J Keller Ford: Five reasons why I live and breathe YA Fiction

Today I have a fellow Sisterhood of the Traveling Pens member, J Keller Ford, aka Jenny, guest posting. She is also a fellow J Taylor Publishing author. The similarities don’t end there, but I’ll let her tell you more about herself and why she’s a YA fiction fiend! Take it away, Jenny!

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I am 53-years old and I love writing and reading YA books.

When I was young, I was never allowed to be a “teen”.  I grew up in a military household.  You didn’t argue.  You didn’t talk back.  You did as you were told or there was hell to pay.  Don’t get me wrong.  That sort of lifestyle forced me to be a better person, to understand right from wrong.  To value my parents and their wisdom.  However, I lost a little bit of me in all that strictness because I wasn’t allowed to be ‘me’.

Young military brat gives thumbs up while wear...

Young military brat gives thumbs up while wearing pilots helmet at base special event (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

When my dad died (I was almost 12 years old), my mom took over both mom and dad roles.  Needless to say, I had strict curfews, and because I was a girl, I was not allowed to do a lot of things most teens do because it might put me in a “compromising situation”.  In short, I was never allowed to be a teen ‘coming of age.”  I was never allowed to stumble, make mistakes or do things that weren’t considered ‘wise’.  Trust me when I say there were plenty of arguments between my mom and me, yelling matches over how she was stifling my youth, and at the age of 18, I high-tailed it out of my mom’s house and I never looked back.

The first novel I wrote was a contemporary fictional piece about a young woman who befriended Elvis Presley before he climbed the ladder of fame and fortune, secretly fell in love with him, and watched him rise to greatness before watching him fall to his untimely death, her secret locked deep inside.  While I loved the story, the book didn’t encapsulate me, my voice, and I truly believed the story fell flat in many ways. (Claire’s rude interruption:  I would totally love to read this!)

I remember avoiding writing YA, even though the genre screamed at me.  Instead, I wrote a bunch of literary short stories, tried my hand at a few adult novellas (writing erotica and/or porn brought out the worst in me, but that’s a whole other chapter in my life we won’t discuss), and then I gave up writing all together because life sometimes has a way of interfering like that.

When I returned to my writing, I followed my passion:  fantasy mixed with YA.  The two together resonate deep within me.  I embarked on a quite ambitious project, a trilogy that I am still working on despite my multiple attempts to let it go.  It calls to me.  It infiltrates my dreams; its characters and story are part of every breath I take.  So what is it about YA fiction that has its hold on me?  Here are 5 reasons why I live and breathe YA fiction:

  1. I wish I could redo my teen years.  I would live them fully, make lots of mistakes, love openly and deal with the consequences later.  By writing YA, I am allowed to relive my youth vicariously through my characters.
  2.  YA is so broad in scope as a genre.  My ‘thing’ this time around may be fantasy, but who’s to say I can’t write YA contemporary, dystopian, or a romance?  Maybe a touch of all three.  I love the freedom YA provides to me as a writer and a reader.
  3. The audience is vast and devoted.  Young children to adults read Young Adult fiction.  People of all ages ‘get’ what YA is all about.  They yearn for adventure, and they are incredibly devoted to their favorite authors.
  4. The characters are sympathetic.  They’re kids. They’re meant to make mistakes and we, as readers, can forgive them, root for them, stand beside them while they’re trying to figure themselves out. As a reader, we’re right there with them, immersed in their trials and tribulations.  As a writer, we can manipulate their ‘lives’.  We can give them whatever barriers we want them to overcome.  Sometimes, it’s a fear deep within the writer, and through their characters, they can triumph.  YA is cathartic for writers as well as readers.
  5. YA is escapism. While I like reading adult fiction, it doesn’t provide the ‘escape’ I crave when I reach for YA, which is most of the time.  In writing YA, my imagination soars.  I can go anywhere, do anything.  I can literally fly if I want.  Reading YA provides me an escape from being an adult.  I forget worrying about paying bills or finding a job, or dealing with family issues.  I can choose to stop being an adult for a brief moment in time and forget about responsibilities that age places upon us.

