*During the summer of 2016, I added this feature to my blog which was called "Season #ONE". This first season ran from June of 2016 to March of 2017.
*I started up the interviews again in June of 2017. It was great to get back to Season #TWO. This season ran throughout the summer.
*Season #THREE ran during the school year of 2017/2018.
*I started up the interviews again in June of 2017. It was great to get back to Season #TWO. This season ran throughout the summer.
*Season #THREE ran during the school year of 2017/2018.
*It has been such an honor to connect with authors and "chat" about their novel, characters, and thoughts about the story.
*This is the Nineteenth interview of what I'm calling Season #FOUR.
*Thank you to Christina Uss for being the Seventieth author that I've had the pleasure of interviewing. I truly appreciate it.
*Here are links to the first Sixty-Nine interviews…
SEASON #ONE
SEASON #TWO
Interview#38 with Terri Libenson (Author of Invisible Emmie)
Interview#39 with Tony Abbott (Author of The Summer of Owen Todd)
Interview #40 with Rob Buyea (Author of The Perfect Score)
Interview#39 with Tony Abbott (Author of The Summer of Owen Todd)
Interview #40 with Rob Buyea (Author of The Perfect Score)
SEASON #FOUR
Interview #54 with Jonathan Auxier (Author of Sweep: The Story of a Girl and Her Monster)
Interview #55 with Sharon Creech (Author of Saving Winslow)
Interview #56 with Stacy McAnulty (Author of The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl)
Interview #57 with Kelly Yang (Author of Front Desk)
Interview #58 with Jennifer A. Nielsen (Author of Resistance)
Interview 59 with Christina Collins (Author of After Zero)
Interview #60 with Eric Walters (Author of Elephant Secrets)
Interview #61 with Phil Bildner (Author of The Rip and Red Series)
Interview #62 with Erin Soderberg (Author of Milla in Charge)
Interview #63 with Laura Shovan (Author of Take Down)
Interview #64 with Donna Gephart (Author of In Your Shoes)
Interview #65 with Alan Gratz (Author of Grenade)
Interview #66 with Barbara O'Connor (Author of Wonderland)
Interview #67 with Lindsey Stoddard (Author of Just Like Jackie)
Interview #68 with Katherine Marsh (Author of Nowhere Boy)
Interview #69 with Dusti Bowling (Author of 24 Hours in Nowhere)
*After receiving a copy of this novel from the publisher, I decided to download it via my Audible app and listen to it while driving to and from work. This story brought me hours of enjoyment, smiles, and laugh out loud moments. There were also several heart-warming and touching scenes between the incredible cast of characters. As soon as I finished the story, I reached out to the author to see if she would be interested in an interview. I was thrilled when she said YES!
*Christine was kind, gracious, and giving with her answers to the questions. It is an honor to post her responses here on the blog.
*Here is a link to my review of the book...
by Christina Uss (June 5, 2018)
Bicycle appeared in my life for the first time as a name in a book title. My husband started joking with me while I was browsing the children’s department of the library for something good to read and said, “Someday, you’re going to write a children’s book.” I asked, “Oh yeah? What’s the name of this book?” and he said, “The Adventures of a Girl Called Bicycle.” (At the time, I was writing for newspapers and magazines about bicycle adventures.) My eyes got wide and I yelled, “YES! I AM going to write that book! Why is she called Bicycle? What are her adventures? I think she rides her bike across the country…” And I ran home to my computer to get to know Bicycle and start writing her story.
What do you think is Bicycle's most admirable quality?
She. Never. Gives. Up.
She. Never. Gives. Up.
Is there anything you wish Bicycle would have changed or done differently in her story?
I wish she’d listened to Griffin when he told her to get out of the way of the Parade of Pigs. It was hard to write what happens to her beloved bike Clunk when the pigs come stampeding along.
I wish she’d listened to Griffin when he told her to get out of the way of the Parade of Pigs. It was hard to write what happens to her beloved bike Clunk when the pigs come stampeding along.
What do you think Bicycle can offer to other children that are experiencing similar situations to what she went through?
