Author Archives: Wendy Garfinkle

YA Reader’s Dream


I’m absolutely salivating over this giveaway by ACROSS THE UNIVERSE Series author Beth RevisShare the Love of YA: http://networkedblogs.com/FgKuk of a library (almost 50 books!) of SIGNED YA novels – winning would really MAKE my Christmas! – And I would love to keep it to myself so I have a better chance of winning, but (ironically) my chances of increase when I share the news, so….

I’ve posted before about my recent on-going love affair with YA books, but as it’s the month of giving thanks (though thanksgiving should happen every month, don’t you think?), I’m once again expressing my thanks and love for YA. Since I ungraciously (at first) caved about a year ago (seduced by the evocative cover of Laini Taylor’s THE DAUGHTER OF SMOKE & BONE) to the enchantment of YA, I just can’t get enough. I’ve lost myself for hours within the pages of such tomes as Suzanne Collins’ THE HUNGER GAMES Trilogy, Sarah J. Maas’ THRONE OF GLASS, Leigh Bardugo’s SHADOW & BONE, Robin LeFevers’ GRAVE MERCY and Laini Taylor’s very worth sequel DAYS OF BLOOD & STARLIGHT (LOVE the titles of this series!). There are so many more worth mentioning – and reviewing (I’ve got to finish and post those reviews!) – but it would be a very long post indeed if I were to list ALL my favorites.

So, if you love books and YA novels in particular, as I do, then head right over to Beth Revis’ blog and complete your own entry(ies) for her signed YA novels giveaway!

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It’s the simple things…


Once again I find myself grateful that my kiddo IS NOT a bus rider. No. I cart him to school each morning, and my mother is kind enough to pick him up each afternoon, pitching in with homework duty (she deserves a medal!!) until I arrive home from work.

With all the issues Broward County School District (that’s us) has had this new school year in not getting bus numbers & route assignments out to families prior to the start of school today, thousands of parents were forced to stand in line at the district bus depot this past weekend to try and get some answers. A friend of mine who has two daughters, one entering 6th grade, the other entering 8th, told me all they have are their bus passes. They don’t know the bus number or route. Her girls will just have to stand at the pick up and get on the bus that comes and sort it all out at school. Meh!

So even though the morning rush causes anxiety sometimes: lighting the proverbial fire under my son, who wears a uniform to school – thank God – packing his lunch – I think that’s going to become a do-it-the-night-before-and-store-it-in-the-‘fridge task – getting myself ready (whatever doesn’t need to be ironed and helps me look thinner than the scale says I am), and breakfast for both of us – he’s going to be fixing his own breakfast from now on and I usually eat when I get to work – I’m doubly thankful that I “get” to sleep until approximately 6:20 each morning, letting him sleep until 6:40, not having to rise at the ungodly hour of 5:00 to be ready for a 6:30 (or whatever time they pick up middle school kids these days) bus pickup. I know, I know, it wouldn’t BE so much of a morning rush if we both rose half an hour earlier – but neither of us are morning persons…er, people…. more’s the pity.

My poor child didn’t quite make it through it first day of middle school. In homeroom (a new term for me to add to my repertoire – I was in a private school & then homeschooled), he hyper-extended his left arm a bit while stretching (as confirmed by the doctor). He’s dominate right, but his left shoulder was bothering him enough that he couldn’t concentrate on his work. So grandmother was kind enough to pick him up early and take him to the doctor. So the rest of first day of 6th grade has been spent reading, drawing and otherwise being completely bored out of his video-game-loving mind. That oughta remind him to be careful next time he stretches in school. : – )

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(Re-)Discovering the Magic of YA Novels


I used to avoid YA novels on principal. Many moons ago, when I was a teenager, the Young Adult novel market was a small one and many of the books I came across were romance, which were great until I realized real life doesn’t work that way and in my disappointment, turned to fantasy – still my favorite genre – which hadn’t yet exploded onto the YA scene. (One author I discovered who DID write YA fantasy even back then, who I still read today, was/is Mercedes Lackey.) So I deliberately avoided the YA section in bookstores.

Then four years ago, I heard about this phenomenon called “Twilight.” The movie posters interested me – yes, I’m just that shallow – and I’d seen the first three novels fly off the shelves at my local Barnes and Noble and wondered what all the hype was about. This was a Young Adult novel. I didn’t think it held any magic for me.

I read the book anyway. And then I read the next one, and the third and the fourth. After seeing the movie, I reread the entire series. Then re-watched the movie. Several times. I’ve watched every sequel – own them, in fact – and greatly anticipate the final film – come on November! My cadre of writer acquaintances for the most part view Stephanie Meyers as a red-headed step-child of the writing market. And after writing my own novel – which took me two years instead of Meyer’s reported three months – I concede that they may have a point. But the woman is making big bucks on her series, not to mention the royalties she earns on the movies and all the movie merch.

I remained skeptical, however, of YA novels in general, despite the recurring recommendations of my best friend, a fellow writer. When one of my mentors suggested that my debut novel might be a good fit for the YA market, I adamantly refused to consider the possibility.

Last year I began seeing articles and cast announcements about The Hunger Games movie, a full year before its theatrical release. I held out on reading the novel until February of this year – not only was it YA, but also post-apocalyptic dystopian (try saying that fast!), a sub-genre I’d never been a fan of. The Hunger Games only lasted three days. By the end of one week, I’d completely absorbed the trilogy. Those three novels grabbed hold of me, shook and slapped me around, and evoked emotions I rarely feel even reading adult sci/fi fantasy novels. I laughed, cried, snickered and yelled at the characters. I wanted to BE Katniss Everdeen – another state of emotion I rarely feel with my beloved adult sci/fi fantasy novels. And experiencing the movie only drew me deeper into the disturbing magic of The Hunger Games.

In the last five months, I’ve deliberately haunted the YA sections of bookstores and scooped up every novel that attracted my attention – as finances have allowed. I’m trying my hand at writing reviews – some of which will appear in this blog – to share my love for these novels, to increase my writing/reviewer creds, and to increase my reading-as-a-writer acuity…And I’ve slowly thawed to the idea that my novel might be a good fit for this  market.

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