Author Tales: Jillian Cantor

Thursday, February 26, 2009
Jillian Cantor is the author for this Thursday's Author Tales! Jillian's debut novel The September Sisters was released February 24, 2009!
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Where did you come up for the premise of The September Sisters?
When I wrote first draft of The September Sisters, back in 2003, there were a lot of stories in the news about missing children. I saw a news show about it, and I noticed some of the missing children had siblings, so it planted this seed in my mind – what happened to those siblings after their brother/sister disappeared? At around this same time, my sister and I had finally started to become friends, after a long childhood filled with bickering, and so I was thinking about what things had been like for us as kids. It was the combination of these two things that set The September Sisters in motion!

What was the most difficult part of The September Sisters to write?
The last chapter. I think I have about 20 or so different versions of it. It was really tough to figure out a realistic way to end things so the readers would feel satisfied and so the story would ring true. I don’t want to give anything away, so I’ll just say the initial ending was totally different than the one you’ll read in the final draft!

Abby had a very interesting first love. What was your first love like?
My first love is also an interesting story, though, nothing at all like Abby’s! When I was 15 and a sophomore in high school, I had a huge crush on a senior who played drums in the school band (I played clarinet.) I was devastated when he started dating someone else, but it only lasted a month, and then, for the first time, he noticed me. We started dating and fell madly in love – that was 15 years ago. Today, we’re married, and we have two kids!

What are you hoping young readers will take from this novel and possibly apply to their own lives?
Well, first and foremost, I hope they enjoy the story. I love books where I become completely absorbed into the lives of the characters, and I hope people will have that reaction to my book. I also think that Abby is a strong female character – she attempts to take control of her own destiny even when it feels impossible. And Abby also figures out how to see people for who they are, underneath, despite the color of their skin or what other people say about them, which I think is a very admirable trait.

What was your road to publication like?
It was very, very long, and filled with a lot of rejection! Like I said, I wrote the first draft of this book in 2003. (And before that, I wrote another novel that I was never able to find representation for.) When I finished the book, in early 2004, I sent out some queries and started looking for an agent. I got some positive responses and some feedback, but no one offered to represent me. Then I had a baby and sort of gave up on things for awhile – I felt really defeated. In the summer of 2006 I decided to give it one more try; I dusted the book off, made some revisions, and sent it out to more agents. After a few months, it fell into the hands of the fabulous Jessica Regel at the Jean V. Naggar Literary Agency, and she offered to represent me. But, the road didn’t end there! She started sending the book out to adult editors, and I got some more rejection, until finally she suggested that the book might work better for young adults. I revised it again, she sent it out again, and then it fell into the hands of my amazing editor, Jill Santopolo, at HarperCollins. She loved the book, but still thought it needed more work, so she offered some suggestions. I revised again, my agent sent it back out, and then last January it sold– more than 5 years after I wrote the first draft!

Who or what inspired you to become a writer?
When I was in fourth grade, my humanities teacher, Mrs. I., assigned us to write one short story every week. This was the first time I ever wrote fiction and also when I first knew I wanted to be a writer. As I got older, great books and great writers always did and still do inspire me to want to write.

Why did you decide to write for young adults?
It wasn’t a conscious decision, as you can see from my answer above! I had a story to tell, and it happened to be about a 13-year-old girl. When I wrote the book, I had no idea that it might be a young adult book or really even what the young adult genre was like. But after The September Sisters sold, and before I started on my second book for young adults, I read a lot of young adult books, just to see what’s out there. And I realized how much I love writing about and reading about teens. For some reason, the teen voice always feels very authentic to me as I’m writing.

Do you have any advice for aspiring writers?
What’s the best writing advice you’ve ever received? My advice for aspiring writers is to read a lot, and read the kinds of books you like to write. Write a lot, too, and find a person you trust to critique your work and listen to him/her. The best writing advice I ever received is this: A professor of mine used to say “a writer writes.” It sounds like lame advice, but really I thought about it a lot when I was struggling to get published and not sure whether to keep writing. I kept thinking that what made me a writer was, well, the writing itself. And that if I wanted to keep thinking of myself as a writer, I had to keep on writing, no matter what.

Who are some of your favorite YA authors?
I’m pretty new to YA fiction, so I have a lot to catch up on. But I love Sara Zarr – both Story of a Girl and Sweethearts blew me away. I also love Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin, The Patron Saint of Butterflies by Cecilia Galante, and Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson. I haven’t read Twilight yet – which everyone keeps asking me about, so that’s definitely on my to-read list.

Are you working on any other novels?
And can you tell us a little bit about it? Yes, I recently finished my second YA novel, THE LIFE OF GLASS. It’s going to be out next winter (2010) from Harperteen, and it’s the story of a 14-year-old girl named Melissa who learns about life, love, loss, and beauty during her freshman year of high school. The book follows Melissa as she sorts through memories of her dead father and struggles with her mother’s return to dating, her beautiful older sister, and her feelings for her best friend, Ryan. I’m really excited about it – I can’t wait to be able to share more!

If there is anything you’d like to touch on or add, please feel free!
Thank you so much for inviting me to be your guest today and for the great interview! For more about me and The September Sisters you can visit my website, www.jilliancantor.com

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Jillian was also fabulous enough to donate a signed copy of The Septemeber Sisters to one lucky winner! Please leave a comment to be entered! Contest only open to residents of the U.S. (Sorry!) Contest deadline is March 5, 2009! Good Luck!



46 comments:

susan said...
Enjoyed the interview. The story sounds interesting. Please enter my name in the contest.
Amy said...
jillian looks like a fantastic new ya author..i'll be looking forward to the life of glass:)
theodoragroger@yahoo.com
Megan said...
Great Interview. Please enter me to win this.

