Blog & Podcast

Always a Bridesmaid, Never a Bride… Find out how I felt the Day after The Aurora Awards 2016 were Announced. Better Luck Next Year?

Just Joshing host Josh Pantelleresco cornered me the day after the 2016 Aurora Awards were announced and we talked about the thrill of being a Finalist, and what the day after looks like.

He challenged me on why I write and what my plans are, and it turned out to be a great interview.

My interview starts at about 5:45 in this podcast, take a listen!!

https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/jpantalleresco/episodes/2016-10-14T02_39_53-07_00

Readers – Why I Write

Recently, I received an email from a teen reader, who was beside herself after reading The Fountain. Her letter read:

SUZY VADORI YOU DID NOT END THE BOOK THAT WAY NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! ! Okay, I know that this isn’t really a “professional ” email but I just finished your book and my heart is DYING!!! you have hurt me, you have created the most wonderful romance I could ever imagine! ! No you did not go there!!! I can’t help but ship but, arrgggg you are tearing my world apart!! Now excuse me while I figuratively cry under my covers… HOW DARE YOU!!

~READER

(DARN THAT BOOK GETS TO ME)

I was puzzled by this letter. The book has a happy ending. Or, at least, a “Happy for Now” as we say. Who knows where the rest of the series will lead? The thing was, I couldn’t tell from this letter whether or not she actually liked the book, or whether she was disappointed with it, so it got to me. (I got another letter from her later – she LOVED it, and enthusiastically so).

But it got me to thinking about why I write, and what the point of it all actually is. And what I realized is that I think a book’s job is to make us feel. In The Fountain, sixteen year old Ava has choices to make throughout. Tough choices, just like the ones we have to make everyday. It’s not always obvious to her what the “right” choice will be. I’ve had readers tell me that her choices are obvious. And I’ve had readers react like this amazing teen – because they wanted her to choose something different. A different life, perhaps. But we’re all different, really – and thankfully so.

Tough choices are why Young Adult books like The Hunger Games and anything by John Green are such sensations. We want to feel. We want to know what it would feel like to be in a really tough situation. What would we do? What is right, and what is wrong, and what choices do we sometimes have to make to just get through the day?

The Fountain works because it does just that. It carries the reader on a difficult journey, where Ava does the best she can with what she’s handed. For the time it takes to flip its pages, the reader faces the same choices as Ava – and it’s not always obvious what’s right. So I feel I’ve done my job. The story gets colored by the readers own values and experiences – and that’s very exciting to me, whether or not readers agree with the choices my characters make.

I am working on the next two books in the series, and readers’ reactions have become my guide. Every edit I do, I make sure that the feeling is there. Sometimes this takes a little longer to achieve, but it’s worth the wait. The magic that makes a reader want to reach out and discuss my book is something I hope I never lose in my writing.

Now excuse me while I figuratively cry under my covers… (Though they may be happy tears) 🙂

 

 

 

 

How a Young Adult Novel was Born…

LIVE interview with Simon Rose on Fantasy Fiction Focus YouTube channel gets to the bottom of how The Fountain (my debut YA Romantic Fantasy Novel – out December 8, 2015) was born.

I’m a busy mom of three who works full time. The number one question I’ve gotten from friends and family since The Fountain was launched is HOW? There’s no easy answer to that. Writing is a commitment for sure, and The Fountain is a story that kept growing as I wrote and ended up being a wonderful mix of  magic, mystery and intrigue.

While the launch of The Fountain has taken much more time and attention than I’d ever imagined, I’m excited by people’s reactions and can’t wait to get Book 2 in The Fountain Series out there! Writing is definitely a discipline – one that I’m proud to be student of.

Hope you enjoy the interview as much as I enjoyed recording it!

LIVE Fantasy Fiction Focus Interview – Suzy Vadori

7 Days an Author…

Flying high after launching The Fountain with Evil Alter Ego Press this week – terrific launch party at Wild Rose Brewery, amazing reading with 8 other amazing authors (Randy McCharles, Madison Avery, Clare C. Marshall, Nola Sarina, Adam Dreece, Neil Enock, Glynn Stewart and David Poulson) at Owl’s Nest Books, Planning meeting for When Words Collide 2016 and a strong week in sales. Couldn’t be happier for this jump start to my author journey. Thanks to everyone for your support and well wishes.

The Fountain is available in print and eBook in Canada here:

Chapters Indigo

and in the US here:

amazon.com

Photo Credits to Dave Harold and G.W. Renshaw. Thank you!!

