Chelsea Bobulski's Blog

January 20, 2021

New 4-Book Deal with Wise Wolf Books!!

I am so excited to announce that Wise Wolf Books has acquired my new YA Christmas romance, All I Want for Christmas, coming Fall 2021, as well as 3 additional books in this fun Christmas series! In All I Want For Christmas, high school student Graham Wallace has been in love with the girl next door for a decade. Unfortunately for him, she’s been dating his best friend for the past two years. Out of sheer desperation, Graham makes a wish on a shooting star—all he wants for Christmas is Sarah Clarke. When he wakes up the next morning, everything has changed, and he’s the one who’s been dating Sarah for the past two years, not his best friend. Graham assumes the wish would have only come true if he and Sarah were meant to be together, but as it becomes clear that he and Sarah bring out the worst in each other, not the best, and as he starts to fall for the new girl in town, Graham starts to wonder if some wishes come true in order to show us what’s not meant to be.

All I Want for Christmas centers around the idea that we, as human beings, often don’t know what we want. We think we know what’s best for us, and we get these images in our heads of how great something might be, and, in so doing, we miss the blessings that are actually right in front of us. Graham suffers from this all-too-familiar plight, and Christmas felt like the perfect season for him to discover what truly matters. For a little more on the book, as well as on my writing journey thus far, check out the interview I did with Wise Wolf here.

Oh friends, I can’t begin to tell you how excited I am to share these Christmas stories with you, stories of hope and love and light. It is my deepest prayer that these books will add to the joy and sparkle of the 2021 holiday season for you all.

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Published on January 20, 2021 06:55

October 16, 2017

Eerie October Giveaway!!


The eeriest month of the year is here… Eerie October has arrived!


And to get into the spirit of things, nine other YA authors with atmospheric, haunting, or otherworldly themed books and I are sponsoring a fantastic giveaway! The Grand Prize winner will receive one copy of each of of the titles you see in the graphic (hardcover or paperback, author’s discretion), and a Runner Up will win the e-book of each title. International contestants are eligible from any country where Book Depository ships for free.


Enter the Rafflecopter below for your chance to win! And don’t forget to check out the other nine sponsoring authors’ websites!


F.M. Boughan


Hope Cook


Jessika Fleck


Tara Goedjen


Larissa Hardesty


Nikki Katz


Meg Kassel


Tracey Neithercott


Lana Popovic



 


I am so excited to be able to celebrate my favorite month, October, and all of its eeriness in this really fun way! I’ve always been drawn to atmospheric and eerie books, movies, and even music since before I can remember. At three years old, I forced my older cousins to watch Are You Afraid of the Dark? (where my fellow ’90s kids at?) and while they hid their faces, I watched the TV with absolute glee. So it should have come as no surprise to them (or anyone that really knows me) that my debut YA novel would have some serious creep-factor in it. I personally prefer the kind of creepy that gets under your skin, slowly raising the goosebumps on your arms and seriously messing with your mind, over the jump-out-and-scare-you kind of creepiness, but both types definitely have their place this time of year.

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Published on October 16, 2017 06:09

September 24, 2017

BOOK GIVEAWAY (PART THREE)!!!!!!!


To celebrate THE WOOD’s release last month (how is it possible that THE WOOD has been on store shelves for almost 2 months now??), I am doing a huge 15 book giveaway through the months of July-September. The first giveaway included 5 books by my critique partners and other authors who had a big hand in my publishing journey (you can check out that blog post here if you’d like). Last month, I gave away books by the authors who have most shaped me as a writer, plus a signed copy of THE WOOD (that blog post is here). And now, for the final month of my celebratory giveaway, I am giving some love to my fellow 2017 YA debut authors by giving away six of my favorites: THE HATE U GIVE by Angie Thomas; DAUGHTER OF THE PIRATE KING by Tricia Levenseller; COLD SUMMER by Gwen Cole; CARAVAL by Stephanie Garber; YOU DON’T KNOW MY NAME BY Kristen Orlando; and a pre-order of one of the most amazing fairy tale retellings I’ve ever read, FOREST OF A THOUSAND LANTERNS by Julie C. Dao (out October 10th, 2017).


