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Showing posts with label Author Events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Author Events. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Happy Days

So today I am super excited for two reasons...

Firstly, I've just submitted my final assignment, signalling the end of my degree!

*happy dance*

It's been 3.5 years and I am so glad it's finally over. Not only do I get to walk away with major in Professional Writing and Publishing, I can now devote my free time to catching up on all the amazing books I have missed. And I have missed a lot. Can you believe I've only done one post in 3 months?! Oh the horror! But I am dedicated to getting my little corner of the web back to normal which brings me to my second piece of exciting news...



I am currently at the airport about to fly to Melbourne for the biennial Reading Matters Conference hosted by the Centre for Youth Literature. 

Huzzah! Excitement to the MAX. 

For those of you who have been with me and the blog for a while, you may remember I attended 2 years ago and had an absolute blast! Here's the link if you want to remind yourself of all the awesome...

I'm going to *try* and keep you updated via Twitter and Facebook but I wasn't very good at it last time. So if I fail, or even just to get extra massive doses of awesome, follow along with the hashtag #YAMatters because lots of wonderful people will be contributing.


Reading Matters guest speakers include:

Sara Farizan
Sally Gardner
Kyle Hughes-Odgers
Amie Kaufman
Priya Kuriyan
Jaclyn Moriarty
Abe Nouk
Tom Taylor
Jared Thomas
Sean Williams
Clare Wright

It's good to be back, guys.
Talk soon xx

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

A Writers Festival and a Book Launch

~ Perth Writers Festival 2015 ~

It's that time of the year again! This past weekend, the Perth Writers Festival returned to the grounds of The University of Western Australia, featuring both local and international authors, for three days of literary goodness. While other commitments stopped me from attending the majority of events, I did manage to stop by for the appropriately named panel, YA Is Where It's At. 

Chaired by the wonderful Amanda 'AJ' Betts, the session was full of laughs and chatter as Rachael Craw, Dave Hackett and Sean Williams discussed their latest books and what it is about YA that makes us love it so.


L-R: Rachael Craw, Dave Hackett, Sean Williams and Amanda Betts


Dave Hackett reading a hilarious excerpt
from his new book, The Summer of Kicks


Catching up with Rachael Craw after the event

    



~ A Small Madness Book Launch ~

On Monday night, I attended the book launch of Dianne Touchell's second book, A Small Madness.






Rose didn't tell anyone about it. She wondered if it showed. She looked at herself in the mirror and turned this way and then that way. She stood as close to the mirror as she could, leaning over the bathroom basin, looking into her own eyes until they disappeared behind the fog of her breath. Looking for something. Some evidence that she was different now. Something had shifted inside her, a gear being ratcheted over a clunky cog, gaining torque, starting her up. But it didn't show. How could all of these feelings not show? She was a woman now but it didn't show and she couldn't tell anyone.

If you've read Dianne's debut, Creepy and Maud, you'll know that A Small Madness is bound to be an incredible read. I'm looking forward to cracking open the spine of my newly signed copy and if the blurb hasn't intrigued you then I suggest you check out the wonderful review by Danielle over at Alpha Reader.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Celebrate Reading YA Conference Recap

Last month, I attended the Celebrate Reading YA Conference held at The Literature Centre in Fremantle, Western Australia.

The Literature Centre supports local and interstate authors and provides writing workshops for students across Western Australia. For more information about what they do, visit their website.


Authors in attendance and speaking on panels were: John Marsden, Melina Marchetta, Vikki Wakefield, AJ Betts, Lucy Christopher, Michael Gerard Bauer, JC Burke, Anthony Eaton, Kirsty Murray and Matt Ottley. As expected, many of us fan-girled over meeting John.

Class Photo! Authors and Lit Centre staff. 
A better photo can be found on their website.

If anyone is interested, click here for a look at the panel sessions.

Anna, from the Centre For Youth Literature in Melbourne, was prolific at tweeting. Me, not so much. Here are some of my favourite quotes and comments from the conference.














Trying not to fan-girl too much in front of John

One of the conference highlights was a screening of Home and Away by John Marsden and Matt Ottley. Matt has composed music to go along with a reading of the picture book with his illustrations complimented effectively by a symphony orchestra and seventeen-year-old opera singer, Nina Baumer, as well as narration by sixteen-year-old Kyle Green. 

