Uncategorized, Writing

Book Launch Party -things I said and did.

The book launch party was a blast. I’m so grateful to everyone who came out -I think we had fun! And to Chris and Bill and everyone at Longfellow Books who helped make this happen. And yes, that was my mother scraping the poster with my face on it off the front of your store so she could keep it -more on her later.

So many friends, colleagues, former colleagues, cousins, former roommates, teachers, students and of course family. I read two short pieces from the book. One as reader’s theater with the incomparable Liz Hardcastle who was not at all  intimidated by the three pages of notes on her intonation that I gave her, and one on my own. Afterwards I was so excited to be done I tried to grab a cupcake and run. But then there was my mother -who stood up (I’m not making this up or exaggerating) and demanded that I answer some questions. Because being a mother is never done and sometimes when your kid tries to turn and flee you have to stop her.

“Was I too obtrusive?” she asked later. We all know what the right answer is don’t we? In all seriousness, I couldn’t be more grateful. Everyone had incredible questions and answering them turned out to be my favorite part. Because I was talking about something I love with people I love.

 

So many of you who aren’t lucky enough to live in Maine have been so supportive -posting pictures of the book as it arrives at your door and sharing your excitement as you read it. Everyone of those messages is like a big old hug and makes me feel even more blessed. I’d like to share with you what I said as an introduction on Thursday night -so it can be just like you were there. That and a few photos.

Thanks for the love.

          The only thing I knew when I was seventeen and applying to college was that I wanted something different from high school and didn’t include fraternities or sororities –which seemed to me at the time like an extension of everything I disliked about high school.

            My tour guide at Oberlin College was named Bony. He was a very large, purple haired gay, dance major from the Philippines. And I remember thinking to myself as he toured us through a student cooperative where the people threw food at us –if this guy can be comfortable here to be himself, I’ll have no problem.

            I ended up living in that very same cooperative my sophomore year. My roommate and I were far and away the preppiest people to live there, maybe ever. But, And, I loved it. I loved being a part of something that seemed so dangerously different from everything I’d been told  was important about being a grown up. The Other Way Around is a little bit of a love letter to that experience. It’s about finding a group of people that make you feel at home, even if they are very different from you and everything you’ve known before.  

            I don’t pretend to live some radical anarchist vegan lifestyle. I never have and probably  never will. But I know that it’s out there. I have sat through a conversation where people argued about whether or not eating honey was exploiting the labor of the bees. And somewhere in the recesses of my mind, I was taking notes, probably with a bemused look on myself. Someday, I must have told myself, this will be useful to you.

            I am so grateful that you are all here tonight to celebrate me and The Other Way Around. It really means everything that you’re here to share in the story and the sharing of the story. Because, as Lance who frequently accuses me of embellishing the truth for the sake of comic timing can attest to, or my parents who made constant trips to the library or book store know, I do love a good story.

3, count them, 3 kinds of themed cupcakes! Courtesy of Liz Hardcastle baking goddess!
3, count them, 3 kinds of themed cupcakes! Courtesy of Liz Hardcastle baking goddess!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chatting and having a grand old time. Yes we wear hats indoors -it's Maine.
Chatting and having a grand old time. Yes we wear hats indoors -it’s Maine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reading aloud with Liz!
Reading aloud with Liz!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My mother -I told you I wasn't making this up. Love you mom.
My mother -I told you I wasn’t making this up. Love you mom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hooray!!!!!
Hooray!!!!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photos by the fabulous Travis Gray!

Writing

Happy Book Birthday To Me!

Yesterday I stood up in front of 800 middle school students and told them I would not show them the dance I did when I learned that my book would be published because, well, they don’t know what “the running man” is and that’s best for everyone.

Readathon 3

Today my book is in the world  -like really in the world and that is very exciting. It’s exciting mostly because I have an excuse to celebrate with my wonderful friends and family here. It’s exciting because awesome readers like Lucy at The Reading Date will write really cool reviews that make me feel known and understood as a writer. And that is really cool and different from your friends and family reading your book and knowing you as a writer (which is also very cool).

Yesterday I stood in front of 800 middle school students and told them that the first line of my book is “When do girls fart?” As you might imagine, this got a good reaction. Including the one from my principal who was standing in the back and shook her head and gave me a little eye roll and a warm grin. “Oh Sashi,” her eyes said.