When J. Taylor Publishing opened their submission doors for short stories to include in their YA anthology, ONE MORE DAY, my tummy tingled, but there were no ideas jumping out at me as something I wanted to write about.  That is until THE DREAM.  With only a few weeks left to submit, I hammered out Dragon Flight, a contemporary sci-fi/fantasy.  I have to say it is one of my favorite YA pieces. I hope you enjoy it as much as I loved writing it.

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Would you like to win a copy of ONE MORE DAY?  Make sure you enter the Rafflecopter Giveaway! (click link to go to Rafflecopter site)

Claire, thank you for letting me take over your blog today.  I had fun.

(Claire’s note:  You are more than welcome! As a military brat myself, I totally related to how your military upbringing shaped your behaviors and views. If the physical outlets are stifled, the imagination is more than willing to fill in the void. We’re so lucky you’re able to share your imagination with us.)

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 About J Keller Ford:

JKellerFord-web-300px croppedMy bio:  As a young Army brat, Reader’s Choice award winner J. (Jenny) Keller Ford, traveled the world and wandered the halls of some of Germany’s most extraordinary castles hoping to find the dragons, knights and magic that haunted her imagination. Though she never found them, she continues to keep their legends alive.  Her story, The Amulet of Ormisez, is available as part of the MAKE BELIEVE anthology. Dragon Flight, is slated for publication in December 2013.  When not at her keyboard breathing new life into fantasy worlds, Jenny spends time collecting seashells, bowling, swimming, riding roller coasters and reading.  She works as a paralegal by day and lives on the west coast of Florida with her family, three dogs, and a pretentious orange cat who must have been a dragon in his previous life.

Network with Jenny here:

Website     Blog     Twitter     Facebook     Pinterest     Goodreads     Amazon

 

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J. Taylor Publishing Christmas Cracker** Scavenger Hunt!

 

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Welcome to the J. Taylor Publishing Christmas Cracker Scavenger Hunt!

This week TEN J. Taylor Publishing authors are taking part in a scavenger hunt, which means there will be multiple chances to enter for a shot at an AWESOME GRAND PRIZE!

PLUS, there are more goodies up for grabs at EVERY stop along the way!

In fact, here’s MY mini-giveaway:
Make Believe
Here’s more about this fabulous anthology:

Sacrificial Oath by Terri Rochenski
An impetuous act unwittingly makes Alesuela the fulfillment of the Sovereign’s Blood Oath to their Goddess. In five days, she’ll be forced to make the greatest choice of her life: become the virginal sacrifice already promised, or force the man she loves most to die in her place.

With an impossible choice in front of her, she searches for ways to undo the oath, and in her quest, finds not everything in her life is as she expects.

The Amulet of Ormisez by J. Keller Ford
There is only one way to save Elton Fletcher’s brother from an insanity-ridden death.
After years away from home, fighting for his people, Elton returns to discover his only sibling, Cayden, possessed by greed and malice, and responsible for malicious, unthinkable deeds. Cayden, though, isn’t the only one afflicted by the Amulet of Ormisez, and Elton finds himself in yet another battle, where the price of failure could be his own life.

Birthright by Lynda R. Young
Christa can mask the pain and hide the scars, but running from a birthright is impossible.
She’s tried to escape her grief by fleeing to a small town in Florida. Much to her frustration, the locals think they recognize her even though she’s never been there before. To make things worse, a man named Jack spouts outrageous theories about her.
Both spur Christa to bolt, to start fresh yet again, but there’s something about Jack that intrigues her enough to stay. The only problem? Someone else wants her to leave, and they won’t stop until she’s dead.

Petrified by Kelly Said
A mysterious storm has replaced summer with winter, devastating crops and smothering Castle lands in snow. Prince Sterling August stands alone as a leader, lost in personal grief as well as a desire to help his people but with an inability to do either.

The answers he needs await him, but without Lochlyn, a woman who’s just as isolated as Sterling, he’ll never see what stands before him, cloaked in illusion.

