A few posts back I mentioned I would be
interviewing Sarah Negovetich, debut author of Rite of Rejection, soon and asked for questions and such here as
well on social media. All the questions
were compiled and sent over. Now I'm
here to share with you my lovely readers the interview and the giveaway down at
the bottom. Enjoy!
Hello Sarah and thanks for joining me for an
interview. Let's jump on into the good
stuff.
Your book Rite of Rejection came out in December
of 2014. How would you describe the book
in your own words to someone who hasn't picked it up yet?
In
order to escape from the world's most dangerous prison, a wrongly accused teen
girl will have to embrace the criminal within.
I'm calling it a cross between The
Hunger Games and Minority Report.
I totally
had a semi Minority Report vibe
reading it. Haven't thought of that
movie in forever. I believe Rite of Rejection is your debut novel,
congrats again. How has this changed your
everyday life?
Thank
you! Honestly, my day to day routine
hasn't changed much. Though I will say
getting reader email is a great perk.
The one thing that has changed is the pressure to write faster. Before I published, I only had a handful of
critique partners asking for more. Now,
I have amazing readers wanting to know how much longer until the next
book. It's equal parts awesome and
terrifying.
Women took
a huge step back to the Stone Age here to make the world
"perfect". How did you come up
with this concept of "perfect" for you book?
We
always hear the older generations talk about "back in my day" as if
the past was absolutely perfect. So I
took some of the more prominent aspects of the culture from turn of the century
America and combined them to create my society.
People look back at that period as a simpler time with fewer problems
(even though we know that's not true) and I really wanted to explore that idea.
How did
your story start? Was it a character, an
idea, or something else? What inspired
you to write Rite of Rejection in
particular?
I
read a story in my local paper about a really senseless crime and wished there
was a way to know who was going to go from normal guy next door to murderer so
we could stop them first. The Machine
was born from that idea and then the rest of the story just fell into place.
One of my
absolute favorite parts is the continuous idea in the book of right and
wrong. You are innocent but you are
rejected as a future criminal. To
survive you have to do criminal things.
Is that proving the machine right?
Or are you simply adapting to your surroundings? Without giving away too away what are your
thoughts on this?
I'm
absolutely fascinated with the duality of human nature. Good people are often forced to make bad
choices or choose between the lesser of two evils. One of my favorite quotes comes from Sirius
Black in the Harry Potter
series. Besides, the world isn't split
into good people and Death Eaters. We've
all got both light and dark inside us.
What matters is the part we choose to act on. That's who we really are. There are no clear cut right and wrong
answers to life and that's what keeps things interesting.
Along that
same line if you went through right now, would you pass through or be rejected
like Rebecca? If so why?
Oh,
I would definitely be in the PIT. I like
to think I'm generally a good person, but I have a hard time keeping my
opinions to myself when it comes to unjust situations. With my big mouth, I'm thinking the Cardinal
would ship me off to the PIT well before I was old enough to go to the
Acceptance ceremony.
Don't worry
I'd be right there with you for the same thing.
I'm both strong willed and hard headed as my mom would say. She'd also say I was contrary.
In the book
Rebecca finds a group she is able to relate to and join. It's amazing how even in the grimmest
circumstances we are drawn to others both for friendship and even romance. Was it difficult to build friendships and
romances out of such surroundings?
The
relationships that Rebecca develops are one of my favorite parts of this
book. As humans, we crave that
closeness. As dangerous as the PIT is, I
think being alone is what Rebecca was most afraid of. Even during humanity's darkest periods,
friendships and love are always present.
Casting
Call: If your book was made into a movie and you got to pick the cast who would
be cast for our core group?
|
Emma Roberts as Rebecca |
|
Micah Williams as Daniel |
|
Alexander Ludwig as Eric |
|
Kaley Cuoco-Sweeting as Elizabeth |
|
Josie Loren as Molly |
As a writer
do you have a favorite or hardest types of scenes to write?
My
favorite scenes to write are ones in which the character realizes something
about themselves they had to work for.
Like when Rebecca realizes just how strong she is. The hardest by far are the kissing
scenes. I never know where everyone's
hands are supposed to be. Just so much
awkward.
Bo asks, why
did you decide to write YA? What draws
you to this particular genre and would you ever consider writing in other
genres? If so which ones?
I
love how many possibilities there are in YA, both as a reader and an
author. Chaacter are still figuring out
who they are and where they fit in the world.
There are so many unknowns, and that can be scary, but also
exhilarating. I can't say I'll never
write for a different audience, but right now I'm having too much fun in YA.
What is
your writing process? Is there something
you must do or have? Rituals? Do you work from an outline or just write it
as it comes?
My
schedule is way to erratic to have any must have writing rituals. I do outline using the corkboard method from
Save the Cat before I start writing.
It's not a rule, but I tend to write in silence and then use music as I
edit to get into the emotional frame of my characters. I've been known to play the same song on a
loop while working on a different scene.
With that do
you do a lot of research before writing?
It
depends on what I'm working on. I tend
to leave myself comments as I write to look up little details that I want to
make sure I get right. For Rite of Rejection, I did some research
on concentration camps to help with the world building inside the PIT. I also did a ton of research on how to build
a microphone from spare parts that ended up getting cut completely out of the
manuscript.
