Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Event Recap: Sarah J. Maas Book Signing Event #SarahJMaasinPH




Hoooow's it going everyone! Boy, am I excited to tell you this story! And even though this post is a month overdue lol I'm still going to write about it and nothing is going to stop me. So with all that said, let's begin!

It was January if my memory serves me right when I first found out about this event and I have to admit, back then I was a Maas virgin. But if you know me, you'll know that I usually haven't read the books of the author prior to the announcement. And this announcement came right after Victoria Aveyard's event was announced, mind you, and I'll have you know that I only cried about not having enough money to buy both authors' books for 30 minutes. But with some tough budgeting, I was able to buy all of Victoria Aveyard's books and three out of six of Sarah's books a couple of weeks before March. But after that, a set of new rules about the signing was released and it sparked quite the reaction from book signing regulars. These rules included:

  • a limit of three books per person
  • a limit of 350 book signing slots
  • absolutely no photo with the author
This caused an uproar from some regulars. I was disappointed about those rules myself because I was really tightening my daily spending just to save up for Sarah's books and I was sad that we weren't even allowed to take a photo. And the fact that only 350 slots are available means that more people are going to camp out a hundred years before the event. And for those who do not camp out, it's the Hunger Games. I also heard through the grapevine that the new rules sparked Twitter wars between the regulars and bloggers, and even NBS staff were involved. Although I will not go off on a tangent about it. It's such a drama, to be honest, and I think we're all over it.

Anyway, it was such a relief to have bought only three of Sarah's books when I heard about the new rules! And days before the signing they lifted the no-photos rule which was sweet. The only problem left is how I'm going to secure one of those 350 slots. Which was why I tried something I've never tried before - I arrived at the venue the day before!

The Makati sunrise
I arrived at 5 PM of the day before and sure enough people were already lined up outside the store although I only expected a handful of people but this is what welcomed me when I arrived.

A screenshot of messages between me and my bookish friend Shea on Instagram. This was the photo I took and sent to her when I arrived that afternoon.
That night I met up with my long-time book signing buddy Kathy and she introduced me to her friends. One of them was this lady named Barbz, and the two of them kept me company while we were waiting in line.

Kathy, me, and Barbz while we were waiting in line.
I really think NBS outdid themselves this time because this time they hired some huge scary bouncers to watch the line from dusk 'til dawn. They kept order and made sure no one was cutting the line, plus having half a dozen bouncers guarding me made me more assured about my security. Some of them were friendly, too! Kathy is a very friendly person and she quickly befriended one of the bouncers, which resulted in occasional chit-chat and jokes with Kuya Bouncer. They even had signs which we LOVED and just had to borrow to take a picture with.


The line.
It's just a shame that we weren't able to take a picture with Kuya Bouncer, but I have a feeling we'll meet again sometime lol. Anyway, the rest of the morning was just the usual. You could watch how my morning went in my Snapchat story:


We were finally allowed to go inside at 10 AM and register and holy cow I was so happy with my number and when I learned that there were seats left for us, I swear I heard the Hallelujah chorus.

Since I attended Victoria Aveyard's event, I noticed that they now always kept the stage cordoned off which was why I could no longer take my traditional picture in the author's chair. :/


Freaking 49!!!! Taken outside NBS on the floor again. And this time I was alone so I totally looked like a nutjob trying to summon a book spirit with the way my books were placed on the ground.

Some of my bookstagrammer friends whom I met during Victoria Aveyard's signing decided not to attend this event, although two of them, Angela and Marsh specifically, decided to still go to the event but not have their books signed (because their books were of the other edition which was not allowed in the signing, although some people still got away with it). It was a nice reunion, really.
OTP... LOLOLOL
At 2 PM, Sarah J. Maas finally arrived! Her interview was longer than Aveyard's, although I wasn't able to record it. Sorry! I'll see if my nice, beautiful, perfect friend Gela can lend me her video of the interview so I could at least transcribe it because the interview actually had some very juicy deets about Sarah's works. 




It was finally time to meet Sarah! Oh my gosh she was so so nice. She was all like, "You must be tired from waiting for so long!" and I was like "I don't feel it [being Tired]. It's all worth it because I get to meet you!", and she was like, "Aw! You're such a cutie!". Oh, no big deal. I've just been called a "cutie" by a New York Times #1 Bestselling Author. No biggie. SAYS NO ONE EVER. 


I think this was the part where she called me a cutie lol
Thank you once again to Angela for letting your iPhone capture these moments!

