Thursday, September 12, 2013

Career: Author Katie L. Carroll Shares How She Became a Writer and Giveaway

Please welcome children's author Katie L. Carroll today. Katie shares the story behind how she became a writer. Please enter the contest below to win her book and other prizes during her tour. 


Katie and I are swapping blogs, so take another hop over to Katie's website to discover what sparked the penning of my non-fiction e-book for girls, Girls Succeed, and leave a comment to enter the drawing for a copy of Girls Succeed.

Let me tell you a bit about Katie.

Katie L. Carroll began writing at a very sad time in her life after her 16-year-old sister, Kylene, unexpectedly passed away. Since then writing has taken her to many wonderful places, real and imagined. She wrote Elixir Bound and the forthcoming Elixir Saved so Kylene could live on in the pages of a book. Katie is also the author of the picture app The Bedtime Knight and an editor for MuseItUp Publishing. She lives not too far from the beach in a small Connecticut city with her husband and son. For more about Katie, visit Katie's website, friend her on Facebook, or follow her on Twitter (@KatieLCarroll).


How I Became a Writer
By Katie L. Carroll

I thought my life as a writer began when I was 19 on a particularly hot day in early spring 2002, a black-letter day, the blackest of black-letter days in fact. I was in college on track to becoming a physical therapist with an early acceptance into the graduate program. But I didn’t become a physical therapist; I became a writer.

I’ve since come to realize, with the help of my mom, that it was much earlier than that when I began my writing life. On my blog post on the release day of the ebook version of Elixir Bound, she wrote, “Although you would have done fine as a physical therapist, I always knew it was not your calling. You were a writer ever since you could pick up a pencil and I think I always knew that, after all the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree (of course I’m talking about your dad).”

Well, my mom was mostly right. Even before I could pick up a pencil, my mom would read stories to us, the Little Golden Books, the Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, all kinds of fiction. I think that’s when I became a writer.

When I stop to think about it, I don’t know why it took me so long to figure out I was a writer. The signs were all there. My family and I used to write and illustrate our own picture books about the adventures of Sam the Billy Goat. At the climax of the story it would always read, “Voop Whoosh! Up went the Billy Goat.” And he would fly up to save the day.
I wrote (and sometimes illustrated) stories my whole childhood. In middle school, high school, and college I worked on the school newspapers. Yeah, I think I had been in a state of denial for 19 years…which brings us back to that black-letter day…April 16, 2002. The day my sister Kylene died.

I don’t like to talk about that day. How the forget-me-nots were in bloom. How there was recording-breaking high temps. How it was the worst day of my life. 
So what do you do when you’re 19 and your sister’s just died? Well, once you’re in a place where you can think again, you reevaluate. Everything. 

For me that meant rethinking what I wanted to do with my professional life. Kylene gave me the permission to pursue my passion. So I began writing. Eventually I decided not to continue studying to be a physical therapist. I kept writing, often not even sure who I was writing for. Kylene, an audience, myself?

I pursued publication. And got rejections, along with some encouragement. I revised, learned a lot more about the business of publishing. Wrote some more. Revised some more. Got a lot more rejections…You get the picture.

Ten years and four months after Kylene died, my book was finally born into the world. And what was that book about? A young woman, entrusted with the future of her family’s secret healing Elixir, goes on a quest to find the Elixir’s secret ingredient.

I don’t need a psychoanalyst to tell me I was fulfilling a wish with that book. It was supposed to be about Kylene, and it is in some ways, but it’s really about me. Because for those 10 years, it had been too hard to write Ky’s book. I tried. Elixir Bound started out from her point of view, but I just couldn’t write that book yet.

But I am writing it now. Elixir Saved, a follow-up to Elixir Bound, will be Kylene’s book. 
You see, I believe each of us as an individual doesn’t truly realize the impact we have on people. Each person we touch—whether it be with a story, a hug, a smile as we pass a stranger on the street—leaves a ripple. 