Megan
bookworm8675309@yahoo.com
Brooke Reviews said...
Wow 20 versions of the final chapter? How did you choose?!

B
bacarleton at gmail dot com
cata ananias said...
Please count me in! I'd love to win this book. Great interview :)
Thanks a lot!

cata2404@gmail.com
Steph Su said...
Jillian sounds great, and she got a great cover for her book. I'm really looking forward to reading The September Sisters now!
Reverie said...
that looks like a fantastic YA book that I should definitely add to my to read list.
Carrie said...
Great interview. I'm really looking forward to reading this one, if it would just actually show up at my bookstore. I ordered it, so hopefully soon.
Erika Lynn said...
great interview! this looks like a fabulous new book and I can't wait to read it
Purdypirate said...
Oh hey enter me :) This sounds like a good book and the author seems interesting.

Purdypirate@gmail.com
Melissa said...
Great interview! I love characters I can get lost in. Thanks for the giveaway.
litmuse said...
cool interview. sounds like an interesting book.
Anonymous said...
Awesome! :) I really want to read this book.

Please enter me.

+BookBegger
lyzziebit(at)yahoo(dot)com
sammyjones57 said...
Great questions for the interview! Love to enter the contest!

sammyjones57(at)hotmail(dot)com
TheBookworm said...
I have yet to hear of another book like this one. I'm really interested to read this and get inside the girl's head. Please enter me!

emailthebookworm(at)yahoo(dot)com
biblauragraphy said...
Ooh, Life of Glass sounds very cool, too. Thanks for sharing the interview!
WannabeWriter said...
Great interview! I honestly can't wait to read The September Sisters, I'm so mad at myself for not having gotten a copy yet.
purplg8r said...
The September Sisters sounds like a great book...I would love the chance to read it!
Lalaland said...
That was a really great interview! I like your story about what happened to you and your husband.

ttt1612 AT yahoo DOT com
(: Isa :) said...
Whoa...that was a pretty good interview. I wanna read her next book too! I'd like to enter the contest! greenc70@yahoo.com
Thank You!
pepsivanilla said...
I've heard so many great things about this book! Please enter me :)
GirlwiththeBraids said...
That was a fun interview! Mrs. I. sounds like a great teacher. :)

I also have heard good things about her book. Please have me entered, too!

-ReadingToMyself(at)yahoo(dot)com
Mishel said...
Fantastic interview. I've been interested in this book since I first saw it on your blog a week or two ago. I mentioned the fact that my sister was born September 14, 1988 and I was born on September 15, 1987. She unfortunately died shortly after birth. However, I always marveled out our birthdates and I sometimes wonder what it would have been like if I would have gotten the chance to grow up with her. I'd like to think we wouldn't have been rivals but rather the best of friends. I love my other younger sister dearly but we don't get along all that much. *sigh*

Anywho, after rambling on and on I'd love a shot to win this. I think I'll be reading this regardless if I get a copy here or not (=

mishtakes AT gmail DOT com
Paradox said...
I enjoyed the interview and can't wait for your next book!

paradoxrevealed (at) aim (dot) com
Jenn Johansson said...
Great interview! Jessica currently has a full of my manuscript. Wish me luck!

Jenaye AT gmail DOT com
M said...
I'm excited to read this book. I enjoyed reading your interview.

I would like to be entered
Flaunt_m@yahoo.com
Anonymous said...
awesome interview! I cant' wait to read this book! enter me please.

Grace L

luv [dot] jesus [at] hotmail [dot] com
Michelle Kuo said...
Ooooh I really want to win this book! I'd love to enter :)

michelle.kuool(at)yahoo(dot)com
Chantele said...
Great interview! I would like to enter!

alwayssomething2read(at)gmail(dot)com
Hillary said...
I can't wait to read The September Sisters. It looks wonderful!

Enter me into the contest please!
Hillary said...
booklovergal12@hotmail .com

I forgot my email address!
1_scoop_vanilla said...
Oooh great interview! I would love to enter :) thanx


sarbty(at)gmail(dot)com
scottsgal said...
This sounds like a great book - I'd love to be entered to win it

msboatgal at aol dot com
Rory Wilson said...
way cool. enter me please. this is one of the debut authors yes? i signed up for that but haven't laid my hands on any of them

Littlewood10@aol.com
Taylor said...
Hey, count me in!
Bev said...
Great interview sounds like this author is on her way to several more books : D
Please count me in as well.

BevE
slawoszewski@yahoo.com
Vera said...
Would love to win this book!

E-mail is vvperesk@gmail.com
Kelly said...
Omg this book looks awesome!! Great interview! count me in!!

kelly.kelinhas@gmail.com
Aimee said...
I love reading author interviews. Everyone has their own story to tell. I especially like the part where she talks about her first love. SUCH a cute story : )
Charlotte said...
Thanks for the great interview! Sounds like a good one--please enter me!
Pandragon said...
That was a great interview, and the book sounds fantastic. I think it's a great idea to talk about the other side of child disappearances, because news shows really only show what the missing child was like and how their parents were reacting not how the siblings were handling it. Even if I don't win (which I really hope I do!) I'm definitely going to have to find a copy of this book.
Catt said...
I am really interested in this. Great interview by the way. I totally went "aww" when Jillian talked about her first love, which is her husband.
Morgan said...
Neat review! Please enter me in the contest. Thanks!
BN Book Blog said...
Oooohh! Just in time! Please enter us!

bnbookblog@gmail.com
Beth & Nathan
Kelly said...
This book sounds awesome!!
enter me in to win :D

kelly.addictedtobooks@gmail.com
The Book Resort said...
Love Jillian's cover & definitely a gr8 post.

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