Author Profile

David Levithan

David Levithan

I find it downright baffling to write about myself, which is why I’m considering it somewhat cruel and usual to have to write this brief bio and to update it now and then. The factual approach (born ’72, Brown ’94, first book ’03) seems a bit dry, while the emotional landscape (happy childhood, happy adolescence – give or take a few poems – and happy adulthood so far) sounds horribly well-adjusted. The only addiction I’ve ever had was a brief spiral into the arms of diet Dr Pepper, unless you count My So-Called Life episodes as a drug. I am evangelical in my musical beliefs.

Luckily, I am much happier talking about my books than I am talking about myself. My first novel, Boy Meets Boy, started as a story I wrote for my friends for Valentine’s Day (something I’ve done for the past twenty-two years and counting) and turned itself into a teen novel.

With Boy Meets Boy, I basically set out to write the book that I dreamed of getting as an editor – a book about gay teens that doesn’t conform to the old norms about gay teens in literature (i.e. it has to be about a gay uncle, or a teen who gets beaten up for being gay, or about outcasts who come out and find they’re still outcasts, albeit outcasts with their outcastedness in common.) I’m often asked if the book is a work of fantasy or a work of reality, and the answer is right down the middle – it’s about where we’re going, and where we should be. Of Boy Meets Boy, the reviewer at Booklist wrote: “In its blithe acceptance and celebration of human differences, this is arguably the most important gay novel sinceAnnie on My Mind and seems to represent a revolution in the publishing of gay-themed books for adolescents” – which pretty much blew me away when I read it. Viva la revolution!

My second book, The Realm of Possibility, is about twenty teens who all go to the same high school, and how their lives interconnect. Each part is written in its own style, and I’m hoping they all add up to a novel that conveys all the randomness and intersection that goes on in our lives – two things I’m incredibly fascinated by.  The book is written in both poetry and linebroken prose – something I never dreamed I would write.  But I was inspired by writers such as Virginia Euwer Wolff, Billy Merrell, Eireann Corrigan, and Marie Howe to try it.  It is often said that reading is the greatest inspiration to writing, and this is definitely the case for me.

My third novel, Are We There Yet?, is about two brothers who are tricked into taking a trip to Italy together. The natural questions to ask when faced with this summary are: (a) Do you have a brother? (Yes.); (b) Is he the brother in the book? (He’s neither brother in the book.); (c) Have you been to Italy? (Yes.); (d) Which city was your favorite? (Venice.); (e) Is this based on your trip there? (The sights are, but the story isn’t; the whole time I was there, I took notes in my notebook, not knowing exactly what they’d be for.)

Marly’s Ghost, my fourth novel, is a Valentine’s Day retelling of A Christmas Carol, illustrated by my friend Brian Selznick.  To write it, I went through A Christmas Carol and remixed it – took phrases and themes and created a new version, centering around a boy named Ben whose girlfriend, Marly, has just died.  When he looks like he’s giving up on life, Marly reappears in ghost form – and sends some other ghosts to get him to embrace life again.  It was a hard book to write – it’s about both love and grief, two very difficult things to capture truthfully.  But I genuinely don’t see any reason to write a book if it doesn’t feel like a challenge.

My next book came unexpectedly.  My friend Rachel Cohn proposed that we write a back-and-forth novel, with her writing from a girl’s perspective and me writing from a boy’s.  The result is Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, a kick-ass love story that we wrote over a summer without really planning it out.  It just happened, and it was one of the best writing experiences I ever had.  It has even been bought for the movies – stay tuned on that front.

A different kind of collaboration is The Full Spectrum: A New Generation of Writing About Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning, and Other Identities, an anthology I co-edited with my best friend Billy Merrell.  It contains true stories from LGBTQ writers under the age of 23, and the Lambda Award for Best LBGTQ Children’s/Teen Book.

Other anthologies I’ve edited or co-edited include: 21 Proms, a collection of prom stories by YA authors, co-edited with Daniel Ehrenhaft; Friends, an anthology of middle-grade friendship stories, co-edited with Ann M. Martin; and three PUSH anthologies of the bst young writers and artists in America:  You Are Here, This Is Now (2002), Where We Are, What We See (2005), We Are Quiet, We Are Loud (2008).  Another PUSH anthology is This is PUSH, featuring new work from all of the authors who’ve written for PUSH.  A list of all the anthologies I’ve been in can be found here.

