I am
very excited to finally have my good friend and fellow author, Thomas Amo, here
on my blog for an interview. Thomas is incredibly generous when it comes to
helping other authors and has been very instrumental in my own writing career;
so I'm happy to have the chance to help him for a change.
Thomas
is a genre hopper and has written everything from horror to comedy (check out
his other books here). He just released his first YA novel called Forever Me
available on Amazon for Kindle and Barnes and Noble for Nook. I was given the honor of beta reading this book, and even though I have been out of high school for a long time, some things never change. Thomas's vivid descriptions brought it all back - the pressure to fit in, wearing the right clothes, being the right weight, wearing the right makeup, etc. and the pain of bullying. Readers of all ages will find it easy to identify with the characters in this book. Here are the
details:
Hannah
Richards isn't your typical 16 year-old at Wichita Falls High. Fashion, trends,
cosmetics and style are unimportant to her. An avid reader, guitar player, and
classic movie and television buff, Hannah marches to the beat of her own drum.
Visible only to her father, the town sheriff, and her two best friends, Lauren
and Haylee, Hannah lives a simple, un-pampered life as an "Eastie."
After
coming to the aide of Taylor Monroe, a popular member of the
"Stilettos" at school, after a series of misunderstanding with her
friends, Hannah is forced to re-invent herself. She quickly gets caught up in a
life much different than the one she knows, where status, glamour, makeup,
appearance and acceptance become her masters.
Can
Hannah survive the lies, deceit, jealousy, and rage that are now waiting for her
around every corner? Will she succumb to the pressures of popularity? Or will
she be crushed under the heels of the "Stilettos"?
And
now, my interview with Thomas Amo:
Q: You
give credit for the genesis of this story to a segment you saw on television
about a group of high school girls from Texas who decided to go one day a week
without wearing any kind of makeup to show that girls don’t need it to be
beautiful. Why did that story make such an impact on you?
A. I was truly encouraged by their willingness to go
against what most girls at that age would never consider in the first place. I
think girls get taught from an early age, that if they want to be popular and
attractive, then they have to be a certain body weight, look a certain way.
Makeup is usually the first rung on the ladder of social acceptance. Followed
by the designer label and hairstyle. What name brand clothes is she going to
wear? What's the name on her purse and sunglasses? Because the fashion world
has a huge impact on girls. If you don't believe me, ask any teen girl what
she's wearing, and you will most likely get a name as an answer instead of
jeans and a t-shirt.
Naturally, girls want to be considered pretty or
attractive to others besides their families. Taking the step to remove the
makeup and just be the girl they are is a bold and brave step for a teen girl
today. So it got me thinking about how all of those impact girls during those
crucial high school years.
Q: Your
previous books have been in the adult genre. What made you decide to try your
hand at a YA book?
A.
As I mentioned, the segment with the girls on TV really spoke to me, and I
thought it was such a good subject to write about. I really wanted to
experience the YA genre. It actually began as a screenplay for a production
company. I wrote a quick draft and called a friend of mine who is a film producer
and told him that I had a script idea to pitch to him. We arranged a meeting
and, fortunately for me, he really liked it. So he encouraged me to write the
screenplay. I got about 50 pages in and hit a brick wall. Suddenly, it just
didn't feel right. I left it for a week or so and came back to it, and decided
it really needed to be a novel first. Which was terrible timing because I was
in the middle of writing the second installment of a trilogy. But, I called my
friend, and said I can't write it as a screenplay right now, it feels like a
novel. He told me to go for it, and to call him as soon as the novel was
finished. Here we are nearly two years later.
Q: After
reading Forever Me, I found that I could identify with many of the characters
in the book even though I hadn’t been in high school for awhile. It seems like
people stay the same even though the times change. Do you agree?
A. I
do agree 100%. The faces change but the players remain the same. There will
always be popular kids which usually seem to always go hand in hand with
sports. Usually jocks and cheerleaders seem to always be on the top rung of the
social hierarchy. The you will always have your nerds, stoners (aka burnouts).
There are the Drama students, music students, and, thanks to shows like Glee,
now singing is more popular than ever. Of course always bullies. Bullies sadly
can come from virtually any clique. Usually though, jocks will pick on everyone
who isn't another jock. If a smart kid who's not athletic joins a shop class
like welding, mechanics, electrical, etc., he's going to be surrounded by two
groups: jocks or stoners. For the jocks, it's an easy grade. For the stoners,
it's going to be a vocation. most likely he's going to end up getting picked on
by both groups. The teachers remain the same too. There's always the cool
teachers and the ones who never see anything happen like a referee in big time
wrestling. There's the teachers who really want to teach and then there are
those who just want to survive. sometimes school can feel more like preson than
it can an educational institution.
Q: As
an adult male, what challenges did you face writing from the perspective of a
teenage girl?
