ally carter

Monday, March 31, 2008

Things about which I am very, very excited

1. I went to Sam's yesterday. With my very own Sam's card. I can now buy flour 50 pounds at a time. Like feed. I'm a happy girl.

2. After visiting Sam's I fulfilled a life-long goal and purchased a deep freeze. Yes, I know how weird this makes me. I don't care. Tomorrow delivery people will bring 13.7 cubic feet of upright freezery goodness and install it in my garage, which means I will hopefully never lack for freezer space again! (or at least for a while)

3. The t-shirt contest. Seriously. Sooooo excited. (but you guys have to follow the RULES. I'm not kidding about that.)

4. Dancing with the Stars.

5. My carpenter came and looked at the cabinets today, and we're now ordering supplies for the exorcism!!! I'll keep you posted.

6. There's a new character in the new book. I like this character. A lot.

7. There's a possibility (I'd say 80%) that I'm going to get to go to one of Stephenie Meyer's signings when she goes on tour this spring!!!! And no, I'm not touring with Stephenie Meyer. My going has nothing whatsoever to do with me being a writer and everything to do with me being a reader. And I'm jazzed.



later gators,
Ally

Sunday, March 30, 2008

T-Shirt Contest...The RULES

Well, it's official! We're having a contest for you--the Gallagher Girls of the world--to design t-shirts to celebrate the books.


If you'd like to try your hand, please read these rules in their entirety. Entries that do not comply with the contest rules will not be considered.

If you have questions regarding the contest rules, please consult a parent, guardian, or teacher. If your parent, guardian, or teacher agrees that your question is not answered by the rules, please email me for clarification at ally (at sign) allycarter.com.

Please DO NOT email questions to the contest entry email address.



THE RULES

Please send your entry, your name, your date of birth, and your email address to AllyCarterContest (at sign) gmail.com by midnight April 21, 2008.


Entrants must be under 21 years of age on the date that contest entries are due.

All designs must be original artwork (no clipart, photographs to which you do not own the copyright, etc.).

All designs must relate to the Gallagher Girl series (either book).

Designs may use lines or themes from the book, but should not directly copy any cover art elements.

Collaborative efforts are allowed, but prizes must be shared among the members of the winning team.

A parent or guardian may assist, but you must do the majority of the work.

Designs will be judged based on concept, execution, and the ability for the designs to duplicate well.

Designs must be sent as either pdf or jpeg files. (Entries may be created in any software program or with pen/paper, but files MUST be scanned or saved in either pdf or jpeg format before they are sent to us.)

You will be submitting designs only--no need to make actual t-shirts. Those will come later.

You may submit a maximum of TWO entries.

Designs can be for front, or back, or front and back. Note that preference may be given to designs that are one-sided since they will be less expensive to produce and purchase.

An important note:

The winning design may be used in a number of ways to help promote the Gallagher Girls series. By entering this contest you give up the copyright to your artwork (meaning you can't sue us if we use it because...well...using it is kind of the purpose.)


If you’ve read and understood these rules and feel up to a challenge, then start designing!

The winner will receive a great prize (to be announced later).

The winning design will be featured on t-shirts (and possibly other merchandise) that will be sold on cafepress.com.

All proceeds from t-shirt sales will be used for prizes for future contests on AllyCarter.com.

Thanks, and good luck!

Ally

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Eleven things about writers

Good news: I'D TELL YOU I LOVE YOU BUT THEN I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU is back on the New York Times bestseller list. Yeah. Week eleven. I'm...floored.

To honor the occasion, I thought I'd bring you another list: Eleven things I'm starting to learn about writers.

Now, of course, it's hard to generalize an entire subset of the population, but lately I've been amazed by the number of things writers have told me that are things I've thought myself a thousand times.

So here goes:

1. we all think we're bad at our jobs a good portion of the time. Really bad.

2. we all live in fear that someone is eventually going to find out how bad we are and take away all the good things that have happened so far in our careers.