Created as part of The Literature Centre's The Sound of Picture Books, the video is a remarkable and emotive experience that shares the story of an Australian family placed in the position of refugees. While the book was already an important piece of work, the music and narration adds another dimension and left the audience speechless. Hopefully Matt will eventually make it available on YouTube because it is something everyone should watch, but for the time being it is only available at The Literature Centre's bookshop or via Matt's website under Store > DVDs. I highly recommend it.



I got the chance to speak with Melina about the progress of the On the Jellicoe Road film. She's written the script, which was a struggle, but she is now very happy with it. Melina recently wrote a blog post about it here. Currently searching for funding, Melina will share any news as soon as she can. Follow her blog to be the first to know. Melina also let slip that she would love to film it in the southwest of WA. I can only hope this happens so my friends and I can road trip down south (from Perth) and check out the filming!

And Melina is also writing her first adult novel, which sounds intriguing...

"a thriller set in London revolving around two bombings, thirteen years apart, and the impact it has on the family of the accused." - from Melina's blog


Catching some Fremantle sun with Vikki

We also got a little snippet from Vikki's new book. Get excited!!!


I think I have about four or five pics with Amanda from different events :)

I got to meet Lucy! Have you read Stolen? You should.

Thank you to all the authors who shared their stories, knowledge and inspiration over the weekend and a massive thank you to all the staff at The Literature Centre and the volunteers who helped make the Celebrate Reading Conference a wonderful two days.


PS. Stay tuned for post-Christmas signed giveaways from the conference :)

Friday, February 28, 2014

Forever Young at Perth Writers Festival 2014

Last weekend, I attended a talk at the Perth Writers Festival. Chaired by Perth author Julia Lawrinson, the 'Forever Young' panel featured Perth authors Amanda 'AJ' Betts and Joe Ducie, Queenslander Claire Zorn, and Will Kostakis from Sydney. Our lovely outdoor setting at the Tropical Grove, inside the grounds of the University of Western Australia, meant the talk started with the authors being pelted with berries, nuts and bird poo from above. Once the laughter and squeals of disgust died down, the authors were introduced and we were given a little run down of their most recent books and how the books came to be. You can click on the book to be taken to my review in a new window.


http://www.thetalescompendium.com/2013/07/zac-mia-by-aj-betts-blog-tour-review.htmlhttp://www.thetalescompendium.com/2014/02/the-first-third-by-will-kostakis.html
 
It occurred to me about half way through the hour that it would be quite useful to record what they had to say so I could share it with all of you. So the transcript below is after each has introduced themselves and their books and after they were asked why they write for young adults. I've tried to pretty much transcribe the talk word for word although it was quite difficult to hear due to the soundtrack of noisy birds made possible by our location at the Tropical Grove. 

L-R: Julia, Claire, Joe, Will and Amanda
Julia: Do you have an ideal teenager in mind when you are writing? Who is it you imagine you are writing for?

Joe: I picture myself when I was 15. You know, it doesn’t really feel any different *audience laughs*

Will: When I visit schools and I visit teenagers, they are so completely different and I like to think I am writing for myself but really I’m inspired by all the kids I meet and their experiences. When I was in high school, Facebook didn’t exist. There is this whole other world, such as internet on phones, a completely different childhood to the one I grew up in and while I do like to write for myself, I do need to be mindful that it is different to what it was in the mid-noughties.

Claire: Um, Will, when I went to school we didn’t have mobile phones so…. I write roughly for my 15 year old self and I try to scare her a lot. I never would have read something like this (The Sky So Heavy) when I was that age but that’s who I write for.

Amanda: I just write for myself. Every now and then I try to imagine it through teenage eyes and it freaks me out. It actually puts me off, it’s scary, so I just keep it for myself and later in the drafting/editing process I might think about them a little bit more. But when I’m creating I don’t like to have imaginary readers on my shoulders.

Julia: All of you are fairly new writers in that you have just published your first, second or third novel which means you have written an awful lot in the past. What is different about being published now? What’s it like going between your first and second novels? What’s that experience like because you are suddenly aware that you are doing it for people and that people are going to be reading it, reviewing it, and blogging about it?

Joe: It’s been great. It’s humbling. And it’s good to see your book in a bookshop. If anything, it puts a bit of pressure on you to keep it up. It’s still too new but it will be good to see how it goes in the long run. I’m still writing I guess so that’s good.

Claire: I feel the weight of expectation because my book has been embraced as dystopian and semi sci-fi, which well, it doesn’t have any robots so I don’t think it is sci-fi. But my second novel, which will be out in August, is very different and doesn’t have any of those elements in it. No robots. But it does have a joke about robots which is almost as good. But I don’t think I’ve had as much fun this time around which doesn’t sound very good but it is nice to write when there are no expectations. I just think, “I’ll write this down and if no one ever reads it…” You’ve got that freedom.