To enter, please fill out the Rafflecopter form below. One winner will be randomly selected on Saturday, September 30th (US resident only). That winner will be notified by email and/or twitter message (if applicable) and will have one week to claim their prize. If their prize is not claimed in one week, Rafflecopter will randomly select another winner.


Thank you so much for stopping by, and for helping me celebrate the launch of my book baby, THE WOOD!!! And as the season of all things football and pumpkin spice starts up (a.k.a. my favorite season ever), if you’re looking for a good autumn read to curl up with under a good flannel blanket on these chilly nights, be sure to check out THE WOOD, which celebrates all things autumn, all things fantastical, and all things weird and creepy.

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Published on September 24, 2017 03:43

August 21, 2017

BOOK GIVEAWAY (Part Two)!!!

 



 


To celebrate THE WOOD’s release this month (available now!!–how crazy is that?), I am doing a huge 15 book giveaway through the months of July-September. The first giveaway included 5 books by my critique partners and other authors who had a big hand in my publishing journey (you can check out that blog post here if you’d like). This month, I’ll be giving away my 3 favorite books by the authors who have most shaped me as a writer (THE SCORPIO RACES by Maggie Stiefvater; VICIOUS by V.E. Schwab; and THE NIGHT CIRCUS by Erin Morgenstern)–(this list is sans J.K. Rowling, because I can’t play favorites with the Harry Potter series and give just one book in the series away)–plus I’ll also be giving away a signed copy of THE WOOD!


To enter, please fill out the Rafflecopter form below. One winner will be randomly selected on Tuesday, August 29th (US only). That winner will be notified by email and will have one week to claim their prize. If their prize is not claimed in one week, I will have Rafflecopter randomly select another winner.


Thank you so much for stopping by, and for helping me celebrate the launch of my book baby, THE WOOD!!!

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Published on August 21, 2017 11:21

July 11, 2017

BOOK GIVEAWAY (Part One)!!!

 



It’s so hard to believe we’re less than a month away from THE WOOD’s release (August 1st, baby!!!!). To celebrate, I’m doing a huge 15 book giveaway over the next three months! YEP. 15. The first bundle of books (5 total) will be given away this month, and it will be featuring books by my critique partners, Lori Goldstein and N.K. Traver, and books by two authors who had a big hand in my publishing journey, Lisa Klein and Brenda Drake. In August, I’ll be giving away 3 books that have shaped me as a writer, plus a copy of THE WOOD. In September, I’ll be showing some love to other 2017 debuts, giving away 6 YA debuts that I couldn’t put down!


So, without further ado, the books I will be giving away this month are:



 


To enter, please fill out the Rafflecopter form below. One winner will be randomly selected on Wednesday, July 26th (US only). Thank you so much for stopping by and helping me celebrate THE WOOD!!!


 


a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Published on July 11, 2017 03:27

April 4, 2017

YA Scavenger Hunt!



 THE HUNT IS NOW OVER, BUT BE SURE TO CHECK BACK IN FOR THE FALL 2017 HUNT! 

 


Welcome to YA Scavenger Hunt! This bi-annual event was first organized by author Colleen Houck as a way to give readers a chance to gain access to exclusive bonus material from their favorite authors…and a chance to win some awesome prizes! With this hunt, you not only get access to exclusive content from each author, you also get a clue for the hunt. Add up the clues, and you can enter for our prize–one lucky winner will receive one book from each author on the hunt in my team! But play fast: this contest (and all the exclusive bonus material) will only be online for 72 hours!


Go to the YA Scavenger Hunt page to find out all about the hunt. There are five contests going on simultaneously, and you can enter one or all! I am a part of the RED TEAM–but there is also a blue team, a gold team, a pink team, and a purple team, each with a chance to win a whole different set of books!