3. we all hate writing (at least part of the time).

4. and yet we all HAVE to write or weird things happen to our psyche.

5. we all stress out over deadlines.

6. we all worry about money--even the writers I know who make decent amounts of money because (according to numbers 1 and 2 above) we live in fear that we'll never make another dime in this business.

7. many of us were reluctant readers when we were teens (which makes sense, I think, that we would try to write page-turning books because we understand all-too-well how easy it is to put a book down and walk away from it.)

8. we all get really annoyed when people chat us up at parties about the book they're going to write someday and how being a writer must be the easiest job in the world.

9. we all suffer from deadline-induced bouts of questionable dietary habits and/or personal hygiene.

10. we all (even the BOYS!) feel like crying and/or throwing up when we get really, really intense edit letters.

11. if we're smart, we also know those edit letters will make our books better in the long run.


And speaking of edits...

Later gators,
Ally

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

The hardest part...

People always ask me what the hardest part of writing a novel is, to which I always reply:

THE PART I'M DOING RIGHT NOW!

Enough said.

Back to the grindstone!

Ally

Monday, March 24, 2008

A very disreputable mission

Okay, Gallagher Girls, are you ready for a mission?

I mean a really, incredibly important-slash-fun mission?

Because, if you are, I've got one.

Last summer I was given an advance reading copy of a book--not just any book: a funny book with cute boys and hilarious pranks.

A book written so flawlessly that every single sentence made me unable to rest until I read the next sentence...and the next.

A book that is about the differences in boys and girls, rich and poor, perception and reality.

A book that was--simply put--one of the best books I have ever read in my entire life.

But there was some bad news...

THE BOOK WASN'T FOR SALE YET!

But guess what, gang, it is now!

So your mission for this week is simple: Don't walk--run--to a bookstore or library and pick up a copy of THE DISREPUTABLE HISTORY OF FRANKIE LANDAU-BANKS by the amazing E. Lockhart.




And then read it and spend some quality time thinking about what it is to be a young woman. And how being a little disreputable is what it takes to be a Gallagher Girl sometimes.


-Ally


ps...go here to read an excerpt and some reviews. You won't be sorry.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Happy 3rd Birthday, Gallagher Girls

One of you guys just posted a comment that reminds me that three years ago today is when I first got the idea for the Gallagher Girls (read all about it in "story behind the story" under the LYKY section of the BOOKS tab.)

Happy birthday, girls!

they grow up so fast.

-Ally

Saturday, March 22, 2008

More T-Shirt Contest Rules

Thanks for all the questions/ comments.

I'm adding to the rules and clarifying. I'll re-post a total/complete list when the details are finalized.

You may make your designs with pencil/paper/markers/paint, etc. and then scan it into the computer.

Computer-built designs (like those using Corel Draw or Paint or the like) are also allowed.

The ability for the designs to be duplicated well will be one of the judging criteria, so if possible, I would highly encourage you to submit designs that are as crisp and clean as possible, and friends tell me that this will be much, much easier with the computer made designs.

(In other words, although handwritten stuff will still be accepted, you're just going to be at a disadvantage, I'm told, so now's the time to get friendly with the software in your local computer lab!)

You will be submitting designs only--no need to make actual t-shirts. Those will come later.

You may submit a maximum of TWO entries.

A parent or guardian may assist, but you must do the majority of the work.

Okay, that's it's for now.

-Ally

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

The t-shirt contest is on! Sort of.

Okay, so the powers that be (meaning my fabulous, wise, and savvy editor and agent) have told me that a t-shirt contest is as cool as we all thought it was going to be.

SO WE'RE GOING TO DO IT!

But since I've never done a T-shirt design contest before, I've got to get the rules settled before we get this show on the road.

Here are the rules as they stand so far:

--all designs must be original artwork (no clipart!)

