Alice Blog

You are my Project

Question:

I have been assigned you as a project that happens throughout the year.  Let me say, I love your books!  I am going to dress ui as you at the end of the year, so please tell me about yourself.  Where do you write?  What do you wear when you write?  What time fo day do you like to write?  How do you dress and wear your hair when you write?  How do you got your ideas?
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I’m flattered that you chose me as your project, but I do hope that you don’t consider me a pen pal, because I truly don’t have time to continue an ongoing correspondence with readers, much as I would love to.  I’m happy to hear comments and criticisms, as well as to answer, as best I can, questions you might have, but my real job is writing books, and that takes a lot of time.  As for these questions, however, here are my answers:
  I write in my big comfortable writing chair, often in my pajamas, at all times of the day, having simply run a comb through my hair.  My ideas come to me through things that have happened to me or my friends, or things I read about in the paper, or just from my imagination.  The best writing tip I can give anyone, if you’re having trouble thinking of an idea, is to think about the time in your life that you were most embarrased, most sad or angry or happy, amd write down just a few sentences about it.  Then start changing it.   Make it happen to someone else.  Give it a different beginning, or ending.  Add conflict and suspense.  And try to make it the story that only you can write.
Posted on: February 19, 2012

Best friend

Question:

                   I’m a 11-year-old girl who’s a little confused by growing up, on the account everyone believes the way to a “clean and healthy” life is avoiding the subject. I was so glad (like every one of your zillion fans) when I found the Alice books. Well, actually, at first I wasn’t. I was kinda brainwashed by everyone about the “clean and healthy” thing, that the first time I saw the word “sex” or something on All but Alice, the first Alice book I read, I was pretty shocked, but forced myself to keep reading. I kept thinking, maybe I picked an adult book, like the Shopaholic series, but I didn’t think so. After reading the whole book, I hadn’t just decided Alice McKinley was a girl just like myself, but in fact she could be a new best friend, one that wouldn’t insult me because she was going through just the same things. 
 
The thing I’ve always admired about your writing style is that you write about everything–the pencil test (which appears in Alice In-Between, by the way), bras, sex, dating…and also that your books are really realistic. They teach girls who’ve grown up believing after a not-very-realistically-rough-patch, a handsome, cute Prince Charming will come along, sweep you up on his white horse and go galloping into the sunset, and the Royal Kingdom will be appalled at your life and banish your wicked stepmother, only you’re so kind you invite her back, when in actuality most girls would invite her back just to see her suffer! Oops, I haven’t finished my sentence yet. I mean, your books teach girls who’ve grown up with fairy tales that not everyone has a Prince Charming coming along, but friends definitely come along. 
 
You might be surprised to hear I’m also a writer (actually, I’m not, I’m just rambling along like I do in this email hoping I’ll please some editors, but in the meanwhile I’m enjoying myself), and I try so hard to be realistic like you. I’m constantly trying to make my characters interesting, funny, cool but yet realistic all the way. Okay, I’ve definitely rattled on enough to bore you now, because I’m just another fan and all that.
 
Well, anyway, I pray that I won’t lose touch with Alice, because even though she might not know it, she’s my best friend in growing up, and my best teacher. Alice is sort of like an older sister, or at least a great influence on me–like, don’t wear rayon dresses to a lingerie shower! (Also in Alice-In-Between 
 
So, anyway, I think every author should know how much each fan appreciates their books, even if they’re just rambling the same thing over and over again, and I’m glad I’ve taken some–and most certainly, your time–time to write this letter to you.
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I truly do appreciate it when readers take the time to write to me.  I’m so pleased to know that Alice could be a new best friend.  I’ve certainly enjoyed writing about her all these years. 

Posted on: February 17, 2012

Absurd not to be dating?

Question:

I feel really honored to be writing to you today since you are one of my favorite authors. I notice you give really good advice and after reading your site for a long time I have a question for you.

I am in my third year of high school and all of my friends are dating. Everyone around me is dating! Even my sister who is three years younger than me. My friends keep trying to set me up with people and I don’t mind really, I just say, “No thanks” and ignore them when they ask again. The person that is driving me insane is my mother. She thinks it is positively ridiculous that I am not interested in boys right now. Every guy I talk to, she asks if I am interested in him. Every text I send, she asks if it is to a possible boyfriend. She keeps asking why I never go out with boys and why I don’t have a date to this dance or this movie. Yesterday, she flat out asked me if I liked girls! Now, I don’t have anything against homosexuals, but I know I am not one. Sure, I sometimes think girls are pretty but I would never want to kiss one. I am really busy now, and also had my heart sort of broken a while back and I just don’t feel like dating. So my question is: How should I voice this to my mother who just won’t listen? And also: Is it really this absurd not to be dating?

