Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Guest Post: Author Kami Kinard Shows How Diaries Inspire


I am beyond excited to feature a guest post by author Kami Kinard! She's here today to tell us how her own collection of diaries inspired her to write The Boy Project (Scholastic 2012).

Inspiring Diary
by: Kami Kinard

Author photo by: Carpe Diem Studios

I’ve been writing fiction for a couple of years now. Not just writing it, actually, but studying it – figuring out what it is that makes some books have a huge impact and others fall flat.

It’s complicated, of course, and it never boils down to just one thing. Good books must have compelling plots, interesting characters, and original writing. But there is another key ingredient to a good book, and in my experience, it is discussed less frequently than anything else.

Going back and reading my own diaries from middle school and high school helped me figure this ingredient out. In fact, reading my old diaries inspired me to write The Boy Project. My book isn’t based on the things that happened to me when I was in middle school. I was a pretty boring kid who loved to read and nothing plot-worthy happened to me during those years.

But the normal stuff happened. Stuff that happens to everybody. And what is a diary, but a place to write down how you feel about that stuff? Have you figured out the key ingredient yet? Let me give you another hint. I typed up a seventy-one word paragraph from my diary. Then I took out all of the words that didn’t have anything to do with my feelings. Here is what was left:

I wish
I can’t believe
more afraid
I’m glad
happy as ever
I’m so glad

Virtually every sentence indicated how I felt about something. And that’s just from one paragraph! My diaries were completely full of my feelings about things: things like  friends, family, wanting to fit in, school and boys. I don’t think I came across a single entry that didn’t have to do with my emotions.

As writers, our imaginations can supply plots, and we can develop skills to finesse language, but none of that is going to matter if our characters’ feelings don’t come across as genuine. Our books fall flat when our readers can’t identify with what our characters feel.

Kami's collection of diaries
Giving characters realistic feelings is important in sci-fi, fantasy, dystopian, and historical fiction too. One good example of books that capture teen feelings is the Twilight series. Author Stephenie Meyer takes a lot of flak for her writing style, but we shouldn’t overlook the thing she did best. The thing that made her books international best sellers wasn’t the vampires at all. It was that fact that Meyer captured the feelings of longing and desire better than most writers, and teenagers identify with those feelings.

My diaries put me back in touch with my middle school feelings and inspired me to write a book about a fictitious girl who felt the way I had about the middle school experience. Middle school girls tell me all of the time that they love The Boy Project because it is so realistic. Some say that Kara, my main character, feels exactly the way they do about things. Thanks, Dear Diary, for that!

Readers: Have you used old diaries as inspiration in writing? What do you think you'd find if you cracked open a middle school diary?




You can find Kami Kinard on her blog: Nerdy Chicks Rule, her webiste www.kamikinard.comfacebook page and on twitter.

Please check out the book trailer for The Boy Project here on You Tube!

Monday, July 16, 2012

Book Review: Past Perfect by Leila Sales

Past Perfect
Leila Sales
YA Contemporary
Published: 2011


What a fun book! I LOVE the premise. If you ever spent the majority of your family vacations at museums and historical sites (Colonial Williamsburg, Gettysburg, Greenfield Village to name a few), you will greatly appreciate Chelsea's summer job at a Colonial re-enactment village. In fact, her parents work there too, they're the silversmiths, and for as long as she can remember, she worked summers as the silversmith's daughter dressed in Colonial-era garb to entertain tourists.

This summer, Chelsea pleads for a new assignment, just down the way at the village graveyard, and sets her sights on a great summer with her best friend who joined the re-enacters for the first time. Only at orientation, her ex-boyfriend Ezra is seated among the new recruits, which will make it quite difficult to get over him.

The Colonial re-enacters are a proud bunch, especially considering across the street from their historical village is another historical village -- the Civil War-era ReenatctmentLand. The teenage re-enacters from both sides are bitter rivals, enacting their own covert war fought with pranks and sometimes worse, all beyond the prying eyes of the adults. When Chelsea and a rival "Civil Warrior" meet and find they don't actually hate each other, Chelsea must decide if cavorting with the enemy is worth the risk.

Their allegiance to historical authenticity and cracks about era-appropriate clothing make this such a funny, different YA story. I had so much fun with it I just kept on reading and finished the whole book on one summer day.

Stay tuned tomorrow for a GUEST POST!