My sixth novel, Wide Awake, starts with the election of the first gay Jewish president, and is about two boyfriends who must go to Kansas when the election results are threatened.   In many ways, it’s a “sequel in spirit” to Boy Meets Boy, since it’s about many of the same things – love, friendship tolerance, and taking a stand for what you believe in.  It was written right after the 2004 election, and published right before the 2006 election, which made me hope that a gay Jewish president was a closer reality than I might have thought. (No, I have no intention to run.  But if you read the book now, it’s sometimes how eerie how it echoes the 2008 race.)

My second collaboration with Rachel Cohn, Naomi and Ely’s No Kiss List, was inspired by a phrase my best friend Nick and I came up with after he moved to New York City.  It’s about a straight girl and a gay boy who’ve been best friends forever . . . but have to deal with a lot of things that have gone unsaid after the boy (Ely) kisses the girl’s (Naomi’s) boyfriend.  This time, Rachel and I decided to rotate the point of view between a number of characters, not just the titular two.  The result was harder to write, but just as fun to create.

How They Met, and Other Stories, was published in 2008, which happened to be the twentieth anniversary of my Valentine Story tradition.  It contains a few stories I wrote in high school and college, and more that I wrote more recently, some for anthologies, and some just for myself and my friends.

The first series I ever worked on (as a writer) is Likely Story, which I wrote with two of my friends, Chris Van Etten and David Ozanich, under the pen name David Van Etten.  Chris and David both have experience working on soap operas, and had the idea for a TV show about the daughter of a soap opera diva who ends up running a soap opera of her own.  I know nothing about writing a TV show, so I said, “Hey, that would be fun to write as a series of books, too!”  And, voila!,Likely Story was born.  It was a blast to write, and the main character, Mallory, is one of my favorites yet.

In 2009, Knopf published Love is the Higher Law. It’s the story of three teenagers in New York on 9/11, and how their lives intertwine in the days and weeks and months that follow. I know this sounds grim, but it’s really the story of things coming together even as it feels like the world is falling apart – because that’s how it felt to be in New York at that time, both tragic because of the events that happened and magical in the way that everyone became their better selves in the face of it. It’s a love story between friends, a love story for a city, and a love story for love itself, and the way it can get us through things, however daunting or shocking they may be. Or at least that’s what I aimed for. I hope you’ll read it and let me know if I got there.

Will Grayson, Will Grayson started, in many ways, back in college, when I kept being mistaken for another student named David Leventhal.  He was a beautiful dancer;  I was not.  So people would continually come up to me and say things like, “I saw you on stage last night – who would have thought you could be so graceful?”  And I’d have to say, “Um…that wasn’t me.”  Our paths finally crossed at the end of school, and we became best friends when we both moved to New York City – him to dance, me to edit and write.  Fast forward ten years or so – I had the idea to write a book about two boys with the same name, and called my friend John Green about it.  He said yes on the spot, and it took us five years from first conversation to publication day.  The result?  A novel about identity, love, and what it’s like to make a musical out of your own life.  You know, the universal themes.

October 2010 brought my third collaboration with Rachel Cohn, Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares.  Once again, Rachel and I are sending our characters all across New York City on a search for love, adventure, music, and … the holiday spirit?  Well, maybe and maybe not.  But Dash & Lily definitely takes in a lot of the crazy that hits New York City in the week between Christmas and New Year’s, as it follows two teens (you can guess their names) who meet at first through a red notebook left on the shelves of The Strand (my favorite bookstore in the world).  Mayhem ensues.

My first novel about adults is The Lover’s Dictionary, which FSG published for Valentine’s Day in 2011.  I say “about” adults and not “for” adults because all of my books are read by teens and adults, and making a distinction about who a book is for is rather silly, and usually quite arbitrary.  The Lover’s Dictionary is the story of a two-year relationship, told in dictionary entries that one lover is writing for the other.  It started off when the deadline for my annual Valentine’s Day story was nearing and I had no idea what to write.  Luckily, I happened to have a book on “words you need to know” (a graduation gift from high school) on my desk, and I decided to try to tell a relationship story using one word from each page spread in this book.  And the novel grew from that.