Julia: So you felt more pressure because you knew that you were going to be sending it to somebody?

Amanda: It doesn’t get easier, the actual physical process of writing a book. Every time I try to write something new I have to learn it all again. I’ve learnt nothing from the last process. I like to try something new. My next book is going to be set in the future in Tasmania because I want to swap very far away from what I have just written, so I have to learn the skills again. But in terms of writing, what it means and how I feel about myself as a writer and the process, it feels really good. It feels really good to say I have three. It feels really nice to see the results of my hard work but also… I forgot what I was going to say *laughs*

Will: Well the big difference for me in terms of attitude from approaching my first book and then my second is when I approached my first book, it was in the middle of all the Harry Potter frenzy. My book was going to be the first of seven that everyone would love and adore but then it came out the same day as Breaking Dawn so you know which one went on to be a really big seller! *laughs* But that wasn’t the only thing standing in my way of success. I like to think that it was *laughs* but… so for me I wasn’t particularly loved by my first publisher and I wasn’t that golden child and you know, you sit there and go, “right, do I pursue a job in an office,” a real job as my mum kept putting it, “or do I do this author thing and see how I go?” The big thing was I was pursuing that job in the office and it wasn’t until that moment when I had that group of girls talking about their grandparents (referring to an earlier story of how The First Third came to be) that I thought, “you know, I want another crack at this.” When I was writing my first book I thought that a career (in writing) was my birthright because I liked creative writing but my second book I realised, “no, it’s not my birthright stop being so arrogant. Sit there and ask yourself, if you had one book and one more story in you and one more story you had to tell someone, what would it be?” So it was more a complete perspective shift rather than a change in my process and that made me love it so much more and it made the bit that came after it so much more rewarding.

Amanda: I remembered what I was going to say! Confidence. It took me ages to write my first novel because I kept going, “I can’t write a novel who do I think I am, I’m going to stop and procrastinate.” But now I know I can do it, so that’s the thing that keeps me going. It’s still hard every time but it’s this trust in myself that this process can work and it’s worth it. So that really helps and that’s what you need as a first time novelist. Trust that there is something at the end of it.

Julia: Does having a legacy publisher (as opposed to self-publishing) make a difference?

Claire: I haven’t ever self-published because when I was starting out self-publishing still had that air of ‘that’s what you do if you can’t a publishing deal’. And that’s really shifted in the last five years perhaps. Now it’s no biggie, you just do it. But for me, I’m the kind of writer who gets to a certain point with my work where I can’t see it any more. You’ve worked on it so much that it no longer means anything and at that point I really need someone else to step in and read it and that’s when publishers are brilliant because you have two, sometimes three, people who will do that. They believe in you and they love your work and they want it to be the best it can be, as you do. And that’s brilliant. I like having a team.

Joe: I’ve done both. My last one I self-published entirely. I have four on the go at the moment, out and about. The first two were through an imprint, not quite self-publishing, not quite traditional publishing, something in-between. That imprint doesn’t exist any more so that tells you all you need to know about imprints. So yeah, the last one I did was entirely self-published. The distribution is a lot more online than through bookshops. At this point your book probably won’t be in a bookshop if you self-publish. But it’s not one or the other any more. You can choose, they call it a hybrid author, you’re in-between and if you do it properly, you can produce a book just as good, if not better, than what a traditional house can put out. It’s an entirely different market now, no one really knows where it's heading but it’s like with movies and music. There have been indies in that for as long as there have been movies and music and I think the self-publishing movement is getting that. It will be interesting to see where it goes in the next few years.

Julia: Joe, because your work is speculative fiction, or whatever label you want to put on it, does that mean there is probably more a ready-made online audience do you think?

Joe: Yeah, you have to find your niche. You have to find a market that you like to write in. Without sounding too arrogant, it’s selling really well, the self-published one. It’s targeted severely towards that particular urban fantasy market. If you pick a niche, something you want to write in, then self-publishing is a viable option.

Amanda: I don’t have the head for that kind of stuff. Sales, and oh my publicist will kill me, but I’m not interested in sales at all. I love writing and I love the process of working with an editor and a publishing house so I am so old school with this. I love sharing that and I wouldn’t trust myself. I don’t have those skills and those business skills to market myself. That’s not where my heart is so I would never consider it. I love being a part of the team, the publishing house team, so I am very lucky with that. But I understand that other people do have much better skills in those areas than I do so I’ll play it safe with the legacy. Is that what they are calling it now?

