Review by Booklist Review
What Stephen King did for adult writers in On Writing (2000), popular YA novelist Carter does for aspiring teen authors in this guide to writing fiction. Chapters cover expected topics, such as getting started, world building, developing the plot, creating characters, and finding your process, while a Q&A format drives the content. Carter brings her appealing, conversational style to the guide, making her advice enthusiastic and inspirational as she introduces both the methods and the terminology of the craft. Yet she's also realistic as she relates that excellent writing takes tremendous time and effort, is not at its heart about publishing, does not involve plagiarism, and requires being an extensive reader. Although Carter draws numerous examples from her own novels, she acknowledges that the writing process is different for every writer, even for every book, and asks Holly Black, David Levithan, Marie Lu, and other venerable YA authors to weigh in on their experiences. The latter part of the guide addresses later stages of writing, including editing a book and the publishing process. With scant writing resources for teens, especially this in-depth, Carter's guide fills a needed gap. And with valuable advice for beginning writers of all ages, adult collections should also consider a copy.--Angela Leeper Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 7 Up-Carter and a host of popular young adult authors answer young people's questions about how to write, edit, publish, and promote a book. These varying perspectives offer practical advice from how to create diversity in characters without stereotyping or appropriating to how to write professionally. While Carter answers the bulk of the questions from her own experience, the guests' contributions offer a balanced approach and ensure multiple viewpoints from this field. For instance, David Levithan shares his perspective on writing characters who are unlike himself, Zoraida Cordova writes about how her world-building informs her characters' development, and Marie Lu shares the secrets to creating multidimensional villains. While the structure is logical and organized, there are some issues with clarity. Carter's sections differ from her guest's by a slight change in font, making it unclear at times who is answering the question. Aside from that, however, this book is an informative, conversational, and varied introduction to the world of writing. VERDICT Young writers will devour this fun and engaging guide to the creative process.-Leighanne Law, Scriber Lake High School, WA © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review
YA author Carter (Embassy Row and Heist Society series, among others) provides advice for teen writers on craft and other aspects of the writing life in a question-and-answer format, also posing questions to other YA authors for a range of perspectives. The book takes teens and their aspirations seriously and includes plenty of practical insights. The conversational tone makes for an accessible read. (c) Copyright 2021. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A nonfiction how-to guide for teen writers by popular YA author Carter (Not If I Save You First, 2018, etc.).Presented in an accessible question-and-answer format, Carter walks young readers comprehensibly and comprehensively through the steps of writing a novel, beginning with planning, worldbuilding, characters, and plot and ending with editing and a wholly realistic look at publishing. Breezy and honest, she encourages her audience to focus on the joy of writing, not the potential monetary rewards, and stresses repeatedly that there are many different ways to approach a story: "You have one job, and that's to find the process that works for you." Along the way, she addresses questions to and gathers data from a diverse crew of 30 established YA authors, among them Z Brewer, David Levithan, Soman Chainani, Melissa de la Cruz, Julie Murphy, and Jay Coles. Several pages are devoted to the timely and important question of writing characters who are different from oneself, whether in gender, ethnicity or other ways. Unfortunately, the section on story structure presents the classic Western three-act narrative as universal, a disservice to aspiring writers who may wish to explore forms from other cultural traditions. Entertaining and informative charts showing answers from her guest contributors reinforce the myriad ways there are to succeed as a writer.Written in a friendly style, this guide contains plenty of information and encouragement; fledging writers are well-served. (table of contents, contributor biographies, glossary) (Nonfiction. 12-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.