• Home
  • About Julie Hedlund
  • Writing
  • Contact

Write Up My Life

Reckless giver-upper of "real" career to pursue dream of writing

Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Beware the Hot Pterodactyl Boyfriend

February 3, 2010 by Julie

Seriously.  They’re even worse than vampires.

Photo courtesy of the Official SCBWI Conference Blog

Author Libba Bray, recent winner of the Michael Printz award for Going Bovine, gave the opening keynote at the SCBWI conference. She is also the author of the bestselling Gemma Doyle trilogy – a semi-historical fiction series featuring a beautiful Victorian teenager who discovers her “special” powers at a tightly-wound English boarding school (is there any other kind?).

I wasn’t sure what to expect from Libba’s speech since it was my first national conference, but one thing is for sure and that is that I did not expect to be belly-laughing about unicorn erotica (“feeling horny?”) and hot pterodactyl boyfriends.

Let me explain. Libba has spent a long time in the sphere of publishing and tells us, “You’ve never really lived until you’ve written jacket copy for unicorn erotica.” She continued with these wacky tales to the point of making us practically pee our pants (luckily it was the first session of the day). In fact, Libba is probably the quirkiest, funniest, most entertaining speaker I’ve heard at a conference in ages. The whole speech felt like she was putting us in a headlock and giving us a big noogie while saying, “Don’t take yourself or your writing so seriously!” This is children’s book writing after all.

I loved her so much I ran to the conference bookstore to buy Going Bovine – a tale about a teenage boy, recently diagnosed with mad cow disease, who pals up with a punk angel, a dwarf best friend and a talking garden gnome. I kid you not. I started reading it on the plane home and guess what? I LOVE it. I’m not sure what that says about me, but that’s a topic for another post…

Here is some of the witty wisdom she passed along.

1. Be the giraffe. She recounted a very sweet story of a conversation she held with her son when he was young. She was, believe it or not, distracted and impatient and trying to rush through the proceedings (anyone ever been there?). To make it seem like she was engaged, she asked, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” She was already preparing responses to doctor, fireman, astronaut, when he said “I want to be a giraffe.” That answer floored her and forced her to pay attention. That answer launched them into a wild, crazy and unexpected conversation. Do that with your writing, she says. “Be the giraffe.”

2.  Find the cracks that let in the light. Characters need flaws in order to be redeemed. This sentiment echoes Jane Yolen’s Rule # 7 – Nobody outside of a fairy tale expects a happy ending.

3.  Just say “no” to the hot pterodactyl boyfriend. Follow trends at your peril. Pterodactyl boyfriends might not work in your story. What about those narrow doorways? “I love you,” she says. “I love you too,” he says. Then WHAP – his wings smack into the doorway and he needs to turn sideways to get in. Not so hot anymore. Write what matters to you and you alone. Hot pterodactyl boyfriends may indeed be hot, but not necessarily for you.

4.  First you jump off the cliff; then you build the wings. If you don’t scare yourself with your writing, then there are no stakes. If there are no stakes, it is not a story worth telling. Write like it matters, and it will.

This comedienne-writer, who crafted an award-winning story about a hallucinogenic road trip between a mad cow disease-riddled teenage boy, a dwarf, a punk angel and a talking gnome, left us with a plea to make this “The Year of Writing Dangerously.”  I will certainly drink to that!

Disclosure of Material Connection: I have not received any compensation for writing this post. I have no material connection to the brands, products, or services that I have mentioned. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

Posted in Authors, Books, Children's Books, SCBWI, Writing | Tagged Authors, Children's Books, Libba Bray, Publishing, Writing, Writing Tips, YA | 5 Comments

5 Responses

  1. on February 3, 2010 at 11:37 am tsuchigari

    Love it, love it, love it. Will definitely keep this in mind when I get stuck.


  2. on February 4, 2010 at 12:43 pm jingle

    insightful post,
    you are very impressive and knowledgeable.


  3. on February 5, 2010 at 7:43 am Julie

    Thanks guys! Glad you liked the post. All of the speakers were inspirational in completely different ways, making a great mix.


  4. on February 5, 2010 at 12:38 pm Patience Mason

    I hated A Great and Terrible Beauty too, so I am glad to hear the new book was good. I felt like I had a dreadful secret. Glad someone else felt the same way.


    • on February 5, 2010 at 12:45 pm Julie

      Whew! Me too. I’m sure she’s not losing any sleep over it as AGATB and the other two ride their gajillionth week on the bestseller list, but I am so glad I like her new book so much. I fell in love with her after her speech and figured the least I could do was give her another try. I hear she’s just signed on to write another series. Here’s hoping it has more of the humor, quirkiness and sheer originality of Going Bovine.



Comments are closed.

  • Search

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Me

  • Share this Blog

    Bookmark and Share
  • Popular Right Now

    • The Moral of the Story
    • About Julie Hedlund
    • Operation De-Clutter the House: Final Results
    • boy who cried wolf
    • Picture Book Dummies
    • Tori Spelling Picture Book – What Next?
    • 100 Random Things
  • Categories

    Authors Birthdays Book Club Books Childhood Children's Books Dogs Family Former Job(s) Friendship Giveaway Gratitude Sunday Holidays I Need Wine Pronto! Movies Parenting Poetry Publishing Rhyming SCBWI Spirituality Summer Travel Uncategorized Unclutter your life in a week Volunteer/Community Winter Works in Progress Write-a-thon Writing
  • Friends - Writers and Otherwise

    • Daily Pie
    • Ingrid's Cakes
    • J.C. Hart
    • Little House on the Southern Prairie
    • Shakenmama
  • Guilty Pleasures, a.k.a. Timesuckers

    • Cakewrecks
    • Slushpile Hell
    • The Pioneer Woman
    • Twitarded
  • Kidlit

    • Adventures in Children's Publishing
    • Alice's CWIM Blog
    • CBI Clubhouse
    • Critique Cafe
    • CYNSATIONS
    • Editorial Anonymous
    • Fuse #8
    • Gail Carson Levine
    • GottaBook
    • Guys Read
    • Ingrid's Notes
    • Kidlit.com
    • Linda Ashman
    • Poetry for Children
    • Riley Carney, Author
    • SCBWI
    • The Miss Rhumphius Effect
    • Write Like You Mean It
    • Write Up Our Alley
    • Writing the World for Kids
  • Writing Blogs and Websites

    • Agent Query
    • Grammar Girl
    • Inkygirl
    • Nathan Bradsford, Literary Agent and Author
    • Publisher's Marketplace
    • Query Tracker
    • The Bookshelf Muse
    • The Urban Muse
    • There are No Rules
    • Writer Beware
  • Archives

  • Blog Stats

    • 8,638 hits

Blog at WordPress.com.

Theme: Mistylook by Sadish.