Showing posts with label adamselzer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adamselzer. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Author Interview: Adam Selzer

Not only does Adam's Interview mark my first Author Interview but I got really giddy at the prospect of it.  For those who didn't read my review of Adam's book, I Kissed a Zombie and I liked It, I suggest you do.   I think it's great, seriously, the book holds so much more then just a single level of context. So really, Adam, thanks for joining me!

How's it feel to be my first Author Interview.  Pretty Fabulous, right?   

Totally! 

Moving on to the burning questions.  Zombies.  Why?  Did you wake up one night from some dream about a Zombie driving a powder blue car and decide it was fate?  Was it part of a silent protest? 

Well, 10 years ago I wrote a song called "I Thought She Was a Goth" about a guy who thinks his girlfriend is a goth, but finds out she's actually been dead the whole time.  In 2009 my publisher asked if I could do a book with that plot - and if I could write it, revise it, and turn it in in under a month.  I thought trying to do a plausible paranormal romance, one that really deals with all the issues you'd get from dating the undead (or even dating at all - these are issues that get left out of most books), would be a fun challenge.  
Of course, I had to do it with as much sarcasm as possible. That's part of why Alley is so awful at the beginning - she's funny, but she's pretty awful. I wanted it to be a redemption story, and you can't redeem someone who doesn't need it! 

I think it is law I ask you this next question, Adam.  So please excuse the possible redundancy.  Is there a tale to tell about becoming a writer?  Was it some life-long quest or something that just sort of happened?

Really, it comes down to a quest for having a purposeful work life (I stole that phrase from Springsteen). It seemed like all of the jobs out there were either working for some useless company or making websites for other useless companies. I wanted to do something that mattered more to me. Writing geek empowerment books seemed like a good way to do it.

So, is there anything you can tell me about a Zombie follow-up?  I know I am totally game for another one.  Really, I think I need some sort of Team Doug or Team Zombie shirt.

The follow-up is coming out in about a year - it has unicorns and fairies and vampires, but no zombies this time. The "real" title is FAIRY GODMOFO, but there's no WAY we'd get a book with a title like that into Barnes and Noble, so they're calling it "EXTRAORDINARY: THE TRUE STORY OF MY FAIRY GODPARENT, WHO ALMOST KILLED ME, SMELLED AWFUL, AND CERTAINLY NEVER MADE ME A PRINCESS."   It's sort of a take-off of all those books where girls think they'll just die if they don't get to go to the dance. And it's a musical, too - there are several points in the book where, if the book were being acted out onstage, they could break into a song from THE MUSIC MAN without changing more than a couple of lines. There's even a Wells Fargo Wagon in it - it's filled with unicorn poop.

Shortly after that I'll have a non-paranormal one that I think is going to be called TANGLED UP IN BLUE. It's about a girl who gets over a crush by embarking on a "holy quest" with a couple of misfits who've started their own religion. That one's not a musical, but there are a lot of jokes about FULL HOUSE in it.

I heartily approve of Team Doug shirts. 

Back to the writing thing.  Is there a certain something you have to have in order to write?  You know, like a mucho-vente-frapa-coffee. (I don't drink coffee, can you tell?)  Maybe a playlist on your I-Pod, or maybe you still use a Walkman?  Maybe you take comfort in combing your hair into a certain hairstyle?  And yes, I did read up on you a little and know you totally sported a mullet.  *Gasp!*  Care to comment on that too?

Every single morning I  take a picture of my fold-out chalkboard (http://twitpic.com/2r0tx2 - also at your left) so I don't forget anything,  and walk to the coffee shop down the block - I'm usually there the minute they open. I take a cup of coffee back to my usual spot and get to work. if they have a good radio station is on, I listen to that - but I also make two playlists per project: one for the rough draft (composed of songs that the narrator would like, songs I'm into at the time, songs that have the right sort of emotional content, etc), and one for revising called the Ragged Glory playlist. I want all of my books to have a sense of ragged glory (I stole THAT one from Will McRobb and Chris Viscardi, who I think stole it from Neil Young). I modify that playlist a little to suit each book, but it's all songs with a very specific, rough-but-heroic quality. It's usually heavy on The Hold Steady, Pearl Jam, The Who, and Green Day.

And, yeah, I had a mullet for about a year in high school. I was trying to grow my hair into a Jim Morrison cut, but my hair doesn't work like that - if I don't cut it, I end up with a combination afro/mullet. And I COULDN'T cut it, really - after the curls grew out, I started getting harassed by redneck kids who thought that having curly hair meant that I was gay (and/or a satanist, which isn't much less of a logical conclusion). And I don't mean that they just teased me - I got chased with knives. I had to keep the hair out of spite - at least until I started dating a girl who insisted on cutting the mullet part off.

I see where you participated in a Banned Books Week Event: We've Been Banned.  Have you been banned or challenged?  Would you like to comment on what you feel about Book Banning?