--all designs must relate to the Gallagher Girl series (either book)

--designs may use lines or themes from the book, but should not directly copy any cover art elements (meaning don't just scan the cover onto your computer and chop it up)

--collaborative efforts are allowed but prizes must be shared among the members of the winning team

--by entering this contest you give up the copyright to your artwork (meaning you can't sue is if we use it because...well...using it is kind of the purpose.)

--there will be a deadline by which all designs must be submitted.

--all entries must be submitted via email (address to be determined)

--designs will be judged by a group of very qualified individuals selected by Ally (probably meaning her agent...her editor...her sister... you know, the design pros.)

--designs will be judged based on originality, execution, and how much we'd like to walk around wearing something that looks like (says) that.

--entrants must be under 21 years of age on the date that contest entries are due.

--designs must be sent in Adobe Acrobat format. You may use any software program you'd like to design it, but we'd like you to save it as a pdf file before sending it to us. (If you win, we'll probably want the source file because it will be higher resolution and will duplicate better.)

--the winning design may be used in a number of ways to help promote the Gallagher Girls series.


Okay...those are the rules as they stand now. Details (like the deadline, email address, prizes, etc.) will be filled in shortly.

Other than that stuff, what did I miss?


-Ally

Monday, March 17, 2008

Dancing, baby!

How much do I love DANCING WITH THE STARS?

An embarrassing amount. Seriously embarrassing.

Because 1. it's an awesome treadmill show.

(Treadmill Show. noun. Term coined by Ally and her sister to describe a television series that is both fast-paced and motivating and has a plotline simple enough to follow that one can easily enjoy it while walking on a treadmill.)

And 2. I do love me some dancing. And some minor celebrities.

A few years ago it was my personal goal to be a major enough minor celebrity to be on CELEBRITY POKER SHOWDOWN.

Well...guess what my new goal is?

I mean, it's not that I even want ME to be the writer on DWTS. Sure. It sounds fun in theory. But given the fact that I am the only person in the world who seems to GAIN weight on Weight Watchers, those little outfits aren't looking so appealing.

But I think it would be awesome for SOME author to be on, right?

Seriously. Dancing with Meg Cabot? So amazing. Or Sarah Dessen? Or...let's face it...I would so pay good money to see Dancing with John Green.

Oooh. You know who would be good? Judy Blume!

So come on, Dancing with the Stars selection committee--we are YA writers--our fans can text message better than ANYONE'S fans!


--Ally

Friday, March 14, 2008

Gallagher Girl...t-shirts?

Okay, so after the last post several of you struck upon a secret, long-held fantasy of mine...

To have Gallagher Girl t-shirts!

I've even gone so far as to sketch some rough ideas before I remembered that I am perhaps the second least artistic person on the planet. (Number one is my sister.)

So I kind of gave up on it.

And for a while I thought about maybe having a contest where all of YOU could come up with potential T-Shirt designs...

But then I saw that Meg Cabot was already having a contest like that, and I didn't want to be unoriginal.

I was sort of making my peace that there may never be Gallagher Girl t-shirts until yesterday when so many of you expressed an interest in something like that.

So I'm putting it to you, guys. Would a contest or challenge or something design-related be something in which you'd be interested?

Discuss.


-Ally


ps...still working on the title contest. When I know details, I'll post them. I swear.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

A blog...in pictures.

Several of you have asked how my trip to Arizona went a few weeks ago, to which I have to reply...

THERE WERE LIBRARIANS/TEACHERS IN GALLAHGER ACADEMY T-SHIRTS!!!!!



How could it have been anything but awesome?

I got to talk to hundreds of middle school students!



(Note how the arrival of this picture closely preceded my re-enrollment in diet church. I mean Weight Watchers.)

And sign what felt like thousands of books!



And see probably the greatest school bulletin boards...


... in the history of school bulletin boards!

(I highly recommend clicking on this one to make it really big because the little details in it are AMAZING!)

So how could it have been anything but wonderful?

