Saturday, April 5, 2008

Bookshelf: Interview with Dr. Barbara Becker Holstein


Dr. Barbara Becker Holstein, nationally known Positive Psychologist and Happiness Coach speaks regularly on radio programs around the country, is the host of her own radio shows and appears on television in New York and New Jersey. Her newest e-radio show is Kids, Tweens and Teens, A Positive Psychologist looks at all three, on http://www.internetvoicesradio.com/. Listen to it live on Mondays at 4:30PM EDT or download it as a podcast 24/7. Her inspiring e-radio show archives can also be found on the web in many places including http://www.ladybuglive.com/ where she has another e-radio show called THE ENCHANTED SELF. Dr. Holstein is the author of four books, including her latest, The Truth (I'm a girl, I'm smart and I know everything). She is in private practice in Long Branch, New Jersey with her husband, Dr. Russell M. Holstein. You can sign up for her e-mail newsletter and/or her daily blessings at http://www.enchantedself.com/ Her blog is The Enchanted Self at www.typepad.com


INN: Your book tells the story of a young girl going through puberty. What drew you to this particular topic?


BBH: Every stage of life is difficult but perhaps the most difficult time of all is leaving childhood behind and trying to figure out how to be a grown-up. We all spend years trying to figure this out! And we all need to find ways to hold on to the best of ourselves as we transition. Since a good story can be universal at its core, I decided to let a girl share her dilemmas and achievements, worries and wisdom, knowing that we can all relate.

INN: What's the craziest experience you've had with 10/11-year-old girls?

BBH: Probably my own when I was 11 and moving. After we had lunch at one of the girl's homes -homemade with chicken pot pie and chocolate cake, we were to take a public bus to the local amusement park. On the way, I got a horrible stomach ache and was in such pain I couldn't get off the bus. So all the girls went to the park anyway and had my party. I stayed on the bus until it returned me to my neighborhood. Then I got into bed in pain until my mother came home. I have never eaten chicken pot pie again!

INN: I love your title! There's been a lot of talk, from Reviving Ophelia to Queen Bees and Wannabes more recently, about how young adolescent girls are short-changed by society-- resulting in horrible self-image, academic intimidation, depression and worse. What's your advice to a teen girl on surviving the challenges that come with growing up?

BBH: My advice is to find a way, somehow, to hold on to the best of herself. The girl in The Truth (I'm a girl, I'm smart and I know everything) finally figures out a solution to moving from girlhood to being a teen. It is an unusual solution, tied into her passions and interests, but it grounds her and makes her feel safe and connected to herself. I think reading this book will help other girls think of their own solutions. And once we hold on to ourselves no one can blow us away!

INN: What do you say to a teen boy trying to understand why teen girls are so crazy?

BBH: Good question. I would tell him that boys and girls develop at different rates and our brains also focus on information in different ways. We all go crazy a bit when we are teens. Boys get hormonal surges that can make them want to ride motorcycles and speed and do daring tricks. Girls have tons of hormones also and get extremely social and talkative. Also girls laugh a lot and that's not so bad. We are really quite different. Fortunately we all level out a bit by the time we grow up and it isn't as hard to understand each other. Just wait!

INN: How did you break into publication?

BBH: I wrote an academic book first-The Enchanted Self, A Positive Therapy, one of the first books in the field of Positive Psychology. Once I did that I found I just couldn't stop writing! And I was very lucky, that book was published by an academic press who really helped me understand the ropes as far as taking a book from an idea to a published book.
INN: Any advice for teen writers?

BBH: Don't be shy. Write everyday and you will see that you begin to develop a style-a way with words that really suits you. For me, it was the way I could think of almost a trick ending when I would write a story. I just had a certain feel for how something should end. But I don't think that would have happened if I didn't write all the time in high school. I kept a diary and wrote poetry and took any paper I had to write very seriously. My persistence was critical. Remember it is 99% perspiration and 1% inspiration. I wish you all good luck. Maybe some of you will turn out like me. I'm a professional psychologist but I'm also a writer. It is great to have more than one outlet.
Thank you, Dr. Holstein!

WORD: A Brief Look at WriTeen Celebs

IS MILEY A SECRET WRITEEN? Probably not.

Miley Cyrus is arguably the current teen queen right now. She's got number one songs, her own TV show, and every time I walk into Dillards I see her face on a little girl t-shirt. Yet WriTeen celebrities rarely look like models. If you want to be famous, don't be a writer. Writing is not really glamorous, and the highest satisfaction comes from being by yourself, with a computer. But we WriTeens usually attract attention by being so young and so good at what we do. Or not so good.


