It's time to celebrate the release of Denise Jaden's second novel!
Everyone who comments on this post will win a signed bookmark and be entered to win NEVER ENOUGH. Come back next Friday and I'll announce the
winner. Trust me, you want your own copy of this book. Your comment below will also enter you into a fantastic drawing for huge piles of books from
Denise's Prize Vault!
I’ll start by stealing a favorite question from your own
author interviews. Tell me about your book in seven words or less:
Two sisters who don’t feel like enough.
I know you’re a huge fan of fast drafting. What are three
benefits/advantages of drafting a novel in one month? Was Never Enough a product of Nanowrimo?
I have written a few novels that will never see the light
of day. The biggest advantage of fast-drafting for me, is that each of these
novels have only really wasted a month of my time. One other huge thing I
learned from NaNoWriMo was to always move forward with my writing. In the past,
I’ve gotten stuck on certain scenes and chapters, spent a long time just trying
to get them right, only to delete them later because they didn’t actually
further the story.
In Losing Faith and Never
Enough, you’ve touched on some sensitive
issues. Do you choose your ideas and subject matter or do they choose you?
Oh, they most definitely choose me. Usually an idea or
character gets under my skin and just won’t let go of me until I write about
it. In the case of Never Enough, I was living with a girl with a severe eating
disorder for a while, and I started writing the story because I wanted to
understand her better. I wanted to be a helpful force, rather than a hurtful
one in her life.
You’ve confessed to me that you were a reluctant teen
reader, what got you reading?
In my twenties, a friend of mine passed along a book to
me, Kane and Abel by Jeffrey Archer, insisting that I read it. I did, and I was
completely shocked that reading could be enjoyable and something I could do for
FUN. I went right out and bought the sequel.
Your YA Contemporary novels introduce us to
multi-dimensional, realistic characters who readers are easily able to connect
with. Do they come to you fully drawn or do you use special tools to get to
know your characters better?
Usually my main characters come to me fully drawn. I can
hear their voices, see their quirks. I kind of feel like I live with them
during the time that I’m brainstorming a book. Secondary characters, and
especially parents, take more work for me. I use character interviews and
different tools to really get to know them. I often write sections from a
secondary character’s point of view, just to get to know him or her better.
I know you’re a writer with a rich life and a very busy
schedule. What do you say to yourself when your writing/publishing schedule
feels overwhelming?
Suck it up, princess. There are plenty of writers who
would cut off their right arm to be in your shoes.
But on a more serious note, I had a real rotten year in
my personal life last year, and it has helped me put things into perspective.
While I’m thrilled to see my books hitting bookstore shelves, I definitely put
more of a priority on my family now and don’t feel in such a rush to have
multiple books out there.
As creator of the encouraging spring writing challenge,
MARCH MADNESS, I know you believe in the importance of a supportive writing
group. What are three ways
connecting with authors and writers has helped your writing career?
Only three? Yes, I’m a huge believer in having a support
network! I have been talked off the ledge many times by writer friends when I
was on my hundredth rejection and things looked dismal. I love getting and
giving feedback on writing (critiquing someone else’s work teaches me at least
as much as having my own work critiqued). Plus, I can honestly say that Losing
Faith, my debut novel, would not have enjoyed the success that it has without
the help of my awesome network of writers passing along the word about it. So
at every stage, from drafting to querying to publishing, the support of other
writers is absolutely essential to me.
What’s one question you’re dying to be asked about Never
Enough?
Honestly, I feel like I’ve been asked everything under the
sun about this book, but here is one of my favorite questions: Have you personally ever suffered from an eating disorder?
Have you?
Yes and no. I have definitely had unhealthy ways of
looking at food and at my body over the years. For several years, I was
involved with producing bodybuilding and fitness competitions with my husband,
and even competing in a few fitness competitions myself. I have since come to
the conclusion that I don’t think that’s a healthy lifestyle for most women.
Putting your body on display to be judged is like playing with the fire of a
woman’s emotions. I became extremely regimented with my diet and extremely
critical of my body. If it wasn’t for the friend of mine who came into my life
around that time suffering from a severe eating disorder, I have no doubt that
I could have gone down that route myself.
Thanks Angelina!