A student asked me somewhat skeptically. “What made you think to write a story about people who are dumpster divers?” I could tell from the way he asked the question that this was one of the weirdest most unlikely things he could think of to write or even think about. So I said something along the lines of , “Just you wait. The world is even weirder and wackier than you could imagine and it’s full of stories  that are too strange to be believed.” And I felt lucky that I could tell someone about a book that I wrote that maybe, just maybe might expand someone’s ideas about what it means to be an adult.

In the mean time, until you can rip into your brand-spanking new copy. I offer you this.


Hungry for more?

Book birthday interview here!

Super Power interview with Jodi Meadows here!

Win The Other Way Around and read another interview  with Valerie Cole here!

Uncategorized

Do you know what today is?

When I saw this video I was concerned it might be me. Now I know it’s pretty much me. Yes, I like to make a big stink out of my birthday! But even more exciting is my book’s birthday now only

3  2 weeks away!!! (February is wicked short!)

In honor of my almost book birthday I’m having a giveaway on goodreads. Sign up (it should go live on Monday) and win yourself a copy! And don’t forget 5:30 am sunrise horseback riding with Mariachi band.

Reading, Uncategorized

The Clan MacLeod is Infinitely Fabulous!

It’s fair to say this is becoming a tradition; when one of our agency siblings has a book released into the world we like to send it out in style!

Today is the book birthday for our own Jodi MeadowsInfinite; the third and final book in the Newsoul series! To quote fellow agency sibling Valerie Cole “Fantastic finale to a great series. The last chapter had my jaw on the floor!”

Here are our photographic tributes/interpretations of this amazing book!

Lizzie Friend
Lizzie Friend
Chanelle Gray
Chanelle Gray
Bria Quinlan
Bria Quinlan
Valerie Cole
Robert Lettrick
Robert Lettrick
Monica B.W.
Monica B.W.
Holly Bodger
Holly Bodger
Dana Elmendorf
Dana Elmendorf
Lauren MacLeod
Lauren MacLeod
Yers Truly, Sashi Kaufman
Yers Truly, Sashi Kaufman

Helene Boudreau
Helene Boudreau

Special gratitude to Robert Lettrick for his mad-wizard photoshop skills!

   A  very tremendous happy book birthday to Jodi and Infinite! We think she is infinitely awesome!

Uncategorized, Writing

Author Events: Where You Can Find Me!

This Friday I’ll be hanging out with some awesome children s and YA authors at the Nerdy Evening with Authors and Illustrators at the McArthur public library in Biddeford this Friday evening from 6-7:30.

So in addition to seeing my smiling face you can check out the following who will be there to hang out and sign books. (Books will be available for purchase too!)

Ed Briant           Megan Frazer Blakemore      Gail Donovan
Kate Egan         Cathryn Falwell                     Kevin Hawkes

Cynthia Lord      Lynda Mullaly Hunt               
Lynn Plourde     J.E. (John) Thompson       Lisa Jahn-Clough

If you can’t make it to Biddo I have a few guest posts and interviews up right now.

A post I wrote about the dangers of writing what you know is here.

And I’m interviewed as part of a series on YA releases in 2014 here.  There’s some fun info about the book and the writing process in general.

Nature, Random musings

Without a Map

Ski woods Today, New Year’s Day, I took to the woods for some cross-country skiing.  I went to a local farm where you can pay a few bucks for “25 km of groomed terrain”. This my second time skiing there -the first time was only hours after a blizzard and their snowmobile/groomer had broken down -right mired in snow (as we say here in Maine). A friend and I managed to get hopelessly lost as we tried to follow the map and avoid stumbling in the 4 foot drifts.

This time as I set out on a bright cold morning, I was determined to follow the map and learn the trails. I like maps. My brother teases me about my excessive map-looking when we go hiking together. I can’t help it. There’s just something I like about having my path confirmed by a little piece of paper. Today it quickly became apparent that this was not entirely possible. Many trails were miss-labeled or unlabeled. Some were even labeled with two different names. A few trails were labeled with names that did not appear on the maps. It also seemed that whomever did the grooming enjoyed changing the trails at his/her whim.

My first reaction was annoyance. I was plotting exactly what I was going to say when I checked in at the warming hut at the end of my ski. But after a little while I realized that map or no map I was having a pretty good time. The woods were crusted with sparkling ice, the snow was dotted with animal tracks and there was little noise aside from the occasional overhead crack of a pine branch.

(I should add that this is a relatively small farm, bordered very clearly by roads and powerlines. There was very little chance of my getting lost in the wilds of Westbrook, Maine.) It didn’t really matter if I could follow the map. Instead, if a trail looked good, I followed it. If it looped back on itself, well then I chose another way to go. I had a great time and it was a good reminder that even for us type A map-followers, a little time off the grid can be good for us.