 

Some Strange Questions my Publisher asked me…

For original transcript of interview, please visit https://evilalteregopress.wordpress.com/category/interview/

We here at Evil Alt Ego Press are super excited to introduce the newest member of our author family, Suzy Vadori. Suzy is the author of The Fountain, coming out December 8th 2015. Recently Suzy sat down with Michell and I to talk about her book, and tell us a little bit more about herself.

The interview was great fun and we are excited to share it with you today. So, without any further delay:

evilalterego

Tell us a little about yourself
Where do you live?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzy

Calgary, Alberta, Canada

evilalterego

Have you lived there all your life?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzy

I’ve moved around a lot. I was born in Nova Scotia and still visit there every summer. As a kid I also lived in Toronto, London (Ontario), Boston and Calgary. In my adult life I’ve lived and worked in Toronto, New York City and now back to Calgary. My books tend to be set in places I’ve lived and know. The Fountain is set near Boston, where I went to grade school.

evilalteregoWhat do you do for a “real” job?

 

 

 

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyI use the right side of my brain, running operations for a packaged goods company. Lots of math and project management.

evilalteregoHave you always wanted to be a writer?

 

 

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyYes.

evilalteregoSince is it indelicate to ask a woman her age, are you old enough to remember the “Coke and a Smile” ad campaign? What about the Mean Joe Green – Coke ad?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyI’m actually good with my age. I don’t really see age as a hurdle. You can do anything you want to do, at any age. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.

evilalterego So… YA fiction – Team Edward or Team Jacob, Team Gale or Team Peeta, and what faction would you be in?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyTeam Jacob, hands down. No choice – I tell my husband he looks like Taylor Lautner.
If I had to choose – Gale. But neither’s relationship with Katniss really fits what I expect from a romantic story line. Katniss deserves more than either of them offer.
Sadly, I have to admit I’d be in Erudite. I’d like to say I’m dauntless brave or selfless abnegation, but I’d rather sit around and think all day…

evilalteregoWhen did you get started writing?

 

 

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyIn grade school I wrote lots of stories and started lots of novels that I never finished.

evilalteregoThis is your first book, where did the idea come from, or can you describe the process of writing this book?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyThis book, believe it or not, came from a novel I started when I was 10 or 11. I was (and am) a huge fan of Gordon Korman and his MacDonald Hall books that took place at a boarding school. I just love the setting where the kids can sneak in and out of each others’ rooms at night, breaking rules. Of course, this novel setting is with older kids, who have more mature problems as well as a romantic story line, but it still has the fun, rule breaking aspect of being away from parents.

evilalteregoAre there other books in the world of The Fountain?

 

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyThe Fountain is the first book of The Fountain Trilogy. The most common questions I get asked by readers of The Fountain are about Courtney, who only appears in The Fountain briefly. She is such a strong character and the story of how she got to that point is the one that wants to be told in the second book.

evilalteregoWho is your favorite fictional character?

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyAnne of Green Gables. Sassy, smart and accomplished in her time.

evilalteregoDo you have any writing habits or rituals? For example, do you only write in the morning with a fresh cup of coffee three inches away from the left side of your computer, because everyone knows you only drink coffee with your left hand while you are writing. Your blue fuzzy slipper socks on your feet, because the pink ones are just silly when you are writing. And of course the music cranked up to 4.75 because anything more or less would just not work. For example.

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyNo. I work full time and have a busy life with my husband and three kids, so I write when and where I can, I’m not fussy. I keep a laptop in my purse and pull it out whenever I have the chance. I write in hockey arenas, on airplanes, sitting in a hallway waiting to pick up kids at their activities, wherever. If I actually find myself with a block of a few hours, I pick a coffee shop or pub and don’t get up. Being out of the house works well for my creative process. Less dishes and laundry calling me. But editing is a whole different story. I can edit in those places too, but more often than not I edit in my home office or at my kitchen table. Editing feels more like work than initial writing, so I feel more justified ignoring the chores.

evilalteregoTell us your favorite part of the whole process with this book.

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyI love getting feedback from readers. I love when they get excited about the book and ask questions about The Fountain’s world and Ava.

evilalteregoWhat is next for you?

 

View More: http://lydiamacintosh.pass.us/suzyI am working on Books 2 and 3 in The Fountain series. Book 2 will come out next year.

