April Henry is on a GCC tour, and she's here to talk about the cover story for her latest release, Torched. Check out the book trailer:
Action! I'm in. Here's April's Cover Story:
"I don't think I had a concrete idea for the cover. My husband is a graphic designer, so I know what my skills aren't!
"I know by the nose that this photo has been used other places, as you can see here. Still, the covers are different enough that I don't think it's obvious.
"When I first saw the cover, I didn't like that the woods were on fire. Mother Earth Defenders would never set trees on fire! And I was kind of iffy about the kiss--my 13-year-old and her friend did NOT like it and felt it looked too romantic. But I seemed to be in the minority--I showed it to librarians and friends and they liked it a lot.
"I told my editor I thought if something was on fire on the cover, it should be a Hummer--which does happen in the book. I sent him a very, very rough (I'm not that good at Photoshop) version of one with a Hummer and one with a Earth Liberation Front action at Vail a few years back in place of the burning trees:
"But the Sales department already like the cover as is, so it stayed. I was told the trees burning was more metaphorical. And it's grown on me. Now I like it! And I hope the kiss means it has romance cover appeal."
I like the trees too--I think that was a good call. This is probably the steamiest YA cover I've seen in a while--it may even appeal to adult romance fans, right? What do you guys think?
Win-It Wednesday: STARGIRL
The winner of IMPULSE by Ellen Hopkins, as chosen by random number generator, is... Thea! Send me your address, T, and then join in the readergirlz fun this month. So much going on at the blog! This week, I'm giving away a book that Lis mentioned in last week's comments when I asked what book character you'd want for a BFF. Lis said STARGIRL, and I was jealous that I hadn't thought of her! I recently read Jerry Spinelli's amazing novel (I'm behind, I know), and it has haunted me since. It's a *must read*, and I don't say that often. Please read it!
And yes, I know I need to get Love, Stargirl too! I can't wait.
So this week, to win a copy of Stargirl, I want you guys to help me spread the word about my May 5th release, Lovestruck Summer. I made countdown widgets... finally!... and I'd love it if you'd post either version on your blogs, your profile pages, in a twitter message, as a bulletin, etc. Any way you share it counts--just tell me what you did in the comments. (Hit that "Share" button in the lower left corner for options.)
OR
Happy Wednesday--and thank you! I always feel a little sheepish asking for promo help.
YA Authors Who Rock
I've already written about how Teen Author Week was great, but now I will give you evidence. I stood behind a bookcase at Books of Wonder to get this footage of Tiger Beat singing "Heroes" (forgive me if it's a little shaky!). Eat your heart out, David Bowie. That's Libba Bray singing, Daniel Ehrenhaft on lead guitar, Barnabas Miller on drums and Natalie Standiford on bass! I have two more songs on film, so I'll upload them all on youtube soon, just had to share a favorite here.
Cover Stories: Gentlemen by Michael Northrop
Today's Cover Story is a really fun one from my friend Michael Northrop (his blog is hilarious--go there). Gentlemen is his debut novel and--not to be braggy--I read it before he even sold it to Scholastic. I loved it back then, and I can't wait to read the official, final version when it comes out this week. Michael really captures the way that certain types of guys think, speak and act--every thought and action rings true. Don't you love it when books are like that?Plus, there's a mystery. Bonus. Here's Michael (and there's a photo of him reading the book that I totally stole from his blog without permission, left):
"Gentlemen is my first published novel, but it is the fourth book I've written. (The fourth book-like thing, anyway, as the first was barely 30K words, and the second was a plotless mess.) Of the four, I only had a real cover idea for one: the plotless mess. It was called Connecticut Penal League and the hypothetical cover involved a sleek, predatory looking state police cruiser and would have been the coolest thing about an awful book.
"I don't know why I don't think of covers as I'm writing. Part of it is that the books seem so complex and shifting as I'm working on them that trying to distill all that into a single image seems daunting and maybe a little counterproductive.
"I knew that I should think about the cover once Scholastic bought Gentlemen, but all I could think of were my all-time favorite covers and none of them seemed to pertain at all.