AND THEN I grabbed my chance to ask her if she could sign my pins (knowing that only books were allowed to be signed by NBS) and sure enough, the NBS staff beside me told me that BUT Sarah did something amazing. She sneakily made a "let me have 'em" gesture and signed my pins!!! That just made me love her even more.


 She was absolutely the sweetest! Plus she looks gorgeous! #PapaMaas (Sarah's husband, the guys who's seated in the chair in the background) is one lucky guy! Josh himself had a line of his own thanks to my friends Kathy and Barbz who were brave enough to be the first ones to approach him. They talked to him a bit and they let him sign their books as well and before he knew it, a long line of girls was in front of him hahaha. But seriously, Sarah is so pretty!
#FLAWLESS
And finally a picture with her!

This signing has got to be one of my top faves! I really enjoyed it and I'm glad to have my book signing buddies! Thank you once again to Kathy and Barbz for everything! ;) I'm eternally grateful. And a shoutout to my bookstagrammer friends who went even if they did not get their books signed: Angela and Marsh. Thank you too to Shea, @bookishwanderlust on Instagram, for having my fourth book get signed! (She only had two books to be signed and I had the guts to ask her if she could let a book of mine be signed because I was past the limit and she gladly obliged!). It was also nice meeting some people too! A quick shoutout to them wouldn't hurt!
  • Rachel and Michelle (thanks for letting me borrow your Android cord when I needed it the most!)
  • Ate Lei (I've been following you for a long while on bookstagram (@lei_reads) and it's nice to finally meet you! :) Thanks to Angela haha)
And finally thank you to National Book Store for this event and to Sarah J. Maas herself for visiting us! I only regret having read only her first book because I'm already done with the first three books of the Throne of Glass series right now and I could proudly say that she is a new favorite author of mine! SERIOUSLY, THRONE OF GLASS IS MY JAM!!! So that was my #SarahJMaasinPH experience. Until next signing! Adios! :)

Monday, March 28, 2016

Event Recap: Victoria Aveyard Book Signing Event | #VictoriaAveyardinPH


Hello there friends! Did you miss me? It's been 9 months since my last blog post.  I can't believe my last post was about Leigh Bardugo's book signing event. And now I'm returning to the blogosphere by writing about Victoria Aveyard's book signing! I waited that long to finally be motivated to blog again lol. But let's save the catching up for later. Right now let's get down to blogging business.


Taken from National Book Store's Facebook page.
If you've been a reader of mine since I started attending book signings, you may know that I often read the books of the author only when National Book Store announces his/her signing, which means that I'm not usually a fan prior to their signing. It's the same old story with Victoria Aveyard. Once I got word of her event, I organized my daily budget (it ain't pretty) to save some dough for her books. And when I read her first book, Red Queen, holy cow I loved every page. It was perfect for my liking; a fast-paced fantasy book with a dash of sci-fi and a hint of dystopia. I found myself literally not putting down the book. I read it on my way to my uni, while waiting between classes, and even while eating! (Alone of course, which is sad now that I mentioned it.) I might post a review some time, who knows?

But before I go on with the rest of the BS story (BS=book signing, not the other obscene acronym), I want to share another story first. During these past blogless months, the only thing keeping my fanboy self sane was my humble little bookstagram account (an Instagram account dedicated to books). There I got to post pictures of my books, post my bookish rants and raves, and of course, meet other bookstagrammers. This one hot chick [;)] with the Instagram handle TheGeekyAuror reached out to me via Instagram chat and we sort of chit-chatted a few times, knowing each other just a teeny tiny bit in the process. And when the event was announced, I learned that she was going to the event too. So we continued to converse via Instagram chat and promised that we would meet during the event. *sparks* And on March 6th at 4 AM, after awkward descriptions of what were wearing, I finally spotted her and we met. She was already with another bookstagrammer that I've been following for a while but never actually got to chat with (because I AM an awkward penguin) with the bookstagram handle TheBookishHowler. We were casually talking to each other, knowing one another because it was our first time meeting each other, and before we knew it, our bookstagrammer group of three became a group of eight! 


The line.
Yes, I know there's only six of us in this photo.  That was because some were in pee breaks or were meeting other people in line. (L-R: Tin or TheBookMaiden, Ate Nicay or TheNerdySideOfAQueen, Marsh or TheBookishHowler, Angela, Khay or BiblioKhay, and whoever that hunksicle is on the right. Kidding.)
Because Angela (TheGeekyAuror) was so friendly, she knew a lot of bookstagrammers like me through IG chat, and for most of the bookstagrammers in our group, it was their first time meeting Angela in person too. But I loved how our personalities clicked and we kept each other company as if we were long time friends. It made the wait not too burdensome. After chit-chatting and talking about bookstagramming life, we were finally allowed to go inside National Book Store and register. And as usual, some kind of magic happens and my number is always my expected number+20 or so. And we weren't blessed with seats this time so for us it was the cold hard ground. I felt like that Taylor Swift goat all over again.




