Monday 2 May 2011

Janet Gurtler-Interview and Giveaway for OH (MG & YA) Canada!

I am thrilled to have Janet Gurtler on the blog today for OH (MG & YA Canada). Her second novel for young adults, I’M NOT HER, just came out and her third book, IF I TELL is scheduled for this fall.









All about I'M NOT HER from Good Reads :

Brainy Tess Smith is the younger sibling of the beautiful, popular, volleyball-scholarship-bound Kristina. When Kristina is diagnosed with bone cancer, it drastically changes both sisters' lives. Sometimes the things that annoy us the most about our siblings are the ones we'd miss the most if we lost them.

In this YA literary coming-of-age novel that will appeal to readers who love Jodi Picoult and Sarah Dessen, sisters Tess and Kristina discover not only who they are, but who they can become.



I am telling you now, I agree with the above. I’d also recommend this book to fans of Deb Caletti, Sarah Okler and Gayle Friessen (If I Stay). Tess is a strong, funny character who teens will related to and cheer for, just like the heroines in these other books. And voice? It's there...in spades.

And now...on with the INTERVIEW!


Janet,  I read your book in a couple of sittings. I had to know what was going to happen with the two sisters, especially the younger I loved seeing her get stronger and stronger for
herself and her sister. I think you captured that relationship amazingly
well. You must (well, I know you do, lol) have a sister relationship that
you could use for inspiration?

Thank you for reading my book in a couple of sittings! Magical words! And
yes, I do indeed have a sister, an older sister and while we certainly never
went through anything as traumatic as Kristina and Tess I did draw on some
of the feelings I had about her growing up. There was a bit of worship but
tongue tied shyness on my part when we were teens. She is three years older
than me, which is a lot when you're young, hardly anything now. She seemed
so much cooler and prettier than I felt and she had awesome boyfriends. Plus
she was thin. And tall. With long legs. And I wasn't.

The other thing that captivated me was your ability to paint
moments--especially some very painful ones--the details of the places
(hospital) and the emotions (finding out about cancer, helping a family
member deal with it) were, for me, nailed. I've been there so speak from
experience. How did you research this, or were you drawing from life? (You
don't have to answer that if you'd rather not).

No one really close to me has been affected by cancer, not while I was
growing up anyways. Actually I have been very fortunate with good health for
myself and my family (and quick knock on some wood for me would you?) I did
connect with a wonderful young woman who went through bone cancer and she
helped with some of the medical and some of the physcholgical aspects of the
illness. And, when I was getting ready to write the hospital scene, I went
to the nearest hospital and kind of wandered around the hallways and
different floors, taking mental notes about what I saw and noticed.


As far as the emotions of the family, I just did a lot of deep thinking on
how I thought the characters would react from who they were deep inside. How
would a self centered mom who wants to control everything around her react
to something she couldn't control? How about a father who prefers not to
deal with hardships face on? I tried to stay real to the way I thought the
characters would behave, even if it was sometimes not the way we want people
to behave when someone they love is suffering.


Well, well done. It just goes to show that you can research and interview to gain an experience
you are writing about.

It's a busy time for you with an upcoming book launch. Excited? Nervous?
Care to share some tips for others gearing up for the same thing? (and,
Congratulations!!) You've done this before, with Waiting to Score. Any
experiences you want to repeat? Some, not so much?

A book launch is truly an exciting and nerve wracking time! Ohh look, my
pretty books arrived in a big box from Fed EX. Watch me squeal and hug one
and sniff it and giggle. Ohhhhh. Reviews are coming in, watch me hide under
my covers and cower and tremble until it's all over.


I did publish one book before, but this is a completely different
experience. I'm publishing under my own name this time, with a new publisher
(Sourcebooks) and it's a GIRL BOOK so it definitely feels like a debut (with
some life experience thrown in)


My advice is to others is to try to do as much promotion as you're
comfortable with and then try to ENJOY the rest!!! There are so many
stressors authors could get hung up on, but the best advice is to have some
fun and celebrate what really is a wonderful occasion!


I am having a book launch this time and inviting everyone to come, and doing
a reading and generally making myself feel like a Queen for a night (okay
for two hours). Sort of like a wedding without having to go on a diet to
fit into a pretty white dress. But like a wedding there will be cake. I'm
now thinking I should appoint the equivalent of bridesmaids. I pronounce
you a BOOK MAID, Deb! You and our fabulous lunch crew. But you don't all
have to dress matchy matchy. Unless you want to.


NO! Let's go matchy matchy and we can wear eighties style bridesmaids dresses to feel
all young like again! Who's with me??


I'm asking this of all my guest authors, so now it's your turn, my friend!
Almost everyone of my book club kids , aged 8-13, are also aspiring writers.
Do you have any advice for them? When did you start writing? A possible
crazy bad story in your past where everyone dies? Even the MC? Or?

I was an aspiring writer from the time I was in grade one. I still have my
first short story from that time and remember the praise I got from my
teacher and my mom for how cute and creative it was. It was about a cat.
Falling into a pot of spaghetti. Oh how clever I thought I was!


My advice to your lovely aspiring writers is to do exactly what they love to
do--write! Write journals! Write blogs. Write poems or letters or stories or
whatever it is that you feel compelled to write. Believe in yourself and
your dreams. Write. If you're a writer, you write. And it feeds your soul.
Also. Don't try to follow someone else's path. Some authors are published
when they're 13. Some when they in their 20's. I was older than that.
Everyone has their own journey.

