Sabtu, 23 Mei 2020

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Book Details

Title: Hope in the Mail: Reflections on Writing and Life
Author: Wendelin Van Draanen
Number of pages:
Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers (January 14, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 1984894668
Rating: 5     8 reviews

Book Description

Review “Van Draanen may not be the first to offer a writing guide for young people, but this book is one of the best. Will be of great benefit to newbie writers of any age.” —Booklist, Starred Review”Van Draanen’s voice is charmingly no-nonsense, and the themes she explores are sure to benefit aspiring writers of many ages. Thoughtful and entertaining.” —Kirkus Reviews”Suitable for both teens and adults, her amusingly told path to publication may serve as a beacon of hope for some struggling writers, and her creative suggestions may prove useful to those looking to sharpen their writing abilities.”—Publishers Weekly”Van Draanen offers readers and future writers guidance, laughter, and depth in this lighthearted writing guide. Her storytelling abilities will inspire writers of all ages.” —School Library Journal”A pure delight! Only Wendelin Van Draanen can make the painful, awful, agonizing aspects of writing seem so joyfully manageable. Hope in the Mail is a toolbox and a source of renewable energy. If you’re a writer, or a teacher of writers, you need this book.” —Andrew Smith, author of Winger and Grasshopper Jungle”Content is the king of writing, and it turns out Wendelin Van Draanen is the queen of finding it. Read her book, set some good writing habits, pick up your pen, and get going.” —Jack Gantos, author of Dead End in Norvelt, Hole in My Life, and Writing Radar: Using Your Jornal to Snoop Out and Craft Great Stories”Wendelin Van Draanen shares essential truths and very good advice for writers of all genres and levels of skill. This is a must-have for all writers.” —Jonathan Maberry, New York Times bestselling author of V-Wars and Broken Lands Read more About the Author Wendelin Van Draanen spent many years as a classroom teacher and is now a full-time writer. She is the author of many award-winning books, including the Sammy Keyes mysteries, Flipped, Swear to Howdy, Runaway, and Confessions of a Serial Kisser. Ms. Van Draanen lives with her husband, two sons, and two dogs in California. Her hobbies include the “three R’s”: reading, running, and rock ’n’ roll. Wendelin Van Draanen and her husband are also the founders of Exercise the Right to Read, a nationwide campaign designed to get kids reading and running and to help schools raise funds for their libraries. Ms. Van Draanen ran her first marathon when the campaign kicked off, and seeing athletes with disabilities running strong provided much of the inspiration for this book. To read more about Wendelin Van Draanen’s books, please visit WendelinVanDraanen.com, and to learn more about Exercise the Right to Read, visit ExercisetheRighttoRead.org. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 Writers’ Gold Write what you know. It’s a good adage, and a manageable place to start. Many first novels are based on the author’s experiences, so take a look at what treasures are already stored in your vault.Before I was published (but after I had finally begun letting on to family that I was trying to be), an uncle of mine asked me how I thought I could possibly be a writer. “You’re too young to be a writer. You need more experiences.” Gee, thanks. And yes, seeds of doubt can quickly grow into weeds in your garden of worthiness.But here’s the reality: No matter how young you are, you have experiences. You have knowledge. You have feelings and observations and thoughts that are worthy of exploration. You can arrive at conclusions that will broaden the thinking of others, or just paint a picture of life from your perspective. It’s often the small stories with universal messages that touch us most deeply. We’re all humans, trying to find a way forward, longing for the place where we feel at home.My first published novel, How I Survived Being a Girl, was described as “Seinfeld for kids.” What the reviewer meant was that it was a story about nothing, as the sitcom was famously called “a show about nothing.”Having your book be considered to be about nothing could be deflating, but I took it as a huge compliment. I loved Seinfeld. And saying that it was a show about nothing was as true as saying that it was a show about everything. Seinfeld was about both. It captured the human experience with humor and heart-zinging authenticity. It was a show about people living small lives in small apartments in a big city. No special effects, no outrageous sets. Just little glimpses into the lives of people muddling along.All of us have that–a story about nothing that’s actually about everything. No matter how ordinary your environment may seem to you, if your story can capture the human experience within it, others will relate.Don’t discount how extraordinary capturing the ordinary can be. And how difficult. You probably haven’t viewed it this way, but if you’re in school–as a student or as an educator–you are surrounded by writers’ gold. How a school works, the voices of the kids and the administrators, the rules and limitations, the curriculum and expectations . . . it’s all second nature to you. It’s workaday stuff, part of the grind.But let’s turn that around. You have the background and details to write about a school environment naturally. The sights, the sounds, the smells, the mechanics of school life will flow from your fingertips. It’s easy for you! Do you know how many authors–especially kid-lit authors–would love to know what you know? Maybe they were in school once, but that was probably a long time ago. Things in education have changed. To get it right, they have to work at it, and work hard.Likewise, if you have a job–no matter how boring or ordinary you