Book info:
Title: Hold My Hand
Author: Michael Barakiva
Published by: Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR)
Publication date: May 21st, 2019
Genres: Romance, Young Adult
Synopsis:
Alek Khederian thinks about his life B.E. and A.E.: Before Ethan and After Ethan. Before Ethan, Alek was just an average Armenian-American kid with a mess of curly dark hair, grades not nearly good enough for his parents, and no idea of who he was or what he wanted. After he got together with Ethan, Alek was a new man. Stylish. Confident. (And even if he wasn’t quite marching in LGBTQ parades), Gay and Out and Proud.
With their six-month anniversary coming up, Alek and Ethan want to do something special to celebrate. Like, really special. Like, the most special thing two people in love can do with one another. But Alek’s not sure he’s ready for that. And then he learns something about Ethan that may not just change their relationship, but end it.
Alek can’t bear the thought of finding out who he’d be P.E.: Post-Ethan. But he also can’t forgive or forget what Ethan did. Luckily, his best friend Becky and madcap Armenain family are there to help him figure out whether it’s time to just let Ethan go, or reach out and hold his hand.
Hold My Hand is a funny, smart, relatable take on the joy and challenges of teenage love, the boundaries of forgiveness, and what it really means to be honest.
Author Interview:
does your writing process look like? Do you know the whole story when you
start? Or do you just start writing and go with it (seat of the pants
writing)? If you plan it out, how do you do that? Outline,
notecards, post-it-notes, etc.?
process of for writing musicals that I have hijacked for novel-writing
purposes. It starts with the writing of
many many index cards – just a few words on each. They can each stand for a character, theme,
line of dialogue, plot moment, whatever.
All ideas are good ideas in this part.
This will also lead me to some research, and I’ll fall through a few of
those wormholes.
doing this, I can usually figure out if the story has stuff. If it doesn’t, I bind all the cards up and put
them in a drawer, to revisit at a later time, if/when I’ve had an epiphany
about how to make it work. If the story
is making sense, I can usually tell at this point: If the cards are coming out
aplenty, if they’re making sense, if they’re interesting and exciting, if they
communicate with each other. Then I
start sifting through them – removing the ones that don’t fit in anymore,
rewriting some, consolidating others.
Once I have a stack (let’s say, 100 at this point) I’ll put them up on
my wall, using scotch tape (really, I should be using painter’s tape, but do I?
no I do not, because adulting is hard).
picture of what an early non-color
coordinated attempt might look like.
Please note the adorability of the index cards I have cut into triangles,
which indicate time stamps.
the cards resemble something of an outline, and I’ll usually start writing
there. Because I rarely have the luxury
of putting full days aside for writing in this moment of my life (my day job is
running the Hangar Theatre in Ithaca, NY), when I do write, I look at the
outline for the chapter I want to write the night before I go to sleep, and
then wake up early and write write write.
First drafts must be written in the morning, early, when I’m barely
awake, so that I don’t have the ability to filter myself. On days that I can devote entirely to
writing, I’ll then go to the gym or make some breakfast, do some other stuff,
take a nap, and then read the morning pages.
Often, I have no memory of having written them and that allows me to
look at them somewhat objectively, ruthlessly, the way a writer must.
edit as you go, or wait till you’re finished before you edit? How
many times would you say you go over it yourself before having another set
of eyes look it over?
to get 50 good pages before I send them to my editor (Joy Peskin, amazing,
goddess, amazing). This will take three
or four or five drafts. With One Man Guy, they were the first fifty
pages. With Hold My Hand, I tried something different based on this article by
Joss Whedon – he said something about not bothering to write in chronological
order – that instead, you should write the scenes you see most vividly
first. So I did that, writing what we
determined was “the heart” of the book.
I didn’t even know where it would end up, but now it’s the end of Act I
and I’m not going to say anything but I think it’s my favorite scene I’ve ever
written.
50 page chunks – writing, re-writing, re-re-writing, re-re-re-writing, before
sending them to my editor for feedback, direction and spiritual sustenance.
pages or so, I’ll also re-index card – take all the old ones down, see what I’m
actually writing and how the pages have taken shape, and write the index cards
in dialogue with the pages themselves.
At this point, I usually start color coding the cards, which also helps
because if I’m like “Why does this section suck” or “I don’t know what should
happen next,” seeing visually that the B plot has been ignored for three
chapters or something helps.
part of a writers group that gets together and helps each other with their
writing?
a thing, and it sounds great. But having
never taken a class in writing, never thinking I’d be a writer, and not knowing
how things were done, I hadn’t ever really thought about joining one. But it sounds awesome.
tips do you have for aspiring writers?
world, look at what is happening in the world, look at what is happening in the
world that no one is writing about, and write about that.
What are your favorite:
Trilogy by N. K. Jemisin is just about as good as writing can get. It is my everything.
Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal – OMG these
two books were amazing
sounded like a fun little book and although it was a book, it was certainly not
fun or little – totally, truly devastating.
Cycle by Ursula Le Guin. The writing is
so good, so clear, so simple, so moving.
What a master.
premiered and now that I’ve seen it I feel like a major chapter of my life is
over.
like it’s going out of fashion. Which,
apparently, it’s not. Favorites there
are:
getting some hedge witch tattoos on my forearm),
Salt Acid Fat Heat, or whatever the correct order is)
Jackson Harper forever)
will you be my friend)
and weird and whacky and dark and funny and wonderful.
are my music gurus – I direct all music questions to them
snack
apple with sunflower seed butter. It’s
healthy AND caloric!
Author Bio:
Michael Barakiva, author of One Man Guy, is a theater director and writer of Armenian/Israeli descent who lives in Manhattan with his husband, Rafael. He is a graduate of Vassar College and the Juilliard School, an avid cook and board-game player, and a soccer player with the New York Ramblers.
Thanks for being on the tour! 🙂
No problem! This is a book I know my students are going to be excited next year to have in the library!
I'd always been curious about One Man Guy, but I'll confess that I never managed to pick it up. It's interesting that there's a sequel where the couple from the first book breaks up (I think?)–you don't see that very often, and it actually really intrigues me.
Nicole @ Feed Your Fiction Addiction
I need to read both. I am not sure how the first one went, so need to try it! Thanks for stopping by!