If you’d like to find out more about the hunt, see links to all the authors participating, and see the full list of prizes up for grabs, go to the YA Scavenger Hunt page.


SCAVENGER HUNT PUZZLE


Directions: Below, you’ll notice that I’ve hidden my favorite number. Collect the favorite numbers of all the authors on the red team, and then add them up (don’t worry, you can use a calculator!).


Entry Form: Once you’ve added up all the numbers, make sure you fill out the form here to officially qualify for the grand prize. Only entries that have the correct number will qualify.


Rules: Open internationally, anyone below the age of 18 should have a parent or guardian’s permission to enter. To be eligible for the grand prize, you must submit the completed entry form by Sunday, April 9th, at noon Pacific Time. Entries sent without the correct number or without contact information will not be considered.


SCAVENGER HUNT POST


Today, I am hosting Alexandra Sirowy for the YA Scavenger Hunt!



Alexandra Sirowy is the author of the young adult thrillers THE CREEPING, the Bram Stoker Award® Nominated THE TELLING, and the upcoming FIRST WE WERE IV. Alexandra attended a women’s college for her undergraduate work in International Relations and received her graduate degree in International Studies. When she isn’t writing, she likes to travel, read, cook, eat, and get into mischief. She lives with her husband in Northern California.


ABOUT THE BOOK



Lana used to know what was real. That was before, when her life was small and quiet. Her golden stepbrother, Ben was alive. She could only dream about bonfiring with the populars. Their wooded island home was idyllic, she could tell truth from lies, and Ben’s childhood stories were firmly in her imagination.


Then came after.


After has Lana boldly kissing her crush, jumping into the water from too high up, living with nerve and mischief. But after also has horrors, deaths that only make sense in fairy tales, and terrors from a past Lana thought long forgotten. Love, blood, and murder.


Find out more information by checking out Alexandra’s website or find more about her latest book, THE TELLING, here!


 


EXCLUSIVE CONTENT


Hi, I’m Alexandra Sirowy author of the YA thriller and Bram Stoker Award Nominated THE TELLING, out now from Simon & Schuster BFYR. There are liars, schemers, best friends, enemies, heroes, and villains in this dark and twisty thriller, and it’s not easy to tell who is who.


I had the idea for THE TELLING while staying on an island in Washington. There were sailboats in the indigo waters, bonfires dotting beaches, and a seemingly idyllic town. I couldn’t help but wonder, what lies beneath this glittering façade? A fictive island as eerie as it was alluring took root in my head. THE TELLING is the story of two main characters, step-sister, Lana, and step-brother, Ben. They have childhoods rich in make-believe and cast themselves as the heroes of their stories. This is before. THE TELLING begins after, with a mysterious murder, a secret past, and seventeen-year-old Lana setting out to become the hero of her imagination. Welcome to Gant Island.


I hope you enjoy this glimpse into THE TELLING’s intrigue.


***


Chapter Three


It was June 8, half past eleven. Ben’s and my movie night had been interrupted. We’d eaten lobster tacos and I drank two beers, which was two more beers than I’d ever had before. Then a pissy Maggie arrived.


She and Ben started fighting—a blustery, name-calling argument. He’d broken up with her five days earlier. She wasn’t supposed to show up at our house anymore. She had to accept they were over. For good. Although I didn’t pick up on it as it played out, it was suspicious that she had a friend drop her off, only to demand a ride home. No, she wouldn’t let Ben order her a car when he offered. No, she wouldn’t sleep off her buzz in the downstairs guest room.


I’d given Ben a sleepy and inebriated frown as we stood in the hallway while she used the bathroom. “Please.” He bent nearer, the light in his eyes diminishing until his forehead touched mine. He was all I could see. “I don’t want to be alone with her. Come. Save me.”