I hope Bicycle’s readers absorb two main things: first, when face-to-face with a challenge, before you collapse and give up, eat some cookies and see if there’s a way over, under, around, or through it. Second: I also hope readers will know that making friends doesn’t have to follow a certain set of rules to be real, and that they are perfectly within their rights to wait until they’re good and ready to make the friends they want to make the way they want to make them.
I hope Bicycle’s readers absorb two main things: first, when face-to-face with a challenge, before you collapse and give up, eat some cookies and see if there’s a way over, under, around, or through it. Second: I also hope readers will know that making friends doesn’t have to follow a certain set of rules to be real, and that they are perfectly within their rights to wait until they’re good and ready to make the friends they want to make the way they want to make them.
How did you research Bicycle and the circumstances she found herself in?
As soon as I realized I was writing a story about a determined girl who wanted to ride a bike across the United States, I knew she was going to follow the same route I took when I cycled across the United States with a group of riders at the age of 22. I got out my journal and photos from that ride and did my best to recall how it felt to enter each state and experience all the surprises and beauty and kindness of strangers (not to mention the hunger and heat and dogs chasing me), so when I wrote about what Bicycle saw and felt and ate, it’d feel real to my readers.
As soon as I realized I was writing a story about a determined girl who wanted to ride a bike across the United States, I knew she was going to follow the same route I took when I cycled across the United States with a group of riders at the age of 22. I got out my journal and photos from that ride and did my best to recall how it felt to enter each state and experience all the surprises and beauty and kindness of strangers (not to mention the hunger and heat and dogs chasing me), so when I wrote about what Bicycle saw and felt and ate, it’d feel real to my readers.
Do you and Bicycle share any similarities?
We both love bikes, we’re tremendously comfortable hanging out mostly in silence, and we both have a tendency to go off optimistically on big adventures without thinking through potential pitfalls. “How hard can it be?” is something both of us said about biking across the country. Bicycle is, however, a MUCH faster cyclist and cries a lot less when things go wrong than I do.
We both love bikes, we’re tremendously comfortable hanging out mostly in silence, and we both have a tendency to go off optimistically on big adventures without thinking through potential pitfalls. “How hard can it be?” is something both of us said about biking across the country. Bicycle is, however, a MUCH faster cyclist and cries a lot less when things go wrong than I do.
What was the hardest scene to write about Bicycle?
The aftermath of the Parade of Pigs really got to me. I didn’t want Bicycle to lose Clunk. I know firsthand how much losing your most beloved bike and leaving a friend behind can hurt.
The aftermath of the Parade of Pigs really got to me. I didn’t want Bicycle to lose Clunk. I know firsthand how much losing your most beloved bike and leaving a friend behind can hurt.
Who do you think was Bicycle's biggest supporter and why?
I’d have to say Griffin G. Griffin the ghost was her biggest supporter. He accepted her plan right off the bat without even questioning for a moment whether she had the muscles or determination or even anyone’s permission to ride across the entire country. Whenever he could help, he’d pitch right in to keep her moving towards her goal.
I’d have to say Griffin G. Griffin the ghost was her biggest supporter. He accepted her plan right off the bat without even questioning for a moment whether she had the muscles or determination or even anyone’s permission to ride across the entire country. Whenever he could help, he’d pitch right in to keep her moving towards her goal.
Why do you think some children need lots of friends and people around them and others are self-sufficient and content to be alone and/or with a few close friends?
I believe this depends on our innate temperament – we’re all born preferring higher amounts of togetherness or solitude. Both are equally good! It’s most important that any child know themselves well enough to know what suits them better, and that their grown-ups believe them and make room for their preferences.
I believe this depends on our innate temperament – we’re all born preferring higher amounts of togetherness or solitude. Both are equally good! It’s most important that any child know themselves well enough to know what suits them better, and that their grown-ups believe them and make room for their preferences.
What do you think Bicycle is doing as the present time?
I love this question. She sent me a postcard recently, so I know she’s in the Midwest, riding with her new friends. I have a feeling she’s about to run into her original family for the first time. (For any readers who thought she might have been an orphan, please know she was just seriously misplaced.)
I love this question. She sent me a postcard recently, so I know she’s in the Midwest, riding with her new friends. I have a feeling she’s about to run into her original family for the first time. (For any readers who thought she might have been an orphan, please know she was just seriously misplaced.)
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