Another kind of collaboration was the one I did with photographer Jonathan Farmer for Every You, Every Me (also published in 2011).  The idea was simple:  Jonathan would give me random photographs, one at a time, and I would write a novel that incorporated them.  At no point would he know what I was writing, so the photographs would indeed be random.  And that’s what we did.  The result is a psychological thriller of sorts, about a really messed up kid named Evan who is getting over the disappearance (or is it more than that?) of his best friend … and at the same time is being stalked by someone leaving photographs that imply there’s more to the story than Evan is allowing himself to say.

2012 brings the release of Every Day, the story of a teen named A, who since birth has woken up in the body and the life of a new person every morning.  At the start of the story, A is sixteen, and wakes up in the body of Justin, who’s never really treated his girlfriend, Rhiannon, that well.  When A falls for Rhiannon, it suddenly changes the stakes of A’s story – and A’s life.  When I started writing Every Day, there were two questions I wanted to answer – first, what would it be like to be a person who grew up without gender, race, sexual orientation, parents, friends, and all of the other things we usually classify ourselves by, and, second, what would it be like to be in love with someone who changed every day – would it be possible?  I wrote the book to figure out what my answers were.

Next, in 2013, will be Invisibility, a collaboration with Andrea Cremer, about an invisible boy and the girl who moves into his apartment building who is the first person to ever actually see him.  Then will come Two Boys Kissing, a solo novel I am currently hard at work on.

When not writing during spare hours on weekends, I am a publisher and editorial director at Scholastic, and the founding editor of the PUSH imprint, which is devoted to finding new voices and new authors in teen literature. (Check it out atwww.thisispush.com for a full list.)  Among the authors I’ve edited and/or published under the Scholastic Press imprint are Suzanne Collins, Maggie Stiefvater, Ann M. Martin, Garth Nix, Patrick Carman, Natalie Standiford, Alice Hoffman, Gordon Korman, M. T. Anderson, Blake Nelson, Cecil Castellucci, and many, many other awesome writers.

http://www.davidlevithan.com/



Author Q&A

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    HeadBuzzer RH

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    Join us from September 12-16 as David Levithan stops by Random Buzzers to chat with us about his amazing new novel: Every You, Every Me. Post your questions here and check back during his visit to find out what he has to say! 

    Posted Aug 31, 2011, 01:11:51 PM

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    Where did you get the idea for Every You, Every Me? Did you choose the black and white pictures that went into it?

    One last question: What was it like collaborating with John Green on Will Grayson? Was it easier or more difficult writing with another person?

    Posted Aug 31, 2011, 01:31:09 PM

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    I'd always wanted to do a photographic novel, but always had a problem with using my own photos -- I already knew the stories behind them.  Then one day I saw a photo on my friend Jonathan's refrigerator that he'd taken, and I was transfixed.  (It ended up being the photo on the cover of the book).  I asked him to give me random photos, one at a time.  And I wrote the book based on wherever the photos took me.

    As for your other question:  It was a blast working with John.  And I think it's easier writing with someone else, and probably more fun.  But some stories were meant to be shared and some were meant to be solo, so I try to balance them out in my writing life.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:40:41 AM

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    Why choose a character who seems average and normal and not one who's up there on the social ladder and watch him break down?

    Or in other words, what drew you to this particular characters.

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 11:06:27 AM

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    I think Evan's been messed up by circumstance, not by social status.  In truth, when the book starts, you see how he's living in a largely negated world -- he has friends and people who care about him, but he doesn't care about that.  He's obsessed with the thing that's tearing him apart.  Which makes sense to me.  When you're haunted by something, it can blank out all the more mundane parts of life.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:42:50 AM

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    Hello David!!

    In Every You, Every Me the main character begins to feel so paranoid, it sometimes keeps him from sleep at night. As an author, do you find yourself writing late into the night? I personally come up with my best ideas right before bed time. Is there a certain time that you've noticed that spark those creative juices? Also, I love the fact that you put actual pictures within the book. Were the pictures what made you want to write this novel?