A lot of you have also been asking how my cabinet exorcism went.

Well...it wasn't actually the exorcism itself. There were no hammers or crowbars or crucifixes or anything. But we did look over the situation and there is hope!

Of course, I was warned, that my cabinets will never be the wonderful cabinets of which I've always dreamed, but they may be able to--with a few alterations--become functioning members of kitchen society.

We'll get new doors.

And lose the terrible, awful brace thing...

that makes it impossible for me to remove my dinner plates without first turning them at a thirty degree angle.



And we might even be able to add some awesome features!

Like two of these!





And maybe even something like this!



And if all goes well, I might have soon have something like this!



Oooh. Look at me--I'm all a flutter!

I don't know if it's the cabinets or this...


That's right--CROSS MY HEART AND HOPE TO SPY is at Wal-Mart.

WAL-MART--the holy grail of retail!

People are going to go in looking for laundry detergent and tortilla chips and they're going to see it. And maybe buy it.

Now I know some of you might not think this is a big deal because maybe you've got a bookstore right across the street, but where I come from...you've got nothing across the street except cows and maybe some big round bales of hay. In fact the only place that sells books in about a five county radius of where I used to live is Wal-Mart.

So...yay!

My book is at Wal-Mart (and right next to my friend Lauren Myracle's awesome books! Double yay!)

That's it.

I need to go lie down.


--Ally

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

BREAKING NEWS!

I just had a call from my decorator. (I know, I know...ALLY has a decorator? Ally? The person who has spent the last nine years perfectly content to have her "fine china" collection consist almost entirely of plastic cups from Eskimo Joe's? Surely pigs are flying somewhere...)

Anyway, she's coming over in a few minutes and she's bringing a carpenter who is going to look at potentially de-eviling the cabinets!

The exorcism might be upon us, people!

Stay tuned.

Ally

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Second Drafts

Hey gang,

Seems like a lot of you want to know about second drafts--how long they take, how many drafts follow, and what they look like.

Well, I can firmly say...it depends.

Every writer is different. Heck, every BOOK is different. For me second drafts are usually the time when I stop seeing all the fun, cool stuff and start focusing on the problems.

Usually some of the problems are self-evident. A lot of the times the problems are also things that were in my head but somehow didn't make it onto the page, and it takes someone else reading the pages and saying "why is character X always saying things like Y?"

And then I have to fix it.

Draft three, just so you know, is usually when the crying starts.

I have no idea how long the second draft will take. Nor do I know how many drafts will come after.

But I can tell you that I'm going to do everything in my power to make this the best book yet. And that is just about the only thing of which I'm really, truly sure.


--Ally

Monday, March 10, 2008

Big to-do

You want to know how two YA authors spend a night on the town? Well, let's just say that when Jennifer Lynn Barnes stopped by to see the new house last night the following happened:

1. Jen agreed that the cabinets are evil, but the rest of the house is cute.

2. We watched a bit of TROY on AMC and agreed that Brad Pitt is indeed the hottest man who ever lived (and is either staying at the same level of hotness or even possibly getting hotter as he ages.)

3. Decided to go see JUMPER.

4. Agreed that JUMPER was both a really bad, yet also really enjoyable, movie.

5. Got into Jen's car to leave.

6. Realized that Jen's car wouldn't start.

7. Tried to call AAA.

8. Realized that if you have a full A-Z keyboard on your phone (like a Motorola Q) then phone numbers like 1-800-AAA-HELP aren't all that helpful.

9. Decoded the AAA phone number.

10. Waited for AAA.

11. Observed a woman, a child, and two men acting suspiciously in the parking lot, so Jen (who also writes about spies) and I recorded the following:

--they were driving two vehicles, a white toyota camry, and a maroon chevy malibu.
--they were both from out of state--the same state.
--one of the men thought he was a whole lot younger and a whole lot cooler than he actually was.
--the owner of the white camry was likely a University of Texas graduate (but neither of the cars were from Texas.)
--the woman and the child left in the white car and the two men left in the maroon car. They left going in different directions, but not before we overheard plans to meet up later at a local nightclub.
--the operatives (Jen and I) couldn't follow, however, because that's about the time the AAA guy got there.

