Book Trailer – RUMP

There are some good book trailers. There are some okay ones. And then there’s this one that’s absolutely adorable.

Fantastic, right? There’s a book trailer done right!

Rump: The True Story of Rumpelstiltskin by Liesl Shurtliff comes out April 9th, and it’s already received a starred review by Kirkus. Here’s what it’s about:

In a magical kingdom where your name is your destiny, 12-year-old Rump is the butt of everyone’s joke.

Rump has never known his full name—his mother died before she could tell him. So all his life he’s been teased and bullied for his half-a-name. But when he finds an old spinning wheel, his luck seems to change. For Rump discovers he can spin straw into gold. Magical gold.

His best friend Red Riding Hood warns him that magic is dangerous—and she’s right! That gold is worth its weight in trouble. And with each thread he spins, Rump weaves himself deeper into a curse.

There’s only one way to break the spell: Rump must go on a quest to find his true name, along the way defending himself against pixies, trolls, poison apples, and one beautiful but vile-mannered queen. The odds are against him, but with courage and friendship—and a cheeky sense of humor—Rump just might triumph in the end.

Liesl and I share the same agent, so I’ve been anticipating this book for a while. I can’t wait to get it into the hands of my readers at the library. Congrats Liesl!

Writing

A few of my friends have asked me how I find time to write between a full-time job, reading for said full-time job, moving, and, generally, life.

The truth is – I just do.

When writing – real first draft writing – I’m always planning. If I have an idea for a scene, I write it down. During downtime at work (shh), moments before meetings, waiting at red lights (also, shhh – I do not recommend this). I’ll always find time to jot a few things down on my notebook. And then in the mornings, or at night long after work, I’ll get out my laptop and write everything. As much as I can. As fast as I can. That’s how I write best.

And then when editing? I bring my laptop with me to work and edit during breaks, during lunch hours. I make myself do it, even when I’d rather hang out with co-workers and laugh about the day’s events.

The truth of the matter is – yeah, sometimes it is hard to find time to write.

But I just do it anyway.

Because I can’t not do it.

So for you trying – don’t try to find time. Make time in those small moments. They amount to a lot in the end.

Accepting

If you’ve seen the movie Pitch Perfect, remember the scene where all the girls are singing Miley Cyrus? And how Beca is too cool to sing along and just rolls her eyes until, finally, she gives in and starts singing?

That scene was so relatable to me. Because that was me.

Okay, I never thought I was too cool for something (let’s be honest, I never thought I was cool period), but I just didn’t want people to know I knew certain things. I didn’t want the attention.

It started in 5th grade.

For my 5th grade graduation, my parents got me a boom box. It was awesome. It had a cassette deck AND a CD player and I loved it so much. My first CD was the soundtrack to The Lion King. My second was MTV Party To Go Vol. 3(My mom really liked MTV.) Ten-year-old me memorized every song on that album, including the first number, the ever-popular “Baby Got Back.”

Flash forward to high school. I was at a homecoming dance when the song came on. My friends cheered and screamed out the lyrics. And I…I mumbled. Yeah, I could rap along with the best of them, but I didn’t want my friends to know. I didn’t want the attention. I hated the thought of people pointing at me, and making me sing it again. I hated the idea of attention in general. So instead of showing off, I pretended to know lyrics here or there. I shrugged and mumbled and got lines wrong on purpose. And I was always excited when someone DID know all the lyrics. But I never admitted that I did, too. 

Around that time I got into the pop punk scene, and relied on the lyrics of The Ataris and Alkaline Trio and Blink 182 to get me through the days. But still, my mom loved the radio (and, admittedly, so did I) so I knew all the Backstreet Boys, all the N’Sync, all the LFO songs. And when around my pop punk friends, I’d pretend I didn’t.

It wasn’t just music. In college most of my best friends were guys. I watched a lot of films with them, I read a lot of the same books. Bret Easton Ellis. Chuck Palahniuk. You name it, I read it. But I also had a weakness for Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants by Ann Brashares. But I’d never admit that to them, because I didn’t want them to know. I didn’t want them to point it out, and draw attention to it – to me. I preferred being invisible in a way, one in the crowd.

