Alice Blog
Question:
love the Alice books so so so much!!
They are the best books ever! Thank you so so much for writing them! I am 12 years old and I have read every Alice book. I am so excited for Always Alice!!
I wonder what will happen to Alice and all of her friends! And lester and Patrick and people like that.
I have one question: In The Agony of Alice it says Elizabeth got her ears pierced so she could where earrings with her gypsy costume (” Elizabeth even ha her ears pierced so she could wear some hoop earrings). And in one of the other books (maybe All But Alice?) Elizabeth’s refusal to get her ears pierced is a plot point. Please Explain.
Oh, and if you HAD to choose, which is your favorite Alice book? I love all of them especially Alice In Between, Incredibly Alice, Simply Alice. Intensely Alice I love them all so much!!
Thank you thank you thank you for writing!!
Phyllis replied:
I know, I know. That isn’t the only mistake in the Alice series. If you look closely, you’ll see that Alice has three different birth dates in various books, not to mention all the other things that slipped by. To celebrate the series, and my fans’ careful observations, we are going to put all this online after the final book is published next year. You’ll be able to go to the Alice website and click on something that will give you about 100 pages of every detail of every Alice book. You’ll be able to read summaries of each book, details of each character’s features, bedroom, birthday parties, love life, gifts received and given, teachers, courses, every fact you’ve ever wanted to know or had forgotten about. Enjoy, enjoy!
Posted on: November 21, 2012
Question:
I love your books. I’ve been reading them since 7th grade. it all started when our teacher took us to the libary and we were about to leave so i picked a book and i picked alice in april and after that book i loved to read alice books and i just wanted to say your my role model i love to read because of these books hope they don’t end.
Phyllis replied:
Wouldn’t it be great if things we loved went on forever? But, like everything else, the series has to end, and I figured I had better write the last book while I still had my wits about me, which I’m glad to say I do. I will be writing many other books about other things, but the final Alice book will come out next year, and I really, truly, think you will be pleased.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
I just want to say that I truly love all your series books of Alice! I can really relate myself through what Alice goes through and I actually finished reading Intensely Alice just today.. made me cry and really broke my heart to find out that —— had passed away. I wanted to ask a question if there’s going to be a movie or series based on the Alice books! I think it would be really awesome and I would be extremely ecstatic to know! I know that there’s a movie Alice Upside Down based on Alice in Agony, but I didn’t really like it much since it didn’t really follow well with the book. But nevertheless, I would extremely enjoy watching a series or movie based on Alice’s high school experience! Huge fan since I was in 5th-6th grade back in ’03 🙂
Phyllis replied:
Phyllis replied:
I wish there would be a good movie too, but so far, the producers have not made any mention of one, and they
hold the movie rights.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
I absolutely love the Alice Series, and I wish I had started reading them earlier. I know you probably have heard lots of letters like this, but, I really wanted to know, what inspired you to write the Alice Series? I was thinking about becoming a writer, and I wondered if you could give me any advice or topics to write about. I like writing, but I can’t seem to write anything worth publishing yet. Your reply will be greatly welcomed!
Phyllis replied:
I didn’t know I was going to write a series when I began. I just had the idea to write about a motherless girl looking for a role model. The best topics to write about are the ones that begin with you, not with someone else. What’s the story or book that only you can write? If you think you have nothing to write about because you feel you are the most ordinary girl in the world, then write a funny story or article about the World’s Most Ordinary Girl. One way to discover what’s inside you is to think about the most embarrassing thing that ever happened to you, or the episode that made you the most angry, or most sad, or most frightened, and write just a few lines about it down on paper. Then turn it over to your imagination and give it wings. Let it happen to someone else. Have it begin differently, end differently, etc. You have started with something that was dear to your heart and turned it into a story that no one else would recognize as beginning with you.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
my sister introdused me to alice i am still injoying the wonderful journeys with alice and i hope that your alice seriese will be passed down in my familey and other girls will not only read but become friends with alice just like i did and am continuing to do
Phyllis replied:
I love hearing that the books are traveling from one person to another in a family or a reading group or a bunch of friends. Thanks for letting me know!
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
Reading them makes me so, so happy.
I love Alice so much, and her story is so
interesting. I have read every Alice book and
am super excited for Always Alice!!
I wish I could have friends like
Pamela and Elizabeth, who were my neighbors
and I could tell them anything.
Your books seem so real and realistic!
I wonder is Alice and Patrick will
stay together! I hope so, but I also
don’t think that would be very realistic.
I am 12, and for the past month or so I
have been feeling sad, and I have been
a little bit depressed. I talk to my parents a
lot and I read the Alice books and I feel better.
The Alice books are so comforting and interesting,
thank you so much for writing them!!!!!
