Alice Blog
Forever
Different Kinds of Books
Question:
just want to say that the other day i was at the library, getting some alice books, of course, and i found your book “sang spell” i checked it out and absoulutley loved it!!! I found it very hard to put down. I wish the alice books had the same amount of adventure, but then they wouldnt be the same. its amazing that you can write so differently for different kinds of books! what other books would you recomend that you have written like this? it would be great to read them!
When will I Get my Period?
Question:
my breasts arent growing quickly enough. im about to be 11years old and im still flat chested. i no everybody grows at different times but i really wish i would grow a bit faster. when will i get my period and when will start wearing a bra? i want to grow faster but im not growing.
A Book for Adults?
Question:
Hello. I was wondering if there’s going to be any more alice books coming out and will you ever write a book for adults? |
Phyllis replied:
There will be four more Alice books. Yes, I have written a half dozen or so books for adults.
Collecting the Books for my Daughter
Question:
I read The Agony of Alice the year it came out. I was a fifth grader. 🙂 I've
been an Alice fan ever since. I recently re-discovered your blog after having a
broken link bookmarked for months. I was pleased to read that you have the
final book written and tucked safely away. I hate waiting a year between new
books, but knowing that you have the final book written somehow makes the
waiting easier.
I wanted to say thank you for the series. I appreciated Alice as a pre-teen and
teenager, and I appreciate her even more as a mother. I'm collecting the books
in hardcover for my preschooler. Alice has aged well, and I suspect she'll
still be relevant a decade from now when my daughter is ready for the books.
Technology changes, but the sorrows and embarrassments of teenage girls has
stayed very much the same.
Phyllis replied:
I love it when I hear from moms who read the Alice books when they were younger. How wonderful that you are collecting the books for your own daughter. You're so right--times change, but feelings--love, embarrassment, sorrow, and all--remain the same. Thanks so much for writing to me.
Love to Write
Question:
I’m thirteen years old and I love to write. I wanted to ask you some questions about writing. I read your autobiography How I Became a Writer and loved it. It really inspired me to keep writing and I see a lot of myself in you. Like any writer, I have trouble writing everyday. You, however, seem to have it come so easily. I think the ideas come to me fine–the characters, the plot, and setting. But its the persistance that gets me. I’m the type of writer that will write a few pages, come back to it later and read over it only to realize that it sounds ridiculous so I throw it out. I’m sure it’s not the healthiest way to go about writing a novel but it keeps me going.
Phyllis replied:
I seem to be getting a lot of mail these days from readers who want to write a novel and get it published before they have written short stories or tried to get anything published in magazines or in teen writing contests. It’s fine to write a novel for yourself, for fun, even with the idea that some day you may want to rewrite it and send it out for publication. But at this point, age 13, you should not be thinking about writing a novel and having it published. You should be writing for the joy of it, the fun of it, the look and sound of words on the printed page–testing yourself on how well you hold up, how excited or unexcited you are to get back to your project, how it appeals to you after you put it aside for a few weeks or months, then get it out and read it over again. Writing is hard work; there’s no getting around it. I’m getting too many emails from young readers who ask about writing something that will become a movie, or asking about getting an agent. The craft, the art, of writing comes first. You need to first persuade yourself that what you might lack in talent, you will make up for by persistence. Your talent will grow as you keep reading other people’s books, seeing how they do things, and then writing your own. What you need to work on first is planting yourself in your chair and keeping at a story until it’s something you truly like. THEN test it out on other people, including editors.
The Movie
Question:
I just LOVE your Alice books!!!! I read all of them up to Alice in the know and still reading them…
Is it OK?
I Take Something Out of Every Book
Phyllis replied:
It’s wonderful that you find something in every book and every author that appeals to you or makes you think. No, Intensely Alice is not the last book in the series. The next book, Alice in Charge, comes out in June of 2010. The very last book in the series won’t be published until 2013. |
My friend introduced me….