.e. importance of respect of
authority and elders, surrounding oneself with good people, and doing the right thing. How important
is it to you as a writer and a father to impart these messages in your stories?
I do not want to preach, teach, or send a message. Young readers see right through this and it turns
them off. I want to write engaging stories with humor, adventure, and family. But I think young readers
are interested in real-world issues and problems, so I include them and try to present them in a way that
is accurate and interesting. I also want to write characters who model good traits and methodology. If
readers take that and run with it, I’m thrilled. But the story always has to come first.

Our audience, both younger readers and those who support them, often want to know about an
author’s writing process. How do you create your exciting tales?
I wish I had a better answer for this. My process is…messy. I write every day – weekends included – and
try to start early in the morning. I can really only get good writing done in my home office, which is set
aside for that one thing. (I find a dedicated writing location is essential.) My writing tends to go in fits
and starts through the first third of the manuscript before it picks up. I don’t outline, but I try to figure
out big picture elements up front and then outline a few chapters at a time. I write those chapters,
rewrite them, rewrite them again, and then outline the next few chapters. My wife is a great reader and
she reads each chapter as I go. I trust her instincts and know that things are going okay if she says they
are. During the last few weeks of the process, I tend to write virtually around the clock with breaks for
meals and streaming a couple of shows – usually mysteries – with my amazing wife Denise.

And finally, can we expect any further adventures featuring The Sherlock Society?

I’m currently writing Sherlock Society 2 and really love the series and the characters. I hope there will be
many more in the future, but that will all depend on how much readers enjoy the first two books.

Is there anything else you care to share with our readers?
I am thrilled to be writing The Sherlock Society, but no less excited about writing City Spies,
which is very much going full steam ahead. I have finished book six and have already signed to
write at least two more after that. It’s great for me to switch back and forth between the two
series, but I do wish there were eighteen months in a year, so I had a little more time to write each. LOL!

Get the Scoop! Check out our FREE GIVEAWAY of a copy of the Sherlock Society here: a Rafflecopter giveaway

Interview – Christine Virnig, author of A BITE ABOVE THE REST

I had the great luck to get to read an early copy of Christine Virnig’s latest middle-grade – a Halloween themed adventure set in the very unique town of Samhain,Wisconsin. And, even though Halloween is still a few month’s away, I’m sure my interview with Christine is going to have you itching to break out the wax vampire fangs and your best monster lawn decorations.

Please tell us a little bit about A BITE ABOVE THE REST.

First of all, thank you so much for taking the time to interview me! I really appreciate it!

A Bite Above the Rest is about a kid who moves from California to Samhain, Wisconsin, a tourist town where it’s Halloween 24/7. Halloween decorations stay up year-round, people wear costumes every day, and the town hall keeps vampire hours, of all things. Being the new kid is hard enough on its own, but then a terrifying encounter with the mayor causes Caleb to wonder: Could there be more to his new hometown than meets the eye? Could real vampires and werewolves and witches be hiding amongst the fakes? He immediately sets out to uncover the truth, aided by his quirky new best friend, Tai.

The premise of this book is super interesting and super fun. What inspired you to write this story?

I was inspired to write A Bite Above the Rest from the moment the main character, Caleb, popped into my head one day. The poor kid was walking around with a wooden stake in his back pocket because he was terrified that he’d encounter a vampire or werewolf or witch at any second. But as scared as he was, nobody around him was frightened. They were all just going about their business as though nothing was wrong. I was immediately filled with questions—Who was this kid? Where was he? Why was nobody else scared?—and A Bite Above the Rest was basically my attempt to answer these questions.

You tackle some very real issues in this book. A parent’s death, a new town, bullying, and anxiety among others. What do you hope readers will take away from Caleb and Tai’s adventure?

I actually didn’t write A Bite Above the Rest with any lessons or take aways in mind; my only goal was for readers to have fun reading it. But despite this, I do hope that Caleb and Tai’s adventure will show kids that we can all be brave when we need to be, especially when we’ve got a good friend at our side.

Caleb and Tai do a lot of research on monsters. Werewolves, vampires, witches, and merfolk all play a part in this book. Do you have a favorite scary being? If so, what about them do you love?

Probably vampires?? I find their lore absolutely fascinating, and I love the idea of living f-o-r-e-v-e-r.

I have always been terrible at coming up with Halloween costumes/decorations. The thought of doing it every day is exhausting to me, so I really appreciated Caleb’s approach. What about you? Are you a Halloween superfan? Do you have a favorite costume from your childhood? Do you go all out decorating your house now?

Apart from the candy, I actually didn’t like Halloween that much when I was growing up. A large part of this dislike was the costumes; they always made me feel awkward and exposed. I still feel this way as an adult, so I’m a huge fan of Caleb-style punny costumes myself. This year I think I’ll go as a fork in the road!

And no, I don’t go all out decorating my house for Halloween. But thanks to the throngs of spiders that LOVE living by our front door, we’re at least bound to have a bunch of very authentic-looking spider webs hanging about 🙂

Will you tell us a little bit about your writing process? In particular how did you go about tackling this story?

My writing process for fiction is supremely inefficient. As soon as I come up with an idea—which might be a character, a setting, a theme—I brainstorm just enough so that I can start writing, and then I let the characters do their thing. This writing style is definitely fun (for example, I didn’t know if Caleb’s suspicions about his new town would end up being real or not until I was halfway done writing, which meant I got to be surprised too!), but it does mean I need to do a lot of revising and rewriting once I finally finish my first draft.

We know no writer is created in a vacuum. Could you tell the readers about a teacher or a librarian who had an effect on your writing life?

Yes! When I was first considering writing for children, I asked the youth librarian at the public library in Verona, Wisconsin to point me towards a few of their most popular middle grade titles. Among others, she grabbed How They Croaked by Georgia Bragg. This nonfiction book was my first introduction to the world of FUNNY nonfiction, and it inspired me to write my first two books: Dung for Dinner and Waist-Deep in Dung. I wish I knew that librarian’s name so I could thank her for unknowingly giving me the inspiration I needed to just start writing.

A Bite Above the Rest ends with Caleb getting some worrying information. Can you give us a hint about what we can look forward to next from you?

Of course! As much as I’d love to revisit the world of Caleb and Tai and Samhain at some point—and I already have some ideas!—my next book is another standalone that I hope fans of A Bite Above the Rest will really love. Slated to come out in late 2025, it features a cast of ghostly main characters who attend Phantom Academy, a school for underaged ghosts. I also have a picture book coming out sometime in the next few years, but those details are still hush hush.

 

Christine Virnig is a fan of books, candy, spooky stories, poop jokes, and coffee…in no particular order. As a former physician, Christine now spends her days writing books, reading books, and working at a library where she is surrounded by books. Christine lives in southern Wisconsin with her husband, two daughters, a ridiculous number of dust bunnies, and one incredibly lazy cat. You can visit her on the web at ChristineVirnig.com.

 

A BITE ABOVE THE REST is out now and available for purchase here or at your favorite bookstore. You can follow Christine on at her website or on Instagram.

 

 

Are you ready for some Halloween fun? If so, let us know in the comments.