I was 96. Okay, it wasn't that bad. At least we were all still double digits. And of course, we were all still bookstagrammers, so we did what had to be done (Marsh and me) and searched for natural sunlight in which we could perform our bookstagramming duties.


Bookstagrammin' BTS.
Our chosen pictorial grounds was the floor outside NBS, which is why having a plastic bag under my books was crucial ("I'm having these books signed and I am not going to get them dirty"). We didn't care if people stared at us as if we were starting a ritual with our books on the floor. Yep, bookstagramming life is pretty hard. And after some major touch-ups with my best friend Vee (short for VSCO), and that well though of cropping, a bookstagram post was born. All we had to do next was wait for Victoria Aveyard to arrive, and the result of the waiting is the following selfies. Excuse my haggard face, I was up since 3 AM during that day.

L-R: Tin, Angela, Nicay, Marsh, Ate Mel or Bibliophile_Veterinarian, that hunksicle who keeps on popping up in these pictures, and Isabel or LuiannaaIsabel
L-R: Khay, Tin, Angela, Ate Mel, Marsh, that guy again (seriously why is this hunk of a man in all these pictures) jk that's me and I'm letting go of the jokes, Allen (another bookstagrammer who goes by the handle WishIWasABook), and his friend (whom I am ashamed of forgetting the name pls don't sue me)

We ate at this fancy colonel-owned restaurant that serves this tasty fried chicken cooked in 11 secret herbs and spices. It was too tasty I got oil on my forehead.
And we chatted some more as if we were old friends catching up with one another. And finally, after hours of sitting down on the butt-destroying floor, Victoria Aveyard arrived!

Photoception.
The interview was the worst. (Not as in worst interview ever. I meant that it was the worst part of the day for me.) During the interview I felt as if my energy was being sucked out of my body. That's what you get when you combine exhaustion with staying up since 3 AM + more than a thousand people stuffed in one teeny weeny National Book Store branch + sitting on cold hard floor for at least 8 hours + a thousand people's body heat + screaming. I did all I could to keep myself conscious. And because a thousand+ people attended, the interview was the shortest one I've witnessed (5 mins or something like that). I recorded the interview although I'm still thinking if I should transcribe it or just make a video with subtitles (because the screaming is too much). 


Guess what we did after that 10 minute(I think) interview. Our favorite hobby of course: waiting. We waited for our books to be signed and when we just couldn't take the heat inside NBS, we waited at the entrance where there was an air conditioner blowing cold wind powerfully at us or in other words, bliss. We took more selfies too, which surprised me because I don't normally do selfies, even just by myself.



You may or may not notice this but beneath those smiling cheerful faces hide tired, exhausted souls. When we were cool enough (but then again, we ALWAYS are *puts shades on*), we entered NBS again and found a space between some shelves in which we could sit.

When in doubt, find a bookshelf. (But seriously I think this is the cutest selfie I took during that day.)
Our numbers were finally called and it was time to meet Victoria Aveyard! Angela was so nice for letting me borrow her iPhone to take pictures with when i met Victoria because it totally beats my Android camera lol.

VA: Hi how are you!
Me: I'm good thank you! Thank you for writing Red Queen I loved it so much!
VA: No! Thank you for coming today!
*photographer takes picture*
Me: Thank you have a great day!
-fin-

And after that we finally decided to go home. But not before we took another picture lol. Although we were incomplete in this one. We were never complete in a photo I think.


I never knew that book signings were so much more fun with friends around! (No offense, Mom!) I kind of enjoyed their company more than the actual signing itself lol. But still, thank you very much to National Book Store for hosting this book signing. I could really tell that you were trying to outdo your past signings (the big scary bouncers were new to me lol but they kept everything organized for as long as they could). And thank you to Victoria Aveyard herself for gracing us with your presence! It was such an honor meeting yet another #1 New York Times bestselling author! And finally thank you to my brand new bookstagram friends. You really made this day special. Please check them out if you can! I didn't take pictures with all of them but now's the opportunity to get to know them! :)

Marsh - @thebookishhowler 
Khay - @bibliokhay 
Allen - @wishiwasabook 

And of course, my book signing buddies from #JamesFreyinPH, @marykatedejesus and @trixie_keepcalm! I hope I did not forget anyone but if I did please let me know in a comment!