We want to thank Suzy for taking the time to sit down with us and answer our questions, strange though some of them where. We are really excited to work with her and look forward to sharing her book with you. For more information about The Fountain, please check out the Evil Alter Ego Press bookstore. For more information about Suzy Vadori see out authors page.

The Fountain – A Novel for Young Adults

fountain-final

Careful what you wish for. It just might come true.

Ava Marshall, driven by a desire to learn more about her mother’s past, moved across the country to attend St. Augustus. But her mom’s secrets will have to wait, because she finds herself instantly hated for her family’s connection to her new school and is forced to fight alone against a classmate who is setting Ava up to be expelled.    

Fleeing campus, she takes a shortcut to her Gran’s house through the forbidden West Woods and discovers a mysterious fountain that has the power to grant a wish and change it all. But can she live with the consequences? Or will she end up breaking every school rule and risking the love of her life to make it right…  

Five Reasons to Stop Reading this and Get Back to WRITING!

Hello! 

If you’re anything like me, writing is something I NEED to do!  Right now, I’m researching and outlining my next book, which doesn’t leave me much time for blogging.  So, I thought I’d write a post that will inspire you to get back to your writing, too.  After all, that’s the goal, isn’t it??

Five Reasons to Stop Reading this and Get Back to your own WRITING!

1.  It’ll never get written if you don’t even start

2.  I have yet to hear of a book deal for your creative prose in tweets or text messages.  Put your creativity to use.

3.  If you write just a page per day, you’ll have a mid-sized novel will be done within the year.  Phew!

4.  Writer’s block?  Write around it!  Start in a different place, use a different voice, change the setting…  just write through it.

5.  Because there is no feeling like being in the zone and having the words flow.

Happy Writing!

10.   Only YOU can tell your story

Now go write.   

Coming out of the Writer’s Closet

If you’ve always known you’ve wanted to be a writer, went to school for it and have several books published and no other source of income – this post is not for you.  But many of us have had other careers and lives before finally “coming out” and becoming writers, and I for one am very excited to hear about people’s journeys! 

“Actually, I’m writing a book, too,” the person I’ve just met whispers to me at a party.

“Really?” I say loudly. “I’d love to hear more about it!”

“Well,” this person says, darting their eyes around the room to see who’s listening, “I haven’t really been telling people, I don’t know where I’m going with it.”

If this scenario sounds familiar to you, my advice to them is always the same.   You have to tell your friends and family and start talking about it, or you’ll never get it finished!  The best thing I ever did when I started writing my first full novel was to tell people I was doing it.   

Now, writers have a reputation out there as a group for being a bit reserved, and granted, I don’t exactly fit into that category.  But still, tell people.  For one thing, talking about my writing is usually a great conversation starter, but for another, I found the pressure very motivating!  Stating my goals out loud made them real to myself, my friends and my family.  I no longer had to write in secret.  I could stick my laptop under my arm and walk out the door, waving to my family. 

“Bye!  I’m going to work on my book..”

What a great feeling. 

You might have friends and family ask to read what you’ve written.  I always let them.  They’ll undoubtedly tell you that it’s GREAT!  It’s wonderful.  (Take the praise with a grain of salt.  They are proud of you and don’t want to hurt your feelings).  If you let them review a Work in Progress, you’ll hear:

“Here are some typos I’ve found, but great job!”

 Is this helpful?  Well, yes – because you are creating champions and supporters along your way.  They still have to buy your book when it comes out to see if you took any of their suggestions, or mentioned their helpful feedback in the credits.  If that’s something that motivates you, as it does me, then having friends and family read your work can be really helpful, though unless they have experience writing and editing, it won’t move your manuscript forward in the direction that you need it to go in to get published.  For that, you need to talk to those who have done it. 

GET INVOLVED!  The biggest surprise to me throughout this journey was just how welcoming the writing community is.  At first I was shy.  After all, I didn’t have a completed work to share, I didn’t know what a query was or how to find a writing group.   Take a writing course, attend a writing conference, look for online groups, join Twitter (I can’t believe how many writers are active and helpful on Twitter!)… find somewhere that works for you to meet writers. 

I was astounded at the number of writers I spoke with who invited me for coffee to share their experiences and point me in the right direction.  As it turns out, they love talking about writing as much as I do.  Taking the time to learn from their experiences has opened many doors for me and gotten me on my way.    

So, shout it from the rooftops if you want to take your writing career somewhere.  “I’M A WRITER!”   Then sit down and start writing.