Showing posts with label YA Christian Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA Christian Fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

How to Write Young Adult Fiction - Firsts in Fiction Podcast!




What is YA fiction, and how can we write it in a way that connects with today's youth culture? I discuss the answer to this question and more in this episode of Firsts in Fiction (one of my absolute favorite writing podcasts)! Check it out above. Let me know if you have any thoughts or questions in the comments! 



Wednesday, August 1, 2018

#ReadCleanYA - Guest Post by Teen Author, Taylor Bennett

I’ve read books before that I love—like, really, really love. Books like The Kite Runner, that introduce me to an entirely new culture. Books like The Book Thief, that make me laugh and cry and—oh, did I mention?—bawl my eyes out. Books like…

Oops.

That didn’t come out right.


Pin This!



While I love books like those mentioned above, I rarely never endorse them because…there’s some seriously bad stuff in them. Not that I’d know what, exactly (I’ve read copies that have the inappropriate scenes/words blacked out 😉) but I know it’s nothing very good.
The few times I’ve had the audacity to pick a book off the YA shelf at a bookstore, I’ve been gravely disappointed. I once had the immense displeasure of having to throw a brand-new hardback in the garbage after reading the first chapter.

And yes.

I know what you’re thinking.

Did I really have to throw it in the trash?

Yes.

Yes, I did.

Honestly, you couldn’t have paid me to get me to give that book to anyone else. It was that bad—and I’m not just talking about the plot and prose.

Sooo…what’s a girl with a heart for the Lord and strong convictions to do? I certainly can’t give up reading altogether, and, sadly, the contemporary YA genre (my favorite!) is filled with stories that leave a reader feeling scummy. It isn’t unusual for me to leave a bookstore in a sour mood after paging through several of beautiful new YA releases, only to have my innocence affected in the process.

The Narrow Shelf

You know that shelf—the tiny one at the back of the store? The one that’s so easy to overlook? Yes, I’m talking about the Christian fiction shelf.

Somehow, in our age of acceptance and inclusivity, bookstores have decided to nearly obliterate their selections of clean and Christian reads in the name of carrying books that appeal to a more progressive audience.

So, in their effort to reach more people, they’re actually turning away some of their most faithful readers.

And that makes me…

Sad.

As Christians, we are called to be set apart, to not let the sin of the world seep in around the edges of our holy and sanctified lives. And that is why my heart breaks every time I hear about the “newest and coolest” book, song, or TV show. Because, more often than not, it’s not something the Lord would want me to be a part of.

But then…if we are to be in the world but not of it, how do we, as obsessive bookworms, find enough books to satisfy both our unique thirst for story and our desire to stay pure in mind, body, and spirit?

That is why I challenge you

#ReadCleanYA

Did you know that the #ReadDiverse has more than fifty thousand posts across Instagram? #ReadCleanYA has…four.

But what if this wasn’t the case?

What if we—as word-loving, heart-guarding children of God—began to raise awareness for the books we love. The ones that don’t harm our souls or lead us down a narrow path. The ones that speak to our heart, encourage us when we’re weak, and put a smile on our face. The books that deserve to be recognized as the pure, lovely stories that they are.

It can be done.

I know it can.

So let’s try it—you and me and all of the other amazing, clean-reading bookworms out there today. Let’s #ReadCleanYA, and let’s make sure the whole world knows. Use the hashtag, spread it around like sunshine and sparkles. Showcase your favorite books and talk about how they touch your heart and your soul for the better.

Share books that point to Jesus, and books that are just good, clean fun. Let’s help each other out by showcasing the books that speak to our hearts in this way.

(Because, let’s face it—we always want to add to our TBR, and what better way to do that than to fill our to-be-read stack with beautiful, pure, and wholesome books?)

Who’s with me?

If you’d like to join me in my quest to raise awareness for these kinds of books, chime in with a comment below or post to your social media accounts using the hashtag #ReadCleanYa.

Let’s start a clean-read revolution!!