    Thanks so much, you're awesome!! And welcome to Random Buzzers! :D

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 12:02:06 PM

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    The pictures definitely inspired the novel -- my writing is completely influenced by the images Jonathan gave me.  It's not like I had a story in my head first, then fit the photos into the story.  I completely made it up as I went along.

    As for your other (excellent) question -- I'm actually your opposite when it comes to writing time.  I actually write best in the morning, after I've woken up and taken a shower.  I can just springboard into the book much more easily then.  There have certainly been a few times when I've stayed up late, following the story.  But that's rare.  I'm usually too tired to write past midnight, truth me told.  And when I try to write when I'm tired, it just feels clumsy.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:45:30 AM

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    Hi!
    1. I think psychology is such an interesting thing, is it something your interested in?
    2. What is your favorite thing about writing young adult novels?
    3. What is your favorite genre to read?
    4. Did you find this book easier or harder to write then your others?

    Thanks so much I can't wait to read Every you, Every me!

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 12:21:01 PM

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    Hello!

    1.  I'm certainly interest in it, but much more as it spells itself out in life, rather than the theory of it.

    2.  The audience.  And my fellow authors.

    3.  Realistic fiction.

    4.  It's hard to compare.  This one was probably on the harder side, but not the hardest.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:47:18 AM

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    Hello David Levithan!!

    I must admit.... I only just purchased and started to read my first book by you... will grayson, will grayson. But so far I am loving it!! I wanted to ask, the character you created for that book is so complex (you wrote the even number chapters, right?), do you draw from people you know or is the character entirely from your own mind?

    Can't wait to finish will grayson and to read more of your books!

    Bea =D

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 12:43:17 PM

    Support Invisible Children as they seek to bring how the child soldiers of the LRA. http://www.stayclassy.org/fundraise/ic?fcid=143852

    Rose: Doctor, they've got guns.
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    Look at these people. These human beings. Consider their potential! From the day they arrive on the planet, and blinking, step into the sun. There is more to see than can ever be seen, more to do than - No, hold on. Sorry, that's the 'Lion King.' - The Doctor

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    i will answer only in lowercase in honor of my will grayson (who is indeed in lowercase letters).  he is not really based on anyone i know, although certainly some of the things he struggles with are things my friends have struggled with.  i hope you like the rest of the book!

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:49:08 AM

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    Hi David,

    Welcome to Random Buzzers! I have a couple of questions: In Every You, Every Me you collaborated with photographer, Jonathan Farmer to bring the reader a different kind of reading experience. How is working with a photographer different from writing with another author? What were some of your conversations while working on Every You, Every Me?

    Thank you,

    Michelle & Leslie

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 01:35:08 PM

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    Jonathan and I didn't actually have any conversations while I was working on the book!  It was a very strange collaboration, in that way -- because we wanted it to be entirely random, he couldn't read what I was writing as I was writing it.  So it wasn't until I finished the first draft that he got to read the book!  It was a good day for him -- I think the suspense had been driving him a little nuts, and I can completely understand how frustrating that would be, to work on a book for years without knowing what it was about.

    As for how it's different -- mostly, it was the randomness and the silence.  Working with another author, you're bouncing words back and forth and feeding off of that.  For this, it was a one-way street -- he was feeding the words with his images, but I wasn't giving anything back (but thanks).

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:52:00 AM

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    why did you want to be an author, what made you want to write books?

    Last Modified Sep 06, 2011, 04:12:41 PM

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    I've just always loved words, and the easiest and truest answer is that I wanted to be an author and wanted to write books because I loved reading them so much.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:53:21 AM

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    This sounds like such a great psychological thriller.  Is there a book or movie that inspired the storyline?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 04:26:22 PM

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    Thanks!  Interestingly, I can't think of anything that really inspired the storyline (except for Jonathan's photographs).  I was, however, inspired in how I wrote the book by my friend Billy Merrell.  He's a poet, and he'd been experimenting with using crossouts in his poetry.  I loved how he used the crossouts to show the speaker correcting himself (like spelling out the thought process) and decided to do that in my book.  (It ends up that Laurie Halse Anderson used the same strategy in Wintergirls, but I didn't read Wintergirls until I was finished with this book.)

