Cover Reveal: Eleanor by Johnny Worthen

I’m really excited about Eleanor by Johnny Worthen, available Spring 2014. Johnny says, “Eleanor is a modest girl, unremarkable but extraordinary, young but old, malleable but fixed. She is scared and confused. She is a liar and a thief. Eleanor is not what she appears to be.” Eleanor is a young adult paranormal novel published by Jolly Fish Press.  Isn’t the cover beautiful?

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Author Interview with Amie & Bethanie Borst

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Mother and daughter writing duo Amie and Bethanie Borst just published their first book in a fractured fairy tale series called Cinderskella. They stopped by the blog to answer a few of my niele questions.

What inspired Cinderskella?

Amie: I would say Bethanie inspired Cinderskella.

Bethanie: Being nearly bored to tears when my school librarian was telling my class about fairy tales and Cinderella retellings.

Amie: Well, that’s probably not the nicest way to put it…. Perhaps it might be best to read the full post about our inspiration at Ann Marie’s blog.

Writing as team can be tough when only one person can type at a time! What are some of the ways you work together to create this amazing series?

Amie:  Thankfully we have more than one computer in our house! I use my laptop dedicated to writing while Bethanie is on the family desktop computer.  Typically I’ll ask her to write a particular scene, she’ll type it up in an email and then send it to me. I’ll copy and paste that scene it into the manuscript.  Other times she’ll sit across from me at the table and I’ll read what we’ve written aloud. She’ll usually stop me mid-sentence, tell me it’s lame and then she fixes it orally while I type the non-lame new stuff into the manuscript.

Bethanie: My mom had me write it up with pen and paper. Then she’d type it up to her liking. Then I’d tell her it’s lame. She should have just done it the way I said.

Amie: When Bethanie was younger – before she could really use a computer or had an email account – she did write it by hand.  I’d correct her grammar and punctuation, which sometimes affected the voice. So we’d have to change it to make it sound more authentic. As Bethanie grew, so did our teamwork and writing strategy. Our second book was done mostly via email as I first stated.  We also create a story board out of poster board and post it notes – that’s really our sounding board, giving us a starting ground from which to write the story.

Bethanie: Why do they have to be color-coded posted notes?

Amie: So we can see the different parts of our story.

Bethanie: But that’s so boring.

Amie: Would you rather they all be one color? How would you tell the parts of the story apart?

Bethanie: Ah….nah. Nevermind. Can we do it in a collage form so it’ll at least look cool?

Amie: No, we can’t do it in a collage form so it’ll look cool. *shakes head*

If you could change one thing about your writing partner what would it be?

Amie: Nothing. I love her input and suggestions. She really has wild ideas and isn’t afraid to implement them.

Bethanie: I don’t know. I guess I wish she wouldn’t read aloud. I’m not an auditory learner.

Amie: But you’re not learning – we’re reading and writing.

Bethanie: Still, I won’t remember it if you read it aloud.

Amie: (That part is probably true. Bethanie has CAPD and ADD) That’s why I print it off for you to read.

Bethanie: But then I would have to re-read it. For like the fifth time.

Amie: Welcome to the world of being an author.

Bethanie: Ugh. I wish this conversation would stop.

Amie: *Snort* Lehua, look what you’ve gotten us into!

(And nooooo….this NEVER happens when we’re writing! *wink, wink*)

What’s next in the Cinderskella universe?

Bethanie: Little Dead Riding Hood. It’s a book about a vampire. It’s about…*gaze drifts to television*

Amie: Turn off the TV!

Bethanie: No, no, no. It’s not distracting me. I promise.

Amie: *gives ‘I don’t believe you’ evil-eye*

Bethanie: I don’t know what to say. It’s a book. *gaze drifts back to the television*

Cinderskella CoverAmie: Little Dead Riding Hood is Scarlet Small’s story, who just so happens to be a vampire. She enjoys drinking Bloody Tom’s (Tom is short for tomato) and isn’t sure of how to adapt to her new middle-school. You’d think being over one hundred years old, she’d have the “fitting-in” thing boiled down to a science, but Scarlet’s not your average middle-schooler. You see, when you’re the new kid at school it really sucks. But when you’re a new kid and a vampire, well then it just bites!

Thanks for dropping by Amie and Bethanie! Cinderskella is published by Jolly Fish Press and available from Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

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