PS—Here’s a list of some of my favorite clean YA reads, in case you could use some inspiration:





About Taylor:






Homeschooled since kindergarten, Taylor Bennett is the seventeen-year-old author of Porch Swing Girl, which will be released by Mountain Brook Ink on May 1st. When she’s not reading or writing, Taylor can be found playing her violin or taking walks in the beautiful Oregon countryside. She loves to connect with readers via her author website, as well as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram (her favorite!), Pinterest, and Goodreads.


Links:

Porch Swing Girl back cover copy:



What if friendship cost you everything?

Stranded in Hawaii after the death of her mother, sixteen-year-old Olive Galloway is desperate to escape. She has to get back to Boston before her dad loses all common sense and sells the family house. But plane tickets cost money—something Olive gravely lacks.

With the help of Brander, the fussy youth group worship leader, and Jazz, a mysterious girl with a passion for all things Hawaiian, Olive lands a summer job at the Shave Ice Shack and launches a scheme to buy a plane ticket home before the end of the summer.

But when Jazz reveals a painful secret, Olive’s plans are challenged. Jazz needs money. A lot of it. Olive and Brander are determined to help their friend but, when their fundraising efforts are thwarted, Olive is caught in the middle. To help Jazz means giving up her ticket home. And time is running out.



Tweetable:

Friday, February 3, 2017

Introducing Illuminate YA Fiction, New Imprint of LPC Books {Searching for teens & young adults!}

It's with great excitement that I officially "cut the ribbon" and introduce to you Illuminate YA!


Illuminate is the new YA/NA imprint of LPC Books that I have had the pleasure of launching. Our goal at Illuminate is to shed light on positive and inspiring books that engross readers in an entertaining journey from beginning to end. We don't shy away from reflecting today’s authentic youth culture, yet we do so in a way that promotes good morals and values. Our stories touch teens’ deepest needs, answers their life questions, sweeps them away in a can’t-put-me-down adventure, and portrays their world with a thread of hope.


Why am I beginning this new venture? Simply put: I'm passionate the YA genre. There's a need in the market for books that satisfy teens' reading needs and promote good morals, yet do so without delivering a sermon. The books at Illuminate will be safe for young readers (although we always advise that teens have parental guidance in their reading choices).  



Do you want to be a part of the team at ILLUMINATE?






If you're a teen or young adult who is passionate about books and wants to support our mission, we'd love to have you join us! We're searching for 15 teens/young adults to join our Teen Advisory Board. Please see this page for more information.



Do you want to submit your proposal to ILLUMINATE?



While we aren't actively seeking submissions at the moment, we will begin to acquire manuscripts in the spring. If you'd like to be among the first of our submissions, please see our submissions page for more details. Please note that we will only accept unagented submissions temporarily.  


 Free YA books!


Who doesn't love free YA books? Sign up for our newsletter and you'll receive free YA books delivered to your inbox as soon as they're available for free on Amazon.

Also, you can join our Street Team and receive free ARCs of our upcoming books and participate in members-only giveaways! Click here to join


Support our mission!



Want to help us shed light on on positive and inspiring YA/NA fiction? Follow us on social media, and don't forget to invite your friends!


~ ~ ~ 

What genre of YA books do you enjoy reading?




Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Author Spotlight & Interview: Laurel Garver, YA Christian Fiction Novelist

Over the summer, I had the opportunity to read ALMOST THERE by Laurel Garver and participate in the blog tour. {You can find my review here!} This was a lovely YA Christian fiction novel that approached topics and questions relevant to the teen life today, yet it was handled with grace and filtered through the perspective of faith. As I mentioned in the book review, I highly recommend this book to all YA and inspirational fiction lovers.   


I've asked Laurel to stop by today to discuss ALMOST THERE and share her valuable advice for teen writers. 





Almost There is a YA novel that is relevant to the teen culture today, yet it's Christian and doesn't come across as preachy. How did you manage to accomplish this without blurring the lines?