The three of us braced ourselves against the early summer breeze as we filed along the path to where Ben’s SUV waited in our driveway. I was pouting, letting my flip-flops spray pebbles at Maggie’s heels. She scowled at me before she climbed into the front passenger seat—without even bothering to call shotgun. I sat in the back, pulled my knees to my chest, leaned against the window. “Turn the heater on,” I whined. I stuck my earbuds in and was listening to the kind of angry, screeching punk I don’t even like just to tune her out. And here’s the second worst thing I’ve ever done.


I fell asleep, and I couldn’t tell the police what happened next.


Two hours later my ears buzzed with the sharp, stuttered ding of car doors left ajar as the police tried to make sense of the blood splatter in the interior. The engine had been left running. My earbuds dangled out of the rear door, where I’d thrown them after yanking my cell free to dial 911. Each time the breeze picked up they swung, grating against the road. I’d never use them again.


The wind hissed through the pines behind Maggie and me. The police had set up perimeter lights; they stretched our shadows and threw them back at sharp angles. Mine was trying to detach from my feet; it wanted to run and hide. A police officer, his finger on the trigger of a camera, blinded me in intervals. The light flashed in my peripheral vision as a second officer captured the splatter on Maggie’s face, arms, and torso. Ben’s blood had gotten in my mouth; it was all I could taste as we waited for the detective Gant PD had called in from Seattle to direct the investigation.


Detective Sweeny started a mile down the highway, with another group of officers examining the crime scene where Maggie and I had left Ben to his attacker. Sweeny was small and wiry, cutting through the blockish male cops in uniform. She sized us up with close-set eyes as she approached. Unlike every other officer, her gaze stayed steady, ticking over the details of us like Willa absorbing a study guide before an exam. Sweeny didn’t flinch away from all that blood. We’ll be okay now, I thought.


Sweeny introduced herself. She was a homicide detective. Then she held up her hand when my expression went runny and frantic and added, “Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. The detective part is why I’m here.” She asked me if I’d been able to reach my parents. They were in Seattle overnight and their phones were off, and she seemed concerned when I told her there was no one else to call. Ben hadn’t been found; the police were searching; the coast guard had been mobilized.


I wanted to help them look. Sweeny put her firm grip on my shoulder. “The best way for you to help is to tell me exactly what transpired. Leave nothing out.”


Only Maggie knew the first half. She could lie and I wouldn’t be able to contradict her. We were a couple of miles before the narrow bridge that connects Gant Island with the Olympic Peninsula. It was the only route to take Maggie to where she lived, off the island. Maggie told the police that Ben and she were arguing. The car slowed. Maggie looked up to see why. To the right there were rocky bluffs that plunged to the island’s heaving waters. To the left there was a dark, meadowy slope that ran until a distant wall of pines.


“A man appeared in the middle of the highway,” Maggie whispered.


“Where did he appear from?” Sweeny asked. “The trees aren’t close to the road. Was he hiding behind something?”


“No. He wasn’t there and then he was. He appeared,” Maggie insisted, her voice rising.


For more about THE TELLING or my first young adult thriller, THE CREEPING, you can check out my website, Tweet me, find me on Instagram, or read about my books on Goodreads.


XO


Alexandra


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Don’t forget to enter the contest for a chance to win a ton of books by me and many more! Check out all of the awesomeness on the Red Team:



To enter, you need to know that my favorite number is 8. Add up all the favorite numbers of the authors on the red team and you’ll have the secret code to enter for the grand prize!


CONTINUE THE HUNT


To keep going on your quest for the hunt, you need to check out the next author, Sheila Sobel! Happy Scavenging!


 


 

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Published on April 04, 2017 04:59

July 19, 2016

Pitch Wars 2016 Mentor Bio and Wish List!!!

0009_Chelsea Headshots (2)


Hey, Pitch Wars peeps! I’m so happy you stopped by to check out my wish list! (If you don’t know what Pitch Wars is, it’s an annual writing contest put together by the fabulous Brenda Drake. If you have a polished, completed manuscript and want to know more, check out the details on Brenda’s blog).