I've been challenged a few times, mainly for my first book, HOW TO GET SUSPENDED AND INFLUENCE PEOPLE. The back cover of the hardback had the tagline "You don't have to be smart to be a smart ass, but it helps." That set off a few alarms, but the big one was in Boise last year. Some woman tried to get it thrown out of the library, and I guess it was a slow news week in Idaho, because it really blew up out there for a few days.  I grew up in a town where book banning was a pretty popular sport and did battle with groups of would-be censors often (they parents of kids who think curly hair means you're a satanist are probably the ones who made headlines trying to ban harry potter in that town a few years back). So I know what motivates these people, and i know (somewhat) how they think. As such, I'm happy to annoy them. The more time they spend going after me for the word "ass," the less time they'll have to go to, say, birther rallies.

But I am very careful with content - if the chain stores think your book is "ages 14+," rather than "10+," they'll order about half as many. The first draft of "Zombie" was a bit more explicit. My editor and I decided it would probably help get it off the ground if I toned it down. But I'm not sure that it DID help, so I sort of regret it now.

If there was one thing a reader can take from your book, I Kissed a Zombie and I Liked it, what would it be?

Same message as all my books really: it's okay if your life sucks in high school. Some people get really disappointed when they turn 16 and life isn't the way it looked on Saved by the Bell (showing my age here) or Archie Comics. It's okay. People who say high school is the best years of your life are miserable people. Don't be one of those. That's sort of the moral of all of my books, except for history books I write (for which the moral is probably "don't listen to hucksters....and drink your juice, or you'll get scurvy.")

So, on your web page I came across a certain PSA (Public Service Announcement.)  Care to comment on this?  How did you get Claudia Gray to participate with you in this?  If that were me, I'd be totally stoked she held my book. 
Claudia was at my new year's party, so I cajoled her into it. She lives nearby, so my wife and I meet up with her to eat cupcakes and talk about Dr. Who pretty regularly. She's awesome.




And one last one.  I have to ask.  Team Edward or Team Jacob?

I honestly haven't thought about this at ALL, but Jacob seems like less of a douchebag to me. Now, if I were Bella's guidance counselor, I'd tell her to get out of Forks, move to a better town, and don't worry about settling down with a guy just yet. You shouldn't base your life around a guy you meet in high school. I guess I'm team Bella. But we know how that ends.

Wow, there you have it.  Thanks Adam for stopping by!  It was totally fab!
Interested in more from Author Adam Selzer? Check him out....

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Review: I Kissed a Zombie and I Liked It

I Kissed a Zombie and I Liked It by Adam Selzer
Date Released: January 26, 2010
Published by:
Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Pages:  Paperback, 177 pages
Young Adult
Overall:Photobucket

Algonquin “Alley” Rhodes, the high school newspaper’s music critic, meets an intriguing singer, Doug, while reviewing a gig. He’s a weird-looking guy—goth, but he seems sincere about it, like maybe he was into it back before it was cool. She introduces herself after the set, asking if he lives in Cornersville, and he replies, in his slow, quiet murmur, “Well, I don’t really live there, exactly. . . .”

When Alley and Doug start dating, Alley is falling so hard she doesn’t notice a few odd signs: he never changes clothes, his head is a funny shape, and he says practically nothing out loud. Finally Marie, the school paper’s fashion editor, points out the obvious: Doug isn’t just a really sincere goth. He’s a zombie. Horrified that her feelings could have allowed her to overlook such a flaw, Alley breaks up with Doug, but learns that zombies are awfully hard to get rid of—at the same time she learns that vampires, a group as tightly-knit as the mafia, don’t think much of music critics who make fun of vampires in reviews. . . .

Synopsis via Goodreads

My Thoughts:

I honestly have no clue how to write this review.  I've been sitting here for probably an hour staring at my screen looking for the right words for this. Really, I have no clue.

Alley Rhodes shouldn't have been a character that I enjoyed reading.  She was nasty, judgmental and one of the mean girls I couldn't stand in high school.  Yet, I loved her.  Even her friends, who were no better then her in all of their Vicious Circle glory, had me giggling even with the little character development there was.

Our main character who starts out as a rather judgmental and close-minded, jaded teenager comes-of-age by way of one of our lives most memorable and life changing events- finding our first true love.  Unfortunately for Alley, later self-dubbed Gonk (the middle 'noise' of her full name), she has to over come several prejudices (which I must say she does quite easily with the realization that her attitude wasn't exactly a positive one) to allow herself to continue loving the boy, well Zombie, that captured her heart by way of music.

This story wasn't only eye catching with it's cover and it's title, it was part parody, part epic-ill-fated romance, comedy and wait for it..... a story with lay-low morals.  Yes! I said it!  Deep within the confines of this zombierific-love-story there are morals to be found- morals that I didn't plan on finding.  Of course, these morals didn't come in the form of angel-like characters, but still, they were there. We aren't given a Twilight worthy happy-ending, but I found the ending fulfilling of the story.

I Kissed a Zombie and I Liked it was an awesome quick read!  One which perhaps lacked some of the makings of an truly brilliant YA fiction read but I couldn't help but love it.  It is definitely one that you have to have a sense of humor to read.

Cover:Photobucket 
Characters:Photobucket 
Plot:Photobucket 
Overall:Photobucket 


Check out my interview with Author Adam Selzer Here!