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Guest Blog: Mike Mullin

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 18th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Mike Mullin’s debut novel, Ashfall, will be released by Tanglewood Press in October 2011. Visit www.mikemullinauthor.com to learn more about Mike, Ashfall, or what termites taste like. When I began writing Ashfall in 2008, I quickly realized that the story had the potential to take on a kind of comic-book quality. The disaster I’d chosen to depict, the eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano, was so horrible and the resulting world so severe that it could easily feel unreal to readers. And while I love comic books, that wasn’t the kind of book I wanted to write. I wanted [...]

Skin Deep

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 17th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Caitlin Kittredge writes the Iron Codex trilogy for young adults. The first book, The Iron Thorn, has been called "the next Hunger Games" and was released in February 2011. She also writes urban fantasy for adults, including the bestselling Black London series and the Icarus Project novels with fellow YA author Jackie Kessler. Visit her website at www.caitlinkittredge.com I'm fortunate that I came of age when LGBTQ characters were starting to make appearances in both YA novels and YA media—but usually, they were sassy best friends, lesbian comic relief or, most often, characters who were tortured, murdered or [...]

Review of “I am J” by Cris Beam

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 16th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Jay is a teenage boy, going through the typical teenage identity crisis: His parents don't understand him, his old friends are becoming distant, and he's awkward around the opposite sex. But there's something different about Jay. His actual name is Jeni. In a world where most transgender characters are female, it's nice to read a story about someone achieving manhood...literally. Jay's parents and their reaction to his new life are portrayed realistically: 'She'll grow out of it.' 'Where did we go wrong?' 'But you're such a pretty girl!' Jay refuses to roll with the punches or back down [...]

Blogathon: Week 3

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 16th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

We've had so many excellent bloggers thus far, I hope you have all enjoyed them! If you had favorite contributors or a certain topic you'd like to hear more of, please leave them in the comments. We'll try and keep providing what YOU want to read. :) We're so excited by all the great authors and bloggers we have coming up.  Here's the lineup for this upcoming week: Friday: Day of Silence, No Posts Saturday: Guest Blog by Brian Katcher Sunday: Guest Blog by Caitlin Kitteredge Monday: Guest Blog by Mike Mullin Tuesday: Guest Blog by Malinda Lo Wednesday: Guest Blog by [...]

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Review: Darkest Mercy by Melissa Marr

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 14th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Sandy writes at her blog http://scribing-shadows.blogspot.com/ She can be found on Twitter under Silversparrow04 My Thoughts Can I say that I feel a little lost now that this series is finally over? And when I say lost I don’t mean that the book left me confused and with unanswered questions, I mean lost because the last page has been printed and I am left behind in the real world while the world of Wicked Lovely continues on in an alternate dimension somewhere without me. It’s a bittersweet feeling certainly and its one I’m happy to feel because it means that [...]

Unexpected Gifts: Julie Anne Peters

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 13th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Julie Anne Peters is author of several YA, middle grade, and children's novels including Keeping You a Secret, Define "Normal" and Rage: A Love Story. She can be found online at julieannepeters.com We asked her about some of the things she's encountered in her career as an author. Q: What are some of the unexpected gifts that you have found through writing GLBT characters and relationships? A: Let me just list them: 1. The empowerment I get from hearing from readers whose lives are impacted by my work. Making that personal connection with a reader is a reward [...]

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Holding Out For A Gay (Super)Hero!

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 12th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

LGBTQ Characters in Mainstream Superhero Comics By Karen Mahoney "I heard the whistle of a train as it approached the crossing. I reached my arm around Goran, pulled him in, and our lips met. It felt like flying." Perry Moore, HERO So, I write for teenagers. For young adults. These kids need a gay superhero just as much as they need the supposedly more acceptable - and certainly more commonly represented - straight ones. We are all - every single one of us - born with the beautiful potential both to love and to be loved. That's the [...]

The Kids May Be All Right, But What About the Parents?

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 11th, 2011|Categories: Archive|

Nora Coon is a YA author with three nonfiction books published, a novel in progress, and a caffeine addiction. You can find her via her blog or Twitter. Parents in YA literature tend to fall into one of two categories – absent or obstacle. If they’re absent, they may be dead or simply unaware; if they’re obstacles, they actively interfere with the protagonist’s attempts to achieve his or her goals. YA lit with gay characters takes this tradition to a new extreme. Parents are either fearsome zealots or bigots who reject their children at the first sign that [...]

We Want More Gay YA

By |2020-03-28T13:43:21-05:00April 10th, 2011|Categories: Archive, Guest Blogs, Readers on Reading|Tags: |

By Maggie Hira I’d like to think I wasn’t quite eavesdropping on them. But I was. I totally was. And what I heard was extremely enlightening. It happened a few weeks ago at my local Barnes & Noble. I was in the YA section, as usual, not looking for anything in particular, but browsing for something that would catch my eye or pique my interest. That’s when I heard them chattering in the other aisle—two teenage girls also on the hunt for an interesting read. I didn’t want to listen in on their conversation, but I couldn’t help [...]

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