Before we get to my wish list, here’s a little bit about me:


My YA contemporary fantasy, THE WOOD, will be published by Feiwel and Friends/Macmillan on August 1, 2017! I’m represented by the absolutely amazing Andrea Somberg of Harvey Klinger, Inc., with whom I first connected when I was a Pitch Wars mentee all the way back in the first ever Pitch Wars in 2013. If you’re at all curious about my 2013 Pitch Wars entry, you can check it out here. Although this isn’t the manuscript that landed me a book deal, it is the manuscript that helped me connect with the online writing community (thanks to Pitch Wars!), and which eventually led to me signing with my dream agent. For that story, you can check out my blog posts “My Journey to Publication, or Why You Should Never Give Up” Parts One and Two.


This year, I will be mentoring YA fiction. As a mentor, it is extremely important to me that my mentee’s vision for his or her book shines, and as such that is always my primary focus. So, while I will be giving constructive criticism on how to get your manuscript submission-ready, above all I want to help you turn your book into what *you* always imagined it could be. To do this, and to make your Pitch Wars experience as enjoyable and beneficial as possible, I will be using both my experiences as a Pitch Wars mentee in 2013 and a Pitch Wars co-mentor last year, along with my experiences from navigating the publishing waters for nearly six years now. Although I will focus on all of the elements of your book when giving feedback (plot, character, voice, description, etc.), I am especially attuned to pacing and tension. Many people will argue that the most important element in writing is either plot or character, but I will always argue that it is pacing/tension (established through well-developed internal and external conflicts). In my opinion, it doesn’t matter how unique your plot is or how interesting your main character is if you can’t keep your reader turning the pages, and all of that boils down to pacing, tension, and conflict.


For more about my style as a Pitch Wars mentor, check out my mini-interview here. And check out my previous mentee’s success interview from when I co-mentored last year here (includes a little more info on my mentoring style as well as some insight into the Pitch Wars process from my 2015 mentee).


And finally, as you all know, we are doing a Blog Hop Scavenger Hunt this year! My letter is…*drumroll*…E!


Now, without further ado,


My Wish List


I have always been a very eclectic reader, and as such I have a very wide range in genres I’d like to see. First and foremost, as a girl who grew up fascinated with all things paranormal and who has seen every single Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode about a dozen times, I am a huge fan of speculative fiction. I’m your girl for pretty much anything that falls under the fantasy umbrella (including fantasy, paranormal, contemporary/urban fantasy, supernatural, Gothic/horror, and magical realism) with the exception of high, Lord of the Rings type fantasy (not because I don’t like the overall story elements of LOTR—please send me elves and dragons and wizards, etc, if done in a new, unique way!—but because I have a hard time staying interested when there are too many odd place and character names and background information/family trees to keep track of). I am also a fan of light science fiction such as the Across the Universe series by Beth Revis, but I am not your girl for super high-tech science fiction such as The Martian by Andy Weir.


To give you an idea of the types of stories I love, here is a list of some of my favorite fantasy/speculative fiction books:



The entire Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling (I’m kind of a superfan)
Vicious by V.E. Schwab
The Shiver trilogy, The Scorpio Races, and The Raven Boys series by Maggie Stiefvater
The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern
The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson
The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer
The Mortal Instruments series by Cassandra Clare
The Diviners by Libba Bray

(Also, one of my favorite adult paranormal/urban fantasy authors is Karen Marie Moning, so if you have the YA equivalent of her style, please send it my way!)


I am also a huge fan of fun contemporary fiction and contemporary romances. Emphasis on the word fun. My 2015 mentee’s book, OUT OF LEFT FIELD, is a fun, fast-paced contemporary about a girl pitching for her high school boys’ baseball team (and it was soooo good you guys. Check out her entry and the ridiculous amount of agent interest she got here.) While I do appreciate darker contemporary topics (and do believe they are important to have even in a “fun” contemporary, since darkness is a part of life), I am not your girl for anything to do with cancer or stories revolving around a main character’s impending death, simply because I’m way too emotional to handle it. In other words, please don’t send me anything even remotely resembling The Fault In Our Stars by John Green. On the flip side, I could handle something resembling Dead Poet’s Society (one of my favorite Robin Williams movies), where the main focus of the story is much more on character relationships and on characters finding themselves, and where a character’s death serves to highlight a bigger issue. However, for me to fall in love with a story like this, there has to be a lot of heart behind it (I don’t like to cry while reading if I can help it! I cry enough at movies as it is, I don’t need to cry from books, too. That being said, if your book is something truly special, I’ll break out the tissues for it).


