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Welcome to my official blog. If you're looking for something in particular, you might want to type keywords into the search feature on the left-hand side of the page. And I've added a BLOG INDEX on its own page (a bit more complete than the one below) to make it easier. Poking around is also encouraged.

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ABLit

 

Represented by Andrea Brown Literary Agency

My Blogroll of Awesomeness

Anne Allen's Blog
Shooting Stars Magazine
Naughty Book Kitties
Teen Book Scene
Teens Read Too
Compulsive reader
Reading Junky
The Page Flipper
Young Adult Books Central
Enchanting YA
What Women Write
A Girl and Her Books
And Another Book Read
She Reads Novels
My Half of the Sky
YA Fresh
Donna's Blog Home
It's Just Life As I Know It
Pages
The Book Scout
Becky's Book Reviews
Chick Lit Reviews
A Good Addiction
Lost For Words
Read Sam, Read!
DeRaps Reads
Steph the Bookworm
There's a Book
The Library Lurker
Once Upon a Review
Reclusive Bibliophile
The Hiding Spot
A Reader's Adventure
The Book Butterfly
Up the Tower of Books
Catherine, Caffeinated
The Worm Hole
Notes of Life
Debs Riccio
Becky's Book Reviews
Queer YA: Fiction for LGBTQ Teens
A Patchwork of Books
Sarah's Book Reviews
Book Chic Club
Amy Reads
Claire King
A Writer in a Wheelchair
Ex Libris
Echoes of a Wayward Mind
Book Pleasures
Teach Mentor Texts
YA Book Shelf
Chew & Digest Books
Elisa Rolle's Journal
Reading Before Bed
Good Books and Good Wine
Dreaming in Books
The Broke and the Bookish
Frazzled Book Nommer
Read. Write. Suffer.
A Patchwork of Books
Harmony Book Reviews
This Little Life of Mine
Melody M. Nunez
Word Harlot
Points West
Bookish Blather
Helen's Book Blog
Roof Beam Reader
Cari's Book Blog
Bookalicious
Emily's Reading Room
The Book Phantom
Maestra Amanda's Bookshelf
Christa's Hooked on Books
Books: A Pathway to New Worlds
Reader's Edyn
Sarah's Book Reviews
Chica Reader
Me, My Shelf and I
Taming the Bookshelf
My Reading Room
My{Reads}Da
Good Choice Reading
Books Complete Me
The Introverted Reader
Random Things Through My Letterbox
The Littlereader Library
Blog It All (Katy Pye)
Chick Lit Plus
Samantha March
Tea and Scribbles Book Reviews
The Book Bag
Storm Goddess Book Reviews
Mrs. Mommy Booknerd's
Jessa Russo Writes
The Bookish Mama
Jersey Girl Book Reviews
The East Village
The Geekery Book Review
Read Along with Sue

 

Authorgraph, Anyone?

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Friday
Mar272009

Book v Movie (reprint)

(This is one in a series of blogs on frequently asked question that I posted on MySpace when I began that blog.  I’m guessing most of my visitors to this site have not seen them.)

I get a lot of questions about this one. 

Q: What did I think of the movie version of Pay It Forward?

A: I thought the book was better.  Then again, I would, wouldn’t I?

When I say that, just about everybody says the same thing:  "Oh, the book is always better than the movie."  Which leads me to wonder why, as a society in general, we see so many movies and read so few books.  But that’s another rant for another blog.

I have theories as to why the book is always better.  Theory 1.  The author is not the person responsible for recovering an investor’s fifty million dollars, and so spends less times second-guessing him- or herself.  Though I expect we second-guess ourselves more than just about anybody except the person in the previous sentence.  Theory 2.  Most books have only one author.  A Hollywood movie is like the textbook definition of too many cooks in the kitchen.  Theory 3.  People don’t seem to realize that Hollywood will make whatever kind of movies we will support, and that we "vote" with our box office dollars.

If I had made the movie Pay It Forward:  a) the world would have actually changed at the end; b) Reuben St. Clair, my African-American Viet Nam vet protagonist would have appeared in said film (Eugene who?); c) all the gay, transgender, physically large, or minority characters would not have turned thin, white and straight or disappeared entirely (ah, Hollywood is a magical place!); I would have made sure that the only black and (arguably) Hispanic characters left were not gang-bangers and knife-wielding thugs.

Q: If I had it to do over again, would I still sell them the rights?  

A: In a Hollywood minute.

Let’s face it.  It’s what you call a high-end problem.

I know some other fortunate authors are facing similar happy disasters, so I’ll offer some tidbits of advice for the adaptation experience.

1) A useful mantra: "It’s not my fifty million dollars."  2) A great quote from Jacqueline Mitchard:  "Where I come from, you can either take the money or you can moan about the process, but not both."   My advice?  Take the money.  3) Remind yourself that they are not, as people will suggest, "Changing your book."  Go back and read your book.  You will find it blissfully unchanged.  This is not your book, it’s their movie.  4) If your problems feels overwhelming, complain to your writer friends who are still struggling to get published (example:  "Boo hoo.  They cast Kevin Spacey in my movie instead of Denzel Washington).  They will help you regain perspective.

I really didn’t mean for this blog to be heavy on advice (or lists).  But since I got off on that foot, one last bit of advice.

If you are not a writer:  Never say to a writer, "I’m a big fan.  I didn’t read the book, but I loved the movie."  If you are a writer:  Take it as a compliment anyway.

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