2013 has been a pretty damn good year. I look forward to 2014 as the year my first published book will arrive in the world. Along with that comes a lot of territory for which I do not have a map. In fact there are many experiences in life for which we do not have maps, or the ones we have provide, at best, a false sense of security. Sometimes it’s good to choose your way based on the best information you have on hand and a sense of play and adventure.

Me skiing

Uncategorized

Reviews and Other Reindeer Games

The Other Way Around has been reviewed by Publisher’s Weekly and Kirkus in the last month and both reviews were very positive. I’m excited and hoping this means libraries and booksellers will want to carry it.

If you want to read the reviews, here are the links: Publisher’s Weekly, Kirkus

Here is a bit of Holiday/Family fun courtesy of my personal word-nerdery:

 If your last name were a verb or adjective -what would it mean?

Examples: to Kaufman means to run back into the house (for snacks, extra layers, or books) three times before actually pulling away in the car. (It’s either that or something to do with non-lascivious public nudity.)

This next one is from dear friend Alex Grindle who said that to Grindle means to give one’s opinion forcefully in an inappropriate setting.

Of course if you’re like me and didn’t change your name after marriage then you’re speaking about yourself and/or your family of origin. If you’re talking about your inlaws it can be a bit trickier.

Feel free to leave your contributions in the comments here or on fb.

Happy Everything To You!

Writing

Book Signing!

Last weekend I had the opportunity to hang out with approximately 6,000 other English teachers. I was attending NCTE or the National Council of Teachers of English conference which was in Boston this year. I had a grand old time! More conference details in a later post.

By far the highlight of my weekend was the author signing I got to do with my publisher Lerner Books. Lerner gave away 100 copies of my book and I got to sign them all and chat with all the really cool teachers who took time out of their conference to wait in line.

As if that wasn’t enough I got to share the stage with one of my favorite YA writers who was signing copies of a Lerner anthology called Losing It -which features short stories about, yup, you guessed it; losing your virginity.  I always hope an author who’s writing I admire will also be a cool human and in Amy’s case my hopes and dreams were wildly exceeded.

I’ll let the photos tell the rest of the story:

Here I am, very excited about the shiny poster with my head on it. I always try and control my emotion in photos.

Poster

Photo bomb
Yup, that’s Amy -photo bombing my author shot. I told you she was cool.
Giggles
Here we are giggling and signing books like a couple -a school girls. Shucks. Seriously though a few tips. When you sign books next to a famous author -don’t sign their name in your books. Also, not a great time to try and bust out your high school Spanish to impress the teacher from Los Angeles. I’m fairly sure what I wrote was not offensive but I doubt it made any sense.

 

 

Me and Lauren
Lastly, here is some love from my agent Lauren. This photo was taken the night before when I signed my first ever book for her. Every writer deserves an agent like Lauren. She rocks!
Writing

Why I No NANOWRIMO

It’s that time of year again; NaNoWriMo. For those of you not aware of this phenomena. National Novel Writing Month is something of a writer’s marathon. The event, which began in 1999, eggs on participants to crank out 50,000 words of a new project between November 1st and 30th. Writers from all over the world, both professional and amateur, participate.  More information about NaNoWriMo here.

I know a lot of writers, newbies, and those with multi-book deals who participate. But not me. “What’s the matter Colonel Sanders, chicken?”

Maybe. And perhaps you’ll find that what follows is nothing more than a massive rationalization. But it’s my rationalization. I do have a project I’m working on currently. I’m about 8,000 words in. So this year NaNoWriMo comes at a pretty ideal time. This year, for the first time, I truly considered it. For about a minute. I’m not going to offer you any excuses about day jobs or kids (I have one of each). My reasons are about balance. For multiple reasons I believe I write best in small chunks.

  1. Small chunks makes writing a treat instead of a chore
  2. Small chunks gives me time to revise a bit as I go -smoothing out the rough edges before moving on.
  3. Small chunks means I have time to go for walks, read a few pages before falling asleep, watch some of my guilty pleasure tv shows.
  4. Small chunks means I’m not up at 3 in the morning obsessing about what my characters are doing.
  5. Small chunks has worked really well for me so far.

Barf. I can’t write “small chunks” any more. So there you have it.  I think NaNoWriMo is great and really helps some people jump-start on to the page. But it’s not for me. At least not this year…

Additionally, the first person to comment and tell me correctly what movie the Colonel Sanders quote is from gets a brand new The Other Way Around bookmark and some smarties for being so smart. I’ll send ’em to ya!