Saturday, October 15, 2011

Book Giveaway: On the Volcano


Book Giveaway!!



The year is 1875. Katie MacDonald lives with her father on the rim of a volcano so remote she has only met three people in her life. They've built a simple but happy life for themselves, far from the frontier perils of the world below—until a long-promised birthday trip to the rough-and-tumble town of Badwater takes an ugly turn and brings the outside world much too close. With it comes grave danger and unimaginable loss, but also something Katie had barely dreamed possible for herself: a heart-pounding but tender romance. Before it ends, four people are dead. None accidentally.

How contest works:

The contest will run for one week.  During this time there are several ways you can be entered, increasing your chances to receive this book!  Ways to enter include:
  • Make a comment on this page.
  • Make a comment on the review and/or the author's interview, below.
  • "Like" Acres of Sage on Facebook.
  • "Friend" me on Facebook.
  • Follow me on Twitter.
The more things you do, the more times you'll be entered!  The results will be given one week from today.

Rules:

*US residents only. (Sorry!)

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Interview with James Nelson, Author of On the Volcano

Enjoy the following interview with James Nelson, author of On the Volcano:

1.         You have had an extensive writing career. Did you always plan on writing a young adult
novel?

No, the idea never crossed my mind. The fact is, On the Volcano started out as just “a
novel.” It was to be read by anyone––adults, young adults, intelligent
children, whoever wanted a good story. But publishing is about marketing, and each book that goes out is aimed at a particular market. GP Putnam’s Sons felt my book would do well in the Young Adult market, so that is where they aimed it. So, no, I did not plan on writing a young adult novel.

2 .        What was it about the landscape of volcanoes you had seen and the Rocky Mountains you once lived by that drew this particular story out of you?

It’s really not so much about volcanoes or the Rocky Mountains, it’s more just happenstance. Let me explain. Occasionally I sit down and write an opening paragraph for a novel just for fun. Opening paragraphs are, of course, vitally important to a novel, and I like to see if I can write
a good one.
I re-read these paragraphs from time to time, and one paragraph I liked more and more was about a young girl looking across the crater of a huge, dilapidated volcano, wondering what was on the other side.
So I wrote a few more paragraphs. And then I wrote a few more, and a few more after that. Before I knew it, I had 10,000 words about Katie MacDonald and her father, and found I was writing a novel to be titled On the Volcano.
3.         Why did you choose a female to be your main character?

As in the last answer, I didn’t really choose Katie McDonald, she just happened. She wasn’t named Katie McDonald at the time, she was just the young girl I saw when I wrote that first paragraph. It don’t know why she appeared. Maybe I wanted to write something about a young, vulnerable
person who was going to have to face a lot of troubling circumstances. I don’t know. That’s what’s fascinating about the writing process.



4.        What type of research, if any, did you do to write the book?

I didn’t need to do much research. I did some, to make sure the saddle scabbard I described actually existed in real life. I was familiar with “fletching arrows,” but I did some research into arrow-making just to make sure. I researched volcanoes to make sure mine was not bigger than any real volcano on the planet. (It wasn’t; the Ngorongoro crater in Africa is about the same size as mine.) But I didn’t need to do extensive research on the landscape. Growing up in Colorado, and traveling in Utah, Nevada, and other desert-like states gave me lots of useful background.
5.         Did you have a particular interest in this timeframe––1800’s––of the book?

I have always has a fondness for the 19th century, particularly for the writers of that century. My college major was in 19th century English literature. I got into American writers and writers from other countries, on my own.
6.            Katie is a very strong person. Did you have someone in mind––a role model in your
life––as you wrote about her?


 I did not have anyone in particular in mind. As Katie began to develop, I wanted her to be strong,
able to face the problems and dangers of living on the edge of a volcano. The question to be answered was, what will she do when confronted with the problems brought on by the presence of other people, not all of whom may have her best interests at heart.
 7.         Do you have another novel in the works? Will it be another young adult novel?

I do have another novel, titled Teddy, finished except for polishing, and it is another coming-of-age story, this time about a boy. Again, this not a novel written specifically for young adults. Like On the Volcano, I have written it for a general audience, and young adults are cordially invited to read it along with the rest of the public.
I hope you’ll read it and like it.

Thank you, James.  I do look forward to reading your next novel!

Check back tomorrow for a book giveaway of On the Volcano!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

A girl, a volcano, and one good story...


 

Book Review by Molly J. Bredehoft


Author: James Nelson

Publisher: Putnam Juvenile

ISBN 13: 978-0399252822

Price: $16.99 (Canada $21.00)





Gold, greed, and romance await for Katy MacDonald to discover as she steps into life as a young woman.  A tomboy having lived a secluded life with her father in the late 1800’s near a volcano, Katy is soon to find that there is more to life than hunting and exploring her volcano.   And she is ready.

Written in first person, the reader is drawn into Katy’s life and is as eager as she is to explore beyond the isolated volcano, the ever changing and yet constant in her life.  Katy is tough, as a girl growing up with just a father and in the woods would be, and yet she longs for someone to love her, like any other girl of her time, or beyond, would do.

James Nelson, in his debut novel, has crafted a well told, adventurous story.  Although the book has been published for young adults, the story will intrigue readers of all ages.  Not only does the author explore the life, thoughts and feelings of a young girl turning into a woman, but he also gives readers a realistic view of life in the late 1800’s.  The other characters in the book are just as interesting as Katy, and although the story is told in her voice, he includes the other lives of the characters as they relate to her.  Nelson’s effective story telling reveals a vivid image of the other characters, the landscape, and the time as he gently weaves them throughout the book.

Exciting, captivating, and at times heartbreaking, On the Volcano will leave readers admiring Katy MacDonald as she faces the challenge of moving from a naïve girl, to a young woman. 


Check back tomorrow for a personal interview with James Nelson!
Check in of Friday for a book giveaway!

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Changes


Fall colors come quickly to our mountains in western Wyoming.  The willows, aspen and choke cherry trees display a final burst of yellow, orange and red beauty before their leaves fall and lie dormant on the ground.  Everything on the earth, including me, seems to hold their breath; capturing the final smells of the sun warming golden grass, the sweet silvery sage on the hillsides and prairies, and clay soil wet from the trickling of paths from forgotten water.

With busy schedules and constant thoughts on our minds, how briefly we enjoy each season.  The “hurry up”, “without delay”, immediate lives we live moves each day along all too swiftly.  Like the falling leaves, how quickly our lives can change, can vanish.

And so, I finally take the time to enjoy the splendor of this fall.