We don't have a WriTeen People, but here's a little celeb gossip all the same.
Christopher Paolini is The WriTeen. He wrote Eragon and Eldest, both which stayed on the NYT Bestseller List for an unbelievable amount of time and made buzz because he was a) fifteen when he wrote it and b) he was homeschooled. Eragon became a major motion picture, featuring a hot young Brit as the main character and Jeremy Irons as the cheesy mentor. The entire movie was cheesy, but I'm sure it made moola. Last I heard, Eragon was becoming a 4-book series. I hated Eldest, so I don't really care at this point. He looks a little like Dan Radcliffe in this picture.

Kaavya Visnawathan was The WriTeen Girl. She was a Harvard freshman with a two-book deal for How Opal Mehta Got Wild, Got Kissed and Got a Life, and rumors of a movie deal as well. Yet all was not sweet for this overachiever: within weeks of publication, she had at least five counts of plagiarism against her. Her book was removed from shelves and she's kind of lost the love of the limelight. (The popular novels Born Confused and Sloppy Firsts were both plagiarized from, and I heard rumors about Meg Cabot too.) I got to read the book before the whole plagiarism thing, and liked it. Shame it wasn't original.
S.E. Hinton: the old grande dame. She had a publication contract for The Outsiders on her graduation-from-high-school day. She's gone on to write Tex and other cool stuff, and as far as I know, has remained gossip-free and quite successful. I consider her a celeb for the pure fact that Francis Ford Coppola directed the movie and there was a young Tom Cruise involved. It was them, wasn't it?

SPOTLIGHT! Merlyn's Pen

"Down to the Sea with Paper & Pen"

WHO? One of the biggest organizations for teen writing, with the possible exception of The Alliance for Young Writers & Illustrators. Very reputable, very big deal. Curtis Sittenfeld, of Prep fame, wrote for them when she was a WriTeen.

WHAT? A writing contest for a full scholarship to their writing "camp" in New England.

HOW? They have a specific submission form, check the website for details.

MORE INFO? http://www.merlynspen.org/contentmgr/showdetails.php/id/39543

Innovative Housekeeping

Thanks to Dr. Holstein for interviewing with us today!

If you are interested in writing for WORD and would like to see our submission guidelines, please email me at innovativeteen@gmail.com.

If you have a question about publication that's personal and would prefer not to share in the comments section, feel free to email me as well! I love hearing from people. Anyone. Hobos on the street. Literary geniuses. I like email.

Innovative will now be posted on Saturdays, instead of Sundays. This means IYW2W will be Tu/Wed, instead of Wed/Thurs. Otherwise, it's business as usual.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

If You Want to Write...

The latest in our weekly "stiletto steps" writing series. Or dwarf steps. Whatever.


Go Local

The more local a writing contest is, the more likely you are to win it. The more local it is, the less entries there will be. There will always be at least fifty or sixty percent of entries that don't follow the rules or are completely impossible. So your odds are better. I was beating myself over the head because I missed a writing contest, and after seeing the winners, knew I could have placed. Darn it.

But, I did tell my English teacher about an essay contest on To Kill a Mockingbird. Our class is reading To Kill a Mockingbird. She has now created an opportunity for anyone in her classes to enter the competition, send her a copy, and earn an extra credit test grade. I feel popular-- except now I have a lot more competition to win this shindig.

P.S. Innovative issues will now be posting on SATURDAYS, allowing readers to relax with the weekend and WORD.

News & Reminders

The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, by E. Lockhart, is on sale! It actually went to bookstores about two weeks ago but I was on Spring Break and it totally slipped my mind. We talked with E. in early March about her new book and I cannot WAIT to grab a copy.

Also, KidMagWriters.com has published their April issue, and it is as helpful as ever. Jan Fields, the editor, wrote a great article about writing for teen zines. Check it out!

AND! April is a crazy publication month for me. I have an article in this month's issue of Library Sparks entitled "Princess Fun for Everyone," on how to incorporate princesses into any age book club.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

And the Granny Goes to... Gabrielle!

I am very honored to have won First Place Young Author Category in the first annual "Granny Awards" at Stories for Children (www.innovativeteen.blogspot.com). My short story, "Eli & Me" was in the first issue of SFC ever! And one of my personal faves.

If you think I'm April-Fooling, check out http://storiesforchildren.tripod.com/id495.html.

Hah! So there!