12. AAA quickly jumped the car. It started. Jen and I bragged about how calmly we handled the situation.

13. Started to leave parking lot.

14. Car died again.

15. Called Jen's parents.

16. Waited and watched as the entire Barnes clan descended upon us. Seriously. It was as if someone sent up the Bat signal or something.

17. Waved about a dozen cars to drive around us because, of course, we stalled in probably the busiest place in the parking lot.

18. Tried to jump Jen's car again--no luck.

19. Listened as Jen's dad instructs Jen's brother to push the car into an empty space.

20. Watched as brother strained and moaned and had his face turn purple.

21. Offered to get out of the car and HELP push as opposed to BEING pushed.

22. Pushed car easily with our superior, collective girl-power strength.

23. Learned that Jen's dad had kept his foot on the brake during the first car pushing attempt, so maybe Jen and I weren't the awesome car-pushers we thought we were.

24. Got taken to dinner by Jen's Parents.

25. Gave tour of house...again.

26. Got confirmation that the cabinets ARE EVIL...again.

27. Said a prayer of thanks that I now live in a place where when you break down people care. And help. And even if the cabinets are evil, the people most definitely are not.



--Ally

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

TEN!

I just got word that I'D TELL YOU I LOVE YOU BUT THEN I'D HAVE TO KILL YOU will be on the New York Times Bestseller list's top TEN for the TENTH week come Sunday.

Ten.

TEN!

That's...let me see...TEN weeks more than I ever dreamed it would be on the list.

So in honor of this momentous occasion I thought I'd give you the top TEN random things that come to mind.

1. I think I'm sick. Again. Either that or I swallowed a burning tennis ball during the night, and considering I woke up hungry and don't play tennis, I'm going with "sick".

2. Many of you have written to ask where I am in the GG3 process, and I can say that I've just started draft #2.

3. My cabinets are still evil.

4. My counters, however, are awesome.

5. When are the new TV shows going to start? I'm dying for new TV!

6. I'm doing Weight Watchers again. This time, however, I'm going to the meetings which, it turns out, are NOTHING like what I thought they'd be like. Is it just me, or does everyone picture WW like AA? Well, they aren't. It's more like diet church.

7. I have decided that I own the world's most uncomfortable furniture.

8. I have also hired a decorator. YES--ME--a decorator!

9. In related news, pigs have been spotted flying.

10. I don't know...maybe I DID swallow a flaming tennis ball?

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Q & A: the books and writing edition

Q: Why can't I find your first two books for older readers, CHEATING AT SOLITAIRE and LEARNING TO PLAY GIN in bookstores?

A: Sigh. Well, there's the short answer, the not-so-short answer, and the really, really long answer to that question. Let's split the difference.

Solitaire came out in December 2005. Gin came out a year later. That's a long time ago in publishing terms, and unless the books are selling really well stores aren't going to give them shelf space. And the books didn't sell well, so now they're pretty much history.

Solitaire is out-of-print (you may be able to find a copy online...or you may not.) Gin is technically still "in print" but you'll likely have to order a copy from a store or online to find one.



Q: Will you be writing a third book in that series to tell what happens after Gin?

A: Sadly, I probably won't. They just didn't do well enough. Sure, I have some ideas of what might happen to those characters next, but I think I ended it in a satisfactory place, so I'm not too heartbroken to walk away.



Q: Do you have a picture or something of the red dress Cammie wears in CMH?

A: No. I really don't. I just imagined a dress that would mortify Cammie beyond belief and I thought nothing would scare "the chameleon" more than a dress that was made to stand out.



Q: How long does it take to write a book?

A: Well, it REALLY varies. I've done it as quickly as a couple of months. I've also done it in as long as a year and a half.