Kylene, in her short life, left lots of ripples. With the people she loved. With the people she cared about. The people she felt compassion for, which was pretty much everyone. The people she shared the Harry Potter books with. Even the nurses in the hospital from the short time she was sick felt her ripples.

I like to think that each ripple I make with Elixir Bound is really Ky’s ripple…because I’m not sure I would have discovered my life’s passion if it weren’t for Kylene. It makes my heart smile to think that Kylene is still making ripples on the world, and that I have my own little role to play in that.
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Elixir Bound Back of the Book:
Katora Kase is next in line to take over as guardian to a secret and powerful healing Elixir. Now she must journey into the wilds of Faway Forest to find the ingredient that gives the Elixir its potency. Even though she has her sister and brother, an old family friend, and the handsome son of a mapmaker as companions, she feels alone. 
It is her decision alone whether or not to bind herself to the Elixir to serve and protect it until it chooses a new guardian. The forest hosts many dangers, including wicked beings that will stop at nothing to gain power, but the biggest danger Katora may face is whether or not to open up her heart to love.

Buy Links:

MuseItUp Publishing

a Rafflecopter giveaway

17 comments:

  1. Thanks so much for having me today to share my story of becoming a writer! And thanks for coming on my blog and sharing your own story. :)

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  2. Hi Katie, It's a pleasure to have you here. Thanks so much for swapping blogs and letting my readers get to know you.

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  3. I wish you every success with Elixir Bound and Elixir Saved, Katie. Your sister would be proud of what you've achieved. Kylene seems a lovely girl, and because of you I've got to know her. You are right about the ripples. Good luck

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    1. Thanks for stopping by today, Helena. I am so happy Katie chose to tell the story about her sister. This blog is all about career choices. Sometimes we forget about all the people along the path to a career who influence our lives.

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    2. Thank you, Helena! I'm so happy to be keeping Kylene's memory alive. :)

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  4. Aww, what a lovely tribute to your sister. I don't need to ask if she is still by your side and in your heart. Yes, life is cruel as so many of us learn first-hand. Your wishful thinking brought about two fantastic stories so far. Keep them coming.

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    1. hi Lorrie. Katie's post touches my heart too. Glad she followed her passion!

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    2. Thank you, Lorrie! I hope to keep the stories coming. :)

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  5. Katie, my eyes are moist.
    Your story of becoming a writer is the most moving I've ever heard.
    When I read Elixir Bound and got acquainted with Kylene's character--insightful, compassionate, and selfless, I wondered--do people really have sisters like this? (I grew up w/out sisters.)

    Now I understand.
    I'm so sorry to read of your sister, and can only imagine the pain of loosing one so close.
    Seeing that she was the inspiration for Kylene Kase, it seems that she touched her family more profoundly in her short life than most of us do over decades of dragging through life.
    May her memory be a blessing to your family.
    It must give them comfort that you've captured her essence so beautifully in your work. Kylene's legacy can now be shared with generations of nieces and nephews.
    All the best,
    Loren

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    1. Thank you so much, LR, for the beautiful comments. Kylene was a wonderful person (though certainly not perfect...she was my little pain-in-the-neck sister after all!). I hope my family is proud of the character I created in memory of Kylene. Hugs!

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    2. LRS--you said everything I was thinking about Katie's piece. Thank you so much adding your thoughts here.

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  6. Beautiful story, Katie. Ditto Loren above. Hard to improve on her words.

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    1. Thank you, Marsha! Loren's comment is beautifully written. I agree it's hard to improve on her words. :)

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  7. Congratulations, Meredeth! You won the e-copy of Girls Succeed. You are welcome to download the files you need for your e-reading formats and to share the book with all the girls in your life. I hope you and they are inspired and empowered by the stories.

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    1. Yay, Meradeth! Congrats! Thanks again JQ for such a great blog swap. :)

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  8. Katie, it was a lot of fun. Best wishes!

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