POINT OF VIEW
Newsletter for YA Readers & Writers
Nov./Dec. 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.

The Language of Love

On November 2nd, I had the opportunity to attend the Vegas Valley Book Festival and sit on a wonderful panel called The Language of Love moderated by the fabulous librarian Nikki Bylina-Streets. First of all, I want to send out a huge thank you to Crystal Perkins for the invitation to the festival. I sat on the panel with eight other authors who write contemporary love stories, and while each of our books features an element of romantic love, the conversation of the day very much focused on how love in a broader sense provides the driving force behind what we write. To paraphrase Terra Elan McVoy, we write about relationships. And love, whether between a parent and child, or between siblings or friends, fuels the exploration of these relationships in our work. Sitting there, I listened to these incredible women discuss the reason they write, share stories of love in their own lives, and talk about their excitement for future projects, and it struck me: I'm so freakin' lucky to be sitting here with these authors! Sitting in my folding chair, a warm desert breeze on my face, I realized: I love these people. I love that they write books about love. I felt drenched in a deep sense of gratitude for what they do, what they share in their books, for their individual voices all coming together to write about the power of love.

And since it's the holidays - a time for reflection and gratitude, and, let's face it, buying stuff - I thought I'd give you a list of these amazing authors and their books so you could check them out too and maybe find one or two that you want to stuff into some stockings. This holiday season, give the language of love.

 

Amy Plum (Die for Me series, HarperCollins)

Lauren Morrill (Meant to Be, Random House)
Katie McGarry (Pushing the Limits, Harlequin Teen)

Stephanie Strohm (Pilgrims Don't Wear Pink, Graphia/HMH)

Terra Elan McVoy (Being Friends With Boys, Simon Pulse)

Robin Mellom (Ditched: A Love Story, Disney Press)

Jennifer E. Smith (This Is What Happy Looks Like, Poppy)

Leila Howland (Nantucket Blues, Disney-Hyperion) 

 

 

Writing Exercise
Write a poem called "The Language of Love."  What specific, sensory language do you use to describe love?  For me, love smells like wet autumn leaves and sounds like my daughter and husband laughing at something unknown in the next room.  Think about all the language we can use to describe love.  Write, write, write.
Outside Reading School Project
Create a holiday book list with books that show the language of love.  For each entry, chose one or two lines from the book to show how this author showcases love.

Catch A Falling Star
by Kim Culbertson

My new YA novel, CATCH A FALLING STAR, will be published April 29, 2014 by Scholastic Press.  Stay tuned for details about upcoming events and blog tour. 
Songs for a Teenage Nomad Need a gift?
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Bundle any combination of the following:
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Upcoming Events
If you're interested in having me Skype with/ speak to your library,  school, or bookstore contact me at kim@kimculbertson.com. 
 
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