If I’m reading your question correctly, you’re wondering how I can write about faith in a way that isn’t off-putting to contemporary teens, but feels like it’s part of normal life. I suppose it’s first understanding that a life of faith isn’t lived across a line in the sand, that this spot over here is where I have a spiritual life, and on the other side is where the rest of the world goes about its business. Real faith doesn’t need a sanitized bubble in order to exist. Real faith is Christ in you, the hope of glory. It walks with courage into dark places through the power of the Holy Spirit, and tries to act as Jesus did. He reached out to those who were at the margins, who were hurting. I write what I hope is an invitation to teens of faith to see their purpose in this way.


Preachiness in literature comes when characters aren’t given the space to “come to their senses” on their own. Jesus’ example of how to show a transformation well is the prodigal son story. Did someone come and preach at the younger brother, and tell him he had been a selfish jerk and he should just go home and apologize to his family? No, the story events led him to that conclusion. So it is with my characters. They make their mistakes and gradually learn from them. When epiphanies come, they act on them, and test their new understanding. They move from blindness to insight to realized truth.




One thing I appreciated about your book was that the family dynamics wasn’t portrayed as perfect, yet the story was hopeful rather than melodramatic. Was this intentional? Why did you feel it necessary to include the hopeful message?


Having a deeply flawed family with lots of baggage is a reality for nearly everyone I know, and yet there is tremendous stigma attached to having a less than picture-perfect family life. People become hopeless because the voice of shame says it isn’t okay to let these secrets be known, and so they become stuck. In my experience, God isn’t content to leave us in these places. He hammers at our lies and disguises so that they crumble, letting in the revealing light that will enable healing. Shame loses its power in the face of a God who pursues and loves us no matter how screwed up or rebellious we are. He’s in the business of bringing the dead back to life. To not have hope is to not yet know this God.



What initially inspired you to write YA Christian fiction?


Young adult books were what got me hooked on reading, especially the realistic fiction of Madeleine L’Engle, Paul Zindel, Judy Blume, Lois Lowry, Paula Danziger, and Ellen Conford. L’Engle in particular had characters clearly coming from a churched background, but the stories didn’t feel like they were plodding morality tales. Her brainy misfits genuinely struggled to do the right thing when it’s hard, clearly making choices informed by their faith. Those stories were very life-giving to me.  So I wanted to create books like those I enjoyed reading at that critical time in my life, especially ones about kids of faith dealing with deeply dysfunctional families.  
    


How were you able to get inside of a teen girl’s head and capture her voice accurately and authentically? 


I’m flattered that you find Dani so realistic that you imagine her to be an actual person with a head to get inside. Creating her was really a matter of tapping into my own well of memory and allowing my emotions to be as big and turbulent as they were back then. The strange beauty of one’s teen years are how very intensely one feels and how one must learn to navigate and channel that ocean of emotion. Along with big emotions come big opinions—some quite wise, some quite shallow and ignorant—and big questions. Who am I? Who do I want to be? How do I go about becoming that person?


Creating an authentic voice comes from connecting intimately with your character’s inner world. You begin to channel the attitudes and opinions she’d have in the face of certain experiences, and eventually think with her. I took extra time to develop some off-page details about my protagonist’s life –especially experiences and cultural influences—that would shape how she thinks, especially associations and allusions she makes in her speech and inner thoughts. What makes the details feel authentic is that they are interconnected—attitudes flowing from her experiences, not chosen at random.



What do you hope teens will take away from this story?


I hope that first of all, they will feel less alone in their struggles in tough family situations. The difficult people in our families often have a story behind how they’ve become that way. Learn the story, and you can begin to move toward that person with more understanding and love. Finally, I hope they will begin to grasp how God is with them and for them in places of deep pain and doubt.



Do you have any advice for teen writers?


Read widely and voraciously—not just what’s hot among your peers, but also poetry and literary fiction and classics and other genres that intrigue you. Copy passages that you love and study them. Experiment with lots of different styles and genres. Be intensely curious, and never pass up an opportunity to try new things and go new places. These are your apprentice years when you are filling your creative well with ideas and experiences, and developing all the foundational skills you need to become the writer you will flower into.