Julia: That’s what somebody called it the other night….

Claire: That’s what we are going to call it now. Hashtag, people, hashtag *laughs*

Will: I don’t think I am quite equipped to be the person who is out there selling my book to people because I have quite a naturally smug face. If you ever do a google image search of me there is always the eyebrow up that’s like, “hi, I’m an author, I think that makes me cool” *laughs from all* and so I can’t imagine being the person running around saying, “love this book, it’s great.” So the great thing about a publisher is, you know, not everyone inside that publishing house is going to like your book and that’s awesome. I love the people inside the publisher that hate the book and then you get some feedback and you grow from it. But there are those one or two really passionate people there that go out and really push you and they prop you up and at the same time, they go out to the stores and go to the audiences and say, “hey you should read this” and that way I can just be quietly smug in the background.

Amanda: It’s good to have other people barracking for you though. Well not for you, it’s all about the book. They say, “this book is amazing,” because if it was me, and I don’t know if other writers feel this way, but I’m full of self-doubt all the time. But these people are really behind me and I am so grateful for that so it’s nice to have someone out in front of me selling the book.

Claire: Yeah, my next one’s been in my draw for about six or seven years and if it was just up to me, it would never see the light of day. But there are people close to me, and my editors, that are just like, “no we love it.” If it was just up to me, it would stay in the draw.

The questions were then opened up to the audience.

Audience Question: With regards to the content of your books, Will said that he is sort of influenced by teenagers. But, with your imagination, do you realise that you influence those teenagers and how far does your imagination go when you think about these books? Is there a limit, like you can’t cross over that line because it’s a bit too risqué or something?

Will: The big thing with me was that I started writing Loathing Lola when I was in year seven and there was one scene that I actually saved and put in the final book that I wrote when I was in year seven. The thing is, I would never have published that scene that I wrote in year seven because I thought it was too vulgar and I actually changed a lot and I actually toned it down. But the funny thing was that it was actually written by a nerd in year seven. So, you are mindful of what you can and can’t say but really, this time around when I was editing, there are a few risqué parts in the new book but the thing was I had a publisher that sat down and said, “ok, this concerns us a little bit but tell me, justify why this is in the story.” And if I could justify why thematically that had to be there then there was no problem. Really, there is no line you can’t cross so long as it is there and thematically works. If it’s just risky for riskys sake then the publisher will go, “no be smarter”.

Audience Member: As parents, we worry about what might be in a book and I have two daughters who are prolific readers but are still quite young…

Will: The great thing is, talk to your booksellers. Booksellers are really great at knowing which books are great for different audiences. So for me, even though I do say there are risqué parts in this new book, you know I’d be more worried about someone who’s younger not actually liking it. So I think ask your bookseller and they’ll tell you, “no, wait a bit, they will enjoy this book when they are fifteen rather than thirteen” and if you tell them what kind of books your daughters like then they will be able to guide you if your daughters are advanced readers.

Claire: I think for me as well, I was kind of like that. I think I read Looking for Alibrandi when I was eleven and a lot of it was like “woosh” (mimes going over her head) and now I’m a parent as well so I do have this sense of being on both sides of the ‘page’. But the thing with teenagers, and from what I remember from being a teen myself, which I remember all too vividly, is that they have a really strong detector for when you are talking down to them. If you are at all patronising or if you are glossing over anything, they pick up on it straight away and you’ve lost them. That’s what I was like as a reader. If I felt like I was being talked down to or protected from something, I would shut off. But it is a fine line and it is tricky as an author. 

Will Kostakis
Audience Question: AJ, your book has been compared a lot to The Fault in Our Stars because they are both about teenagers with cancer and so I’m wondering what it is like? The Fault in Our Stars is obviously a really famous book at the moment and the movie’s going to come out soon so what is it like to be compared to a famous author? What are the pros and cons? Do you think the pros outweigh the cons?

