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Showing posts with label The Tear Collector. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Tear Collector. Show all posts

Sunday, October 4, 2009

T2T Blog Tour: Interview: Patrick Jones (Author of The Tear Collector!)

Today I'm hosting Patrick Jones, author of the recently released YA supernatural read: The Tear Collector!


Brief Biography (from Patrick Jones' website):
A former librarian for teenagers, Patrick now concentrates on writing fiction for teens. His third novel -- Chasing Taillights was published in summer 2007, while his 4th novel Cheated is due out in spring 2008. His second novel Nailed was published by Walker / Bloomsbury in spring 2006 and was a runner-up in the Great Lakes Book Award. His first young adult novel Things Change (Walker & Company, 2004) was named by the Young Adult Library Services Association as a best book for reluctant readers. His most recent (and last) professional publication is Connecting with Reluctant Readers (Neal-Schuman, 2006). In 2006, he won lifetime achievement awards from both the Catholic Library Association, and the American Library Association. In March of 2006, he won the Scholastic Library Publishing Award. Jones is a frequent speaker at library conferences, having visited all fifty states, as well as in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Jones grew up in Flint, Michigan, but now lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

The Interview:

First off, tell us a little bit about your new novel, The Tear Collector.
The Tear Collector is about a vampire-like creature Cassandra who lives not off human blood, but human tears. She’s in high school, so it is the perfect setting for a book about crying. There’s a line in the book about how drama turns to trauma turns to tears in her school. So it has a supernatural element, but there’s also a romance between her and a human male. There are some bigger themes about science vs. religion / facts vs. faith, but mostly it a supernatural romance ala Twilight with everything twisted. I’d wanted to write a book for years about rumors / gossip in high school, and that theme fit nicely into this book.

Where did the inspiration for the supernatural aspect of The Tear Collector originate?
I knew I wanted to write a vampire novel, but thought the charismatic male vampire meets plain Jane girl searching for answers had already been done. To death. So, I needed a new gimmick. Tears made sense as all my other teen novels certainly contained their share of crying characters. Johanna in Things Change who is in violent dating relationship, Christy in Chasing Tail Lights who is growing up in poverty, and most recently Danielle in Stolen Car who hates her life, wants to make a change, and wants to know if love is real. So, tears and high school go well together.

Did you do any research while writing The Tear Collector? If yes, please explain.
Only a little, mainly about the specifics of some biology concepts, like adaptation, and trying to remember my Catholic School years for information on the Stations of the Cross. My main research is always visiting high schools, and then communicating with students after via facebook or myspace. The Samantha character is pulled from a couple of girls I met doing visits, and I don’t think I’ve ever been to a school and not met Cody or Brittney types. Lots of small details – from how Samantha wears mismatching Chuck Taylors to how Brittney uses her IPod as a mirror – are things I noticed the road. My research is also after the fact, in that after I have a good solid first draft done, I find teens that read it and comment / correct mistakes.

Why did you cast your lead character as female rather than male?
Most of my books are told first person point of view from a teenage girl. I find that easy to do since when I’m writing I have these high heels I wear. Wait. That’s a lie. They’re pumps. I write from the female POV for three reasons. The first is practical: more teen girls buy YA novels than guys. The second is Cassandra, like my other teen girl characters, is struggling with identity. Not that teen guys don’t, but I think it is different. I think all teen girls are two people: the person the parents think they are and then the person they really are. Sometimes those two sides are close, but often they are far apart. That’s been true from Johanna in Things Change to Cassandra in Tear Collector. These are young women in conflict between their heads and their hearts; between what they want and what they need, but mostly who they are and who they want to be. Finally, most of the vampire books may have teen girl telling the story, but often she’s not the most interesting person in the book. Like everything else, I wanted to twist that convention.

What was the most difficult aspect of writing The Tear Collector?
The hardest thing was the mythology: how Cassandra’s world works. Not just figuring it out, but then how much to reveal, and how to reveal it Since she’s telling the story, there’s no good way for her to get that information out since she can’t tell Samantha (until near the end) and anyone else who is a tear collector already knows how the world works. I also wanted to keep some stuff vague, both to set-up a sequel, but also in that X-Files / Carnivale way of letting the viewer piece together the clues. The other hard thing for me is that my previous teen novels deal head-on with sexuality, and I knew for lots of reasons I wanted to limit that here. It’s still not a middle school book, but it is tame compared to my other books. There’s also much less cursing. Damn.

