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OZYA

#LoveOZYA Interview: Megan Jacobson

#LoveOZYA Interview: Megan Jacobson

Jun 3, 2016

OZYA Author Interview- Megan Jacobson

I love Aussie YA. I love reading books from authors that live in the same country as me, that know things that people out of Australia might be so confused about. I love how sometimes they can incorporate this into their book and it is fabulous. 

So in saying that, I have decided to start a new feature on Angel Reads spotlighting Australian YA Authors. Each Friday for the next couple of months, I am going to interview an OZYA Author. I thought it would be a fun way to share my love for Australian Young Adult authors with not only fellow Aussies, but everyone around the world. I want more Australian YA books to be read, because they are amazing. 

First week I interview Sarah Ayoub, then Fleur Ferris, followed by Will Kostakis, then Shivaun Plozza, and Gabrielle Tozer, followed by Jay Kristoff, then Kylie Fornasier and last week A.J Betts. This week we have none other than Megan Jacobson author of Yellow (2016, Penguin Australia). 

Hi Megan, welcome to Angel Reads. First can you introduce yourself to everyone? Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Megan J author picHeya you lovely little starlings, my name is Megan Jacobson and I live at Bondi Beach, Sydney,  but I’m originally from Darwin and then the far north coast of NSW in a place called Kingscliff. In Darwin they actually teach you crocodile safety when you first start school! It’s an apt name for the place – nearly every deadly creature in the world lives there, on top of the tropical cyclones that whip through pretty regularly, so if you survive it really is Darwinism in action! It’s a beautiful, wild place and I go back as much as I can.

Right now I work at the ABC in Sydney helping to put the TV news to air, but occasionally I write for TV shows too,  I’ve worked in the script department of a couple of shows, including the Channel 7 soap Headland and the ABC children’s drama Dance Academy.

Oh, and I’m also an author. There’s that. My debut novel, Yellow, was released by Penguin early this year. It’s about a fourteen year old girl called Kirra who makes a pact with a teenage ghost who speaks to her through a broken phone booth – she’ll prove who killed him almost twenty years ago if he does three things for her – makes her popular, gets her parents back together, and doesn’t haunt her, but Kirra realises that people can be haunted in more ways than one.

What has your writing journey been like? When did you start? Why?

I’ve always written stories since I was a little girl – I’ve always been drawn to telling stories and I can’t remember ever not doing it – even before I could spell I’d create elaborate dramas with my dolls.

After studying journalism at university I was lucky enough to be offered a job as a script assistant at the TV soap ‘Headland’. I’d been doing extras work on Home and Away and for about a year I’d pop into the script office after my shift and ask if they had a job for me yet.

Eventually a writer heard about a new Channel 7 show which was in production and they put me forward for the role. I worked my way up into a script storylining position from there. I’ve also written short stories in my spare time for most of my life. I began as a kid when I realised I could win small prizes in writing competitions, and I honed my craft from there, eventually winning the Sydney Morning Herald Young Writer of the Year when I was in year twelve.

I’d always wanted to write a book, and the characters from Yellow had been in my head for years and years, but I didn’t have the confidence to do it, and I was so busy with my day jobs that I put it on the backburner for over a decade. 

Megan Book

What was the process of getting your first book published?

I began writing Yellow when I’d moved to New York in 2013, trying to find a TV writing or production job. That proved more difficult than I’d expected, and I had all this free time, and I’m not used to being idle, so I thought I’d write the story that had been knocking about in my head for so long. I plotted it like I would a TV show and began to write, and by the time my US visa had run out I’d had a third of a novel and I really loved it, so I used the rest of my meagre savings to move to Bali for the next three months to finish it. I chose Bali because I knew I could live cheaply, and I found a cheap, tiny little hut in the middle of the rice paddies in the outskirts of Ubud.