The Epic Reads poster was from NBS's live Twitter contest during the event. I also won an ARC, although I claimed it during Sarah J. Maas's book signing (which is a blog post for another week ;) ), I wasn't able to claim it in this event. I hope I can make the video with the interview soon! And until then, have a great week and welcome back to the blogosphere to me haha!
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Monday, June 29, 2015

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Event Recap: Leigh Bardugo Book Signing Event #LeighBardugoinPH


Let me ask you a question. What would a normal person usually do at 3 AM on a Sunday? Sleeping, right? Or at least not on his/her way to what he/she knows will be a long period of time waiting in line outside a mall. But not for this guy! Last Sunday I went to another book signing and this time I can confidently say that everything went better than expected and that this is one of the best book signing experiences I've had (which in retrospect is actually not that big of a deal, because I've only attended four of these things so far).

As usual, I arrived before the sun did and I was thrilled when I saw that the line hadn't become as long as my last book signing. I'm apparently getting better and better at this line thing (a valid theory, considering all the experiences I've had with past book signings). And as usual, campers were present, probably for the much-coveted Six of Crows ARC that Leigh announced she was going to give to the first couple of people in line. The only thing that boggled my mind was that the line was made up mostly of not people, but bags. So apparently this is a thing, letting a bag save your spot in line. I might try it sometime. Haha. But this isn't the only new thing I've learned at this signing.



Speaking of new, some people still had that old habit of allowing their bagong ligo (Tagalog: freshly showered/bathed) friend who arrived not-so-early to cut in line (and yes, I'm throwing all the shade I could muster hahaha). Of course, I let my friend Katherine (the prime reason I have all these pics to put in this blog post, thanks again Kathy!) cut in line too, but that was just because I had someone else with me to act as a placeholder while she wasn't there yet, so technically what I did was legal. Hahaha. If you have read my past book signing recaps, you may recall that I have a love-hate relationship with signings like this mainly because I always end up sitting on cold hard floor for hours. This time though, when we were finally allowed to enter National Book Store and register, people were entering (semi-illegally haha) the chair area and were already saving seats even before they got registered! And then I thought: "Let me in on that bandwagon!" and I ran to the chair area and practically trespassed the perimeter thingy (metal cylinders with strips of cloth attached to it, I forgot what it's called). It was practically the Hunger Games, minus the killing-each-other part of course... and voila! For the first time in ages, I was finally able to sit on a real chair! I still consider it a personal achievement, if you ask me. And nobody stopped us or told us it wasn't okay to do, so it's also technically legal HAHAHA.

Then as usual, it was time for the customary stage pictorial. 



My new book signing bud, Kathy. We met at the James Frey book signing event. 
When we got that out of the way, I couldn't help but notice that the crowd wasn't as big as I expected. I guess not many have heard of The Grisha Trilogy yet, maybe because it it is still relatively new? When the movie comes out, though, I think people will wish they went. ;) 



While waiting, Kathy and I couldn't help but notice the people who were in cosplay. They all did a really good job! There were two sets of people in costume which I liked to categorize as the Protagonists group and the Grisha group. Plus, all of them were on the running for a Six of Crows ARC! Three ARCs were raffled out among the cosplayers.

The Protagonists group; people cosplayed as Genya, Zoya, Mal, and Alina.
Now this next one just blew my mind! They were super spot-on, and even Leigh thought it was one of the best cosplays she's seen! Their keftas were like what I imagined (or looked up on Google) when reading the books. Too bad we weren't able to take a picture with them. 


The Grisha group. Photo taken from National Book Store's official Facebook page.
More photos while waiting haha. 





When it was almost time for the program, we left our seats and positioned ourselves in front of the stage for that amazing video footage we wanted, and for the exclusive photo with Leigh haha. You'll see later.


We missed you, Trixie! ;)
Photobomb #1
Then at exactly 2 PM, Leigh Bardugo arrived and now it was time for the interview/Q&A with professional author interviewer, Yvette Fernandez.




Guys, I recorded the whole interview haha. But then I decided to transcribe it so that you won't have to deal with the sound of ruckus of the audience in the background. I'll upload the full interview soon. (Feel free to skip the interview transcript. There's more to read after that!)

Q & A with Leigh Bardugo:


You had only three books yet you had so many male characters. Do you know who she [Alina] is going to end up with?