Amanda: Oh it’s unfortunate for me, I think. I’d been working on Zac and Mia for many years and I was giving it to an author friend of mine to just read part one and get her opinion and she emailed me and said “do you realise there is this new book out called…” and I was like “THE WHAT?! THE WHAT?!” It freaked me out and it took me about a month or so to even get my hands on the book and read it, but within ten pages I realised it was fine because our books were different. And by the time I got to the end of his book, I went, “oh gosh, they’ve got nothing in common except unfortunately that tag for ‘teenagers with cancer’. It is often people who haven’t read my book who go, “oh, you’re writing the same” and yet I’m not writing the same. And people who have read both go, “yeah, they are actually completely different”. So I don’t think my style is compared to his because we’re not the same. I don’t know if it’s a bonus or a drawback that my book came out just after his. I’m upset about John Green and when I meet him I shall tell him so. *laughs* But the thing is, you never know. This book I am working on now, I had the idea nine years ago but by the time it comes out, who knows? Maybe six months before it comes out John Green will come out with a speculative fiction set in Tasmania. So I’ll be, “damn you, my nemesis!” It’s just how it happens. There is no original story except that you’re writing it in your own way and I’m hoping that people aren’t put off by the fact John Green wrote The Fault in Our Stars and they see my book as its own entity.

Claire: The thing that kind of erks me about that kind of thing is I’ve kind of copped the 'John Marsden' tag, which is not a bad tag to have let me say! So Much To Tell You is pretty much why I became a writer, but I haven’t read The Tomorrow Series. *laughs from audience* It’s funny, I don’t think if you’re talking about literary fiction and you’re writing about war, somebody doesn’t stick a hand up a say “oh we’ve already got a book about war”. There are lots of people, unfortunately I think it is one in three people, who have their lives affected by cancer. That’s a lot of stories to tell and as far as teenagers fighting a war, mine aren’t fighting, really, they’re just running, scared.

Will: The weird thing is, I have experience from the other side of the coin. So I’ve met the next Will Kostakis. Will Kostakis isn’t even a thing yet, why would you want to be me!? At the end of the day, it’s really a marketing shorthand and if you could judge a book by its blurb, which is really what’s going on there, or a particular style, it seems now days if you write realistic fiction you are the next John Green. Well no, I’m writing a realistic story. When did it become that he owns realistic stories? So you know, it is just a marketing shorthand but if it gets more people to discover more work then you know... If the next generation want to call themselves the next Will Kostakis, then go for it.

Amanda: The thing is, there were books about teenagers with cancer long before John Green but no one thinks about that. It’s just because John Green is John Green and I honestly thought when Meg told me that, that no publisher would ever want to touch this thing (Zac and Mia). But I went, “you know, stuff it” and entered it in the Text Prize and when they were judging it they went, “you know, we love this book but we’re conscious of what is already out there”. But they took that risk and thought it would be judged in its own right. And I am so glad that they did. It is going to happen again, I am sure of it.

Audience Question: When you write, do you think about what you want to say? Do you start out wanting to say something in particular?

Joe: Well I stole the idea for my last novel from a Nicholas Cage film, so no. *laughs* But to expand a bit, with The Rig, the general idea is kind of a blow to the privatisation of government services, in particular prisons and hospitals. Without making that the entire theme of the novel, it does make a good argument against that so I was thinking about that when I wrote it.

Claire: I wanted to engage in the asylum seeker debate but I also wanted to touch on the tension of not actually being able to help everybody, but at the same time, where does compassion come in and that kind of thing. That’s what I wanted to explore. I don’t think, I hope, I haven’t preached a message. I might have, but I don’t know.

Will: I just really wanted to catch what my life was like at that particular moment and from that obviously themes and messages rose out of it. But at the end of the day, I wanted to tell a story first and foremost and whatever else happened, happened, hopefully organically. There were some bits where I used some character arcs to show different things but at the end of the day it really is about the emotional story you want to tell because, you know, those are the stories that will last forever.

Amanda: I’m the same. Like Will, I never set out with an idea, with something I want to communicate. I wouldn’t finish it. I’m intrigued by an idea and I’m interested in story and it’s probably about two-thirds of the way through the book that I start getting this sense of the heart of it. And then throughout the editing I’ll come back and make sure its cohesive but yeah, it kind of emerges through my subconscious.

Audience Question: Are there any works of fiction that inspired your books or particular characters or settings?

Joe: Anything by Nicolas Cage. *laughs* No, Stephen King was my biggest influence. He always creeps into my work these days.

Will: My big influence is Terry Pratchett. Even though he writes fantasy, that man can do wonderful things with innuendoes. *laughs* If I’m half the writer he is by his age then I’ll consider myself very lucky.