I finished the novel there and when I returned to Sydney I googled literary agents and decided upon Tara Wynne at Curtis Brown. Agents are extremely busy and it took months before I heard back from her, but I was lucky enough to have her accept me as a client. She then sent it off to all the big publishers and two were interested in publishing me. We decided to go with Penguin and I was so happy when I signed that contract that I had to step outside afterwards and breathe deeply because I wasn’t sure if I was going to hyperventilate or cry happy tears. It was a life’s dream come true.

What was your journey as a debut YA author in Australia? What was the hardest thing?

The process between signing a publishing deal and the book coming out on the shelf is quite a hard one. There are lots and lots of rounds of edits. My editor Amy Thomas is a genius – she knew exactly what the core of my story was and managed to help me draw out the strongest threads of the story and whittle away the bits that didn’t quite further the narrative. It was exhausting though – more exhausting than writing the actual book! It’s like playing jenga with words, you change some scenes or character motivations and that affects the rest of the book and the whole thing wobbles and then you’re frantically trying to fix it before the whole thing collapses! It was worth it in the end though. Totally worth it!

Fun Fact Megan Jacobson

You are an OZYA author, what are some of your favourite Aussie YA books?

Oooh, there are so many great Australian voices, I love reading about my world in print! Obviously the queen of OZYA is Melina Marchetta and her beautiful book Looking for Alibrandi, and I adored Puberty Blues as a teenager – I loved the fact that the authors were young and female and Aussie and they wrote of their lived experiences and it wasn’t just old European men who could tell their stories. I love The Book Thief with a big messy love, and of course the books by my fellow Penguin Teen Australia YA Squaddies – The Sidekicks, Frankie and The Things I Didn’t Say. It’s a bumper year for Oz YA!

I have yet to read Yellow, but I plan to as soon as I can. You can find Megan on twitter at @jacobson_meg or check out her website for more information. Plus add Yellow to your goodreads. 
yellow meganYellow by Megan Jacobson

Pages: 259
Publish date: 1st February 2016
Publisher: Penguin Teen Australia
ISBN: 9780143573333
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – Dymocks

If fourteen-year-old Kirra is having a mid-life crisis now, then it doesn’t bode well for her life expectancy. Her so-called friends bully her, whatever semblance of a mother she had has been drowned at the bottom of a gin bottle ever since her dad left them for another woman, and now a teenage ghost is speaking to her through a broken phone booth. Kirra and the ghost make a pact. She’ll prove who murdered him almost twenty years ago if he does three things for her. He makes her popular, he gets her parents back together, and he doesn’t haunt her. Things aren’t so simple however, and Kirra realises that people can be haunted in more ways than one.

***

Thank you Megan for joining me at Angel Reads. That is it for this week’s #LoveOZYA Interview. What did you think of Megan and Yellow.

Come back next week for some more Aussie fun. If you want to know more about the #LoveOZYA movement check out the website for all the details. Also if you have any Australian YA authors that you would like to see me interview, just let me know and I can see what I can do. 

#LoveOZYA Interview: A.J. Betts

#LoveOZYA Interview: A.J. Betts

May 27, 2016

OZYA Author Interview- AJ Betts

I love Aussie YA. I love reading books from authors that live in the same country as me, that know things that people out of Australia might be so confused about. I love how sometimes they can incorporate this into their book and it is fabulous. 

So in saying that, I have decided to start a new feature on Angel Reads spotlighting Australian YA Authors. Each Friday for the next couple of months, I am going to interview an OZYA Author. I thought it would be a fun way to share my love for Australian Young Adult authors with not only fellow Aussies, but everyone around the world. I want more Australian YA books to be read, because they are amazing. 

First week I interview Sarah Ayoub, then Fleur Ferris, followed by Will Kostakis, then Shivaun Plozza, and Gabrielle Tozer, followed by Jay Kristoff, then Kylie Fornasier. This week we have A.J Betts author of Shutterspeed (2008, Fremantle Press), Wavelength (2010, Fremantle Press) and Zac and Mia (2013, Text Publishing). 

aj betts author picHi AJ Betts, and welcome to Angel Reads. First can you introduce yourself to everyone? Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Hi there. I’m an author and teacher who lives in Perth. I love cycling, travelling, bushwalking and living by the sea.

