Today, I’ve the honor to pick the
brains of a wonderful blogger friend by the name of C. Lee McKenzie, (she of
the awesome sauce blog,
The Write Game.)
Aloha
Lee, Thanks for dropping in and agreeing to be my latest
Aloha back! I only wish I could say that to you in person. It's been too long since my last visit to the islands. Gotta do something about that!
In late July, you published your
first MG book, Alligators Overhead.
Sincere congrats on that, but I have to ask: Why alligators? You seem very nice and normal, and alligators are
mean and abnormal (I lived in Central Florida for three years and one nearly
ate me…)
First, thanks for the "nice and
normal" compliment, Mark. You obviously haven't talked to my family or you
might not have written that about me. Sorry about the traumatic alligator
encounter. That would put me off those critters for sure, but they've been on
planet earth for over 65 million years, so they got here first. We have to give
them some space and what better place than a lovely swamp? So why alligators? I guess I wanted to write a story without a cat in it for a change. There are cat stories all over the place . . . and dog and horse ones, too. In my opinion, alligators are underrepresented. And as for those cats, well, I love cats or I did. Have you read the news on my blog about what those cats are up to? They want to ban my book. Very unreasonable demands! They're calling for a total rewrite of the story, taking out the alligators and putting themselves in as the witch familiars. This is a battle, but I'm determined to win.
Am I allowed to be bold? Why C. Lee? (I’ve
always wondered what the C stands for :)
C. Lee McKenzie |
How did you come up with some of
those awesome character names like Lucy Thricewater… she must have a very clean
and filtered family history J
Clean and filtered she is, indeed.
Each of the characters needed something special about them and I began with
their names. (Do you see some kind of pattern in my life? Naming seems to be
important. Maybe that came from something in my childhood.) The problem about
the names in this book is that I had to put them into my spell check so I could
spell them the same way throughout book. I mean Stiltencranz and Wartgob and
Frankenhoff aren't too easy to say, let alone spell. But I loved the quirky
names and they fit the quirkiness of the story. I kept the MC pretty common (Pete
Riley), but then I had to tweak his sidekick's name a bit. I had a neighbor
once that we called Weasel. He hated that nickname. Hope he has a good laugh if
he ever reads my story. Either that or he'll write me a nasty letter to tell me
how much hated me for calling him Weasel lo these many years ago.
If *they* said you could not be an
author, and you had no choice, what is the one job you would most least like to
do – and why?
How about witch for what I'd like
most to be? That's an ancient and honorable job. They don't burn witches
anymore, do they? That would be a downside to that career choice. I'd least
like to be night watch woman. I'd also be almost totally unemployed, too. I'm
an early riser, and I'm definitely an early to bed person. If I had to guard
anything after ten, whatever I was guarding would pretty much be up for the
taking. So there you have it: witch woman but not watch woman.
Can you remember when you finished
your first ever story? How old were you, and what was it about?
I was about 8. It was actually a
play about vegetables. (You're laughing? And that would be because . . . ?) I
took my play seriously, and I created my cast only after giving it a lot of
thought. There was Miss Tomato, Mr. Cabbage, Mrs. Carrot, and I think an onion or
two. When I cast my play I could recruit the tomato and the carrot, but no kids
wanted to play the cabbage or the onions. I had to do a rewrite and make the
cabbage into a cucumber. I forget what the onions became. It was first
experience with critics.
Someone gives you $5,000 to give
away. You’re not allowed to spend it
on friends or family, or donate it
directly to a cause... but you do have to spend the money in a
charitable way. How would you pay it forward?
That's easy. I'd buy up tons of
books and send to libraries all over the world, especially ones that were small
and in poor areas where they needed books for young readers. Could you make
that $10,000?
Wow… You’ve been blogging since
2007. How did you first hear about “web logs,” and was it like just you and
like six other people here on Blogger? (I bet one was Alex
J. Cavanaugh :)
Yep. Them was the good old days. To
tell the truth, I hated blogging. I only did it because my editor told me I
should. I not only hated it, I was rotten at it. Then I started connecting with
writers and readers and that changed how I looked at this new way of sharing
ideas. I started enjoying it. I started having a lot of fun. I'm glad I kept at
it. I mean if I hadn't, I never would have joined the A to Z Blogging
Challenge. I never would have met you or all the other great bloggers! I'm finishing up another MG fantasy adventure, but it's another stand alone and it doesn't have any alligators in it . . . No cat either. I have a hard time with series. I can read them; I just don't think I have the talent for writing them. I'm also in the final stages of a rewrite on another YA that I hope to put out next year. In between those two books, I hope to get away and find an island paradise where I can locate some inspiration for some future stories. Any suggestions in your neck of the woods, er, water? (Stay away from Tahiti… they’re always filming The Final Bachelorette there…)
Reading your five fabulous moments
here I’m going to hazard a guess you don’t live in Manhattan or Downtown
Chicago. Are you all country – or a recent import?
I'm a long time hick. I love
visiting cities, but they make me jittery after a while. If I have a perfect
day it has to be a walk in the forest or along a creek. My next best one is a
sandy beach day. I really love the sounds that nature make and prefer them over
our noisy man-made ones.
You walk into a classroom, full of
first-year writers, and you’re *the* teacher. What three points would you want
to impress on this group of fresh, eager author-interns J
First, I'd ask if they've consider
coal mining? It's honest work and when they go home at night they won't have to
face letters of rejection or critiques about their current WIP. Seriously, I
guess I'd want them to know that everyone can write stories. Then I'd want them
to know that not everyone can write them well, but they can learn with practice
and by paying attention to good writing. Third, I'd want them to know that if
they are truly passionate about writing and sharing their stories with others,
they can never give up. Giving up is the only sure way to guarantee failure.
