POINT OF VIEW
Newsletter for YA Readers & Writers
Sept./Oct. 2013
In This Issue
YA Novel Review
Writing Exercise
Educator Project
News
Message

In a writing workshop I once took, the literary novelist Ethan Canin told us that reading is "about connecting with a sensibility."  This resonated with me as a writer because I know that when something I read compels me, it's because I feel like I'm connecting to a certain world view in a piece of writing, a specific take on a timeless theme, a fresh, original voice.  A teacher I had in college used to like to say "there are no new plots, just new characters" - and I'd like to take that one step further.  New sensibilities.  Lucky for all of us writers - each of our sensibilities is truly individual.  No one else in the wide world sees the way we see - through our unique experience, through our distinctive eyes.
 
And that's the heart of point of view. 
 
Not just who's telling the story or how it's being told but the entire world view that an author translates through a piece of writing to a reader. 
 
Different readers connect to different point of views, to different sensibilities. It's why I can read something and think "Wow, this engages me. I'm hooked."  And the guy sitting next to me in the café can tell me he couldn't get through it.  It's two sensibilities connecting - or not. 
 
So that's why I think Point of View is essential as a writer and a reader.

I took the summer off from writing this newsletter but I didn't take time off from reading.  I read wonderful novels this summer (Matt Haig's The Humans, Karen Thompson Walker's The Age of Miracles, J Courtney Sullivan's The Engagements to name a few).   

 

 

Perhaps my favorite YA of the summer was Jessi Kirby's GOLDEN (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers).  I've loved Jessi's other books and this one just proves she keeps getting better and better.  The story follows "golden" girl Parker Frost (she has that famous last name for a reason), who, at the end of her senior year realizes she's always taken the road most expected. When she uncovers the secret journal of a former golden girl of her small town (a girl with a tragic story), Parker has to decide if the road less traveled truly is worth exploring.  Jessi weaves lovely Frost references throughout this sweet coming of age tale as Parker picks her path and takes her chosen journey (with the help of her best friend and a darling boy, of course).    

Writing Exercise
In the novel, Parker's English teacher asks them to keep a journal at the end of their senior year detailing their dreams, wishes, hopes, fears, etc.  Then, at the end of the year, they turn the journal into him and he'll mail them back ten years later.  I'm not sure I'd love to get a time capsule from my senior year (oh, the bad poetry!) but it's a clever idea. 

For this writing project, have students write a "Letter to Future Me"
They can write it as a list poem or as an actual letter.  Most importantly, encourage them to focus on what it is they hope for themselves; not just the normal practical things (I hope to have a job) but also the little, specific things they love (I hope to still be eating mint ice cream while watching the stars).
Outside Reading School Project
Jessi peppers the novel with snippets of Frost's poetry.  Have students look up three or four of the complete poems she uses and discuss the way they relate to Parker's character throughout the novel using specific examples from both the poems and the novel to support the argument.

Instructions for a Broken Heart
by Kim Culbertson





IFABH was named a Booklist Online Top Ten Romance Fiction for Youth: 2011: check it out!

IFABH won the 2012 Northern California Book Award for YA Fiction: check it out

I appreciate any other great reviews you'd like to add to Amazon, goodreads, etc. 
And I thank you in advance - it means a lot! 

"Culbertson balances the story between teen angst and a nice Italian travelogue. The author has a flair for evocative descriptions. . . The major strength here is in the literary quality of the writing, although teens may be more interested in the characters' relationship."  -- Kirkus Reviews

Sourcebooks Fire (May 1, 2011)

Also, check out the official trailer!!
"Instructions for a Broken Heart" by Kim Culbertson - *Official Trailer*

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Upcoming Events
My next YA novel, CATCH A FALLING STAR, will be published by Scholastic Press in Summer of 2014! 

If you're interested in having me Skype with/ speak to your library,  school, or bookstore contact me at kim@kimculbertson.com. 
To all my readers and writers
I look forward to sharing more with you next month. I welcome your thoughts and insights.

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