Road Trip to Publication with Megan Crewe
Thursday, July 3rd, 2008Welcome to the sixth chapter in Road Trip to Publication, a series of interviews with authors at various stages in their careers. You can check out previous interviews here.
The sixth story features YA author Megan Crewe, a super cool redhead who tutors autistic children. And if the photo on her website is any indication, she may be a part-time model too! Still, it wasn’t a pretty smile that scored Megan the representation of highly sought after agent Kristin Nelson. I’ve had the fortune of reading some of Megan’s writing, and the girl has some serious world-building skills.
Another cool thing about Megan? She’s a publisher sistah of mine. Henry Holt BYR will be releasing her debut YA paranormal, GIVING UP THE GHOST, in Fall 2009!
Synopsis (ganked from her website): Sixteen-year-old Cass McKenna would take the company of the dead over the living any day. Unlike her high school classmates, the dead don’t lie or judge, and they’re way less scary than Danielle, the best-bud-turned-backstabber who kicked Cass to the bottom of the social ladder in seventh grade. Since then, Cass has styled herself as an avenger. Using the secrets her ghostly friends stumble across, she exposes her fellow students’ deceits and knocks the poseurs down a peg.
When Tim Reed, the student council V.P., asks Cass to chat with his recently-deceased mom, her instinct is to laugh in his face. But Tim’s part of Danielle’s crowd. He can give Cass dirt the dead don’t know. Intent on revenge, Cass offers to trade her spirit-detecting skills for his information. She isn’t counting on chasing a ghost who would rather hide than speak to her, dealing with the retaliation of an angry student, or discovering that Tim’s actually an okay guy. As Tim sinks into a suicidal depression, Cass has to choose: run back to the safety of the dead, or risk everything to stop Tim from becoming a ghost himself.
Your YA paranormal, GIVING UP THE GHOST, sold a few months back. Congrats again! If the world building is half as amazing as HALFWAY HERO, readers are in for a treat.
Some writers dream of their ideas, others let their characters dictate the plot, and some plan everything out via flash cards beforehand. How did you come up with the idea for GIVING UP THE GHOST?
Honestly, it’s a little hard to tell you, because I was half-asleep at the time. I get a lot of my best ideas when my mind is just wandering, as it often does when I am attempting to sleep. During one of those times, the main character, Cass, started to form in my mind—this girl who would rather be friends with the dead than the living, because the dead were less scary (for her) to deal with. Later, when I was awake, I had to figure out why she found the living scary, and what she was going to have to overcome in the book, and that’s when the outlining and index cards came in.
If GIVING UP THE GHOST was a movie, who would play Cass? Who would play Tim?
Hmmm. If I could get a teenaged Thora Birch, she might make a good Cass. Or a teen Anna Paquin. They’re both too old now, though. I can’t think of any actors who look like my mental image of Tim. Obviously, if GHOST does become a movie, I should not be involved in casting.
Pick a theme song for Cass—one that suits her personality. Good. Now, why did you pick that song?
This I can do! “Trouble” by Lisa Germano. It sums up Cass’s internal struggle pretty much perfectly—wanting to reach out, yet catching herself because she remembers how risky that can be; starting to realize she’s not happy with the way she is but hesitant to change all the same.
World building is tough, and the bar is continually being raised in urban fantasy/paranormal. What do you think makes your world believable to the reader? Can you think of any YA urban fantasy novels where the world building really impressed you? If so, why?
I hope my world is believable to the reader! What makes it believable to me, I think, is the internal consistency. I know exactly what my ghosts can and can’t do; I set the rules down early and I don’t deviate from them. And then there’s the very-hard-to-express sense of ‘it feels right’. The way the supernatural elements in my book work, and how my characters respond to them, were written the way that felt the most real and true to me.
Let’s talk about the road that led you to this wonderful place. What did you love about the agent hunt? What drove you nuts?