Yeah. I knew and honestly if you read the books, it’s sort of built into the DNA of the books. But I also feel like the stories are about much more than who she ends up with and the person who Alina ends up with is not necessarily the person who I would have chosen. I would have chosen Tolya so don’t get excited about that. Tolya’s like my perfect man. He’s also based on The Rock. Yeah, I think the story is about much more than that and are about of different relationships. There are about a lot of different friendships. And for me that was always going to be a part of the story. And I know a lot of people haven’t read the third book because you are all waiting for the paperback. The paperback is going to have the Darkling prequel story in it, some fan art, an excerpt of Six of Crows, so yeah.

Your characters are so well developed. How does it come about? While you’re writing them down, does it flow when you write your characters or do you outline everybody first…?

I outline plot. I outline the major beats, the major things that need to happen, and I do have the understanding that things might change. But when it comes to the characters, some of them arrive fully formed. Sturmhond basically walked into the room while I was writing. He was like, ‘I got things to tell you!’ and then he would just not shut up and he also became something more as I was writing him. You don’t know the journey you’re going to take the character on even if you know what the plot says. You don’t know what emotionally that’s gonna mean. Alina’s voice took a little longer to write. When I first wrote the first draft of Shadow and Bone, she was just so nice, she was nice to everyone, and I was like ‘Oh man I’m gonna punch her in the face!’, so it took a little while to find her and it was only when I found this sour side of her that I understood this girl, for obvious reasons. Genya was somebody who I never expected how important she was gonna be to the story. So it all depends on the character.

Did you plan to make Sturmhond into Nikolai?

I hope everybody read Siege and Storm, because that’s a spoiler! I absolutely knew who he was, but when you plot the synopsis, all I wrote down was the “mysterious privateer”. And until you start writing those scenes you don’t know who that person is going to turn into. And I’ll tell you something: initially I was gonna kill him off in the second book. [Audience screams “NOOOO!”] And that was what he said, so I was like, “No”. When you fall in love with a character you have to keep them around you know. It’s like the reverse George R.R. Martin.

How do you decide (well I guess you knew that from the beginning) who she [Alina] would eventually end up with?

You are very hung up on this, I’m sensing. *laughs* Yeah, I always knew who was right for her, and I wanted her to have some peace at the end. I think that she’s seen and had been through so much. That’s all I’m gonna say.

Do you yourself relate to Alina? Was there any part of you in Alina?

I am extremely powerful! I think that there’s a little bit of me in every character. None of them are too much like me because otherwise nothing bad would ever happen to them. We would just write books where it was like, ‘I met this character named Sheigh Farfugo… she ate lunch and then she took a nap.’ There’s a little bit of me in all of them but nothing really, really close. I think Alina and I share the similar sense of humor. We’re both pretty pragmatic about life and when I was growing up I really felt like I was an outsider and I definitely spent many years in Junior High School feeling like I did not belong where I was, I hadn’t found my tribe. And I think if you read Ruin and Rising, you know that she sort of begins to build her own family. She finds the friends in the people and some of them are the people who you would never expect her to be friends with in the end but they learn to fight side-by-side together and that really resonated with me.

So are their friends based on your own friendships that you have?

I have amazing friends. I am surrounded by this crew of amazing people, really amazing women, both in my professional life and my personal life so yeah, some of the friendships. I think Alina’s relationships with Mal is really inspired by a bunch that I had while I was at an age where my life could have gone really bad. It was that year where things could have gone really wrong, and this friend, it was like us against the world. And also Tamar and Tolya was based on my college roommate Hedwig. Yeah my roommate’s name in college was Hedwig. I’m not kidding, when I first read Harry Potter I was like ‘WHUUT?’, and she was pretty magical so…

Do you and your publishing team collaborate on ideas or do you write it pretty much on your own, or do you work with other people who help you?

It depends. I always bring my ideas to Jo (Leigh’s agent). With the Grisha Trilogy, I brought her a whole manuscript and she saw where the story was going. The Six of Crows is my next book, it comes out on September and it’s a heist book, right? So I was driving around LA and I saw this billboard for a movie called Monuments Men with George Clooney and Matt Damon. Yeah, I see your blank expression s because when I saw this billboard I was like ‘I don’t wanna see that movie’, but I really wanted to re-watch Ocean’s Eleven, so I see this and I literally drove across three lanes of traffic, I almost drove out of the road, I screeched to a halt and I was like ‘I wanna write a heist! I wanna write Ocean’s Eleven meets Game of Thrones’ and I called Jo and I was like ‘Jo, what do you think?’ and she was like ‘Go! Do! Write!’ and we talked about [stakes?] and all that kind of thing but for me, between the idea and actually showing somebody a draft I tend to keep things pretty tight. I feel like if I tell the story to too many people the magic leaks out of it.