Did you always want to be a writer?
When I was eight, my Dad took met to a professional wrestling match. I was a huge fan of grown men in their underwear pretending to hurt each other. The next day, however, there was no story in the Flint Journal (my hometown paper) about the match. So, I mentioned it to my mom and she said I should write an article. She had an old manual typewriter and taught me how to type. Somehow, I found a wrestling newsletter in NYC that accepted my article; I’m sure they don’t realize I was only eight. So, in elementary school, I had a byline. That’s addictive. While I wasn’t a big reader in school, I did enjoy writing including plays, songs, and poems, but I also was growing up in Flint, Michigan so being a writer was not a realistic dream. Although I guess a few of us have proved that a wrong assumption. I think I’d still rather be a pro wrestler though.

What jobs did you have on your way to being a writer? Did they help you in any way as a writer?
I still have one. Because I write for older teens, because I write honestly about sexuality, and because my teens don’t use words like “shoot” and “freakin’”, I don’t sell many books in schools, which is still a lot of book sales. I’m also with a smaller publisher, so they don’t have the same UMPH to push my books, and I maybe because write about working class kids, I’m not selling tons of books in suburban malls. I still have a day job, which did lead directly to my getting published. I started working in libraries in 1979 (yes, almost 30 years ago) and got a a Masters in Library Science from the University of Michigan. I’ve worked a librarian since then, focusing on youth services, including winning a couple of national lifetime achievement awards for that work. As part of this, in the early 1990s, I served on a national committee to select books for reluctant readers, which is where I first met Emily Easton, who is now my editor. There’s more about this, and other librarians turned authors (including Annette Curtis Klause who wrote THE teen vampire romance The Silver Kiss) in an article in VOYA magazine.

When and where do you usually write?
I write at home in Minneapolis normally in HUGE jags on the weekends for like seven or eight hours at a time. A book I just completed poured out of me: from 0 to 55,000 words in ten days to complete a good solid first draft. But I also write in short bursts on airplanes, in hotels, and in Northwest World Clubs since I travel a great deal doing speaking engagements and school visits. When I’m at home, which is where I do most of my writing, I write sitting in bed on a Dell laptop (which is missing the “d” key). But before I sit down at the computer, it seems – at least for the last four books – that I’ve got the book pretty outlined and imagined in my head. It’s just a matter of unrolling the “movie” from my mind and getting in on paper / on the computer.

Is there something that is a must have for you to be able to write?
Something to say, something I want to learn about myself/teens, and a soundtrack. Every book I write, I’ve developed a soundtrack / play-list that really helps. It is not a play-list that people would listen to reading the book since most teens wouldn’t listen to / like the artists I enjoy (for Tear Collector it was the Celtic soul of Van Morrison), but it gets me in the right mood.

What author or book most influenced you as a writer or in general?
My favorite YA books of all time are Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson, Rats Saw God by Rob Thomas (Veronica Mars, not Matchbox 20), and Vision Quest by Terry Davis. These books are epitomes of YA novel voice, attitude, and honesty. I’m also, as mentioned, influenced by music.

What are currently reading?
I mainly read adult non-fiction, so my most recent book was Columbine by Dave Cullen. I was so blown away by this book that I wrote a review and interviewed the author for a magazine. In my novel Nailed, the main character Bret is a misfit teen bullied by jocks. One of his responses is writing an essay called “Dylan and Eric Were Victims, too.” Except I got it wrong; most of the media got it wrong. Dave Cullen – who followed the story since 1999 – sets the record straight in this book that Columbine wasn’t what most of us thought it was.

What book are you anxiously awaiting?
Nothing most of your blog readers are looking for I would guess. While I wrote a supernatural teen romance, I’m not reading them, nor do I read much speculative fiction. One book I’m waiting for is Hulk Hogan’s new book, which I can only hope will be as hilariously inaccurate as his first one. In teen stuff, I’m waiting for new books by Coe Booth, Jeannine Garsee, Annette Curtis Klause, and the sequel to Perfect Chemistry by Simone Elkeles.