think it is–the way it works, the conversations in the employees’ lunchroom, how your associates relate to each other and the boss . . . it’s all gold.If you’re a dog walker, a babysitter, a dishwasher, a law clerk, a trash collector . . . it’s all gold.And if you’re in a rough situation right now–turbulent home life, a bad neighborhood, even unemployed–turn it around. What you’re going through is hard and dark and frightening, but it’s also writers’ gold. Take notes. Document your experience any way you can. There are seemingly mundane details about your everyday life that will give a natural authenticity to your writing.It’s all gold.So pay new attention to the ordinary around you. Find the story inside it. And find the human connection, because the best stories are the ones that touch our hearts. Love, longing, triumph . . . these can be small and personal, yet they’re universal desires. You don’t have to save the world. Just save your character. And at the heart of that character is you.So no matter what your situation is or how young you are, you have enough to paint a story with words, to make others hear you, see you, feel you.Take a closer look at what you already know.What’s inside your heart?What’s inside your vault?It’s a really good place to start. 2 Out of the Ashes What turns a person into a writer?Sometimes the unexpected. I came to it from a place of anger and pain. Horrible stuff happened to my family when I was in college. An arsonist burned down our business–an industrial facility my immigrant parents had spent twenty years building–and then my father passed away unexpectedly six months later. We were devastated emotionally and financially, and our faith in justice was shaken to the core. I’d jolt awake in the middle of the night relieved to have escaped a nightmare, only to realize, Oh, wait, no. That’s my life.Unable to go back to sleep, I started writing. Scrawling, really, about how unfair the world was, how it was so wrong that such bad things could happen to good people, how small and helpless and lost I felt to be in the middle of this disaster, how the Big Bads–the people who had destroyed the business–were out there, free from any consequence of their actions.I wouldn’t classify what I did as journaling. It was more slashing at the paper. I was alternately furious and heartbroken, or maybe both at once. I felt raw and deeply wounded, and the facts, my thoughts, my emotions poured out, oozed out, bled out. I wrote and I wrote and I wrote.And it didn’t change a thing.The Big Bads were still at large, no one came back to life, and there was still ash where dreams had once stood.I started fantasizing about payback. Payback may be a bad idea, but the cornered, wounded animal doesn’t care. The cornered animal is desperate and primed to strike back.Fortunately, the weapon handy during my middle-of-the-night jolts into reality was a pen.Fortunately, I discovered that I could kill off my bad guys on paper.And unexpectedly, this led me to the world of fiction, where you don’t have to stick to what really happened, where you can change the names of your bad guys a little, change the way things turn out a lot, and dole out payback that would land you behind bars if you tried it in real life. Torture, justice, murder . . . it was all available from the tip of a pen, no jail time required.So, no. I didn’t start writing with literary aspirations.I started writing because I needed to kill off some bad guys.Clearly, what I really needed was therapy.Turns out, writing is great therapy. 3 Putting Hope in the Mail The first novel I wrote was an epic clash of good and evil. Weighing in at 627 pages, it had thinly concealed names, caricatured players, and a very visible ax to grind.Yes, it was terrible.But I didn’t know that!I also didn’t know anything about publishing.Well, other than that most publishing houses were located in New York City.But now I needed to know! I had a masterpiece to place!This was before you could query editors or agents or submit samples online. I got some preliminary information about the submission process by reading back issues of Writer’s Digest magazine, then went to the library, checked out a book called Literary Market Place, perused it for friendly-sounding names, and started shopping my manuscript.Compelling query letter–check!Self-addressed stamped envelope–check!Ignore the no-multiple-submissions rule because who has time for that?–check!Not a great (or even good) strategy. And (displaying compounded ignorance here) I was also under the common misconception that getting a book published meant becoming an instant millionaire. Consequently, I thought that placing my manuscript would bring an end to my family’s financial troubles. Or, at least, help out considerably.So, yeah. Therapy and financial need. These were the forces fueling me. But then a strange thing happened. Each time someone in New York would agree to take a look at my full manuscript, I’d make a copy of it, box (yes, box) it up, and stand in line at the post office. And as I moved forward in the line, my heart would beat a little faster and I would tell myself that this was it. This editor was going to read and love my story. This editor was going to send me a million bucks and my family’s financial troubles would be solved.And when it was my turn at the counter, I’d give the box a quick kiss for luck, pay the postage, and walk away with a little spring in my step.Outside, the world felt renewed with possibility.Things were going to change!We were not defeated.Hope was in the mail. 4 Today Could Be the Day I put hope in the mail for ten years.Actively and persistently, I sent out manuscripts and queries, and for ten years I was actively and persistently rejected by editors and agents in New York.The rejection slips were usually generic–some version of We’re sorry. This is not right for us at this time. But please think of us again with your next project.I shoved the