Sometime my last year in college, I started to open up. I wish I could pinpoint the exact moment, but I can’t. It was gradual, a flower opening, the soft opening of a song. But I as I realized certain things made me happier than others, I stopped caring what others thought about my tastes. I started watching When Harry Met Sally with friends. I took out my girly books when guys were over. And one night, at a party at my friend George’s house, I screamed the lyrics to “Baby Got Back.” And you know what? No one cared. They high fived me, commented, and kept going on with their night.

The thing is, I liked fitting in with my friends. I didn’t want to be the star, I didn’t want all of the attention. I liked being in the background, the sidekick. I liked to blend. But after a while, blending got old. I didn’t want to just be that girl who had no opinion, no spark. I didn’t want to be afraid that people would stop liking me because I liked something different, because I knew something different. Because I realized if someone loved me for me, they wouldn’t care what I liked. And If loved me for me, I wouldn’t be afraid to admit it.

RTW: Anything For Love

This week’s question: What’s the craziest thing you’ve done for love, or what’s your favorite book/movie moment of someone doing crazy things for love? 

As it turns out, I’m not a very crazy romantic person. Ask my husband. I think the most romantic this I did last year was surprise him with FIFA 2012. (In my defense, it was a Big Deal, – he is British and all – and i’m pretty sure he’s more in love with the game than me.)

He’s way sweeter.

So let’s go with my favorite movie moment. It’s not so much a moment, but a culmination of events. I love the movie Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. I love how Joel goes from wanting his memories erased, to wanting to keep them forever. I love that, for love, he mentally fights a mental procedure. How great is that?

But mostly, I love the ending. Because Joel and Clementine have seen what happens when they date. It doesn’t go well. They try to erase one another.

And yet. They try again.

My (Home) Desk

As promised, here’s my home desk.

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For starters, I love my desk so much. It’s big and bulky and dark wood. Incidentally, I have found two people who share the same desk – one of which being my best friend. It was originally my grandfathers, and he gave it to me before he passed away. There are secret compartments behind the drawers where I like to think he hid presents for my grandmother.

Top: IKEA clock (which I never wound, but I thought was cute), tiny toys (good luck cat and mini typewriter from my friend Colure; shell turtles from my friend Katie; Chun Li, Harley Quinn, and Joker action figures from my friend Hunter), The Ataris CD (I listen to high school pop punk when I need writing inspiration-seriously) moving calendar (because that’s important), mask from my trip to Venice, Little Prince figure from my trip to Paris, cube of Jewish phrases that used to belong to my grandparents, old camera, pile of old books*.

Drawers: A ton of random things, including four filled moleskin notebooks, circus greeting cards from Michaels, my letter from my agent(!!!), stamps (because I still mail letters), post-its, and a golf ball that almost hit me in the head when I was 16. I keep weird things.

Desk: Penguin mug from London (S got me The Big Sleep because we met while reading that book in class-awwww), notebook, hard drive, camera, post-it with my to-do list, laptop, pile of edits.

And because I love it, my cork board beside my desk has a mess of things, including: buttons, a Helga Hufflepuff card, a picture of my puppy Jetta, photostrips of my mom and I and my friend Meg and I from the day I bought my wedding gown, bookmarks, drawings from my friend Shannon, a picture of S and I, and a bookmark from a haunted ship (yep).

And here’s the wall above my desk:

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I like to frame random things, so here you go. Clockwise from top: painting from Florence, a print that says Hope, a photograph of my great aunt and uncle**, a postcard from Papa Please Get the Moon for Me***, a painting from Venice, a print my friend Shannon got S and I of two owls reading.

* – Books: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Dick Tracy, The House at Pooh Corner, Andersen’s Fairy Tales, Peter Pan, Through the Looking Glass.

** – Photo: My Great Aunt Faye and Great Uncle Julius were flamenco dancers in Spain. It was a Huge Deal because she was just a little Jewish girl from Brooklyn who followed her heart to another country for a guy. First interracial marriage of my family! The story ended well, though, because they were married until he passed away (when I was in 5th grade). She passed away when I was a senior in high school, and it broke my heart. She was such an amazing woman. In the end, she left me her rings, which are now my engagement and wedding bands.

*** – Postcard: There’s an ongoing joke in my family that my dad will do anything for me. So when he (willingly!) went with me to an Eric Carle exhibit, he bought me the postcard because, yeah, if I asked for the moon as a child, he would have done his best to get it.