Finally, take advantage of mentoring relationships with creative adults you know. As a teen, I was always quick to start writing projects, only to abandon them, until a school program paired me with a favorite former teacher to create a big senior project. Mrs. Wright encouraged me to write an entire novel that year, and I did with her guidance. It was derivative and naïve, but I had so much fun and learned how to complete something large— a giant leap forward in my development.







Author Bio:




Laurel Garver is a writer, editor, professor’s wife, and mom to an arty teenager. An indie film enthusiast and incurable Anglophile, she enjoys geeking out about Harry Potter and Dr. Who, playing word games, singing in church choir, and hiking in Philly's Fairmount Park.


Connect with Laurel:



~ ~ ~



Thanks for joining us, Laurel!


READERS: Do you have any questions for her? Leave them in the comments below!





post signature

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

YA Book Review & Blog Tour + Giveaway!: "Almost There" by Laurel Garver

Amazon // Goodreads




                      { Back Cover } 

Paris, the City of Lights. To seventeen-year-old Dani Deane, it’s the Promised Land. There, her widowed mother’s depression will vanish and she will no longer fear losing her only parent, her arty New York life, or her devoted boyfriend.  

But shortly before their Paris getaway, Dani’s tyrannical grandfather falls ill, pulling them to rural Pennsylvania to deal with his hoarder horror of a house. Among the piles, Dani finds disturbing truths that could make Mum completely unravel. Desperate to protect her from pain and escape to Paris, Dani hatches a plan with the flirtatious neighbor boy that only threatens the relationships she most wants to save.  

Why would God block all paths to Paris? Could real hope for healing be as close as a box tucked in the rafters?








{ My Review }



Almost There made me fall in love with the YA genre all over again. This is the kind of teen fiction I enjoy: An authentic and inspirational novel that accurately portrays the teen life. Throw in a romance thread, family drama, teen angst, beautiful wordsmithing, an artistic element, and weave them together to create an original, page-turning-worthy plot.


Honestly, this is the best YA novel I've read in a while. The plot was well-paced, and the story was a quick-read, but mainly because it was difficult to put down. The characters weren't stereotypical; instead, each character, including the supporting ones, were unique and three-dimensional. They weren't perfect, either. Even the Christian characters came with baggage and flaws, yet they were willing to admit their wrong-doings.


I thought the author did a perfect job of reflecting today's teen angst, dialogue, and struggles. One of my favorite aspects of this book was the well-written descriptions. Many books today are either too description-heavy in a way that distracts from the story, or they're too bare bone, lacking any details to aid in painting my imagination. Laurel Garver wove in setting and character details in a way that planted me in the scene without interrupting the flow of the story, and she did so in a way that made me feel as though I were watching a movie. The overall story itself was unpredictable. In fact, there were certain threads that pulled me along and kept me guessing until the very end. I also really appreciated the use of humor in the story, especially in the scenes that could've otherwise come across as emotionally heavy.


If you're searching for a quick contemporary read that is original, realistic, inspiring, well-written, and does not lack in depth, Almost There will not disappoint!



5 / 5 stars.



{ Recommended Ages 13+. Parental permission advised due to minor mature content. } 



** DISCLAIMER: I received a free copy in exchange for an honest review.



{ About the Author }




Laurel Garver is a writer, editor, professor’s wife, and mom to an arty teenager. An indie film enthusiast and incurable Anglophile, she enjoys geeking out about Harry Potter and Dr. Who, playing word games, singing in church choir, and hiking in Philly's Fairmount Park.



{ Contact links }



{ Giveaway }



You’re almost there! Just a few clicks here and a few clicks there and you’ll arrive! Arrive where? Why, you’ll arrive at the rafflecopter page to enter the creative giveaway.


a Rafflecopter giveaway






{ Tour Schedule }



July 25
Bookish Orchestrations-Tour Introduction
Robyn Campbell-Review and Author Interview

July 26

July 27


July 28

July 29
Peggy's Hope 4U-Author Interview

July 30
Bookish Orchestrations-Giveaway Winner
 

post signature