Alice Blog

The Time Capsule

Question:

I just wanted to write to let you know how much your Alice books mean
to me. My best friend Allison introduced me to Alice in Rapture, Sort
Of when I was ten years old, in 1994. After that book, I was hooked
and bought every new book each year it was released. I’m 26 now and
have always looked forward to spring because it means that I get
another installment of Alice. Her books are the only ones I ever
pre-order and I read them in one sitting.

I recently unpacked a bunch of old books from my parents’ house and
re-found all of the Alice books I’d had had when I was in elementary,
middle, and high school. (The ones I bought during college were
already with me.) I decided to re-read a few of Alice’s seventh-grade
adventures and couldn’t help but realize how much your books have
helped to shape my life. Alice truly is one of the best real
characters I’ve ever read and can relate to, and it’s like she’s one
of my best friends, as weird as that may sound. When I re-read those
books, I was transported back to being thirteen, too. I think it’s
amazing that you are able to tap into what it was like being that
young. And now I have to wonder… in the last book, does Alice open
that time capsule in 2040, the same one that Mr. Hensley assigned to
the 7th grade class? Do we find out what happens to Elizabeth, Pamela,
and Patrick?

Thank you so much for everything that you do. Your books mean so much
to me, and if I ever have a daughter I am saving all of my books for
her.

Phyllis replied:

Yes, in the final book, #28,  Alice and the former members of her 7th grade class open the time capsule.  It was not until I got so many letters from readers, asking to have that scene in a book, that I decided to end the series with a book in which Alice goes from 18 to 60.  Thanks so much for writing.

Posted on: June 24, 2011

Incredibly Alice

 Question:
 
I just finished reading Incredibly Alice about five minutes ago and I just needed to write you about it! I got the book this morning and I sat down and read it for four hours until I had finished. It did not let me down, and none of your books ever do. Alice is a great friend to me. I definitly look up to her and wish i could be more like her. She seems to experience EVERYTHING and I wish I could do that. I really loved that she was in a play because I was in the school play this year and I loved it. I just really wish Patrick was in the books more. He is definitly one of my favorite characters along with Penny and Lester and Carol and my favorite part of the books are when he comes to visit. Jill just shocks me with what happens to her and all, and I liked that I got a glimpse of another side of her in this new book. Thanks for making a story that is so true to life and so relatable. I love Alice and I’m so terribly sad the books are almost over but I cannot wait to read that last one. Thank you.
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I’m so happy you liked it.   I’m beginning to think that perhaps the very last book, #28–Always Alice–may be one of my favorites.  Hope you like that one too.

Posted on: June 24, 2011

Can’t wait to see where Alice goes next….

Question:
I can not begin to tell you what the Alice books have meant to me. As a painfully shy sixth grade girl, who always found more comfort and familiarity in the literary world then in the real one, Alice was my best friend. Upon starting sixth grade, my aunt gave me The Agony of Alice. I felt like Alice McKinley was my best friend – she definitely “got” what being a preteen was like (of course, my aunt’s initial reason for picking the book up, other then the character’s age, was that I share your name of Phyllis). When I completed sixth grade – she got me the next book in the series. I felt like Alice and I were pen pals, and for a time in my diary I actually addressed my entries to her, imagining mailing them to this fictitious girl in Maryland. And so it went – for season of middle school, I had a visit with Alice and was looking forward to spending high school with her, but by that time I had gotten older then she was – we ended eighth grade together, but ninth grade would have to wait. I grew up, finished high school and college, and Alice is just now finishing high school, but I’ve been delighted to see Alice back on the shelves at my bookstore – what better place for a bookworm and teacher unable to find a job then the children’s section of Barnes and Nobles, sharing Alice (and some of my other childhood favorites)

I just wanted to say thank you for sharing Alice with me, and for helping my survive the treacherous halls of middle school. As bittersweet as reading Incredibly Alice was for me, I can’t wait to see where she goes next – and I can’t wait until I have children old enough to share Alice with.

 

Phyllis replied:

 

Thanks so much for your email.  I find Alice fans incredibly loyal–many of you have followed Alice and her friends for years and years.  I know you will interested in the very last book, coming out in 2013, “Always  Alice.”

Posted on: June 21, 2011

From a 38 year-old fan

Question:

 

Thank you for these books. I've been reading them since the series first
started. 🙂 I'm a little sad that the series is ending soon, but with
books you can always reread and of course there is no waiting to see
what happens next when you have them all right there.

Thanks for many happy years of reading.

Phyllis replied:

 

You're welcome!  And thanks for writing!

 

Posted on: June 20, 2011

A Few Tips?

Question:
 
I’ve been writing stories and posting them on a web site where other girls write their own stories and they all sound the same, I want to create a different one that will grab their attention and read it. My story is about a teen pop sensation that runs into a girl, but not just any girl…the girl of his dreams. But here’s the thing every story I read in that web site are like that. I e-mailed you because I want to know how to make it different, I want to know how I can hook them on to every word and especially the title. if you can at least give me a few tips, that will help me so much. Thank You.
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I can’t write your story for you, but one obvious thing is to do exactly the opposite of what everyone else is doing.   Why does your protagonist have to be a pop sensation?   Why does the girl have to be the girl of his dreams?  Why not someone he doesn’t think he could ever fall for?   Try to imagine what your readers will most likely anticipate, and then do just the opposite.
 
