Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Boys vs. Girls: What's Easier to Write
I hope that you are enjoying this week's celebration posts for Children's Book Week. I am having a blast reading all of the guests' thoughts on writing, children's books, etc; as well as your wonderful comments and questions. This is such fun for me and I'm glad to see so many of you participating. I hope that you will continue to spread the word about the posts and giveaways. Currently, there is 1 copy of The Monster Who Ate My Peas, courtesy of Peachtree Publishers, and 5 copies of A Life Revealed, courtesy of Suzi Katz's publicist. Please enter to win and tell your friends.
Please help me welcome YA Science Fiction author, LM Preston to the blog this afternoon. You can find LM online at her website, Phenomenal One Press, or her blog, LM Preston.
BOYS VS GIRLS: WHAT’s EASIER TO WRITE
Well, if you didn’t know it, I’m a female writer of young adult novels. My debut novel, Explorer X – Alpha’s main character was a male. A boy named Aadi that was fourteen years old is a stretch from a grown female writer that created him. For me though, writing a male was much more exciting than writing a female. My up coming book The Pack has a female, blind vigilante as the main character. Shamira was a lot harder for me to write than Aadi, simply because I take being female for granted.
Many authors I’ve met write female main characters, because they feel as though their understanding of the male psyche is vague. Also, they think that girls are the larger reading audience and that it’s a lot easier to sale a book written with females in mind than males. I personally disagree. As a girl, I liked reading books from a boy’s point of view. I felt that it allowed me to delve further into boy’s thoughts, and enjoyed reading about both sexes.
As a writer, writing something totally different than I am everyday is like living out an adventure of my own making. Picture a writer as an actor, playing a part out in their head as they write. In order to feel comfortable writing a character – you have to study people that fit that character’s profile.
CHALLENGES WHEN WRITING A MALE
Although my initial inclination is to write as a male, I still have tons of challenges trying to portray male characters correctly. Since my career as an engineer is a male dominated profession, it’s been a great source of subject matter to use when writing.
Male character’s experience emotion, they just show it in different ways than females. Not to mention their dialogue is different from most females. Those subtle differences a writer has to take the time to notice. Society has certain expectations and rules for males and writing as a male should fit those boundaries – otherwise, the reader will notice.
Aadi was easy for me to write, because I have a son that’s the same age as my main character. My kid somewhat fits Aadi’s character profile because he’s a jock and a good student. Most writers pull their character profiles from someone they know, researched, or imagined.
When I write in boy, it’s like I’m acting out that character’s adventure and it becomes my own. Writing Aadi was exciting to for so many reasons. I was able to shed my daily makeup as a girl, and for the months it took me to write him – I was able to be young again, strong, and powerful. Not just young, but be a boy.
CHALLENGES WITH WRITING A GIRL
Writing a female main character allows me to express deeper emotions, to be what I am everyday – a girl. You know what? For me, it’s difficult, because writing as a boy I get to imagine a totally different persona. I’m a girl, and being a girl in my writing isn’t quite so exciting. So I cheat, I make her into a tough girl.
My main character in The Pack, Shamira, was especially challenging to write. I had to make it fun, because if my characters aren’t interesting, it’s hard for me to write them. So, I gave her it all - cool girly clothes, a motorcycle named Pearl, and a too die for hottie on her tracks. She’s a girl – but she kicks major booty and is somewhat cocky. I gave her outer appearance a feminine softness. However, she’s a trained fighter that carries herself with the sureness of a male that can protect himself.
PULLING IT TOGETHER
All of my books are composed of a strong array of male and female characters. I love to write with multiple lead characters. Why? Because when I was a kid, I loved to have friends around. Also, it allows me to write characters that are both male and female yet bonded together in friendship.
By: LM Preston, author of Explorer X – Alpha and The Pack http://www.lmpreston.com/, http://lmpreston.blogspot.com/
Thanks to LM's publisher, I have the opportunity to give away one copy of each of her books. Let me tell you about them, and then I'll give you the entry details.
Explorer X - Alpha - For most kids, a trip to space camp is a trip of a lifetime, for Aadi it was life altering. After receiving a camp immunization needed for travel to Mars, Aadi finds that the immunization is the catalyst of an insidious experiment. Lucky for him, he was engineered to survive, thrive, and dominate. Without realizing he is being trained to conquer worlds, and manipulated under the guise of a camp, he unfolds the plot too late for a change of fate.
The Pack - Shamira is considered an outcast by most, but little do they know that Shamira is on a mission. Kids on Mars are disappearing, but Shamira decides to use the criminals most unlikely weapons against them, the very kids of which they have captured. In order to succeed, she is forced to trust another, something she is afraid to do. However, Valens her connection to the underworld of her enemy, proves to be a useful ally. Time is slipping, and so is her control on the power that resides within her. Yet, in order to save her brother's life she is willing to risk it all.
To win a copy of one of these books, please leave me a comment as to which one you would like to have. It's that easy. If you don't have a preference, then let me know that as well. One person will win a copy of Explorer X-Alpha and one person will win a copy of The Pack. The choice is yours. Please enter by Saturday, May 15th at midnight. Winners will be chosen randomly and posted on Sunday, May 16th. As always, extra entries are earned by spreading the word on your blog, Twitter, or Facebook; you just have to let me know what you did, in the comments.
Labels:
Children's Book Week,
giveaways,
guest post,
Science Fiction,
YA
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1 comment:
I'd like The Pack if I win. Great giveaway!
mearley (at) gmail (dot) com
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