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Shon Bacon/ChickLitGurrl™: a true wordsmith



Last Updated: 12/13/2009

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Gender: Female
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 37
Sign: Virgo

City: Lubbock, TX~Lake Charles, LA~B'more, MD
State: Texas
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/15/2006
September 9, 2009 - Wednesday 

Category: Writing and Poetry

For the month of September, All the Blog's a Page (AtBaP) is looking at authors who have been put into the genre "young adult fiction." Up next, I feature author E.M. Crane whose debut novel, Skin Deep - which also was the first book she ever completed - won the Delacorte Press Prize for First Young Adult fiction; it's also been nominated for the 2009 Charlotte Award by the NY State Reading Association. I dig E.M., and I think you will, too, because it's not just about young adult fiction that moves her but the timeless quality found in good stories that transcends age.





About Skin Deep
:

If all the world’s a stage, Andrea Anderson is sitting in the audience. High school has its predictable heroes, heroines, villains, and plotlines, and Andrea has no problem guessing how each drama will turn out. She is, after all, a professional spectator. In the social hierarchy she is a Nothing, and at home her mother runs the show. All Andrea has to do is show up every day and life basically plays out as scripted. Then one day Andrea accepts a job. Honora Menapace—a reclusive neighbor—is sick. As in every other aspect of her life, Andrea’s role is clear: Honora’s garden must be taken care of and her pottery finished, and someone needs to feed her dog, Zena. But what starts out as a simple job yanks Andrea’s back-row seat out from under her. Life is no longer predictable, and nothing is what it seems. Light is dark, villains are heroes, and what she once saw as ugly is too beautiful for words. Andrea must face the fact that life at first glance doesn’t even crack the surface.



When asked Why write teen fiction, Crane replied, "Because many teens love raw truth in stories. So do I. But the truth is, I don't write for teens. I write for everyone. I do love coming-of-age stories and using teen characters, so I guess that's how I've ended up in the genre, but I definitely don't sit down and say, 'This piece is going to be teen fiction.' I just write it."



Come by AtBaP to continue reading Crane's thoughts on YA fiction.


ALL THE BLOG'S A PAGE (AtBaP) - Where everything relates to writing

[http://alltheblogsapage.blogspot.com]