Wednesday WOLF - Snark

I've got a collection of random information in my brain that makes me an awesome Trivial Pursuit partner, but is completely useless when it comes to real world application. Like say, job applications. I thought I'd share some of this random crap with you in the form of another acronym-ific series. I give you - Word Origins from Left Field - that's right, the WOLF. Er... ignore the fact that the "from" doesn't fit.

Where do we get the word snark? I don't think I need to inform the YA community what that word means, but I will anyway. Snark is the new way to say someone is sarcastic, usually with a bit of an edge of humor... or at least those of us who are attempting to be snarky hope so. I think of snark as being good-natured sarcasm.

So where do we get it from? t actually means irritable or short-tempered, which we borrowed from the German verb snarken - meaning "to snort."  But did you know there's another meaning for it? 

I grew up in the country, and anyone who didn't and happened to be visiting might be invited by the locals to go snark hunting... which would be the equivalent of sending a complete yokel into the streets of NYC to hail a cab for the first time in their lives. Short version - there is no such thing as a snark. But what I didn't know is that that slightly mean-spirited little joke has it's basis in literature.

The Hunting of the Snark is a poem by Lewis Carroll. And if you feel like a little insight into both the history of sarcasm and country pranks, have a read.

Rachele Alpine On the Whispering What-Ifs

Inspiration is a funny thing. It can come to us like a lightning bolt, through the lyrics of a song, or in the fog of a dream. Ask any writer where their stories come from and you’ll get a myriad of answers, and in that vein I created the WHAT (What the Hell Are you Thinking?) interview. Always including in the WHAT is one random question to really dig down into the interviewees mind, and probably supply some illumination into my own as well.

33122055.jpg

Today's guest for the WHAT is Rachele Alpine, author of both MG and YA novels. Her newest MG release YOU THROW LIKE A GIRL, about a girl who pretends to be a boy in order to play the sport she loves, releases today!

Ideas for our books can come from just about anywhere, and sometimes even we can’t pinpoint exactly how or why. Did you have a specific origin point for your book?

Yes!  When I was in elementary school, I was obsessed with hockey.  I watched it, I read books about it, I played street hockey on rollerblades, and begged my mom to let me learn to play on ice.  The problem was, my local ice rinks didn’t have a program for girls.  I always thought about how unfair that was (and for the record, they do let girls play now), and the idea for You Throw Like a Girl came out of there

Once the original concept existed, how did you build a plot around it?

I would have dressed up like a boy and played hockey in a heartbeat if I could have gotten away from it, so that’s what my main character does.  I loved writing about her experience trying to fool the boys’ team!  I tried to figure out problems that she’d get into and obstacles along the way.  I didn’t want the path to be easy for her, so it was a lot of fun trying to come up with funny situations to put my character into and figuring out ways she could get out of them.  I sometimes feel bad that I torture my characters, but it’s always out of love, and they always prevail!  

Have you ever had the plot firmly in place, only to find it changing as the story moved from your mind to paper?

I used to write with a plot in mind and then sit down and see how where it goes.  When I wrote like that, my story was always changing and surprising me.  However, now that I juggle teaching and being a mother, I’ve gotten a lot more rigid in my writing.  I don’t sit down to write a book into a have a very firm story in place.  I’ve sold my last few books on proposal, and instead of turning in a summary to my editor, I give her a chapter by chapter outline that is usually nine to eleven pages.  I find it’s so much easier to write this way because life is so busy, and I try to squeeze my writing time into any little space I can.  

However, you can’t really develop voice in an outline, so I find that as I begin to draft my story, my main character’s personality comes out and she starts to take over the story.  There are definitely twists and turns that take me off the path of the outline, but I always find that those are the most fun, because they surprise me and usually make the story better.

Do story ideas come to you often, or is fresh material hard to come by?

I always say that my mind is a crazy crazy place because it’s never quiet.  It’s full of story ideas, characters, and “what ifs” spinning around.  I have a notebook where I jot down all my book ideas as they come and always have a few that seem to be whispering for me to write them.  

How do you choose which story to write next, if you’ve got more than one percolating?

It’s usually the one that I can’t stop thinking about.  My books come to me in scenes, so I’m constantly visualizing chapters in my mind.  I usually write the one that is the most vivid and keeps coming back.

I write middle grade and YA.  I started writing YA first, but my YA is pretty dark and focuses on heavy topics.  I always say that I started writing middle grade, because I need something funny after writing a book that was pretty depressing.  I  like to jump back and forth, because it’s not always easy to dwell too long in the worlds of my YA novels.  My middle grades give me a much needed escape and laugh!

2016 was not an easy year. Do you draw any inspiration from the world around you, or do you use writing as pure escapism?

I definitely draw information from the world around me.  I teach high school American Literature, so I’m surrounded by teenagers every day. What we read often sparks discussions and debates about what is important to them, and it’s those ideas, fears, and worries that inspire what I write. Not everything I write is a based off of my opinions or views on a topic, but the way I see the world definitely influences what I write and the themes in my books all spring from issues that I feel connected to in some way. My writing is often a way to understand things that are going on in my world, even if I’m exposing the ugly side of things. I’m working to create some kind of meaning to what is oftentimes hard to understand or accept.   

Valentine's Day For The Non-Romantic

You may have guessed this, but I'm not a romantic.

I grew up on a farm, and while others have always said it's the thought that counts, I'm much more impressed by physical labor and an eye for practicality. It's February in Ohio, and if a guy gave me a wood cord for Valentine's Day, I'd be impressed.

It's true that there might be a tinge of bitterness involved in my Valentine's Day thoughts. I wasn't an attractive pre-teen and don't remember getting anything for Valentine's Day until my junior year - by a guy who dumped me shortly thereafter, my first heartbreak.

As I often answer people who ask me why there's a distinct aversion to the happily-ever-after in my novels, it's because I'm divorced. I'll add that my ex's birthday is very close to Valentine's Day.

And - time for the zinger - my annual pap smear (to which we've recently added a mammogram) always lands around February 14, bringing an added layer of meaning to V-Day.

So yeah, not a fan.

But - I'm not against it either. I get love. I'm in love, for heaven's sake. I just happen to have fallen for a guy just like me, a guy who might bump his Corona against mine at dinner and say, "Oh yeah by the way, happy Valentine's Day." But he'll probably do it on Wednesday or Thursday because he often doesn't know what day of the week it is.

All that being said, I know there are romantics in the world and I don't deny them this day to celebrate. As a former Hallmark employee (long story) I actually get my back up a bit when Valentine's Day is referred to as a Hallmark Holiday. Valentine's Day has ancient historical roots, ones I won't bother linking off to here because I'm sure you'll find them everywhere tomorrow.

However, if you want to mark your calendars for my favorite made-up holiday, flip forward to October and make a note. October 14th is National Feral Cat Day.

On that day, I encourage you to find one, and hug it.