Last Winter Red by Jennifer M. Eaton
Emily is a Red, a woman whose sole purpose in life is to produce offspring. When her husband dies and leaves her childless, she risks her life and forsakes the safety of Terra—a disease-free city born after the nuclear holocaust. Beyond its boundaries, she knows, survives a man with whom she can be properly paired.

The Outside, though, holds secrets the government struggles to keep, and what Emily discovers on her quest for a mate will change her life forever.

Escort to Insanity by J.A. Belfield
From a charity auction, to a stroll in the park, to the craziest night of her life. Nicole Harrington can’t help but wonder how a simple event went so drastically wrong.

Of course, the male escort she booked is wholly to blame. Not only charming but shrewdly intelligent, Benjamin Gold drags Nicole into a platoon of unimaginable problems—ones from which she’ll have to find the courage just to survive.

All you have to do is leave a comment telling me what books you plan to read over the holidays—name or count or both—because I’m a Nosey Nelly and I like to know what Christmas reads people are scoping out, and you will be entered to win an EBOOK OF Make Believe. Make sure you leave me a way to contact you in case you’re my winner…either in the comment form or the body of your comment. Thanks!

You have until midnight of Friday 20th December 2013 to enter, after which a winner will be selected using Random.org

Good luck!
And back to the …ScavHuntBut

But first a definition for my American (and other non Commonwealth country) readers:

**Christmas Cracker (from Wikipedia):

Christmas crackerChristmas crackers, bon-bons, are part of Christmas celebrations primarily in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Commonwealth countries such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa. A cracker consists of a cardboard tube wrapped in a brightly decorated twist of paper, making it resemble an oversized sweet-wrapper. The cracker is pulled by two people, often with arms crossed, and, much in the manner of a wishbone, the cracker splits unevenly. The split is accompanied by a mild bang or snapping sound produced by the effect of friction on a shock-sensitive, chemically-impregnated card strip (similar to that used in a cap gun). One chemical used for the friction strip is silver fulminate, which is highly unstable.Assembled crackers are typically sold in boxes of three to twelve.

These typically have different designs usually with red, green and gold colors. Making crackers from scratch using tissue paper and the tubes from toilet rolls is a common Commonwealth activity for children

So … the GRAND PRIZE?

A $100 Amazon Giftcard just in time for Christmas!

amazongift

In order to enter, you will need to answer a variety of questions. There are ELEVEN questions in total—so eleven chances to win—and you will find ONE question on each of the nine other participating author blogs plus the J. Taylor blog.

As for the eleventh? Well, that’s a question about one of my  J. Taylor Publishing books, The P.U.R.E.:

Question: What song was playing in Gayle’s office after a fateful work party a few days earlier?

If you need help, here’s a hint: You can find the answer HERE!

Enter for the GRAND PRIZE by answering my question using the Rafflecopter form at the bottom of this post.

Good luck!

And don’t forget to enter the NEXT STOP (Emi Gayle’s blog) on the Hunt for another chance to enter and another prize opportunity!

Don’t worry if you get lost. Simply hop back to the J. Taylor Blog, where you can find the complete list of authors and links.

So, in summary, comment here for a chance to win Make Believe; answer my scavenger hunt question in the Rafflecopter for a chance at the grand prize.

 

P.S. If you want a chance to win my book, The P.U.R.E., be sure to hop over to Terri Rochenski’s blog or J Taylor’s blog.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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NO PURCHASE is necessary to enter this giveaway; This giveaway is open INTERNATIONALLY to anyone over the age of 17; Prizes is as stated: ONE ebook to ONE winner; No cash alternative will be offered; Giveaway begins on December 16th 2013 and closes at midnight Eastern time on December 20th 2013; one comment on the blog post equals one entry; Winner will be chosen using Random.org; Winner will be contacted via email, and will be asked to select their preferred e-format for their prize; No addresses, emails, or other contact information will be shared with third parties, other than the publisher, who will deliver your prize direct–all information will be treated with the strictest confidence; If there are any technical issues, they will handled post haste. Eg, duplicate entries will be deleted; if the blog via which you have entered goes ‘down’ you entry will still stand and be entered; VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW

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