What has your writing journey been like? Where did you start? Why?

Writing was always a passion of mine. As a young adult, my main interest was poetry, and I had a number of poems published in my early twenties.  My first novel, Shutterspeed, evolved out of a short story I’d been working on. I had the idea in 2000, and it was published in 2008.

AJ Betts Book

What was the process of getting your first book published?

I entered Shutterspeed into a major writing competition, which I received excellent feedback and encouragement from. On the judges’ advice, I sent the manuscript to Fremantle Press, and it was fortunately picked up by them. I guess my story is quite straightforward and positive, compared to most

Was it different when getting your next books published?

Every book has a different process, in terms of writing and publication. My next novel, Wavelength, was also sent to Fremantle Press. My third, Zac & Mia, was entered in the Text Prize as an unpublished manuscript. I’ve never been contracted to write work, and I don’t want to. I still prefer to write independently and privately, then seek the best avenue for the manuscript. While it may be easier to be published now (as a previously-published author) I think the process is equally tough. Each novel should be viewed as a complete work in the best version it can be, rather than an extension of a writer’s oeuvre.   

Fun Fact About A.J. Betts

What was the difference between getting your books published here in Australia and internationally?

They’re very different, and I have less power/involvement in the publishing process overseas (as it’s handled by my rights manger at Text Publishing). Every country makes their own choices about their intended market, and will package the novel accordingly, including some alterations to the manuscript.

You are an OZYA author, what are some of your favourite Aussie YA books?

At the moment, anything by Fiona Wood, Vikki Wakefield, Julia Lawrinson and Cath Crowley.

I have read Zac and Mia and really loved it. You can find A.J. Betts at @a_j_betts on Twitter, ajbetts.com and you can add her books to your goodreads.

zac and mia coverZac and Mia by A.J. Betts

Pages: 310
Publish date: July 24th 2013
Publisher: Text Publishing
ISBN: 9781922147257
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – Dymocks

“When I was little I believed in Jesus and Santa, spontaneous combustion, and the Loch Ness monster. Now I believe in science, statistics, and antibiotics.”

So says seventeen-year-old Zac Meier during a long, grueling leukemia treatment in Perth, Australia. A loud blast of Lady Gaga alerts him to the presence of Mia, the angry, not-at-all-stoic cancer patient in the room next door. Once released, the two near-strangers can’t forget each other, even as they desperately try to resume normal lives. The story of their mysterious connection drives this unflinchingly tough, tender novel told in two voices.

***

Thank you A.J. for joining me at Angel Reads. That is it for this week’s #LoveOZYA Interview. What did you think of A.J and her books? 

Come back next week for some more Aussie fun. If you want to know more about the #LoveOZYA movement check out the website for all the details. 

#LoveOZYA Interview: Ellie Marney

#LoveOZYA Interview: Ellie Marney

May 20, 2016

OZYA Author Interview- Ellie Marney

I love Aussie YA. I love reading books from authors that live in the same country as me, that know things that people out of Australia might be so confused about. I love how sometimes they can incorporate this into their book and it is fabulous. 

So in saying that, I have decided to start a new feature on Angel Reads spotlighting Australian YA Authors. Each Friday for the next couple of months, I am going to interview an OZYA Author. I thought it would be a fun way to share my love for Australian Young Adult authors with not only fellow Aussies, but everyone around the world. I want more Australian YA books to be read, because they are amazing. 

First week I interview Sarah Ayoub, then Fleur Ferris, followed by Will Kostakis, then Shivaun Plozza, and Gabrielle Tozer, followed by Jay Kristoff and then last week Kylie Fornasier. This week we have none other than Ellie Marney author of the Every Series (2013, Allen and Unwin). 