So do you lock yourself in a room for hours on end?

Yes. I also love to draft with people. My friends and I will go to coffee shops or whatever, and we do what’s called “Friendly Surveillance”. We’ll take each other’s cell phones so we can’t get online, we won’t get the wifi password and we’ll make each other write. Or we’ll go on a retreat, we’ll all stay in a house together, we’ll sit around and it’s good peer pressure. If it’s a bunch of people on a laptop, you could be like ‘I’m on Twitter!’. I love to draft but when it’s time to turn that rough, messy draft into a book, then I go into the bunker and I literally do not leave my house for like, two or three months. I’m not kidding. The car doesn’t get driven, I order a lot of take-out, nobody sees me and I’ll come out and my hair is this big and I’m just like ‘AHHH!’ but that’s how the book gets done.

And that’s when you show it to your editor, right?

Yeah, that’s usually the draft that goes to my editor and I send it to Jo at the same time and I have a wonderful editor named Noa Wheeler who’s been with me through all of the books and I really don’t know what I’d do without her. Are there any aspiring writers? Don’t be afraid! Be like ‘YES!’ so I could come to your signing one day. Why not! Write some good books so I could read them! But you need to find readers you trust, right? And it’s important because maybe they’re not the best writer but they’re a really good reader and they can read it and not put their ego into it and they can read it and give you good feedback. They’re the people whom you walk out of a movie with and they’re like ‘I didn’t like that the character did this’ or ‘I thought it was slow in the middle’. They’re people who have an understanding of story and I feel like they are blessing and you should hold on to those people.

Okay and there are some authors who have been here to Manila who are your writing buddies as well, right?

Yeah, we all see each other at conferences and festivals but the YA community is really unique among the author communities. I don’t think literary fiction authors just hang out. That’s one of the best things about becoming an author is that you meet some of the people that you’ve admired for years. Have you guys read Holly Black? She’s one of my favorite writers in YA and that I actually get to meet her and hang out with her and have dinner with her and talk story with her, I periodically will have these moments where I’m like ‘Am I asleep? Am I dreaming? Am I gonna wake up and I’ll still have the same crappy job I’ve had before?’, so it’s incredible. It’s a great community.

So if you were a Grisha, who/what would you be? Would you want to be Genya…?

Well, I wouldn’t want Genya’s life. She’s had a rough [go?] over it. I mean, I‘d love to have her power. Genya should come over before parties and make me look dazzling. I would say that I would like to be a Heartrender because I’m a little bloodthirsty and if you are having a boring conversation with somebody you could just be like, ‘Sleeeeep.’. But in my heart I would probably be a Fabrikator. I just wanna be in my workshop making things or making stories. What about you? Which Grisha would you be?

I just wanna be with the Darkling! So tell us about your upcoming books.

Yeah, so Six of Crows, I told you guys it’s a heist book. It’s set in the Grisha world but it’s set in a little country called Kerch. If you guys have Siege and Storm and you look at the map, it’s this little island nation at the bottom if you remember it’s where Nikolai went to college or university briefly and it’s the home of the stock exchange. It’s the opposite of Ravka, basically. Ravka is this isolated fairy tale realm. It’s been cut off from the world, it’s failed to industrialize. Kerch is the opposite.  Kerch is this place where they stay neutral. While everybody else was fighting they got really rich. It’s this like cosmopolitan hub of trade and it has this thriving criminal underworld and of course all of my “heroes” from Six of Crows come from this criminal underworld. It takes place two years after the Grisha Trilogy. You don’t need to have read the Grisha Trilogy in order to read Six of Crows but if you liked the trilogy you’ll get more appreciable in Six of Crows and you will hear about some of the characters. I tried to put lots of little goodies in there for the people who have read the trilogy so you will see lots of little references that other people won’t get. Shadow and Bone is kind of a “chosen one” story and I wanted to write something about six kids who are not chosen ones, who didn’t have grand destinies, who aren’t kings or queens, who aren’t looking to start a revolution. They’re just looking to survive. And the guy who leads this crew, he is not a chosen one. He is just the toughest, smartest, most ruthless kid in the room.

Is that a series as well?

It’s gonna be two books. They’re really long books.

So going back to your characters, not everybody is really bad or not everybody is really good. Is it easier to write people as gray characters or black and white?