Facebook
question, if you could collaborate on a book with any YA author who would you
pick?
Great
questions! And a tough one. There are so many talented authors out
there. I'd love a chance to write with
Maggie Stiefvater. She creates such rich
worlds and isn't afraid to explore the darker side of human nature. I'd love to peek around in her head. Plus our last name combo would go down in
history for difficulty level.
I just
adore her books. Maggie Stiefvater has a
way with words and making you just fall in love with a story. She's also pretty awesome and totally sweet
and hilarious. The name difficulty would
be epic. Speaking of, help us out
here. How do you pronounce your last
name?
The
accent is on the third syllable and it sounds a lot like “lego fetish” with
just a few letters swapped.
I wouldn’t
swear to it but I think I might have it now.
Twitter
question, do you have a favorite quote?
I
already mentioned the Sirius Black quote and there are tons of others from the Harry Potter series that are just
wonderful life lessons. I'm also a huge
fan of 1984 and it has one of my
favorite quotes: "The choice for
mankind lies between freedom and happiness and for the great bulk of mankind,
happiness is better." It's not
exactly cheerful, but it is powerful and it reminds me why we follow the heroes
of our stories. Because they are the
ones who would choose freedom.
Morgan on
Facebook asks if you have any tips for writers who are struggling with writers
block?
I
generally find that writer's block is the result of one of two things: Knowing what comes next, but not being
excited about writing it or having no idea what is supposed to come next. For the first, ask yourself if that is the
right scene. Chances are, if you don't
want to write it, your readers won't want to read it. If you don't know what comes next go back to
your last scene and figure out what your character is thinking or feeling as a
result of that scene. Your next scene
should be a reaction to that thought or emotion.
In your bio
it mentions you are an agent for Corvisiero Literary Agency. Is the publishing process different for you
being an agent yourself?
Nope. I went through the same query process as
everyone else. Some agents represent
themselves, but I know exactly how much work that is and decided I would be
better off with my own agent. I went out
on submission to publishers, just like every other writer. I did receive a lovely offer for my book, but
in the end decided self-publishing would be the better route for this book.
The always
dreaded question to be asked to pick but what fun is it without it. What are a few of your favorite books or authors
who have helped shape you as a reader or even as a writer. Also notice I made it plural so you don’t
have to choose just one ;)
Well,
I already mentioned Harry Potter and 1984 which are big influences on me as a
reader and a writer. Thanks to Lurlene
McDaniel I spent the better portion of my childhood with plans to be a
pediatric oncologist. As it turned out,
I hated biology and then married a biologist.
I think I'm a much better writer than doctor.
Funny how
life works out. I wanted to be a medical
examiner, a lawyer, or a spy. Sarah
Leigh on Facebook asked how you as an author choose the tense in which you
write?
I
usually end up writing the first few scenes in a couple different tenses and
POVs until I can get a feel for how the story would be told the best. Sometimes I'll ask my critique partners what
reads better. It's just a guy
decision. I've yet to develop a magic formula
for figuring our what tense to use for what project.
Are you
working on anything new? Can you share
news on it?
I'm
currently finishing up the sequel to Rite
of Rejection and that should wrap up in the next few weeks. I always have to let a project sit before I
jump into revisions, so I have a SciFi plotted that I plan to start writing while
book two soaks a bit.
Bo asks, is
Rite of Rejection a series or a
stand-alone? If it is a series when can
we expect book 2 and does it have a prospective title/cover?
Originally,
Rite of Rejection was intended to be
a stand-alone with an open ending.
However once the book started going out to Beta readers and then again
when it finally went on sale, I got a lot of reader feedback wanting to know
what happens next and asking for a sequel.
I had so many amazing responses to the book that I felt my readers
deserved more. Rite of Revelation is currently in the drafting phase and I hope to
have it out this summer. No cover yet.
In the
sequel will we learn more about the Machine?
Will we follow our same band of characters?
Lots
of readers have asked for more information about the Machine and how the
Cardinal came into power. I actually had
this all in the first book, but thought it would be too boring and took it all out. Goes to show how much I know. We'll get more details on the world with
Rebecca, Daniel and the others. Plus, a
whole host of new characters to spice things up.
And most
important how can readers get in touch with you?
You
should definitely head over to my website SarahNegovetich.com where you can
sign up for my email list. This will let
you know as soon as there's news on the next book and also gets your sneak
peeks and exclusive giveaways. One
social media I'm @SarahNego on Twitter and you can find me as Sarah Negovetich
on Facebook as well.
Thank you
so much for coming by and answering all our questions. I know I'm looking forward to your next book.
And thank you readers for stopping by and sending
in your questions. I appreciate it and
love to hear more back from you all.
Now onto the giveaway. You all know how to use one of these they are
pretty simple and self explanatory.
Given shipping we were going to keep this only to US destinations but we
found a compromise for that. US is
entering to win a signed paperback copy of Rite
of Rejection sent from our friendly author Sarah here. So we don't leave anyone out, anyone wishing
to enter from outside the US, you can enter for a paperback (unsigned) that
will be sent through the book depository due to shipping costs. You know what to do from here. Good luck!
a Rafflecopter giveaway