Ellie Marney Author PicHi Ellie, and welcome to Angel Reads. First can you introduce yourself to everyone? Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Hey Angel, thanks for having me to visit. I’m Ellie Marney, I’m a teacher and a writer of YA fiction – I wrote a YA crime series, the Every series (Every Breath, Every Word, Every Move) that has gone out to readers in eight countries – yay Rachel and Mycroft!

What has your writing journey been like? Where did you start? Why?

I started writing in primary school, so yes, I caught the bug early.  I think it was a direct consequence of being a big reader.  I think my writing journey looks – from the outside – like a fairly straight line, but from my end it looks more like a twisty turny caterpillar trail.  Every Breath was a bit of a hit, but like I said, I’ve been writing a very long time.  I wrote stories as a kid, then when I went to uni and studied literature, I became very intimidated, so I stopped writing altogether for years. 

I got back into writing through fanfiction – it’s a great way to write anonymously, get feedback, and (as Amie Kaufman once said) ‘build your writing muscles’.  I wrote about seventy fic stories, publishing them under a pseudonym, before I got my mojo back and started writing originals again.  Then I entered some stories in competitions, to test the waters…and I won the Scarlet Stiletto Award in 2010 (through Sisters in Crime Australia).  Everything took off after that.

Ellie Marney Books

What was the process of getting your first book published?

I wrote Every Breath in about six months, then spent about a year polishing it (as you do, when you have no obligations re: deadlines) before submitting it to publishers and agents.  It was accepted by Allen & Unwin, the first publisher I approached, and I ended up being represented by Catherine Drayton of Inkwell Management, the first agent I approached.  I think that qualifies as a bit of a dream run with a first book.

Was it different when getting your proceeding books published?

Why YES, it’s interesting you asked!  Allen & Unwin really got behind Every Breath in a big way; well before the book was published they were championing it all over and generally being awesome, and they asked me to write a sequel.  Which was good, because I already had half a book’s worth of sequel ready to go!  But the timelines for each subsequent book got shorter – I had nine months between each release – which was very demanding, especially for Every Move, when I had to write and edit a book, and prep it for publication, inside nine months.  It was such a hard book to write and I was frantic right up to the to-print date.

FUN FACT ABOUT Ellie

What was the difference between getting your books published here in Australia and internationally?

When the books went international, the covers were changed – they were hardcovers, for a start (why don’t we have hardcovers for YA in Australia?  I don’t know.  Maybe people don’t think Oz teens can look after nice things!), and the designs and taglines all changed.  They also changed some of the lingo, like asphalt for bitumen, and flashlights for torches, and flip flops for thongs etc – but that was mainly to clarify meaning for overseas readers (you can particularly understand about the thongs).  Most of the Aussie content was retained, which really surprised me, so there are still references to all the Melbourne locations, like the MCG and Sydney Road, and all the swearing is still authentically Aussie, which made me very happy. 

You are an OZYA author, what are some of your favourite Aussie YA books?

Is this where I get on the desk and shout ‘MELINA MARCHETTA FOREVER’?  Because she is like my OzYA superhero.  I’ve also been in love with John Marsden’s Tomorrow series since they were first published (Homer ftw, by the way), Simmone Howell’s work, and I’ve always loved Cath Crowley and Leanne Hall’s This is Shyness duology. 

New YA is much harder to nail down, because there’s so much great stuff out there…but I think some of the coolest OzYA books I’ve read recently are Summer Skin (Kirsty Eagar), Illuminae (Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff), Calypso Summer (Jared Thomas), Black Spring (Alison Croggan) and Clancy and the Undertow (Chris Currie).

I have read all three books in the Every Series and gosh did I love them. They are fantastic, engaging, full of romance and crime – it’s brilliant. You can find Ellie at @elliemarney  on twitter, elliemarney.com and add her books on your goodreads. 

Every Breath coverEvery Breath by Ellie Marney

Pages: 335
Publish date: 5th Spetember 2013
Publisher: Allen and Unwin
ISBN: 1743316429
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – Dymocks

Rachel Watts has just moved to Melbourne from the country, but the city is the last place she wants to be.