I think there’s always a temptation to make characters black and white and I think sometimes readers want that. They want you to tell them is this person good or is this person bad but I don’t know many people who are just one thing, right? I don’t like heroes who always make the right choices and I don’t like villains who are easy to dismiss. You get these villains and you’re like ‘Why is anybody listening to this dude? He is clearly bad news!’ so I wanted to create antagonists who you could see yourself rooting for (I know some of you do) and I wanted to create heroes who got things wrong and didn’t always do the noble, right thing because I think that’s more readable. I wanted magic to feel real, I wanted Ravka to feel real, I wanted Kerch to feel real. All the characters in Six of Crows have different pasts, different things that have brought them together but none of them is just a good guy or a bad guy.

How did you end up becoming a writer? What was your path? Were you a regular kid?

What’s a regular kid? I always knew that I wanted to be a writer. I was an only child and I would walk around telling myself stories all the time, and I still do. That’s how I work when I have writer’s block. I put my Bluetooth thing in and then I walk around talking to myself so people won’t think I’m completely insane. I have a picture that was drawn for me by a friend of mine when I was fourteen years old and it was a birthday present that she drew me in a book signing and that was how long I wanted to be a writer and that’s why moment’s like this are just crazy because it actually happened! But I had a very long path. I had a lot of very bad jobs. It took me a long time to find the right story and for any of you writers in the audience, I did this thing where I thought you could write a perfect first draft because I would compare what I was writing to what I saw on the shelves, all my favorite books and I didn’t realize they weren’t first drafts or second drafts or third drafts. Those books have been through the wringer so you can’t compare your first draft to their however many draft. There’s a lot of stages in there so I had to get to a stage where I could write a messy, crazy first draft, shut down that editorial voice and that for me was what really made me a writer. That’s how I became a writer was by writing a book.

And are there specific books you would recommend to aspiring writers?

Read everything. Never let anybody make you feel ashamed for loving young adult or loving whatever you love if it’s fantasy or contemporary or whatever it is. If somebody is trying to pull up with you, they have their own thing going on. A lot of people ask me about taking Creative Writing courses or going into getting a masters of Fine Arts and my advice is always you don’t have to actually go into that little fancy school… all you have to do is read and write. And that’s what you should do. Read everything. And if there’s a course you wanna take, go online. All of the syllabi from where I went to school, they’re all online! You don’t have to go to Yale! Going to Yale is not what made me a writer. Reading and writing and loving books is what made me a writer. So go and steal their syllabi! If you want to read it then read it. And also if you’re having trouble plotting, there’s this great book called “Save the Cat” and in fact my friend Jess Brody did “Save the Cat for Novels”. I think it’s out. It’s great for structure, if that’s where you fall down, but you know, that’s the trick to becoming a writer is becoming an avid reader and just writing and writing and writing until it’s good.

AUDIENCE QUESTIONS:

You’re always so active on Twitter and Tumblr and everything. How do you balance that with your writing?

I don’t. No, really, you’re gonna see this actually in the next couple of months. Balancing promotion and writing is incredibly hard for me and I never want people to feel like, if people have gone out of their way to tweet at me or make an edit for me, I don’t ever want them to feel like I didn’t see it or acknowledge it but I know things fall through the cracks and I know also that I may have to disconnect a little this summer because I have a sequel to finish.

Are there any updates for the major motion picture for Shadow and Bone?

Yes, but I don’t think I could share it just yet? Guys I swear, angels from Dreamworks will drop from the ceiling and hit me with sticks… we can’t talk about it and the thing is,  I don’t wanna get your hopes up until we really know, until it’s really happening. Things are moving, but Hollywood is slow, man. The best thing we can do is talk about the books, get your friends to read the books, to help them see how many people wanna see that movie made.

Are there gonna be any short stories about Genya or the other characters?

Maybe someday. That would be something that would happen down the line. When I finish the sequel of Six of Crows, I’m going to take a break for a while from the Grisha world. There are some other things that I want to work on. Someday I will probably write a Nikolai book but I don’t know when. I don’t know when that might be but I’ve always known what his story was and where the story goes.

What is harder, writing a bad character or a good character?

Writing a good character is harder. It is, because writing bad characters is so much fun! I think that’s why it appeals to readers. They do things we would (hopefully) never do.

Do you feel that there is still some stigma between a traditionally published author and an ebook author? Also, if you were given the chance to cast the Darkling, who would you pick?