Speaking of my book club kids. I am thrilled to say I will be starting a
teen book club as part of our Summer Reading Programme, even have a few who
are keen to get started now. Any teen reads that you've loved lately? The
kind you can't wait to tell someone about?

I love how enthusiastic you are about kids and reading!! I really do. I
love Young Adult fiction with passion. I am especially drawn to contemporary
stories or gritty urban fantasy. The latest teen read I loved was FIXING DELILAH by Sarah Okler.


Oh boy, yes. That one was good.


AND--speaking of being a writer and a reader. How do you balance that (and
your family and all the other busy that life brings?

Oh that crazy thing called balance. I admit I spend far, far too much time
on my computer. Writing and the lure of social media and online writing
communities. Sometimes it drives my son and my husband a little crazy.
Luckily my son is an avid swimmer and swims 6 days a week, so that gives me
time to either write or exercise (so I can write when I would otherwise be
exercising) And my husband drags me out to the cabin he's building for
periodic escapes from the Internet.


I'm not working at another part time job right now, but probably will be
again and that's when I find it really tough to manage to find writing time.
I'm lucky enough right now to write while my son is in school and hubby is
at work!

Is there a question you were hoping hoping I would ask? Go ahead and answer
it right now.

Just how awesome do I think Just Deb is? Well thanks for asking. I think
she's great! I think she's a talented and passionate lady and she has really
good taste in lunch partners! Thanks for having me on your blog.


Aw, thanks, Janet! Yeah, the lunch pardners are cool bacon sauce (to partially quote Angela). Thanks for being with me today.

Next Up....THE GIVEAWAY!

Comment on this interview and I will enter your name in a giveaway for a hardcover, signed copy of I’m Not Her.

Comment with a recommended contemporary YA book or author and I’l give you another entry.

If you don’t read whole lot of realistic or contemporary YA, then comment with your latest “LOVED IT” YA book, ‘cause my book club kids read all genres.

There's more (lol, again with me sounding like an info-mercial?) Stina of Seeing Creative is hosting Janet today, too and there's a giveaway. Check it out and get some great writing advice from Janet. Kind of a win win, imo!

Finally, you still have a chance to win book one of Maggie L. Wood's series, The Divided Realms.

15 comments:

  1. Thank you for the awesome giveaway! I have this on my wish list, so I would love to win a copy :)

    My latest YA "Loved it!" read was Where She Went. It was so, so good :)

    jaidahsmommy(at)comcast(dot)net

    ReplyDelete
  2. Oh my gosh, Tiffany, yes on Where She Went! It's on my to read list-I loved,loved, If I Stay. Thanks for the recommend!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I can only imagine how nerve-wracking a book launch is!
    I highly recommend Once Was Lost by Sara Zarr.
    rickimc[at]aol[dot]com

    ReplyDelete
  4. Great interview and I'd love to read the book. I'm in the middle of Joy Preble's "Haunting" which is a sequel to the excellent "Dreaming Anastasia."

    It's contemporary with a little fantasy mixed in. Hope that counts!

    Congrats on the new book, Janet!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hey, Shari, thanks. Absolutely counts. Have Dreaming Anastasia on my kindle, sounds like I will be getting book number two...and will be sure to order copies for the library.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Thanks for the giveaway!

    I'd highly recommend Sara Zarr's Sweethearts.

    jpetroroy at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  7. Great give away. I'd love to read this one.

    My latest contemporary YA fave -- Bruiser by Neal Schusterman

    ReplyDelete
  8. Thank you for the opportunity to win this book. I love hearing authors advise for people who would love to experience having their books published.

    hootowl1978 at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  9. opps I forgot to do my recommendation.. I would recommend My Life, the Theater, and other Tragedies by Zadoff.

    hootowl1978 at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  10. I hope we don't have to wear dresses with puffy shoulders. :P

    I love sooo many YA novels, I don't know where to start. I can't wait to read I'm Not Her (I've been really good not sneaking a peek at the copy for my blog giveaway). And I can't wait to read Where She Went. :D

    ReplyDelete
  11. LOL, Stina...maybe removable puffs??

    ReplyDelete
  12. I need to write more and get going on that journey...

    I would love to read I'm Not Her; thanks so much for the giveaway!

    My favorite contemp author is Sarah Dessen, and my favorite book by her is The Truth About Forever. I also really enjoyed The Lonely Hearts Club by Elizabeth Eulberg.

    whatinabox at gmail dot com

    ReplyDelete
  13. I've just started reading I'm Not Her and am totally sucked in. Janet and Deb, you guys are both awesome!

    Angela @ The Bookshelf Muse

    ReplyDelete
  14. Great post! I am really looking forward to reading I 'm not her. I would love to win a copy. Please enter me into the giveaway. Thank you!

    lovemykidsandbooks At gmail DOT com

    ReplyDelete
  15. I LOVED Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher. I would highly recommend that book if you haven't read that yet!

    lovemykidsandbooks At gmail DOT com

    Another YA that I read recently and really enjoyed was Mockingbird by Kathryn Erskine

    ReplyDelete

#ReadtheNorth

Over the last while there has been a hashtag you may have seen about called Read the North. It's a campaign encouraging people to read C...