Phyllis replied:

I can’t count the number of girls who write to me because either they or their friends or parents are concerned that they are almost through high school and still haven’t had a boyfriend, or gone out on a date, or been kissed.  I also hear from girls who never started going out with guys until they were in college.  Parents worry about all sorts of things because we all want to believe we’ve been good parents, and it’s possible that your mom simply wants to support you whatever your sexual inclinations.  If you have a full life now and don’t want to date yet, don’t!  Many girls date because they like the idea of having a boyfriend, but don’t necessarily like the guy.  It could be that you are simply more discriminating.  That you haven’t met a guy who appeals that much, and can’t quite see yourself spending an evening with someone you don’t especially crave to be around.  It’s hard to know how to turn off a worried mom, but perhaps you can tell her, with a genuine friendly smile, that if she will stop pestering you to go out with a guy before you’re ready, you will let her know when you need her suggestions or advice.  Sometimes parents just want to know that they aren’t completely excluded from what’s going on in your life, but you are certainly old enough to keep some thoughts and feelings to yourself, whatever they are.

Posted on: February 11, 2012

Note from Phyllis

Spoiler Alert: If you’ve not yet read “Incredibly Alice,” you may want to skip over this post. For the rest of you, however, I thought you might enjoy two old photos from my high school senior play, “Cheaper by the Dozen.” In the first, wearing those dreadful black stockings, I’m showing my dad the underwear I intend to wear from now on; in the second, in clothes more appealing, I’ve lined up with my brothers and sisters for the customary fingernail inspection by our dad, who runs the house like a railroad time table.

Posted on: February 9, 2012

Should I contact her?

Question:

I recently read Please Don’t Be True, and was shocked to find out that a classmate of Alice’s passed away. Now, that’s happened to me. I graduated in 09, and we lost out first classmate, Mike to suicide. It’s a really scary thing and he was more of an acquaintance to me, but a friend to many of my friends. One in particular, a girl that I stopped being friends with 2 1/2 years ago. We were good friends, and things just stopped one day when she told me she hated me. We were both going through rough spots in our lives. I wasn’t doing well being away at school, and she was sad that Mike left for college after recently spending a lot of time with him in the summer. So her and I didn’t just drift apart, like I said she ended things by saying through a text that she hated me, and also, “Just shut the **** up already, can’t you accept that we are no longer friends?”  Now that Mike is gone, all I can think about his her. I loved when she told me stories about them sneaking around, I was so happy for her when she finally had a chance with him. Would it be appropriate to contact her again? I wasn’t thinking anytime soon, cause she is mourning and must be taking it hard. I just wonder if I would get the same response I did a few years ago. I don’t know what to do. I still miss old times with her, and after this horrible death, maybe the past should be put aside.

 

Phyllis replied:

I vote for getting in  touch with her and telling her, simply and without fawning, that you miss your friendship, and how sad you are about Mike.  The worst that can happen is she’ll say no and even call you names.  If so, you will always know that you tried.  And she will always know that she rejected a friend.  We never know when we are going to miss someone, and somewhere down the line, she may need you more than you need her right now.

Posted on: February 7, 2012

Explaining to parents

Question:
 
Throughout my middle and high school years you’ve always helped me out whenever I’ve had a problem. Now that I’m in college I’m hoping you can give me some advice. I’m currently dating a boy I met in high school and we’ve been together for almost two years. We’re in a long distance relationship so it’s very difficult for us to see each other besides summer and winter break. However, I have a couple days off from school coming up and I booked a plane ticket to go visit him. The problem is, my very religious parents think that it is incredibly distasteful and wrong for a girl to travel and visit her boyfriend. Apparently if I visit him, I will ruin my reputation (even though I’m staying at a friend’s apartment). They have no problem with him coming to visit me at my college, so I am very confused about why it isn’t the same way when it comes to me. I’m a junior in college, I bought the plane ticket with my personal money I made from working, and my grandma even approves of the trip. If you could give me any advice on talking to my parents about the upcoming trip I’d greatly appreciate it. Thank you so much.
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I’m with you on this one, but the problem is reasoning with your parents.   Way back in the “olden” days, that might possibly have been true, but it’s so far out of date now that it makes me wonder just how old your parents are.  Whatever, if you feel you do have to have their permission or their understanding, ask them calmly just what it is they think will happen if you are staying at a friend’s house and visiting your boyfriend in his town, and how this is different from his coming to visit you.  My guess is that two things are involved here:  they feel that if he comes to you at your college, your college or roommate or resident dorm manager will look out for you, but if you go to his town and stay with a friend, he could come there and “anything could happen.”  The fact that in many colleges today men and women can room with each other and have friends overnight may be beyond their comprehension.  The second thing that may have a factor in their disapproval is not that they don’t trust you or your boyfriend, but that they might have to explain to relatives or friends what you are doing over your break, why you aren’t at home, and it’s this possible “reputation” they are concerned about.  You are a junior in college, you are learning to make your own decisions, and after listening and responding politely and lovingly to their feelings, I think you should thank them for their concern, tell them you don’t share their worries, nor can you imagine any of your friends or professors thinking less of you, give them the phone number where you will be staying, and have a a good time.