Q: Do you ever get writers' block? How do you handle it if you do?

A: Are you kidding? I LIVE on writers' block! (It's right down the street from "I think my book is terrible" boulevard.)

The first thing people struggling with writers' block need to do, in my opinion, is figure out what kind of writers' block they have.

For me, there are two types:

Type 1 is the "I know I SHOULD be writing, but there's a Gilmore Girls marathon on, so I think I'll just lie here for the next hour...or two...or seven" block. This is the block of motivation. Maybe you're not excited about the book. Maybe you're bored. Maybe you're getting sick. Maybe you're book is boring to write (which is an almost certain sign it'll be boring to read.)

Whatever the case, the only way to get over Type 1 writers' block is to write THROUGH the block. Duct tape yourself to your chair if you must, but you have to plow through it.

Type 2, however, is trickier and, frankly, scarier.

It's the kind where you work ALL the time, but no matter what you do the characters seem false or the pacing feels flat or everything just feels...wrong.

I don't know how it is for other writers, but for me, anything that I have to make an EFFORT to write (in the first draft) is almost always terrible.

My favorite writing quote is by (I think) F. Scott Fitzgerald who said, "Great books write themselves, only bad books have to be written" (Or something like that.)

Again, I don't know about other writers, but for me that sums it up as well as anything possibly can.

Type 2 writers block isn't a matter or effort. Type 2 is the type you can't go through--you have to go AROUND.

Maybe you're forcing a character to do something she would never do.

Maybe your plot has a hole that you really can't (and shouldn't) ignore.

Maybe there just isn't enough conflict within the story.

Fix it. And that that will fix your block as well.




Q: Do you write on a computer or long-hand or what?

A: Some of everything. First drafts I usually do on an Alphasmart. Then I transfer everything to a desktop computer without internet access (that's KEY) and rewrite from there.

When I'm stuck--or when the language needs to be particularly good (like first and last chapters) I tend to do a lot long-hand.



Q: What are the best things kids who want to write can do to prepare?

A: Read everything--and I do mean EVERYTHING--you can. And write!

Don't worry about getting published--that's like an athlete worrying about where they'll hang their Olympic medal when they should be practicing their sport.

I've given those pieces of advice before, but I'll add something to the list:

Get in the habit of writing well. Respect and appreciate language, grammar, spelling--the works. I know you guys spend a lot of time instant messaging and stuff, but if you're hoping to make your living with words, I'd recommend you get in the habit of using them.




Q: What should my college major be if I want to be a writer?

A: I really don't think there's a right or wrong answer to this question.

I've had the privilege of meeting several very successful authors and in talking with them I've learned that we all come from a variety of majors.

I have a master's degree in economics.

Jennifer Lynn Barnes is getting her PhD in something relating to psychology.

I know authors who have day jobs as attorneys and doctors and accountants and everything in between.

Of course, I've also met a good many English or literature or fine arts majors, and that's great too.

I didn't major in English because I wanted to have a degree where I could make a good living whether or not I ever earned a dime writing. Economics allowed me to do that. And unlike the law or medicine or a number of other vocations, you don't have to have a specific degree to be a published author.

You just have to have a book worth publishing.

Some people will argue that majoring in literature will help with that, and I won't say otherwise. There are a lot of times when I'm with a bunch of writers and I feel like an IDIOT because I haven't read nearly as much as they have. While they were studying the classics I was diagramming the supply and demand of fertilizer.

But there are other times when I'm glad I don't have a full-blown literature background--when it's nice not to know what rules I might be breaking.

I'd say find a major that makes you excited to go to class every day.

And no matter what that is...keep writing.



--Ally

A point of clarification...

The title contest would be a contest for you guys to de-code or figure out the title--not to come up with it. I'm pretty sure we've settled on a title; I'm just looking for ultra cool/exciting way to reveal it to you guys!

Happy Sunday!
Ally