James Mycroft is her neighbour, an intriguingly troubled seventeen-year-old who’s also a genius with a passion for forensics.

Despite her misgivings, Rachel finds herself unable to resist Mycroft when he wants her help investigating a murder. He’s even harder to resist when he’s up close and personal – and on the hunt for a cold-blooded killer.

When Rachel and Mycroft follows the murderer’s trail, they find themselves in the lion’s den – literally. A trip to the zoo will never have quite the same meaning again…

***

I have meet Ellie quite a couple of times name and she is just fantastic. She is amazing to listen to and always has something to bring. 

Thank you Ellie for joining me at Angel Reads. That is it for this week’s #LoveOZYA Interview. What did you think of Ellie and her books?

Come back next week for some more Aussie fun. If you want to know more about the #LoveOZYA movement check out the website for all the details. 

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book blogger 💻| romance books 💜| bookseller 📖
💌 angel@angelreads.com
📚15/150

I have a love-hate relationship with this series. I have a love-hate relationship with this series. But I ended up really enjoying this one. It’s best friends to fake dating to-lovers. It’s always been you, bad-boy/good-girl, and I loved that. While Save Your Breath has quite a few tropes, it really leads itself to it, and it works. 

Aleks and Mia have known each other for years now. Since they were teenagers, that angst has been building up this whole time. And you can tell right from the get-go, it’s fantastic. I even wanted more of it, because I love pain. When Aleks went to live with Mia’s family as a teenager, sparks flew, but for many reasons, they both put their feelings aside. And well, now they are not only going to be fake-dating, but they might as well be engaged, too. 

I really enjoyed seeing how both Aleks and Mia both tried to hide how they were feeling throughout the whole ‘fake-dating’ situation, but anyone could see it. They know each other as no one else does. Aleks has a lot going on, and while I do think this was brushed over a little too much, Mia is his centre. Mia is a massive music star and is a female in the industry, so yeah, people don’t respect her. Obvsiouly because why couldn’t a female star be badass and write about the things that she has gone through? Aleks and Mia get each other, and that is very clear from the start; they are both just trying to squash everything. We get to see them slowly start to show how they feel, and well, one night it all explodes. 

Overall, I enjoyed this one a lot; it’s not my favourite of the series, but I had a great time reading it. I liked Aleks and Mia a lot as characeters and while I think the mental health aspect could have been explored a whole lot more, I can see why it wasn’t. The romance was slow and spicy, the angst was great, and the payoff for these two was what they needed. 

Tropes
🏒Sports/Hockey Romance
🎤Fake Dating/Engagement
🏒Childhood Friends to Lovers
🎤Forced Proximity
🏒Athlete x Pop Star 
🎤Angsty Slow Burn 

Content Warnings
Mental Health Struggles 
Suicide Intention 
Family Deaths 
Alcohol Consumption
Violence on Ice

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #bookreview
Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I onl Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I only ended up reading 3 books in. 3 pretty fun books but one of my slowest readings months in a while. 

And I’m going to be honest here it’s because I’ve been constantly reading Heated Rivalry fanfics. 🤷‍♀️ I’m having the best time though. 

How was your reading in February? Any 5  star reads? 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #februarywrapup
January was a really solid reading month. I read s January was a really solid reading month. I read some books that had been on my tbr for some time, reread a few things that peaked my interest. I also started a few new series. And just had a good time!

I just had a really good start to the year. While February is a little slow so far I’m looking forward to what I can pick up.

What did you read in January? Any 5-star reads? Let’s chat! 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #januarywrapup
Can you believe that it’s already February? I know Can you believe that it’s already February? I know I can’t. But that means it’s a new month with more releases coming out! And that makes me excited. Some fantastic titles releasing this month and I cannot wait to read them. 📚

A couple of these are on my TBR already and some have just caught my eye and that makes me super excited to pick them up. 🖤

What are you looking forward to reading this month? Let’s chat! ✨

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #Februaryreleases2026
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