slips inside a drawer.Over time, they filled the drawer.I moved them into a box.Over time, they filled the box.You’d think I’d have taken the hint: I didn’t have what it took to be published. So why did I keep trying?Looking back, I think it had a lot to do with keeping hope in the mail. As my first manuscript was making the rounds in New York, I began working on a second story. Another epic clash of good and evil! This time, though, it was more removed from my own story. Characters were becoming . . . their own entities. Plot was more . . . flexible. There was real freedom in that, and I enjoyed it.I also began reading about the craft of writing. I read everything I could get my hands on because I wanted to finally crack the code. I wanted to get inside structure and dialogue, pacing and theme.So when my self-addressed stamped envelopes started coming back to me with rejections for my first novel, I was disappointed, but not crushed. I’d learned more about craft and could see now that, yeah, the first book was more therapy than literature. I got back to work, thinking, You didn’t like that story? Okay, well, wait ’til you read this one!Having overlapping hope in the mail equipped me with the mantra Today could be the day. If I didn’t give up, if I kept submitting, kept learning, kept writing, kept trying, someday someone somewhere would read one of my manuscripts and want to buy it.Today could be the day.It’s a nice way to live your life, but it only works if you keep hope in the mail. This phrase doesn’t refer to just physical mail or email. Putting hope in the mail means putting yourself–your work, your wishes–out there however you can. It means actively creating the possibility for good things to happen.Now, prepare for your hopes to be dashed–because undoubtedly they will be. But when that happens, the only course of action is to pick yourself up, redouble your efforts, and put hope back in the mail. Don’t let rejection or brusque (and occasionally cruel) critiques cause you to close in, close down, or give up. Don’t sit in a dark corner licking your wounds. If you disagree with the opinions of the rejecting party, send your work to someone else. I promise you that over time rejection gets less painful and becomes just part of the process.In the case of literature, it’s not science, and I see now that that’s a good thing. There is nothing more ho-hum than a formulaic book. And what one editor may dismiss, another editor right next door may love. So get back in the ring! And while you’re waiting for a reply, shift your focus to a new project.Do not wait around.Nothing will reinvigorate you more than pouring your energies into something new.Another thing that helped me endure ten years of rejection was not knowing it was going to be ten years. For all those years, I had a full-time job, and for many of them I also had two little kids. I got up each morning at five o’clock when my husband left for work, spent the next hour or so writing, then began my real day. I was constantly sleep-deprived. If I had known it would take ten years to get published, I almost certainly wouldn’t have made it.But I didn’t know.And every day I told myself, Today could be the day.And then one day it was. 5 Defining Moments Ten years is a lot of rejection for someone to take. And on the long and winding road to the day I finally got a “Yes,” I heard things like “It’s just too hard to get published” and “You have to know somebody in publishing” and “Maybe if you had an MFA, people would pay attention.”These, uh, consoling and, uh, helpful statements were tempting to buy into during the many phases of feeling discouraged. Maybe there were just too many obstacles, too many reasons I wouldn’t succeed.Any one of them would justify quitting.So . . . what, then, made me keep going? Why did I think that, despite the odds, I could do this?I trace the defining moment back to my first car.A lot of kids I went to high school with got cars when they turned sixteen. Some got hand-me-downs, some got brand-new, off-the-car-lot, big-bowed beauties.If I had asked my parents for a car of any kind, they would have laughed me out of the room. That’s just not the way things worked in our family. If I wanted my own car, I was going to have to buy it with my own money.Desperate for a vehicle, I scoured our small town for one I could afford. Taking out a loan or buying something on credit never even crossed my mind. We didn’t do credit. We were taught to only buy what we could afford, and as a student without steady income, what I could afford would be paid for with money from babysitting, yard work, and summer jobs. This meant that what I could afford wasn’t much, but there were three for-sale-by-owner prospects in town at my price point, and a friend offered to drive me around to check them out. Read more

Customers Review:

Readers and writers should both note this remarkable book. I’ve read all Wendelin Van Draanen has published, and revisit often for her gift of revealing the complex, subtle thinking of others. She sees detail, and gifts me with seeing it. I am a reader, not a writer. But this book makes me a better reader, which is a delight. The range here—personal stories, seeds from which novels grew, writing wisdom, book industry insight—is extraordinary. Despite all that it covers, it does so with clarity, brevity, and depth. Depth not by detail, but by long reflection, and focus on what is essential. Imagine enjoying the night sky… and having a friend arrive with a telescope, aiming it effortlessly to reveal new views of things you thought you knew. That’s how Hope in the Mail feels to me. Stunning new images in my mental gallery. Wisdom expertly distilled, with humor. “It’s all gold” here, and alchemy has never seemed so achievable. Who knew it could be so much fun to write fiction as you wished real life to be? And so startling to spend time with fictional characters who become real, and influence you?