Phyllis replied:
It’s wonderful to hear that the Alice books are comforting to you. Being age twelve may have something with your feeling sad at times, as your body is going through a whole bunch of hormonal changes. I wonder if you can pinpoint things that might bring the sadness on–thoughts or worries, perhaps. The fact that you can talk with your parents a lot is great. A great many things happen to Alice in the final book–good things and sad things and surprising things, and she discovers stuff about herself that helps her grow and deal with whatever life sends her.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
Hi, I just wanted to say that love your Alice books so much! I always tell my friends about them and try to get more people to read them. I have a couple questions:
1. Do you know what the cover looks like for Always Alice?
2. I heard that Always Alice is coming out in 2013, I was just wondering why it has to wait a whole year before it gets published? I’m not trying to be rushy or anything, I was just wondering.
3. Is there going to be another movie based off the books made?
I didn’t really enjoy reading very much before I read the Alice series, so I wanted to thank you do much for writing them! They have really opened my mind to reading, they even had me staying up late because I couldn’t put the books down. I have read almost all of them (all except patiently Alice and of course, always Alice) on a course of one year since I found them. Alice is kind of a role model for me. I know a lot of people say this, but she seems so real, like a best friend to myself.
Phyllis replied:
1: Yes, I’ve seen the cover of “Always Alice,” but we’re still tinkering with it.
2. It takes a long time to get a manuscript ready for publication. This book is at least twice as long as the other Alice books, and there is SO much for the copy-editor to check. Everything that has gone on before, since Alice was eight, provides Alice’s history, so there is always that much more to refer to and check in each new book. Also, we’re giving the reader something special at the end of the series–more about this later–and that has to be in good shape as well.
3. I’ve not heard anything from any producers about making this book into a movie. All the characters would have to go from their present ages to age 60, and that’s asking a lot.
I’m glad you’ve enjoyed the Alice books so much. Thanks for letting me know.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
i dont know if u remember me but its sofia chase i am 9 yrs old and i am almost ten i just love your alice books. can i ask u something in alice in april is so sad that denise got hit by a train when i told my dad about it i could see tears in his eyes! but why did she do that? i also wanted to know do u right these books about your life when u were younger or do u just com up with a story
Phyllis replied:
I know it’s sad, and I think that your dad was reacting not so much to the story, perhaps, as to your sadness in telling about it. Sometimes, for some people, life seems to be going so badly for them that they can only think about getting away from it NOW. And perhaps, in Denise’s situation, she felt that her mother could only miss her and love her after she was gone, and she liked thinking about how her mom might miss her then. It really was sad, because there really are people who can help in most situations if they only knew about it, and if Alice had known what Denise was planning to do, she might have been able to alert a school counselor or a minister or teacher or grown-up who could help work out some of the problems in Denise’s family. Despite her sadness, Alice will always know that Denise did consider her a friend. Most of the things I write about in the Alice book are things I just make up from stories I read about in the paper or that happen to my friends. Sometimes I write about something funny that happened to me as a child. But I never had a close friend who took her own life.
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
Hello Mrs. Naylor (I’m sorry if this isn’t how you begin such an e-mail in English!),
I just wanted to thank you so much for writing all the Alice-books. They really seem to be so real, as if Alice really exists in this world that I don’t ever want to finish reading them!
I’m very glad I can understand every single sentence even in English, because only The Agony of Alice to Simply Alice are translated into German, the language I grow up with. I’ve been reading “It’s not like I planned it this way” since a week or so and now I’m quite near the end. 🙂 and 🙁 at the same time!
Reading your books gave me a great chance to see how life for an “average” american teenager can be: (junior) high school, grades, courses, extracurriculars, part-time jobs, family, etc. and I also learnt (learned?) a lot of words just by reading them again and again (e.g. intercourse, to have some catching up to do, waist, to be engaged, porch, …). Thank you!!!
But why did you make Alice think of engagements and marriages so often? I mean, why does she always seem to expect a couple getting engaged when they have been dating each other for only a year? They can definitely live together without having a wedding, can’t they!?
Still, I love being kind of part of Alice’s life, at least knowing what’s going on with her and her friends.
Phyllis replied:
It’s always good to hear from fans in other countries–to find out what words are new to you, how are customs and cultures differ and how they are the same. Of course couples can live together without being married, but that is more acceptable to a more general culture than it is to traditional Americans. I think Alice’s focus on marriage–most particularly on hoping her father finds a wife and wondering if Lester ever will is that she grew up without a mother. This makes her especially anxious to have a new one, and–being the only girl in the family–she’d love for Lester to marry just so she could have a big sister. I’m glad you were able to find “It’s Not Like I Planned it This Way,” and hope that you will also find “I Like Him, He Likes Her,” and “Please Don’t Be True.”
Posted on: October 29, 2012
Question:
I love your books. There is just no other way to put it. Alice is so real and down to earth, and she wonders about the same things I do. She and her friends face problems that real girls face, and each book is like a guide to one element of real life!
I particularly like how you created Amy Sheldon. I have a sister and brother with special needs, and I tend to love books that have a character in them with disabilities.
Phyllis replied:
I’m so glad you enjoy my books. I wasn’t really thinking about “special needs” in particular when I developed Amy Sheldon. She just sort of grew on me–an example of that infinite variety of human beings on this earth.
Posted on: October 29, 2012