For some more insight into the kinds of contemporary stories I gravitate toward, here are my all-time favorites:



Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell
The Moon and More, Along for the Ride, and Saint Anything by Sarah Dessen
Red by Alison Cherry
The Heist Society series by Ally Carter
Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants by Ann Brashares
The Royal We by Heather Cocks and Jessica Morgan
Someday, Someday, Maybe by Lauren Graham

(Also, please send anything resembling Gilmore Girls and/or Friday Night Lights).


As a history major, I also enjoy historical fiction, especially alternate and/or supernatural history, time-travel, and anything to do with American history (with favorite time periods being: the American Revolution, the Edwardian era, WWII, and the 1950s and ’60s). Some of my favorite historical books include:



Wolf by Wolf by Ryan Graudin
Walk on Earth a Stranger by Rae Carson
Winter Garden by Kristin Hannah
The White Queen by Philippa Gregory
Outlander by Diana Gabaldon
The Help by Kathryn Stockett

(I would also love to find a book resembling either Band of Brothers or The Patriot).


And finally, I am a huge sucker for romance. Whether it’s the main focus of your story or one of several elements, if there’s romance in your book, I am that much more likely to be drawn to it! However, don’t let a lack of romance stop you from sending your book to me if it hits any of my other wish list items (Vicious by V.E. Schwab, for example, is one of my favorite books of all time, and I wouldn’t exactly call “romance” one of its main elements). I also love a well thought-out mystery and surprise twist endings.


So, to recap, I’m mentoring YA this year, looking for: speculative fiction; fun, fast-paced contemporaries; historical fiction; romance; and mysteries (or some crazy mix of all of the above!). I am NOT looking for high-tech science fiction; high, LOTR-type fantasy; or John Green-esque contemporaries.


If you think we might be a fit, please send your submission my way! I look forward to reading!






1.


Phil Stamper

2.




Jenni L. Walsh

3.




Linsey Miller

4.




Jennifer Blackwood

5.




Amy Trueblood

6.




Laurie Elizabeth Flynn

7.




Kelly Ann Hopkins

8.




Kip Wilson Rechea

9.




Kristin Wright

10.




Amanda Foody

11.




Fiona McLaren & Dionne McCulloch

12.




Karen Fortunati

13.




Marty Mayberry

14.




Sarah Glenn Marsh & Shana Silver

15.




Monica M. Hoffman

16.




Heather Ezell

17.




Kate Karyus Quinn and Demitria Lunetta

18.




Erin Summerill & Rosalyn Eves

19.




Jamie Howard

20.




Ashley Hearn

21.




Charlie N. Holmberg

22.




Isabel Ibañez Davis

23.


Pintip Dunn

24.




Rachel Solomon & Kit Frick

25.




Mara Rutherford & Joan He

26.




Cat Scully & Kim Graff

27.




Lynnette Labelle and Destiny Cole

28.




Natasha Neagle

29.




Sonia Hartl

30.




Trisha Leaver & Kelly Calabrese

31.




Jessie Devine

32.




Ayesha Patel

33.




Helene Dunbar & Beth Hull

34.




Emily Martin

35.




Karen McManus

36.




Marie Meyer

37.




Jeanmarie Anaya

38.




Sharon Johnston

39.




Naomi Hughes

40.




Summer Spence

41.




Nikki Roberti

42.




McKelle George

43.




Monica B. Wagner & Kerbie Addis

44.




Rebecca Sky & Stacey Trombley

45.