I mean, I've always loved the cover of Watership Down, but a silhouette of a rabbit has absolutely nothing to do with a gritty mystery about a missing boy.
"So, like a rabbit, I was all ears when my editor called and said, 'We have an idea for the cover.' It seemed like a good one: three boys, representing the main characters, standing in a mock police lineup and holding up a signboard with the title of the book on it.
"My initial input on the cover wasn't a suggestion or a probing question, which makes me feel like a bit of a slacker compared to many of the Cover Stories I've read on here. It was just me agreeing, and it included an exclamation point or two, 'That sounds great! Yeah!' Something like that.
The process began. Models were cast and put in appropriately distressed jeans and hoodies. Everyone loved the first mockup, myself included.
"And for a long time, that was going to be the cover. Some tinkering would be done with the fonts and such, but basically, it was good to go. And then it wasn't. There'd been a meeting: People had fallen out of love with it. It was too 'pretty' for a gritty 'boy book,' too soft, not tough enough.
"I looked at it on the screen as my editor relayed this by phone. Now that she mentioned it, it did kind of look like a GAP ad. I figured we'd discuss new ideas, but she told me they already had one. And not only that, they'd already made a new mockup, something tougher, something darker.
"They weren't kidding:
When I clicked on the image for the first time, I literally gasped. Look what they've done to my beautiful cover! And then I thought about it. I thought about what the characters in my book would have thought of the first version ('gay') and what they'd think of this new version ('cool'). (MW note: That is how his characters think.)
"The new cover matched what I was trying to do with the text: to create a book that boys and reluctant readers could read and pass around without being embarrassed, like the Hinton and Cormier books I read at that age. I began to think about how this macabre black cover would stand out in the forest of pastel and glitter of the YA section.
"The more I thought about it, the more I liked this cover. Pretty soon, I was raving about it. I still am. The overall effect is really striking, and if you look closely, there are a lot of clever little touches, like the dull plastic color of the zipper and the fake toe tag on the back for the barcode (MW note: see top photo of Michael reading).
"Here is the final version:
"So that's my cover story. I wasn't exactly driving the process. I was in the backseat pretty much the entire time, but I love where we wound up."
I agree! I liked that first cover when I saw it, but the second cover is way more arresting. All that black? Very cool. What do you guys think?
Photo Friday: Violet in France!
Violet on the Runway and Violet by Design were both released in France this week. Yay!Their titles are Violette Taille Mannequin (which I think means "Violet, Model-Size") and Violette Fashion Mais Pas Victime (um... "Violet, fashionable but not a victim"). If someone knows more French than I do, feel free to correct me. Also feel free to let me know what these ads, which ran together in a French newspaper, mean. I love them regardless!
Happy Friday! Or, um, Bonne Vendredi?
PS-Correction! Bon Vendredi! (Thanks, Jacqueline.)
PPS-I also LOVE that crazy purple skirt in ad #2 and how the demure white lace peeks out from the bottom. AND, it made me laugh that in the first ad, someone is handing Violet a tissue so she won't cry about being plain.
PPPS-My friend Marie, who's French, confirms that the ads mean... "She thought she was ugly... but she's going to become the new Kate Moss." Yay!
NEW UPDATE! My friend David Levithan is in Paris, and he took an awesome shot of Violette fashion mais pas victime on the shelf there! Thanks, David!
Win-It Wednesday: IMPULSE by Ellen Hopkins
Last week's trifecta of books goes to... Anna! (She was comment #65, leaving a post about Free Book Friday). Send me your address, A! The random number generating gods have smiled on you. If you didn't win, there are a TON of contest links in the comments on last week's post... so go enter like crazy! This week I'm giving away a copy of IMPULSE by Ellen Hopkins. It happens to be the April readergirlz pick, so if you win you'll have to speed read and then join in our book talk! This book just floored me. It's the story of three teenagers who meet each other in a psych hospital after separate suicide attempts. I fell in love with Vanessa, Connor and Tony, and the bond that forms between them--it's amazingly touching how close they get, even after so much trust has been broken in their lives. IMPULSE is written in verse, which makes it's dark subjects easier to handle, somehow.