Amanda: Probably not a writer for me but individual books, especially the ones I was reading as a teenager because I would read them over and over again. So Robin Klein or even back to Roald Dahl. And Douglas Adams. I love Douglas Adams. The crazy humour. Everything I read becomes a part of me, I don’t have a real hero.

Claire: I think for me Robin Klein was huge and I would read her books over and over again, particularly Came Back To Show You I Could Fly which is about a girl with a drug addiction which I had no idea that was what it was about because I was about ten . But she was huge and Marsden’s So Much to Tell You and Letters from the Inside. And Douglas Adams. There’s even robots in that *laughs*

*********************
Thank you to all the authors for speaking at the Perth Writers Festival. I look forward to seeing you and reading your books in the future.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

2014 Perth Writers Festival Program

It's that time of year again! Last week the program for the 2014 Perth Writers Festival was revealed. Held on the beautiful grounds of the University of Western Australia, the four day event (20th - 23rd Feb) is bursting at the seams with local and international authors.


I will admit that this year there appears to be less talks featuring young adult authors, with only one free talk really exciting me. There are however lots more publishing industry professionals taking part in sessions and workshops that may be of interest to you. 

I have included a couple of events below but there are many more on offer. Images are screen shots taken from the official program. For more details and to match up the event numbers, please download the PDF brochure here.

One of the few YA events

Full day publishing seminar

 

There are also writing workshops for kids held on the Family Day 
(Sunday 23rd Feb)
An example of a writing workshop for kids

And remember, the Writers Festival is part of the larger Perth International Arts Festival which features plenty of other events being held throughout February. This includes theatre and dance, classical and contemporary music, visual arts and film.

Download the full Writers Festival Program here.

Saturday, December 28, 2013

Reading Matters 2013 Recap

This year I attended the 10th biennial Reading Matters Conference in Melbourne, hosted by the Centre for Youth Literature. This was no cheap or easy feat as I flew over from Perth for the weekend at the pointy end of my uni semester. But it was well worth it and I wanted to share the experience with you all. Unfortunately this post has been sitting in my 'drafts' folder since June, long forgotten when uni got hectic, much like the blog, which has suffered this year due to my increasing work load. So even though it is six months late, I do still want a record of the amazing time I had so here is a little recap of the 2013 Reading Matters Conference.


Reception
Thursday 30th May 2013
The conference kicked off with a reception at the State Library of Victoria where all the conference guests could mingle with each other and the visiting authors. I ran into some lovely librarians from Perth and various other book industry people. I then spied blogger Danielle of ALPHA Reader and Adele from Persnickety Snark, who also now happens to be the Program Coordinator at the Centre for Youth Literature! Adele then made a point of introducing me to all the lovely authors, which was insanely intimidating (but VERY much appreciated) because, hello, YA royalty! I met Gayle Forman, Libba Bray, Myke Bartlett, Vikki Wakefield (who I met earlier in the year at PWF), Fiona Wood, Emily Gale and Leanne Hall and everyone was so lovely to meet and chat to, and many knew me via my blog which was so flattering!

You can check out Danielle's recap of the reception here.

L-R: Danica (Pages and Pages), Tim Sinclair, me, Gayle, Danielle, Adele and Fiona.

With Gayle, Libba, Danielle and Adele
With Myke and Vikki
Conference Day 1
Friday 31st May 2013
The first panel of the day was chaired by Adele and titled Action! with Gayle Forman, Tim Sinclair and Raina Telgemeier discussing writing about teen experiences. When asked why they choose to write about teens, Tim said because grown ups are boring (agreed!) and Gayle said it's about reliving the teen years and making them better. Raina commented that kids are the same no matter where they are from, they all have hopes and dreams and when Adele asked if YA is a genre or a readership, Tim replied, "it's awesome", much to the agreement of everyone in the room!

Some other snippets from the session:
  • Gayle compared librarians to crack dealers in that they distribute things that are addictive. This got lots of laughs from the audience which was largely made up of librarians.
  • Gayle's idea for Just One Day came from a dream about a warehouse in Paris.
  • Gayle didn't think If I Stay would 'go' anywhere when she was writing it (It became a best-seller seller and the film adaptation is currently filming).
  • The lovable Dee from Just One Day actually came from another novel idea which she had 'shelved'
  • Tim said, his novel Run, which is written in verse and about parkour, is about tricking people into reading poetry
  • Tim got huge laughs when he commented that the poetry section in bookstores is where books go to die (as a poet, he is allowed to say this so poetry lovers, don't go hating!) and that he would be upset if his books were put there.
With Gayle
At question time, the authors were asked what their next projects were. Gayle is working on a suicide/mystery/love story tentatively titled A Code Unknown (now recently announced as I Was Here). Tim is working on "an actual book" as opposed to a verse novel and Raina has a companion to Smile, (which sold out at the conference bookstore within the first half hour of the 2 day conference!) called Sisters, which will be released in 2014. Gayle also told us that the If I Stay film was starting to come together with a new director (RJ Cuter) and that they were in the final discussions as to who would play Mia. As we all now know, If I Stay is currently filming with the amazing Chloe Grace Moretz cast as Mia and will be released sometime in 2014.