Can you tell us anything about your next YA novel?
I just (and I mean like yesterday) finished a 55,000 word first draft of a sequel to Tear Collector with the working title of Cassandra's Turn or maybe Cassandra Turns. The sequel explores what happens with Brittney, follows Cass's desire to become human to be with Scott, develops the friendship with Samantha, as well as finding her cousin Alexei returning. There will also be a competing love interest. But they’ll only be a sequel if Tear Collector sells. I also have another book (Clicked) done that is in my editor’s hands which is a realistic novel. The story starts with the main character Carson returning from his school's homecoming football game. He goes up to his room to write an article about the game for his school newspaper, but he's distracted by the word "homecoming." Three years ago, Carson's older sister Carrie ran away from home and hasn't been heard from since. He finishes writing the story, and then he's alone on the computer. He's a teen boy, so soon he's looking at porn. Click. Click. Click. And he comes across an image of his sister on a porn site. Well, the plot kind of takes off from there.

The Hiding Spot is dedicated to my personal hiding spot, books. Is there a place, activity, or person that is your hiding spot?
Listening to music in my car, or a rented car. I put in a Springsteen CD – or sometimes in a rental car, I’ll get the EStreet station on satellite radio – and everything wrong in the world washes away. Nothing matters except the cars in front me, and Bruce’s Badlands, Jungleland, and the Darkness on the Edge on the Town. For me, Thunder Road is one hell of a hiding place. While it probably isn’t Bruce, I think this is a hiding place many teens can understand.

Anything else you would like to share with us?
I think part of this work isn’t just writing books for teens, but being accessible, which is much easier to do in the Internet age. I’m on facebook and myspace, and even set up a myspace just for The Tear Collector, with links to songs, books, and movies that will make you cry. Writing is about communicating ideas, but I hope that the communication between my readers and me doesn’t have to end on the last page of my last book.

Thank you, Patrick, for taking the time to chat with The Hiding Spot!



T2T Blog Tour: Review: The Tear Collector by Patrick Jones

Title: The Tear Collector
Author: Patrick Jones
Publisher: Walker
Pub. Date: Sept. 2009
Genre: YA
Main Themes: Supernatural, Love, Family, Emotion
Pages: 263
Plot (from book jacket):
"Between hookups, makeups, and breakups, there isn't a day at Lapeer High School without drama turning to trauma turning to tears.
And tears are just as essential as air for Cassandra Gray. She and her family are vampires who thirst for human sorrow, and the energy that they soak in from a good crying jag can keep them fueled up for days.
Anytime a friend needs a shoulder to cry on, Cass is there. Anytime a boyfriend gets too secure, she breaks his heart.
Cass's work as a school peer counselor and hospital volunteer also provides the perfect cover and access o her family's energy source. But she is getting tired of all the lies and manipulation - especially now that she's actually fallen in love with a human. Can she bear to betray her family for a chance at happiness and a life lived with joy?"

I really liked the idea of The Tear Collector. When I read that the main character was a girl who basically lived off human tears, I was intrigued. While I felt that the idea of the book was well conceived, I didn't think the novel was very well executed.

One aspect that I felt was a major negative of The Tear Collector was the characters. I think this is the aspect that caused the most distraction for me. I didn't feel like the dialogue between characters was well written and I didn't feel like the characters were fully developed or believable.

The romantic aspect of the novel was very disappointing to me. I thought the love story would be greater, more epic, than it was. I felt like Cassandra didn't really do much to deserve any of the devotion that she received - her character was too flat for me to feel any attachment to her and I didn't see how any guy would be attached to her either. Her only quality that I could imagine her using to attract a guy would be her tendency to have sex with guys. I liked the idea of a guy finally seeing more to her than just what she could do for him physically, but I don't think that she ever really showed that other side.

I did think that the premise for The Tear Collector was a really unique and original idea. That was the one redeeming quality, it is unfortunate that I didn't enjoy the other main part of this book: the romance.

