Today I’m welcoming
fellow Houston author and friend Crystal Allen!
Crystal’s the author of HOW LAMAR’s BAD PRANK WON HIM A BUBBA SZED
TROPHY (Balzer and Bray 2011), which arrived to great acclaim and starred PW
review among other things. Plus it’s one of my favorite MG books ever because
of Lamar’s voice.
And now, Crystal’s
second book is here – THE LAURA LINE (Balzer and Bray 2013), with another great
voice, one Miss Laura Dyson. I would say that Crystal Allen has hit another
home run with this one – a fitting analogy since Laura loves baseball.
Here’s the cover copy:
Thirteen-year-old
Laura Dyson wants two things in life: to be accepted by her classmates and to
be noticed by ultracute baseball star Troy Bailey. But everyone at school makes
fun of her for being overweight, and Troy won't give her a second glance. Until
their history teacher puts Laura front and center by announcing a field trip to
the old run-down slave shack on her grandmother's property. Heck to the
power of no way!
Her grandmother insists
that it's more than just a shack; it's a monument to the strong women in their
family—the Laura Line. Something to be proud of. But Laura knows better: if her
classmates can't accept her now, they never will once they see the shack. So
she comes up with the perfect plan to get the field trip canceled. But when a
careless mistake puts the shack—and the Laura Line—in jeopardy, Laura must
decide what's truly important to her. Can Laura figure out how to get what she
wants at school while also honoring her family's past?
From Crystal Allen
comes this touching and funny story of one girl's path to figuring out where
she came from, and the unlimited possibilities of who she can become.
I asked Crystal some
questions so you could get to know her and Laura and here’s what she had to
say!
Joy: Tell us about Laura Dyson.
Crystal: Laura Dyson is a
humorous, 13 year-old, overweight African American girl with dreams to do great
things. She loves fashion, which leans
her dreams toward modeling. However, she
also loves pitching and would love to get invited to play baseball, especially
if that invite came from Hunky Chunky, Troy Bailey! Unfortunately, bullying by her classmates
causes Laura to be unsure of herself.
Joy: What drew you to
this character once she popped into your head?
Crystal: I wanted to tell the story of the little
house on my grandmother's farm. During a
"what if" brainstorm, Laura entered my thoughts with a low
self-esteem. She had several personal
issues, one being how important it was to keep the "little house," a
secret from her classmates.
Joy: Was she as
insistent you tell her story as Lamar was?
Crystal: I'll probably never have a character as
insistent as Lamar. :)
Joy: Tell us about
writing a story that balances a thirteen year old girl's regular life -- school
and crushes and insecurities-- with a family history that goes back to this
slave shack. Was that a challenge?
Crystal: Yes, it was a challenge, and I'm not sure if there ever
was a balance for Laura in this story. And that's okay. Laura's life wasn't complicated; it was
contaminated with insecurities and fears of the unknown. So, my biggest challenge was making sure she
traveled the path from low-self esteem to confidence in a way believable to the
reader.
Joy: What kind of
research did you do for this novel?
Crystal: I studied the
story of the Amistad along with its captives, and actually toured a replica of
the ship when it was docked in Boston a few years ago. It was painful to be on that schooner, and I
wasn't sure where that pain was coming from.
I gave some of that emotion to Laura.
I also sat with my relatives and learned as much as I could about my
ancestry.
And I ate quite a few pork chop sandwiches. :)
Joy: I know there are
many aspects of Lamar that came from you and your personality and life
experiences and love of bowling! What about Laura?
Crystal: The
scenery for The Laura Line was taken
from my grandmother's farm. There was a
small "shack-like" house in a wooded section on the property, very
close to the family cemetery. I later
found out that my mother raised my oldest brother and oldest sister in that
little shack-like house.
I never ventured inside and to this day, I regret it. Later, my grandmother sold the farm to the
city. Everything was torn down to make
room for a freeway. However, in my
grandmother's contract with the city, she specifically requested the cemetery
be preserved, and it was. But now that
my grandparents and all of my older ancestors are gone, no one knows who's
actually buried in that cemetery, other than the fact that they are relatives
since there were no names on the crosses or headstones.
As I've traveled this road to The Laura Line, my relatives have
sent me pictures and newspaper clippings of family members I had never met or
worse, didn't know they existed. Now,
I'm trying to piece my family history together and I'm closer than I've ever
been before. It's been a wonderful feeling
to find my own "Line" as I wrote about Laura's.
Joy: Was the Laura Line always the title?
Crystal: Yes.
Joy: For the writers who
are reading this, talk a little about writing a second novel.
Crystal: Writing The Laura Line was different than
right How Lamar's Bad Prank Won A Bubba-Sized Trophy for several reasons.
1. This story was not a sequel to Lamar.
2. My protagonist was a girl.
3. I'm not sure why, but writing my second book
seemed harder than writing my first.
Joy: Advice for those aspiring writers?
Crystal: Only listen to the voice of truth, the one
that says you can do it.
Joy: What's up next for
Crystal Allen?
Crystal: I'm
working on a series for Balzar and Bray for early middle-graders.
Lightning Round:
M and M's or
Twizzlers? Red Twizzlers rule, baby!
Unicorn or zombies? Unicorns
Favorite guilty pleasure
TV? Cold
case.
Wine or Beer? Wine...no
wait...beer....no wait...
Salty or Sweet? Swalty.
Book(s) for the desert
island? If I'm not there by choice: The Dummies Handbook on How to Build a Boat,
and a the Bible. If I'm there by choice: A
variety bag of trashy romance, legal thrillers and pound-the-sand,
laugh-out-loud funny books.
Perfect vacation? Cruising.
Thank you,
Crystal, for stopping by!
1 comment:
Thanks so much, Joy
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