Posted on: June 20, 2011

Just finished “Incredibly Alice”

Dear Mrs. Naylor,
 
I have read every single one of the Alice novels including the most recent “Incredibly Alice”, as I just finished it. I will be a senior in high school this year and have read your books every year since the 5th grade. As I grow, Alice grows and shes usually in the constant level as I in terms of growing up, discovering who I am and going through experiences. May is the month I am always excited about because I know the new Alice novel comes out.  I have experienced so many things that are discussed and occur in the novel and sometimes I have no idea how to handle it in my daily life. Over the past year my grandfather passed away, a very close friend from school passed away and my long term boyfriend and I broke up. Your books comfort me when I am down and when I am not sure what to think, you nail it. They directly describe my emotions in a way that others can understand and I feel as I am not alone and that its normal to feel the way I do. Sometimes I feel like your writing the books about my life because even though Alice is a fictional character she is an image of me. Your books have encouraged me, have created tears and joy. I definitely would recommend this series to any girl thats growing up and will go through many of these experiences. Unlike other writers your books are real experiences that each of us girls go through as we grow up and try to find who we will be. I would also recommend this series to a boys so they could some what understand how girls think and their emotions. What I love the most is the fact that you never know what you will go through and theres not always an answer and with your help I have learned to accept that and take life how it comes by enjoying the present and what i can control. Overall I can speak for me and I’m pretty sure all of “us” girls that your books are beyond helpful and that you have helped us in so many ways. Thank you so much.
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I draw on my own memories and emotions when I write, and I’m always glad to hear they resonate with some of my readers.
 
 

Posted on: June 20, 2011

Sad the Series is ending

I have been reading Alice books since 3rd grade. I am now 13 years 
old and I have read every Alice book several times.
I know you get  tons of letters from your fans about how much they 
love your books but as I’ve been reading both
your books and your website for a while I figured it was time to let 
you know how much I Iove them.
I live in Arlington Virginia so I can relate to Alice’s environment 
as I live close to where she does in the books.
I have actually hiked Sugarloaf mountain so it was funny when Alice 
went there. I feel like Alice is a very relatable character,
  and even though we don’t have that much in common she seems like a 
real girl. When she was in younger grades she was
  so focused on embarrassment and I would feel better about my own 
embarrassing moments when I was reminded by your
books that everyone has them.
You write from Alice’s perspective about a lot of things that people 
don’t normally talk about and for me, that is one of the
best things about the Alice series. I know what the people on your 
website mean when they say they feel like Alice is a
real person. You have really captured the essence of what it’s like to 
be a girl growing up and I think Alice will never grow
outdated. I just finished Incredibly Alice-as soon as my copy arrived 
I immidiatly started reading and didn’t stop  until I finished
the book. Also I really enjoy the advice you post to people on your 
website.
I just wanted to say thank you so much for writing a series I will 
continue to read over and over, and Alice does really
feel like my friend. I am so sad that the series is ending soon, but I 
will most definitly have all the books to reread. You are an
  amazing author!

 

Phyllis replied:

 

I’m sad the series is ending too, but the very last book has so much in it about Alice’s life, that I think you will be quite satisfied after you read it.   I know that I’ve taken a chance writing about things other people don’t talk about, and sometimes my editors have questioned my judgment.  But each time I ask myself, is this something I would have wanted to know when I was that age?  or Were any of my friends ever worried about this topic?  Often I write about something that readers have confided to me, because I believe that if one person is worried about something in particular, it probably means others are also.  Thank you for writing to me.

 

Posted on: June 20, 2011

Fun Watching Alice Change and Grow

Hey! I know you probably get thousands of these a day so you don’t have to reply, but I figured since I spend so much time reading Alice I owe you my gratitude for writing the series. I am a freshmen in high school and I just started reading the books a few years ago, it has been fun watching Alice change and grow, and she has also helped me change and grow as a person. Every may I eagerly wait for a new Alice book to come out and I just got the latest Alice book (incredibly Alice) and am only a few chapters away from finishing. Again thanks so much for writing the Alice books.
 
 
Phyllis replied:
 
I’m glad you feel this way.  Some booksellers were worried, when I had Alice get older in each book, that I would lose my readership, but it seems to have worked the other way….  

Posted on: June 20, 2011

Something that relates completely to me

Question:

 

Hey ms naylor I know you asked for people to wait a while before emailing you but I don’t want to forget. I am really happy to read the Alice story where Alice and Tony got together. It was nice to read something that related almost completely to me. (as in hanging out with a guy I didn’t want anything serious with and making mistakes more than alice but still) usually when I come across a story like that the girl gets taken advantaged of and I hate reading that kind of stuff. I loved how it shows that not all guys will force a girl to do everything if they start and she wants to stop. Thank you so much for making that so realistic.

 

Phyllis replied:

 

I try to make the Alice books as realistic as possible, but it still depends on the reader.  Since everyone’s experience is unique–and often very different from others–Alice’s life may be more realistic to some than to others.  I’m happy to know that you relate so well to her.

Posted on: June 20, 2011

Books in order

  Question: 

 

 I’d like to start out by saying I adore your Alice books. I feel like I can
relate to her in so many ways. Though I have a quick question about the order of
the books in the series. I recently finished ‘Please Don’t Be True’ (which I
loved!) I was happy to go to Barnes & Noble and realize that ‘Incredibly Alice’
had been released. But I noticed on the back of it, it says the book after
‘Please Don’t Be True’ is ‘Alice In Charge’, which doesn’t appear to be
realeased yet. I’m a bit confused now about the order. Which book comes after
‘Please Don’t Be True’? I really appreciate your clarification on this. Thank
you so much!
           A dedicated Alice reader,
 

Phyllis replied:

 

It can be confusing, because those large paperback books that each contain 3 Alice books (one for her freshman year, one for sophomore, junior, etc.) are compilations of already published books.  “Alice in Charge” is only one separate book, not to be confused with these large “bind-ups.”  For the right order in which to read the separate books, not the bind-ups, go to the Alice website and click on “Books in order” at the top of the page.

Posted on: June 19, 2011

 

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