Sunday, September 30, 2012

Austin Teen Book Festival & Ally Condie

Yesterday I attended the Austin Teen Book Festival, which is an AMAZING festival that is put on by Book People (an independent bookstore in Austin) and the Austin Public Library Friends Foundation. They bring in tons of young adult authors--meaning they write books for teens--who are organized into panels by genre, and the authors talk about everything ranging from their books to their writing processes to the challenges of today's teens. I have loved YA fiction ever since I read Twilight took a class on YA literature at BYU, so obviously this festival was kind of a big deal for me. I went to the panels on the fantasy, romance, sci-fi, and thriller genres. 

I really liked something that Ally Condie said. She wrote the books Matched and Crossed and was on the romance panel. She is also LDS (Mormon). Before I get to what she said, I need to give some background. For those of you who may not be familiar with the romance genre, I should tell you that a common trope in this genre is the bad boy (shocking, right?). Usually the bad boy secretly has a heart of gold (though he may not know it yet), but he has had hardships in life that cause him to go down the wrong path. The heroine then helps the bad boy see the error of his ways, he turns good (or at least better), and they live happily ever after. In other genres as well as romance, a deeply flawed character can actually make for a really compelling read—at least in my opinion. (I mean, have you ever heard of Severus Snape?)

Anyway, back on the panel there was another author who had been talking throughout the session about the bad boy love interests in her books and what she likes about them being bad boys. When Ally Condie was asked about her books, she said something I really liked. She said that she has always really wanted to write about good people, which is why her three main characters—Cassia, Xander, and Ky—are all good people. She thinks it’s a misconception that good people in literature cannot be interesting. Good people aren’t just automatically good; they have to decide over and over again that they want to be good, that they want to do the right thing. Good people aren’t perfect, and they often make mistakes, but they also often do really hard things in their pursuit of goodness. All these things make for the possibility that good people be just as compelling to read about as not-good people. While her books aren’t my favorite (though I certainly like them), I admire her for trying to show people that characters who are good are interesting and that we can be as fascinated by them as we are by deeply flawed characters.

Here’s an unrelated extra tidbit for Ally Condie fans: She said that though the whole trilogy belongs to Cassia, Crossed also belongs to Ky and Reached will also belong to Xander. Does this mean that Cassia and Xander will end up together in Reached? One can only hope. Actually, I’m only sort of on Team Xander, so I wouldn’t mind terribly if she ended up with Ky, but wouldn’t it be kind of weird to have half the narration be by Xander and then to have him not be chosen?

 Quote of the Day: “I can do hard things.”—Elaine S. Dalton

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

I'm back!

Sorry I haven't posted in seven months, but I'm back and better than ever! (Well, I guess I should let people judge that for themselves . . .) Anyway, I think I have a hard time posting for the same reason I have a hard time writing in my journal, which is that both of these things feel permanent, so I put a lot of pressure on myself that each post/entry has to be perfect. In an effort to get out of that mentality, this post is going to be about something of no consequence, but nevertheless has been on my mind (or in my "real life," as my blog title would suggest).

I have been listening to Taylor Swift's new song "We Are Never Ever Getting Back Together" over and over and over again for the last two days. Consequently, I have watched the music video on youtube over and over and over again.


I have a few thoughts about this song and music video:
  • This song has left Taylor Swift's country roots completely behind. I hope this is not a permanent change.
  • I don't relate to this song at all, but it's just so darn catchy that I love it (for now).
  • I like that her band in the video consists of her stuffed animals that have come to life and grown 5-6 feet tall.
  • I like her bangs and her clothes in the video.
  • The guy in the video looks like Adam Levine with a little bit of Chris Bukowski tossed in (he's from the last season of the Bachelorette and Bachelor Pad). In this case the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
As promised, this is a completely inconsequential blog post. But hey, at least it's something.

Quote of the Day: “People haven't always been there for me but music always has.” --Taylor Swift