M.K. England and Jamie Pacton

46.




Tabitha Martin

47.




Brian Palmer

48.




Brianna Shrum

49.




Molly E. Lee

50.




L.L. McKinney

51.




RuthAnne Snow

52.




Chelsea Bobulski

53.




Janella Angeles & Axie Oh

54.




Megan Lally & Katie Bucklein

55.




Kes Trester & Jen Hawkins

56.




Dannie Morin

57.




Stephanie Scott

58.




Sarah Nicolas & Leigh Mar

59.




Lizzy Charles

60.




Tobie Easton

61.




Lisa Amowitz

62.




Diana Gallagher

63.




Katherine Webber

64.




Judi Lauren

65.




Austin Aslan

66.




Dawn Ius




Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.


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Published on July 19, 2016 17:00

June 3, 2016

My Journey to Publication, or Why You Should Never Give Up (Part Two)

(This blog post ended up being pretty long, so I decided to separate it into two parts. You can find Part One here).


It’s kind of amazing to me, looking back, that I didn’t give up after those first three manuscripts. Baby author me was, apparently, very resilient. That resilience would be tested with my fourth manuscript, a young adult steampunk romance. I absolutely loved my fourth manuscript when I started querying it in 2012. For the first time, I felt like this was it. This was the one. For the first time, I had truly discovered my voice, and my writing had gotten strong enough to support it.


I don’t remember how many agents I queried with my fourth manuscript, or how many requests I received, but it was a lot more than I had received in the past. I also made it into two contests: Baker’s Dozen, hosted by Miss Snark’s First Victim, and the very first Pitch Wars, hosted by Brenda Drake. I believe the number of total requests (from contests and querying) was somewhere near twenty, and all of them were from dream agents, including the incredible Andrea Somberg, who would eventually become my agent, but I’m getting a little ahead of myself.

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Published on June 03, 2016 03:00

June 2, 2016

My Journey to Publication, or Why You Should Never Give Up (Part One)

(This blog post ended up being pretty long, so I decided to post it in two parts. Part Two will be up tomorrow.) 

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Published on June 02, 2016 06:05

October 22, 2015

BOOK NEWS!!!!

Sitting here, writing this, I’m feeling so humbled. It’s been five years and five manuscripts since I decided to pursue writing as my career, and I am so thrilled to share that my YA debut, THE WOOD, will be published by Feiwel and Friends in Spring 2017!
Here’s the official announcement: http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/childrens/childrens-book-news/article/68434-rights-report-week-of-october-19-2015.html
THE WOOD is definitely the book of my heart. I wrote it during a very difficult time in my life, and thus there is darkness in its pages, but also a lot of hope.  And because I’m the kid who always fast forwarded through movies to get to the kissing scenes, there’s also a lot of romance, too.
One of the main reasons I became a writer (aside from the excuse to live in other worlds all day) is because books have a way of helping people. Whether you’ve had a long day, or you’re going through something really tough, or you just really love books, being able to escape into another world by way of paper and ink is its own special brand of magic. I hope all of you amazing readers out there will find such an escape in my book, and hopefully some lifelong friends, too.
I’m planning on writing a more in-depth “Road to Publication” post detailing my journey over the past five years, but for now, I just want to say thank you. Thank you to my incredible agent, Andrea Somberg, who is the greatest cheerleader-warrior-agent a girl could ask for. Thank you to my editor, Anna Roberto, for believing in my little book. I cannot wait to work with you and see just how amazing it can be! Thank you to my CPs, Lori Goldstein, N.K. Traver, Naomi Hughes, and May Robertson, for all of the encouraging emails and for always bringing out the best in my work. Thank you to my husband (my best friend, my soulmate) for never letting me give up. And thank you to the entire book community—authors, readers, publishers, agents, booksellers, bloggers, reviewers, teachers, librarians—for being the amazing people you are. It is because of all of you that the magic of books lives, and for that, I am eternally grateful.  
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Published on October 22, 2015 15:58