Next was a segment called Graphics Alive in which illustrator Sarah Howell did an exercise on drawing emotions. She wrote different emotions on  a piece of paper and then asked us what our facial features did and then drew them. She also showed us how Grimace works, a blending emotions simulator.


The second panel of the day was chaired by Jordi Kerr from the Centre for Youth Literature and was titled Is there an app for that? It featured Fiona Wood, John Flanagan and Paul Callaghan and discussed "stories and communities in a brave new world". I was busy listening and forgot to take notes but I did scribble down a couple of things Fiona said, such as "I write a book I'd love to read". When talking about her new novel Wildlife (a companion to her debut Six Impossible Things), Fiona said she felt Lou and Fred didn't have enough page time in Six Impossible Things and her Wildlife protagonist, Sibylla, needed a friend like Lou. I also took this picture of John checking out photos of the LARP (Live Action Role Play) of his series Ranger's Apprentice...

John checking out LARP of Ranger's Apprentice
The big surprise of the day, possibly the whole conference, was a talk by UK author Keith Gray called Gatekeepers - the good, the bad and my mother. Keith was a fantastic speaker and really hit the nail on the head when it came to discussing people stopping kids and young adults from reading certain books. 

A few golden nuggets from Keith:
  • "Reading is about opening your mind, learning to look at the world from a strangers point of view"
  • "I am yet to hear of a convicted criminal being influenced by James and the Giant Peach" - in regards to banned and challenged books in the US.
  • "The best gatekeepers are the readers themselves"
  • "Fiction is a safety net"
  • "Trust the reader"
Keith's speech in full can be found on the Centre for Youth Literature's website and I highly recommend it.

Me with Keith
By this point I had pretty much given up trying to take notes as I was too busy listening to each of the speakers. The afternoon featured the Everyone's a critic session with Myke Bartlett, Alison Croggon and Morris Gleitzman, and Challenge accepted with Ambelin Kwaymullina, Andrew McGahan and Garth Nix.

"I never dreamed of writing epic anything cos I get sore wrists" - Morris Gleitzman
"I was writing for the kids who didn't have the perfect life" - Ambelin Kwaymullina

The final session of the day, You can't say that! was with Libba Bray, Vikki Wakefield and Gabrielle Williams. I managed to scribble down that Libba said in the US, censorship is more about language than sex or violence. And Gabrielle told us how her US publishers wanted to replace the character of Jesus in her novel The Reluctant Hallelujah, with Elvis.

Libba, Vikki, Gabrielle and Kim Kane
And what's next for Vikki, Libba and Gabrielle? Vikki is working on a love story with a dual point of view. Libba is working on the sequel to The Diviners with all new evil and 1920's avengers. And Gabrielle is writing a novel set in 1986 with four characters, two who are 17 and two who are 23. There is crime, intrigue and romance.

There were many more amazing quotes but I just couldn't get them down fast enough and listen at the same time! Danielle was far more efficient than me and has written a tremendous recap of all the Day One talks in full detail, making you feel like you were sitting there next to us. Check out Danielle's post over at ALPHA Reader.

Conference Day 2
Saturday 1st June 2013
Day Two started with Raina Telgemeier discussing My life in comics. Raina retold how her comic career began and evolved and shared with us the long process it takes to create her comics. She talked about what inspired her to create Smile and Drama and then did a little illustration for us on the projector. As well as creating Sisters, the sequel to Smile, Raina continues to turn the classic Babysitters Club stories into graphic novels.


Raina

Zac over at My Best Friends are Books has done a great recap of this session here.

What's yours is mine was second on the bill for the day with Alison Croggon, Andrew McGahan and Gabrielle Williams exploring "creation through adaptation". Gabrielle discussed how the structure of The Reluctant Hallelujah was influenced by The Wizard of Oz, with each of her characters with resembling characteristics. For those who have read it, Dodie - Dorothy, Coco - Toto, Enron - Scarecrow, Jones - Tinman, and Taxi - Lion.


