If you haven’t had the opportunity to watch Roger Sutton, of the Horn Book Reader, as he interviews reknowned children’s novelist Richard Peck than you need to check it out (see below).
It is a fairly lengthy interview but Peck has a lot of worthwhile things to say to those who write for children.
As an adult writing about a newsworthy topic (such as gay marriage), you need to be careful not to preach. Peck deals with this by always employing a youthful narrator. This keeps the adult author from stealing the show.
That said, Peck also warns us not to write with complete sympathy. Parents are for sympathy. Young readers need writers who are willing to tell them hard truths including the fact that not everyone is gifted.
Writers can make even tough truths palatable by delivering them with a big spoonful of humor. This is how Peck created The Best Man, a book about being gay and gay marriage that is synicle and funny and true, but without the tragedy of the earlier gay novels.
There is so much more than this in the interview including tips on how to keep modern technology from destroying the tension you need to build a story. I’ve always loved Peck’s books, but after this interview I may have a fangirl thing going on.
–SueBE

Is your writing a priority? I always say yes but I’m not sure that that has been true this past month.
I’ve been thinking a lot about audio books lately – what makes a good audio book and what doesn’t. In part, this has to do with my recent listening experience. My family listened to The Blackthorn Key on a recent road trip. Excellent book. Actually it was perfect for the three of us because it combines science, history, a mystery and codes. What more could you ask for?
I love it when I find interviews with fellow authors. This week, I discovered Library of Congress interviews with nonfiction author Tonya Bolden. When I was reading the description of her book
Last night we watched an old episode of Bones. They were trying to solve the murder of a body builder who had been partying on the Jersey shore.
Last weekend when I was at the All Write Now! Conference, I witnessed my first slush pile reading panel. It’s a little different from a first pages panel and works like this.
Too bad I’m not writing a book set in the 1970s. Hmm. Maybe I should just shift the date on the Cold War mystery. I’m not too far to do that. I’ve gotten to do some extra research this week. Why? Because while I was out yesterday our internet went out.
As most of you probably know, an elevator pitch is a 60 second pitch, something short enough to share on an elevator ride. It needs to hook the agent or editor and make them want more. Hint: Saying that you don’t know how to describe your story is not the way to go. If you can’t describe it, you probably aren’t familiar enough with it.
This Saturday I was down in Cape Girardeau for the All Write Now Conference put on by that chapter of the Missouri Writer’s Guild. I gave a talk on writing short nonfiction for young readers. I actually gave this talk twice but it is really interesting how participants’ questions lead you into different territory. Although it started out the same, it turned into two very different presentations.