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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Greg Neri, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Children's books news - author signings

ice%20claw.png If you like adventure books (I love them) you might also like to know that WH Smith are selling the new Max Gordon - Danger Zone book by David Gilman for one month before the official release - it is available elsewhere from July 3. I really enjoyed the first book 'The Devil's Breath' so I had to have this one - and it's huge. Here's the Ice Claw blurb: "A thundering rumble echoes round the mountain peaks of the Pyrenees as a deadly avalanche speeds towards the oblivious competitors in an X-treme sports challenge. Max Gordon's race to win has just become a race to survive. But Max has been betrayed. Sayid, Max's best friend, is injured and missing. Max is accused of murder and the evidence seems conclusive - the hunt for Max Gordon is on. "In a life-or-death struggle, a mysterious monk passes on a vital clue, which plunges Max into the heart of an ancient secret, foretelling of a cataclysmic event that will kill thousands and destroy the entire ecological balance of Europe." David has a fantastic blog and does a lot of hands on research around the world for his books. He is also about to go on tour for 'Ice Claw' beginning Monday 29 June. His blog says; "We start in Preston, then Lancaster, Manchester, London, Devizes and Plymouth. If you see a man carrying a tree trunk it's me - and the tree trunk is the tube I'm using to carry my picture of a massive bear." So far I haven't been able to find out which bookshops he's visiting - I'll update on this post if I hear anything. Check out www.davidgilman.blogspot.com or www.thedangerzone.co.uk for Max Gordon updates. BOOK SIGNINGS * Henry Winkler AKA The Fonz will be signing copies of his new childrens book HANK ZIPZER NIAGARA FALLS OR DOES IT? at WHSmith, Arndale Centre, Manchester on July 6 between 1 and 2pm. * Children's author Patricia Jones who will be signing copies of her latest (fifth) book, at Waterstone's Preston on Saturday July 19 between 2 and 3pm. 'Circles of Blood' is a teenage crime story set in France. Children of all ages are very welcome and there's no need to book. Find out more at www.patriciajones.co.uk

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2. G. Neri


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 Writer’s can be an odd bunch. We hear voices in our head and see incredible stories in the ordinary. When asked to explain the writing process, some of us are eloquently complex, others simplistically matter-of-fact. G. Neri is among the latter. He calls himself “a reluctant writer, writing for reluctant readers,” and has said writing for teens from a first-person point-of-view appeals to him because, “I couldn’t turn a phrase if it had power steering. But using a teen’s voice, particularly an inner city voice, I could tell stories rough and raw and straight from the heart.”

But there’s nothing matter-of-fact about Neri’s debut, Chess Rumble, a 2008 ALA Notable Book, or his second Middle Grade novel, Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty, due out this spring. These two, very different tales, have common denominators, they feature male protagonists and take place in the inner city. As librarians and parents, alike, implore publishers to produce more “boy” books, G. Neri has created two that just may bring more males into the readers’ circle.

BBS: The term “boy” book. Love it or hate it?

Greg Neri: I use it but I don’t like to refer to young adults as boys. I don’t mind it if it’s for a middle grade book.

BBS: Chess Rumble is a free-verse novel, Yummy, a graphic novel. Do you believe using those styles makes your books more appealing to male readers?

Greg Neri: I’m trying to re-think the notion of what a book means to urban teens. Many teens can make it through high school without ever having read a book of fiction. But that’s because to them, books are big, full of words, and told in a voice that is alien to them.

Most of these kids are now born into a more visual society, so I think playing with graphic novels and illustrations and using voices and characters that you don’t see often in literature is a big plus for reluctant readers in the city. I see my books as gateway books to Jane Austen.

BBS: Have you found that being of mixed ethnicity has been a plus, negative or non-issue as a children’s author when it comes to marketing your books or yourself?

Greg Neri: I think it’s good because people can’t quite tell what I am. I’ve passed for black, Latino, Italian, Arab, Israeli and so on. I think that makes it okay to talk about more cultures. I am a multicultural writer, literally.

BBS: What types of books have yet to be written targeting young multi-cultural readers?

Greg Neri: I think the possibilities are endless. The more bold, the better. I’d like to see more multicultural books move away from the noble, perfect example of a (insert ethnicity) person’s life and into more colorful, robust works.

BBS: Booklist says Chess Rumble “will have particular appeal among reluctant readers and young, inner-city teens.” Was your audience a conscious thought as you penned the novel?

Greg Neri: Absolutely. I found my niche and that’s urban teen fiction for boys. That being said, I’ve been surprised how universally it’s been accepted. Even white middle-class girls that have nothing in common with Marcus’ life, totally get it.

BBS: How has your experience as a film maker and digital media producer made being an author easier? More challenging?

Greg Neri: Easier because I went through the Hollywood game as a filmmaker. The book business is set up in the same way, but much less ruthless.

Hollywood is full of sharks because that’s where the money is. It’s a joy compared to that world. Almost everyone I’ve met in books is incredibly supportive and positive.

BBS: Looking beyond the obvious reader (inner city, African Americans, young males, reluctant readers), tell us what makes Chess Rumble a good read for any reader ages 9-13?

Greg Neri: I’d like to think it’s a good story, period. It has fantastic illustrations by Jesse Joshua Watson, a unique voice and really, there’s nothing else quite like it out there. We’ve had a great response from students, teachers, and librarians, and very good reviews all around. We were also very lucky to get the approval of the American Library Association who named Chess Rumble a Notable Book for 2008. Isn’t that enough?

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The Buzz on…Chess Rumble

“This book will become a standby pick for reluctant readers, who will be pulled in before they know it by the story’s quick pace and the authenticity of Marcus’s voice and experience.” —SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL

“Marcus tells his story in street slang, in a conversational first-person voice. . .The acrylic black-and-white illustrations are particularly effective at capturing natural expressions and the concrete-gray inner-cityscape.” - Kirkus Reviews

On the horizon

If someone affiliated with a gang shoots and kills someone else, then later ends up a victim of violence himself is that person a killer or victim?

Greg Neri tackles this weighty topic in his next book, Yummy, the last days of a Southside Shorty through the eyes of Roger, a young man trying to process the life and death of Yummy, a neighborhood boy.

Based on a true incident, this graphic novel illustrated by Randy DuBurke will be released by Lee & Low later this year.

Recommended for readers ages 10+

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