Thursday, June 17, 2010

Interview: Susie Day + GIVEAWAY!




Did you put any of your own life into My Invisible Boyfriend?

The book is set in a boarding school for older teens with problems, and as I work as a house parent at an international boarding school, I definitely took some inspiration from our students! Our school is nothing like the Finch, but that environment puts the troubles that all teenagers face into a smaller goldfish bowl: no one goes home at the end of the day, so if you’re having problems there’s no escape. I hope I got the right balance of angsty woes.

In what ways do you relate to Heidi?

Heidi’s fear of being ‘left behind’ by all her friends definitely resonates: I was a ‘late bloomer’ (ugh, hideous phrase) and was still trucking around with unbrushed hair and Mum-bought clothes when everyone else suddenly sprouted hormones. (Ever seen Heather Mattarazzo in Welcome to the Dollhouse? That was me, giganto plastic granny glasses included. Oh, the pain.)
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Heidi talks through her worries with Mycroft Christie, a time-travelling TV detective, and that’s all very ‘me’ too. I’ve grown out of the granny glasses, but not the obsessive TV-watching tendencies! I’m an unashamed geek.

If Heidi could date any guy from any YA book, who would you choose?

I’d have to say Peeta, from The Hunger Games. Heidi would adore his unapologetic devotion, and he’d laugh at her tendency to overthink everything. And he’s a baker! Perfect.

What was your favorite thing about writing My Invisible Boyfriend?

The endless cake references. Heidi works in a quirky cafe called The Little Leaf, which is what gives her the idea for Gingerbread Ed, her fake boyfriend. When you’re toiling away at a desk all alone, it’s very cheering to be writing about blueberry muffins. And lemon shortbread. And carrot cake. Mmm, carrot cake...

In your opinion- are there any "must haves" (personality, looks etc) for "the perfect boyfriend"?

None, because he doesn’t exist. Heidi constructs what she thinks is the ideal cookie-cutter boyfriend (he plays guitar, he writes poetry, he rides a motorbike) but his personality is basically ‘he likes Heidi’ and that’s it: he brings nothing new to her life that she doesn’t already have from her friendships (not that she realises it), so he’s not perfect after all. But even a real boy doesn’t have to be ‘perfect’: where’s the fun in that? We all have flaws. The best boyfriends have them too.

If you could travel back to any time period- which would it be and why?

Great question! I adore Golden Age crime fiction (Dorothy L. Sayers, Margery Allingham and the like) and I studied Virginia Woolf as a grad student, so I’d probably say 1920s and 30s. Unfortunately, I suspect the impact of two World Wars and the still fairly grim status of women at the time would shatter all my illusions, but if that nice Doctor turns up in his TARDIS and offers me a quick visit, I won’t say no.

Thanks so much for having me, Kelsey – and for asking such brilliant questions!

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Thanks so much, Susie!

Click here to visit Susie's website!

Click here to read my review of My Invisible Boyfriend!
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Thanks to Susie's awesome publicist, I have TWO copies of Susie's newest release, My Invisible Boyfriend, to giveaway!


Rules:
US Only
Ends July 10, 2010

Fill out THIS FORM to enter!



26 comments:

  1. Ahhh! No way! Today I was like, "I really want to read this book." And now you have a contest for it! Looks like a great read! :)

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  2. Cake! I love cheesecakes. Oh and Peeta. Boarding school. Hm, this sounds interesting, yay for interview!

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  4. all this talk of food is making me hungry!

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  5. This looks like a great book! Thanks!

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  6. This book looks adorable! Thanks for the interview & contest.

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  7. Any female character would be lucky to date Peeta! ^__^ I like that she points out there is no perfect boyfriend - we have to love all the quirks of people. Thanks for the interview! :)

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  8. The perfect boyfriend is kind of like beauty- in the eye on the beholder.

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  9. I think the idea of time travel with the doctor sounds great; while I'd love to go back and visit, I'm sure the restrictions placed on women would rankle me too!

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  10. I can relate to being a late bloomer. I also LOVE her answer about traveling with the Doctor.

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  11. This book sounds so good! Great interview :)

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  12. Yum, cake! I love cake... And now, thanks to Susie, I so want cake...This sounds like such a cute book! And I still want cake...

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  13. I found your review to be intriguing and one that I would take pleasure in reading.

    Thank you so much for hosting this giveaway.

    steven(dot)capell(at)gmail(dot)com

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  14. I always imagined what it would be like to attend boarding school. Than to feel like you are the odd one out must magnify everything by 1000.. I like the premise of this book. Thanks for the great giveaway and I loved the author interview :)

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  15. OMG, I love Peeta! He really is the best ever. :)

    Great interview!

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  16. i would love to read this book the plot is just so interesting. thank you for the giveaway.

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  17. Thanks so much for offering this giveaway! This book looks so cute!

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  18. This book reminds me of Little Black Lies. And yes, Peeta would be great for Heidi.

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  19. thank you for the wonderful contest!

    k_sunshine1977 at yahoo dot com

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  20. I will be checking this book out. Thanks for the give away and great interview. I really like the last question, what era would you live in.

    kennifernjennyatgmaildotcom

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  21. I love the idea of any plot set in a boarding school for some reason. There are always a lot of possibilities! :)

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  22. great interview! ahhh Peeta would be good for anyone! he's so perfect :( (in a good way kinda frown cause he's not real)

    angela z

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  23. I love all you interviews!!!! This looks like a great book!

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  24. while, yes, I do love YOU interviews, I'm pretty sure I meant to say YOUR interviews ;)

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I love getting comments, so feel free to leave your thoughts :)