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:55:40 AM

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    Hi! Welcome to Random Buzzers :) 

    This sounds like such a good book. I can't wait to read it. I wanted to know, what were some of the challenges you came across when righting this? Did everything come naturally or did it take time?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 04:40:43 PM




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    The biggest challenge with this book was not knowing what was going to happen next.  Because Jonathan was giving me photos randomly, he could have forced me to switch tracks at any time.  Once you start writing a book that's a thriller, you worry that your friend will give you a photo of a unicorn, and suddenly you'll have to work that in.  But luckily I was never derailed.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:57:20 AM

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    Why did you initially start writing Every You, Every Me? It sounds awesome!!

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 04:51:41 PM

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    It was the idea of writing a novel based on random photographs that spurred me on.  It was fascinating to write without a plan, and to be subject to the whims of images.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 09:58:53 AM

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    LittleMissEMI

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    Was there anything you were trying to make more aware to high school students? Do you think there are other kids who might feel paranoid as the main character in your book feels or did you try to emphasize the paranoia he was feeling?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 05:00:18 PM

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    DLevithan

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    I never really aim for awareness -- I'm going more for connection.  And I definitely think that Evan is someone you can connect with, even if you haven't beenin the same exact situation.  Because losing control over your life or over your friends can really mess you up.  And that's where Evan is.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 11:57:22 PM

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    slowequeen

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    Hello,

    I was reading the discription and was wondering, where do these ideas come from? Are they personal experiences, or did they just come to you?

    Thank You Very Much,

    Gabby

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 05:41:48 PM

    Gabriella Slowey

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    DLevithan

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    Thanks for the question.  I feel I've already answered it above, so won't repeat the answer here.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 11:58:28 PM

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    EmeraldSun Literati

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    EmeraldSun

    EmeraldSun Literati

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    Can you recommend some of your favorite mystery thrillers?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 05:49:35 PM

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    DLevithan

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    Eliot Schrefer's THE DEADLY SISTER, Eireann Corrigan's ACCOMPLICE, Caleb Carr's THE ALIENIST, and anything by Elmore Leonard

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 11:59:25 PM

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    Sayomay Bibliophile

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    Sayomay

    Sayomay Bibliophile

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    Have you yourself ever been stalked?? Or have you ever stalked someone else???

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 05:58:16 PM

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    DLevithan

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    Happily, the answer to both is no.

    Posted Sep 13, 2011, 11:59:59 PM

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    shadley Literati

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    shadley

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    Hi!

    What inspired you to include the pictures from the story?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 05:59:50 PM

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    DLevithan

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    Thanks for the question.  I feel I've already answered it above, so won't repeat the answer here.

    Posted Sep 14, 2011, 12:01:00 AM

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    Tusora

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    Whoa this sounds like a really intense book! How did you go about doing research for the story????

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 07:55:09 PM

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    Pinkangel1026

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    What is your favorite book?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 08:22:09 PM

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    DLevithan Avid Reader

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    DLevithan

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    That's a hard one.  Today I'll say BLANKETS by Craig Thompson.  But if you ask me another day, I'll probably have another answer.

    Posted Sep 14, 2011, 12:02:14 AM

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    ErikaWrites Literati

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    ErikaWrites

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    This books seems kind of sad and maybe a little creepy. Did you at all surround yourself with sad/creepy books or music while writing?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 08:44:27 PM

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    DLevithan

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    I actually listened to A LOT of Placebo while writing the book.  (The title is actually from a Placebo song.)  That was actually the first thing I conceived about the character -- that he listened to Placebo.  And that set the whole tone.

    Posted Sep 14, 2011, 12:08:31 AM

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    Amillssews Reader

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    Amillssews

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    This book seems like a different type of book for you. What was your inspiration; why did you decide on this type of book -- and where did the pictures come from? Did you have a professional photographer's help?

    Posted Sep 06, 2011, 08:49:26 PM

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    DLevithan

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    Thanks for the question.  I feel I've already answered it above, so won't repeat the answer here.

    Posted Sep 14, 2011, 12:09:38 AM