Anyway, you guys probably know Ellen Hopkins' work--I'm so behind! But I'll be picking up the rest of her books now.
To win, just leave a comment below and tell me about a book character you'd like to have as a best friend. For me, I think I'm in the mood to hang out with Gilda Joyce, a psychic investigator I just adore! Yeah, I read Middle Grade stuff sometimes too. These are the perfect little-sister books.
Happy Wednesday!
I Have Four Things to Say...
1. Today's the last day to enter Liviania's In Bed With Books Blogiversary contest! So watch this vlog, here or there, and then head over to her blog to comment about your favorite organic beauty product and enter to win.
Good luck! (It's also the last day to share contests and enter this week's Win-It Wednesday.)
2. It's Fashion Week at Teen Fiction Cafe, and I'm writing about my favorite pair of jeans... thanks to Sara Zarr and Wendy Toliver.
3. Kelsey at Reading Keeps You Sane interviewed me for her "On the Outside" series about the title origin of LOVESTRUCK SUMMER. I love this! I know some other bloggers do Cover Stories, and that's cool, but what's THE BEST is when you can spin off an idea and do your own thing, and Kelsey's hunt for how book titles came to be is just fantastic! Such a great idea. Authors, contact Kelsey to participate!
4. The Biggest Teen Author Book Signing EVER at Books of Wonder completely ruled. It was great to meet some of you guys! Here's a photo from the end of the day (taken by Mitali Dave, thanks!), which has some of the 44 authors who were involved. Can you recognize anyone?
Cover Stories: Wherever Nina Lies by Lynn Weingarten
One of the Win-it Wednesday authors is here this week! Lynn Weingarten is sharing her cover story. Yay!"One day I needed a writing break but wanted to feel like I was being productive, so I decided to browse through some stock photo websites to look for some cover ideas, just for fun. I found a few photos I thought were cool and I sent them along to my editor. This was the one my editor liked the best:
"I love the pose and the girl's crazy-looking eyeballs. She reminds me a little bit of the princess in The Neverending Story.
"My editor passed it on to her art department, and they liked it too. At that point my book didn't yet have a title, so for about ten minutes I was thinking we could call the book Hush to match the picture. (A quick search on Amazon, however, revealed that Hush is already of a whole bunch of other stuff including another book, a Gwyneth Paltrow movie and a series of Batman comics).
"Eventually we settled on the title Wherever Nina Lies and the Scholastic art department made this cover mock-up:
"I loved it! But in the end we all agreed that the girl looked sort of like a very pretty alien and that her alien-esque-ness made it seem like the book is sci-fi (which it isn't). Scholastic hired a model and did a photo shoot. And then made a few tweaks here and there. They were very open to hearing my thoughts about stuff, but really, I didn't have a ton to say. I loved the cover. And here is the final:
"I love it. I love the colorful letters in the title and the map at the bottom. I think the model looks great. It's funny to me that even though she is right there on the cover, I have no idea what her name is, or how old she is or anything. I mean, I guess that's not really unusual at all, but still... it strikes me as odd. I wonder if any of her friends or relatives called her up after the book came out and were like, 'I saw you on a book cover today, YOU HAVE WORDS ALL OVER YOUR FACE!'"
Hear that, cover model? Get in touch with Lynn here. Well, you guys know that I loved this book, and I think the cover is really compelling too. Don't forget to enter to win a copy of Wherever Nina Lies (it's signed!) here.
BIGGEST Teen Author Signing EVER
Photo Friday: Twitter Mosaic
First, Casey at Teen Fashionista interviewed me yesterday, and she was over-the-top nice to me. Go visit if you have time!Second, check out this site that the amazing Little Willow showed me. You can make a mosaic from your twitter followers! Look at all my followers--how cute are they?
Want to see yourself in my next mosaic? Follow me here. Follow I Heart Daily here. Follow readergirlz here.
Happy Friday! Go watch some basketball!