We don’t know if Sean O’Pry can act! Do we care? I don’t know. First question: I don’t think there’s a stigma. Authors are really crossing those lines a lot from ebook to traditional publishing and back again. People who started as ebook writers commonly traditionally publish, people who aren’t traditionally published sometimes sell published books when there isn’t enough push from their publisher or desire for the next book in a series. So I don’t think there’s a stigma. I’ll admit that for me self-publishing is hard. You’re doing the work of agents and editors and so many promotion and marketing and it needs less time to write, so I don’t know if that’s something I would ever pursue but you know who’s the right person to read about self-publishing? Courtney Milan. She’s a romance author and she’s really smart and she really understands the market. That’s how she broke out. Oh, and casting. I mean, for me, I’m so old that I’m like ‘A young Gary Oldman! Or a young Richard Armitage!’ but you know who I really like? I assume you guys have seen Divergent? Do you know Jai Courtney? I want him to be the Darkling.

What YA boks would you recommend us?

For the fantasy readers, read Megan Whalen Turner. A lot of people haven’t discovered her books. Amazing. If you talked to any fantasy writer, they love her. Mark Harris, Robin McKinley are like the classics. A also love Marie Rutkoski, she wrote a book called The Winner’s Curse. So fantastic. Graceling by Kristin Crishore. There are so many great ones and I sometimes post about what I’m reading. I just read a science fiction YA called Illuminae. Guys. This is the first book that I’ve read in a long time where there was a twist and I felt like I have been punched in the gut, and then for two chapters afterwards, I was like ‘No! No! No! It can’t be real! No!’ so I recommend it highly. It was incredibly good. Also, I don’t read a ton of contemporary but some of my favorites are I’ll Give You The Sun, Eleanor and Park, and there’s a new contemporary called Dumplin by Julie Murphy and it’s coming out in the fall and I thought it was really good. They’re all fantastic books.

 Remember the "exclusive photo" I told you about? Well here it is!


See? I knew we would be best friends. Just kidding. Here's the actual photo by National Book Store.


And if you'll look closely, Leigh was actually nakaakbay (Tagalog: akbay - to put one's arm over the shoulders of another according to Google Translate) on my book signing bud, Kathy!

After that, the book signing proper started. I was number 68, so I had to wait for a little while. 



When number 61-80 were finally called, we lined up right away and while waiting, Kathy and I met some very nice book signing peeps! 


(L-R) Kathy, Joanna, Innah, moi, and Sam


Photobomb #2
We chatted for a while, which made the queuing not that stressful. Finally it was my turn to have my books signed! 



Leigh Bardugo was super nice! She made me feel comfortable and less awkward by starting the conversation (as she does with everyone). Hihi. It felt like I was talking with a friend. She asked how I was and I asked her the same and she thanked me for coming and I told her the same. And she actually said my name out loud! (which if I'm correct has never been done by an author I've met before) When she read the sticky-note with my name on it, she was the first ever person to say the correct answer! You see, I have this name frustration because people always have a hard time pronouncing my name. Aljur. Arjune. Every name that sounds close to mine, I've heard everyone say. EXCEPT FOR MY ACTUAL NAME. But she was the first person to say what I wanted to hear. And guess what. She just asked how it was pronounced. It's that easy. And I was like, "It's Ar-Jude" and she was like "Arjude? Okay Arjude... *proceeds signing my books*". By now for me asking is way, way better than just guessing.



She asked me if I have read the three books and I told her that I was not yet done with the third one, Ruin and Rising. Then she was like, "Oh okay, I'll write... *writes down insanely appropriate quote*". Then I was all like, "Can you draw your own amplifier please?" and she was like "OH MY GOD. Okay let's see here... *proceeds to draw a stag*... there. It's not that bad?" and I was like, "It's good! Just like Alina's." and then I said my thanks and goodbyes and we parted ways. But that wasn't before we took a picture together. But sadly, the lady in charge of taking pictures only took ONE, and it was blurred! When I saw the picture, I couldn't help but scream internally inside my head "NOOOOOOOO!" (with matching fists in the air). Hence this. 


I already edited the crap out of this one to make it look better.

And that was my #LeighBardugoinPH experience! Here are the signed books, if you wanted to see.





A huge, huge thank you once again to Katherine for being my impromptu photographer during the event! I am very grateful. (Follow her on Instagram and Twitter!) And to the people I have met, it was nice meeting all of you! Thank you to Leigh Bardugo for gracing us with your presence! It was such an honor and a pleasure meeting you! And a HUGE thank you to National Book Store for bringing Leigh Bardugo here in Manila! You guys are the best! Oh yeah, I made a vlog of this event.



Also, I am currently working on uploading the full interview. I'll update you once it's done. :)



P.S. This is not a sponsored post by National Book Store. But of course, if the opportunity comes I'd be happy to... you know, be a member of the Bloggers' Forum or something. Just sayin'. ;)