A. Danger
Will Robinson! This is that question that has to be answered carefully. At
first, I didn't give it any thought. I just approached it as I would any novel
or character I planned to write. Having been a playwright for a decade, I wrote
roles for certain actresses, so that helped a lot. So much dialogue helps you
learn how people speak, and that's a great way to get insight on how they might
be as people/characters. There did come a point though where I thought is anyone going to accept a YA novel written
by a man from the perspective of a teenage girl? My good friend and fellow
author, Michelle Muto, quickly pointed out to me, "Stephen King did it
with his novel, Carrie." That was all the encouragement I needed. Besides,
I wasn't going to write a novel that focused on menstruation. Plus, I had my
wife and daughter to keep me on track with the developments of the girls in my
novel. I did work hard to make it feel real all the time. Even though it's
fiction, it was important to me that I would want a teen girl to pick this book
up and say, "YES! That's me! That happened to me, or that character is
just like me." I think there's never a question when a woman author writes
male characters because we readily accept that women are in tune with the
universe so much more than men are...but there does seem to be a pause when you
see it's a man writing from a woman's perspective. And, if I pass, hopefully
the assumption isn't "Oh he was spot on...he must be gay." I have had
a wonderful female role model in my life with my mother. She is the strongest
woman I've ever known; and, because of her, I've always been quick to regard
women with admiration and respect. Check
any of my previous work, whether it be in my novels or plays for the
stage. My female characters are always strong women. I don't reduce them to
bimbos or battle axe stereotypes.
Q: You
mention in your acknowledgements that writing the ending was very emotional for
you and during that writing process, you were interrupted. How did you deal
with that?
A.
My Barbara Walters question. I won't go into the actual details because it's
too personal. However, I was in the middle of writing the climax of the book,
and I had just written a line that caught my breath, and I actually began to
cry. I'd never experienced that before as a writer. While I was basking in that
moment of euphoria, my phone rang and life did one3 of its nice little screw
you moments. And I was like NO!!!! I can't stop now! Any writer will tell you
when you're in the moment, if you get disturbed too long...you lose it and that
feeling leaves you. It's very much a Jack Nicholson moment from The Shining,
when he explains to his wife that when she interrupts him it breaks his
concentration and then it will take him time to get back to where he was...of
course this is described with four letter words and tearing of paper in a manic
Jack style. If you've seen the film, you know what I'm talking about. So yeah,
It kinda feels like that. (Thank you Jack and Stanley Kubrick.) Well, I was
forced to leave my computer for over and houra nd a half...and I was filled
with bitterness and anger because I knew I was close to the end. I came home
and was so angry, I knew I would never get my muse back...I paced and actually
said to myself "No, I'm not going to let circumstances take this away from
me!" I forced myself to sit down and put my music on that I was writing
the scene by and forced myself to let the anger go...which was NOT easy. And i
was able to get back and finish, but it still hurt me deeply because I so loved
writing this book, and I so wanted to know that bliss of how it might have been
had I not been interrupted. But you can't go back, so I had to move on.
Q: High
school can be so tough for kids. Besides being yourself, what other positive
messages do you think YA readers will be able to get from you book?
A. I
believe that people CAN change, for the better and for the worse. That while
who your friends are can affect your life in so many ways, your friends, family,
money, clothes, should never define who you are as a person! Also, I would hope
that people get the message of bullying must never be tolerated! Bullying comes
in so many forms. Even friends bully friends. If just is not even funny how
some jocks will bully a weak kid (call it hazing), and that adults will shrug
it off and same lame things like, "Hey, that's life." I remember a
terrible incident where a mean kid bullied another until the other kid felt he
had only one choice - either kill himself, or kill the bully. The school
wouldn't help. The parent of the mean kid encouraged his son to be that way. So
the victim shot and killed his tormentor. And sadly, everyone cried over the
bully. The father actually had to the nerve to say, "Why couldn't this kid
just take an ass beating? He didn't have to kill my son." There was the
problem right there. The father believed it was fine for the other boy to be
beaten and just take it. That mindset haunted me, and I just pray that students
are able to find strength in numbers because sadly, all too often, adults thing
ignoring it will make it go away. High school years, while only being four of
them, can sometimes be no different than four years of prison.
A
big thank you to Thomas Amo for stopping by! Connect with Thomas on Twitter
@AuthorThomasAmo, Facebook, and check out his blog here!
Great interview. Forever Me sounds extremely interesting. I've put it on my TBR list.
ReplyDeleteWishing you much success with your book.
Thanks for stopping by Janna!
DeleteGreat interview! LOVED the book Tom, and I'm not a big fan of YA. It was so much more than the drama of teens in high school and how they're bullied and the struggles they face. Do you think you'll venture into this genre again, or stick with the adults?
ReplyDeleteThank you Jean and yes I'm venturing as I'm already plotting a second YA novel as we speak!
ReplyDelete