This is the book Wendelin Van Draanen’s reading fans have been waiting for her to write. After twenty-plus years of being a published author and thirty-four books penned by her, she gives her reading audience a behind-the-scenes look at her writing process, personal anecdotes, and life lessons learned.The sharp wit, humor, vivid imagery, poignant personal stories, and writing suggestions are all here in this classic story of a beloved award-winning children’s and YA author. Even if you’ve never read one of her books, this is the one to pick up and enjoy when it hits bookshelves in January. It will leave you laughing out loud, tearing up, and falling in love with this one-of-a-kind writer and her powerful stories that reflect her life, writing journey, and strong belief in living a life to enrich a life.You will want to reserve some time to read this motivational self-portrait of a woman who has impacted thousands of lives with her unforgettable, inspirational stories. Her characters open hearts and minds to looking beneath the surface to discover empathy and understanding for other human beings. Once you enter the world of Wendelin Van Draanen and her characters–both real and fictional–you will never want to leave. Hope in the Mail is filled with hope, wisdom, life lessons, and pure joy.
I am 1/3 of the way through and could easily give up the day to finish it. Yet, it is so good that I force myself to put it down to savor what I’ve just read. I intend to recommend it to my book club next week. I just ordered a hard copy to donate to our local library that has imaginative afternoon programs for children. Hope in the Mail would make for great discussion, sharing, then writing, and more sharing. It’s made me want to sit down and “write what [I] know.” Van Draanen gives this advice in the first chapter, “Writer’s Gold,” then proceeds to illustrate her counsel with personal examples that read like a novel!.
Just as any book written by WVD is masterful, purposeful and worthy, this insiders look to her writing life sparkles. I have read every book by WVD and can offer them to middle school students of every reading level with confidence. This book peeks behind the curtain — right to her writing life long before publishing and long before she ventured into the world and work of writing. WVD shares her childhood and family stories because they certainly lay the foundation to her storytelling. She shares how her stories evolved in structure and craft and how sheer fortitude to continue shaped her author life. This fortitude was grounded in her childhood and seeps into her stories with unforgettable characters. I have purchased this book for the writers group in our middle school and they cheer it as well. WVD is substance all the time. This is hope for writers not (yet) published waking before work to sit on the corner of the bed to get pages out, for writers who carve out time after work and family duties to write more pages. WVD was there. She is cheering all of us on and we can do nothing but cheer her work. Again. Thank you, WVD! Can’t wait until your next book is out in the world.
I always thought that most people have a book inside of them. Wendelin’s “Hope in the Mail” will inspire and provide the tools to make a book idea a reality. While Wendelin is clearly not lacking in visionary genius in creating characters and compelling story lines, it is the perseverance she learned from her father at an early age and the skill set she acquired in revising her work that has made her the author of over 30 published fiction books for young adults. I liked this practical how-to book on taking a book idea and honing it sufficiently into a polished manuscript to catch an editor’s eye. Wendelin also gives insight into the roles of agents, managers, art directors, editors and publishers, and explains the realities of royalties and cash flow. And, she’ll also tell you her secret to avoiding writer’s block!
“Hope in the Mail” is less of a “how to” book on writing, and more of a “get out there and give writing everything you’ve got” book. It’s got tons of insightful personal anecdotes from Wendelin Van Draanen’s path to and through publishing, and it’s absolutely brimming with refreshing humor and positivity. I expect I will open this book many more times on my own path in writing.
To anyone who wants to be a writer (or knows anyone of ANY age who enjoys writing) – I found the book Hope In The Mail, written by the brilliant Wendelin Van Draanen, to be a smart, insightful, and very inspiring book. While it’s ostensibly about how to strengthen your writing skills and be a published author (with moving and funny stories from her own impressive history of 30 novels – and TONS of great behind-the-scenes stories from Sammy Keyes, Flipped, Wild Bird and more!), it’s also a book that will encourage the creative people you know – and as we know, they ALWAYS need encouragement. This book is available now – you can also buy the fun-to-listen-to audiobook on iTunes, which is how I enjoyed it!