Ratings (Out of 10):
Plot: 8
Characters: 4
Writing style: 4
Romance: 4
Originality: 10
Total: 30/50 (D-)

The Tear Collector wasn't a book that I particularly enjoyed, but my sister read it as well and liked it. I recommend reading some other reviews before deciding whether to pick it up youself. More reviews will be circulating as the Traveling to Teens blog tour for The Tear Collector continues!


Saturday, August 29, 2009

In My Mailbox (6)

IMM is hosted by Kristi, aka The Story Siren!

I'm really pumped about all the books IMM this week - all of them have been on my wishlist!


The Tear Collector by Patrick Jones (9/1/09, Walker Books)
"Fans of urban fantasy should prepare for a new kind of vampire–one that feeds off of tears instead of blood. Descended from an ancient line of creatures that gain their energy from human tears, Cassandra Gray depends on human sorrow to live. Only Cass has grown tired of living this life and wants to live like a human, especially now that she's met someone worth fighting for."
This book came as part of Traveling to Teens and I am so excited for it! It looks so amazing!


Prada and Prejudice by Mandy Hubbard (already out from Razorbill)
"To impress the popular girls on a high school trip to London, klutzy Callie buys real Prada heels. But trying them on, she trips…conks her head…and wakes up in the year 1815!
There Callie meets Emily, who takes her in, mistaking her for a long-lost friend. As she spends time with Emily’s family, Callie warms to them—particularly to Emily’s cousin Alex, a hottie and a duke, if a tad arrogant.
But can Callie save Emily from a dire engagement, and win Alex’s heart, before her time in the past is up?
More Cabot than Ibbotson, Prada and Prejudice is a high-concept romantic comedy about finding friendship and love in the past in order to have happiness in the present."

I found this one at my new library where I live in Kalamazoo - which is huge! Basically, I am in love with a library. Creepy? I think not! Okay, maybe, but I don't even care!


Meridian by Amber Kizer (out now from Delacorte)
Half-human, half-angel, Meridian Sozu has a dark responsibility.
Sixteen-year-old Meridian has been surrounded by death ever since she can remember. As a child, insects, mice, and salamanders would burrow into her bedclothes and die. At her elementary school, she was blamed for a classmate’s tragic accident. And on her sixteenth birthday, a car crashes in front of her family home—and Meridian’s body explodes in pain.
Before she can fully recover, Meridian is told that she’s a danger to her family and hustled off to her great-aunt’s house in Revelation, Colorado. It’s there that she learns that she is a Fenestra—the half-angel, half-human link between the living and the dead. But Meridian and her sworn protector and love, Tens, face great danger from the Aternocti, a band of dark forces who capture vulnerable souls on the brink of death and cause chaos.

This one was at the library too - and I've been dying to read it so I was super excited!


The Naughty List by Suzanne Young (2/10/2010 from Razorbill)
"Tessa Crimson: Cheerleader by Day, Spy by Night
As leader of the SOS (Society of Smitten Kittens), Tessa’s mission is twofold: pep preservation and relationship salvation. That’s right, Tessa is a head cheerleader whose night job is catching cheating boyfriends in the act! Thank goodness her own relationship with Aiden is strawberry-smoothie purrfect—except for the fact that she’s been concealing her nocturnal habits for, oh, two years.
Aiden suspects something’s up, and his patience is wearing thin. But in the meantime, Tessa’s far too busy to deal with her own romantic roadblocks. The Naughty List is at maximum capacity; because so far, every single suspect on it is 100% guilty.
When sultry Chloe Ferril transfers to Washington High, things only become more catastrophic. Tessa knows this predatory vixen won’t stop hunting Aiden until her claws are planted firmly in his backside…
But Tessa’s in for an even bigger shock when Aiden’s name shows up on The Naughty List, and she’s finally forced to confront the unthinkable: is her own boyfriend just as naughty as all the rest?"

I can't wait to read this one!! I think that it has such an interesting premise... for some reason it reminds me of Veronica Mars, which makes me want to read it even more. And watch Veronica Mars... :) Thanks Razorbill for the copy!