"Sometime you can go on an adventure that isn't about you, it's bigger than yourself" - Gabrielle Williams

See Danielle's post for further info on this session.


Alison, Andrew and Gabrielle
Myke Bartlett, Fiona Wood and Libba Bray were up next to discuss gender and identity in YA with Jordi Kerr. This was quite a highly-charged session with panel members and the audience getting riled up about the constant 'distinction' between girl books and boy books, who will read them, who won't, and the marketing ploys of publishing houses to appeal to who they think will be the most likely readers. 


Libba, Myke, Fiona and Jordi
I'm sure you have all noticed the increase in the number of YA novels with headless girls wearing beautiful dresses (here is a post I recently found that places a bunch of these side-by-side) on covers and I am reminded of a talk I saw last year with Melina Marchetta who said she was very opinionated as to how the cover of Quintana of Charyn was to look. The character is not some pretty, magical looking girl and she didn't want the cover to resemble another 'made-up girl' floating through a forest or beach or whatever (ok, I'm paraphrasing here, but that is essentially what she said) and not reflect the character in any way. When I worked in the book store, it would make me so mad when parents wouldn't buy a excellent book I recommended just because they didn't think their son would read the book because it had a female protagonist, or a girl on the cover, or god-forbid, the author was female! It was/is so utterly frustrating. The Maureen Johnson Coverflip Experiment was brought up during the session and if you haven't heard of it, check it out.


"Books are about understanding the 'other'" - Libba Bray
"Read Books, become better humans" -Jordi Kerr

For a play-by-play recap of this session, check out Danielle's detailed post here.


With Fiona
Next up was I sing the body electric with Paul Callaghan, and then Outsider, outside with Garth Nix, Tim Sinclair and Vikki Wakefield. By this stage I had completely given up taking notes so please stop by Zac's post or Danielle's post to see what these fantastic people had to say.


With Vikki
The Inky long list was announced in the afternoon which is an annual teen literature award run by Inside A Dog, the Centre for Youth Literature's website, and winners are voted for online by the readers of the website. The nominees are listed below, with the winner for each highlighted in green as they were announced a couple of weeks ago.

Gold Inky
Australian Award
Fire in the Sea by Myke Bartlett
Girl Defective by Simmone Howell
My Life as an Alphabet by Barry Jonsberg
Cry Blue Murder by Kim Kane and Marion Roberts
Life in Outer Space by Melissa Keil
The Interrogation of Ashala Wolf by Ambelin Kwaymullina
A Confusion of Princes by Garth Nix
City by James Roy
Friday Brown by Vikki Wakefield
Wildlife by Fiona Wood

Silver Inky
International Award
The Diviners by Libba Bray
This is Not a Test by Courtney Summers
See You at Harry's by Jo Knowles
Hostage Three by Nick Lake
Every Day by David Levithan
The Originals by Cat Patrick
The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater
Drama by Raina Telgemeier
Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
The Fifth Wave by Rick Yancey

To finish the conference, Gayle Forman, Morris Gleitzman and Keith Gray where guests for the Unleashing YA panel. Zac has a great recap of this session over at My Best Friends are Books which I recommend checking out and Danielle once again has this session covered in her Day Two post.

Gayle, Morris, Keith and Adele
This was my first Reading Matters Conference and I had such a wonderful time and met so many great people. It was definitly a highlight of my year and I look forward to the 2015 conference. Big shout out to the Centre for Youth Literature crew for putting together such a terrific program and for all their hard work leading up to and over the conference weekend. You guys rock! x

With Libba Bray
Bumped into Emily Gale and cornered her to sign
her debut novel, Steal My Sunshine
The swag of signed books I had to fit into my suitcase...
My beautiful signed books <3 span="">


Other recaps of Reading Matters 2013
Danielle at ALPHA Reader
Zac at My Best Friends are Books
Adele at Persnickety Snark
Vikki Wakefield's blog


I was lucky enough to also be invited by Gayle to hangout with her, Annette and Rachel, fellow bloggers who run Looking on the Side of Wonder. The day after the conference finished, we met Gayle at her hotel and then walked through Carlton Gardens to Brunswick Street where we did some window shopping and grabbed lunch.



I hope everyone checked out the #yamatters tag on Twitter because there were some truly awesome quotes put up over the weekend (in particular on the 31st May and 1st June) and the hashtag is ongoing so keep an eye out.
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