Posted on: February 2, 2012

Prom dress

Question:

I was reading about when Alice was choosing the dress for her senior-prom in Incredibly Alice, and I was wondering if you have a photo you saw that inspired the dress. 

 

Question:

 

I wish I could say that I did, or that I love designing dresses, or that it was always the dress I wanted to have.  To tell the truth, I’m more an auditory person than a visual one.  And I can remember instances in the past when I described a dress out of desperation, and the editors gently changed it a little for me–the color or style or fabric.  When I was in high school I made my own prom dresses, though, and I do remember those.  The first was a black velvet top with a black, green and plaid taffeta skirt; the second was a brilliant red cap -sleeved dress, and–thinking my boyfriend already knew the color when he asked–I jokingly told him it was purple.  My mother said she could still remember my face when he handed me an orchid corsage.  The third dress I made, that I liked the best, was a light blue cotton stapless, form-fitting at the bodice with a flared skirt.  I loved that dress.  Maybe I should have put Alice in one of those.

Posted on: January 26, 2012

Ice

Question:

would you ever consider writing a sequel to your novel

 

Phyllis replied:

No, I don’t think I would.  There are just too many other books I want to write.

Posted on: January 26, 2012

Scared about pregnancy

Question #1:

I have two questions to ask you (reading the Alice books in Please Don’t Be True kind of set them off!!)
1. It seems like Pam’s miscarriage wasn’t a big deal. I don’t get how they happen though. So she went to the bathroom and bled, and that was it? Isn’t the baby still inside her though? So confusing.
 

Phyllis replied:

Early in a pregnancy, the miscarriage may not be more than a lot of bleeding into the toilet, with perhaps clumps of blood or a little tissue, so that the woman knows this is more than just a “little bleeding,” and can well suspect a miscarriage.  Later on, when the baby is much larger, she would definitely expel something that appeared to be a fetus.  I’m not a doctor, remember, but in the first few months of pregnancy, the first few weeks in particular, there is not much to see, and the miscarriage would look like clumps of blood. 

Question # 2. About birth control, I am still paranoid that even on pills and using condoms (2 methods), I will still get pregnant. These TV shows and my mom telling me stories scare me. Am I overly paranoid? Should I not worry?  

 

Phyllis replied:

 It would be very, very unlikely for you to get pregnant using both kinds of birth control, I would imagine.  Nothing is 100%, of course, and the woman could forget she had skipped a day, and the condom could be defective.  If you are all this worried, however, I would think that intercourse would be rather miserable for you, and wonder, if you are unmarried, why you are taking this chance if you worry so much?  Mothers do tend to scare their daughters because they don’t want to see them become pregnant before they are ready to be mothers themselves.  But a big advantage of being married when you have sex is that your baby is likely to be welcomed if you become pregnant or, if an unplanned pregnancy, at least supported, we hope, by the husband.  Your fear of getting pregnant, however, is something you should be able to talk over with your boyfriend.

 

Posted on: January 19, 2012

Spoiled rich girls

Question:
I am 20 years old and I am so sick of all the shows and books revolving around filthy rich girls. It’s crazy already, and I think that is why so many girls are becoming so spoiled and so stuck up. But of course when I think of Alice, I think how great it is that you write about someone like her, not some dumb rich girls needing all of their name brand crap. How do you feel about everything portraying rich and spoiled girls?
 
Phyllis replied:
 
Frankly, I don’t either read or write about them, because they don’t interest me.

Posted on: January 17, 2012

 

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