Lee, thanks so much for taking the
time to answer my random questions – and much success with Alligators Overhead.
What great questions, Mark. You did
your research! I really appreciate the time you took to put this together.Alligators Overhead is available from Amazon and a variety of sources via Lee's blog, The Write Game.
25 comments:
Vegetables? I wonder if the cats would've protested being replaced by vegetables?
And now we know your first name! Yeah, I wouldn't want my name associated that way.
And yes, first to comment! I'm back on track.
Not much difference between writing and coal mining anyway. Both about hacking into the unknown, with the promise of maybe a diamond in there somewhere! Great interview, Mark and Lee. :)
*sigh* I think there's a stripper with my name too. I better come up with something else :P
I'm so glad Lee has stuck with blogging. I had my reservations about it too when I first started, but she's so right! Once you actually connect with other writers it becomes a lot of fun :)
Great interview!!
(Oh yeah: I go by both Sam AND Samantha. The choice is yours Mark. Just don't call me Sammy :D)
C. Lee - A stripper? LOL, I have a mud wrestler in Europe with the name Ciara Knight. It is interesting.
Great interview! The only thing I'd slightly disagree with is being a coal miner...at least in writing I'm pretty certain the ceiling won't collapse on my head. But you're right, it is good, honest work...but I'll leave it to the brave among us. :)
"Mahalo!" for a terrific interview, Lee and Mark.
Lee, Mike says to tell you your character names remind him of the Roald Dahl stories he used to read his kids. I'll have to take his word for that.
Oh, and I totally agree with you about the redundancy of cat stories. But sweetie, you can't have too many dog books!
Mark, I've never been to Hawaii, but I do love me some SPAM. (The real stuff, not the e-mail kind.) Maybe I could be an honorary Hawaiian.
I am sooooo late to this party! But I have an excuse a really good one. Well, a pretty good one. My car battery died. Now I realize I don't have to drive to get here, but I do have to drive to get elsewhere, so there was a tow truck involved and the driver not really comfortable with mountain roads (Who knew?) and other stuff. Any way, I made it, and I'm so glad I did. The weather here is perfect and the company very interesting.
Thanks for the great visit, Mark. I'll be back.
@Alex I should have stuck with veggies. You're so right. The cats wouldn't have come up an objection to those.
@Nick Hacking into the unknown . . . I love that.
@Samantha It must be our charming names. Just overlook it. You'll be the one with all your clothes on, so everyone will know you're the one who writes.
@Ciara Knight is such a pretty name. I can see it for a writer, but not so much for a mud wrestler.
@Elizabeth you're probably right, but there's a lot bravery involved in this writing business, don't you think?
@Buddy you are so literary! I'm always amazed at what you know. I have a dog in my next book!
Hi @Mr. Lonely Thanks for the visit!
Alligators catches anyone's attention title wise. Nice post.
Wohoo Lee!
I agree about the power of names when it comes to creating stories. I love that she'd use the money to buy books for libraries! I'd do that too!
Nutschell
www.thewritingnut.com
Good interview questions, Mark!
Awwww... LOVED THIS! C. Lee, you are fabulous. I love seeing your beautiful face everywhere. And I'm excited to check out your work--I definitely get a very talented vibe from you :)
And Mark, I'm DYING with your comment on Alex's blog today... I'm still laughing...
Fun questions and great answers. Good luck with your new book!
@Sheena-kay Catchy names title are important. This did get me a radio interview. Love your name BTW.
@Nutschell you are always generous, so I know you'd donate books, too.
@Hi again Catherine. You sparked an idea on your blog post about rewriting openings. Thanks.
@Morgan you are so kind. And you stirred my interest in what Mark has said on Alex's blog. Have to go see!
@Carol I really appreciate your wishes for good luck.
You share a name with a stripper ... interesting.
I've discovered that MPax is a record label. I keep getting all these follows on Twitter from rappers until they figure out I'm not the record label. If they read my bio, they'd figure it out sooner. I've even had people email me demos.
Greetings!
I'm hopping over from GUTGAA and have decided to start visiting some of the blogs early. Nice to meet you and you have a lovely blog!
Donna L Martin
www.donnalmartin.com
www.donasdays.blogspot.com
Hi Mark and Lee .. it's the misty swirls of the swamps with witches, alligators and perhaps triffids that's worrying me .. lots of diversity and brain wanderings here ..
Great interview with C .. I'd often wondered what it stood for .. love the sound of the 8 year old vegetable stories .. they're fun .. cheers Hilary
@MPax I can see you rapping in space. :-)
@Hi Donna glad you stopped in early.
@Hilary if I return to vegetables as MCs I'm emailing you. :-)
Lee:
A play about vegetables doesn't strike me as particularly terrible if you were only 8. I was still watching Vegie Tales when I was like 12...
STOP DOUBTING YOUR ABILITY IN WRITING SERIES! YOU CAN DO ANYTHING! BLARG!
Alligators are cool. Cat fur makes my nose and eyes itch, though I don't have a severe allergy.
Mark:
Thanks for sharing this awesome interview with this awesome person. Have an awesome day :)
Great interview! Your "perfect days" sound amazing - it's always fun to get away and just drink it all in.
I swear, Mark has the best interviews. Only he could unearth the truth about Cheryl the Stripper!
Too funny, Lee. :)
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Really a fun interview Mark and C. Lee. I'll bet the vegetable story was really cute! Happy weekend, everyone.
Uh, Mark? I'm thinking you're gonna have to disallow anonymous comments, lol! I know I had to.
Lee, I'm with you on a good day. Cities are fun to visit and I've had to live in a few but they do make me *jittery* after awhile. Too many people. Loved the idea of a Vegetable play. How fun.
Sia McKye Over Coffee
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