The best and worst part of the agent hunt was that moment an e-mail appeared in my inbox, or a SASE arrived in my mailbox. All that hope—maybe they want to read more! Maybe they loved it! And all the fear—maybe they hated it and they never want to see one word from me again! Getting requests and positive feedback, knowing agents liked the idea and the pages enough to want to see more, that was great. But getting the rejections, not being quite there yet, not knowing when I would be… Not so much fun.
Is there anything you’d like to share about Call#1—when your agent offered representation? Did your agent tell you what she loved about the book?
I was so excited during that call it’s a bit of a blur. But I do remember feeling that Kristin really got the book, because the things she loved about it—Cass’s voice, her prickly yet vulnerable personality, the idea of using ghosts to learn people’s secrets—were the things I loved most about it, too.
A lot of writers question whether or not an agent is necessary. What do you really love about having an agent?
In the least amount of words, not having to worry. I don’t have to worry about which editors to send a book to, or how to get to editors at closed houses; I don’t have to worry about negotiating contracts or figuring out what terms are reasonable. And that’s time I can spend writing instead. On the less practical side, it’s also a really great feeling having someone on your side, who believes in your work enough to want to get it out there for you.
Did you have to revise before your book went on submission?
I did some relatively small revisions for Kristin before the book went out—line edits here and there, and expanding a couple of scenes.
Response times in the publishing world can be rather unpredictable, but we writerly types love stats. How long did it take you to get an offer after your agent submitted the manuscript to publishers?
I’m fond of telling this story now, but it wasn’t so enjoyable when I was in the middle of waiting. GIVING UP THE GHOST went on submission on January 2, 2007. We got the first offer January 2, 2008. One year to the day!
Did you manage to form coherent sentences during your first conversation with your new editor?
As far as I recall, they were mostly coherent. To be careful I had written out the questions I wanted to ask ahead of time, just in case.
You’re definitely well on your way, but the road trip isn’t over yet. Now that you’ve found a great agent and editor, what are you focusing on (i.e. promotion, revisions, etc)?
Right now I’m focusing on finished revisions on GHOST and getting my next project ready for submission. I’ve been thinking a lot about promotion, too—it seems like so much fun! But it’s a little early for that yet.
If you could design your own book cover for GIVING UP THE GHOST, what would it contain?
I don’t know if this would actually work, but the image I have in my head is a wide gravestone, with two girls sitting on it (visible only from waist-ish down), one fully there and one ghostly, inclined toward each other as if they’re hanging out there talking. And the title would be carved on the gravestone.
**Fun author factoids**
Which character in THE BREAKFAST CLUB were you in high school (the nerd, the rebel, the jock, the princess, the recluse)? And how did you totally blow that stereotype to shreds?
I was probably closest to the nerd—I was best known as someone who got good grades—but I was not a very good stereotype. I was involved in athletics (swim & synchro teams) and artistic things (newspaper, writing contests, murals) as well. I listened to alternative rock. I hated math, and stopped taking it as soon as I was absolutely sure I wouldn’t need it for. Sure, I wanted to do well academically, but the only marks I really cared about (as in, would get upset if they didn’t meet my expectations) were on the fiction assignments in English class.
Name one thing that hasn’t changed about you since you were a teen. Come on, there’s always something.
Um, I write? Okay, okay. I’m still kind of socially awkward, and not very good at starting conversations with people I don’t know well. Or answering questions like this, apparently!
Okay, so let’s say you get stuck in an elevator. But you get to pick one author to keep you company. Who would it be and why?
You didn’t say it has to be an author who’s still alive, so assuming this is all a dream anyway: Roald Dahl. Because he’s been one of my favorite children’s authors since I was a kid, and I’d love to get a glimpse of what he was like in person, ask him questions about his books, that sort of thing. Also, he clearly has a great sense of humor, so I would be entertained while we were stuck.
Yay! Thank you, Megan, for your splendid answers and insight into your upcoming book. I mean–sarcastic girls and ghosts? Sounds like something right up my alley
Look out for GIVING UP THE GHOST in Fall 2009, everyone! I know I can’t wait to read it.
