We recently interviewed Sandy Grubb, the 2022 Kraken Contest winner for her middle-grade novel, Just Like Click, which released yesterday, April 16, 2024. Just as Sandy has been inspired by so many talented authors who came before her, her adventure story with heart and humor is certain to inspire a new generation of readers. We hope you enjoy the conversation.
RHP: Your book is out in the world! How does that feel?
SG: I’m elated. I’m humbled. I’m jittery. I have all the feels, all at once. But I’m so grateful to my family and friends who encouraged my dream of publishing a children’s book. And I’m grateful to my agent, Stephanie Cardel at Lighthouse Literary, and you, Fitzroy Books, for picking my book out of the masses of manuscripts you receive every week and recognizing something special in my pages. I wrote a story about fifteen years ago that slightly resembles Just Like Click. I would pull it out every couple of years and play around with it, making minor changes in my characters and plot. In the meantime, I began really studying writing and realized what a mess that story was. I started all over about seven years ago, and my debut is the result.
RHP: We’ve all heard the advice that authors should “write what they know.” But fiction emerges from imagination and creation of new worlds. Do you feel a tension between what you’ve experienced and what lives only in your mind?
SG: I believe a writer should definitely write what she knows but shouldn’t stop there. A writer’s life experiences inform and enhance her imagination. The more experiences she has, the more her imagination will range far and wide to create exciting stories and intriguing characters.
Imagination is a mysterious phenomenon. No doubt we draw from all the movies, books, and TV shows we’ve consumed along with our real-life relationships and activities. In a way, it’s like having our own personal version of AI running full-time in our brain. For Just Like Click, I drew from my childhood love of Superman comics and our family’s favorite vacation spot at Black Butte Ranch. My characters in the story are a conglomeration of my own family, friends, students I’ve taught, and myself. Ideas may come to me when I’m poised with my fingers hovered over my keyboard, when I’m out for a walk, or when I’m about to fall asleep at night. Imagination is at work all the time. When ideas come, I quickly write them down.
RHP: Which author most influenced you?
SG: In the eighth grade I discovered Charles Dickens. When I finished Great Expectations, at first, I was just impressed with myself for reading such a long book. But that story and Dickens’ writing have continued to inspire me. When I was applying to colleges, the Stanford application asked me what kind of book I would write. I told them, I’d write a story that reflects today’s society the same way Dickens did for his time. I can’t match Dickens’ genius, but the books I write for children are all contemporary stories with universal life themes showing struggles kids face today. I recently listened to the audio version of Tale of Two Cities. It played like a movie in my head. Dickens swept me into his vivid world. I hope I can do that for the readers of my books.
RHP: What’s your favorite joke?
SG: It turns out laughter is good for our health in many ways. Humor is just as essential as breathing. I take it seriously and work it into my writing and my life. The humor I enjoy best springs up organically, often from the quick wit of a friend or within the dialog of my story. Those are the kind of laughs we explain by saying, you had to be there. I also appreciate slap-stick humor or stand-up comedy, in the right place. If I were trying my hand at writing a stand-up routine, I may deliver something like this:
I told my husband I’d like to fly to Paris for the weekend to gain inspiration for a story I was feeling stuck on. When my husband called me delusional, I almost fell off my unicorn. I explained that if I don’t fly business class, our kids will. My wonderful husband agreed. I wanted to blend into the Paris scene, so I shopped for some camo pants, but I couldn’t find any. On the flight, a lively little girl ran up and down the aisles, disturbing everyone. Eventually she ran into the flight attendant and knocked a cup of hot coffee out of her hand. As the attendant was cleaning up the mess, she glanced at the little girl and suggested, “Look, why don’t you go outside and play.” In Paris, I began posting videos on TikTok, thinking it would help spark my imagination. I was addicted to the hokey pokey, but then I turned myself around. When my husband told me to stop impersonating a flamingo, I had to put my foot down. I finally came home when I broke my arm. I explained to my doctor I had broken it in two places. He told me to quit going to those places.
RHP: What difference do you hope your book will make?
SG: Recently, blogger Melissa Taylor (Imagination Soup) listed many reasons children benefit from reading, including cognitive development and increasing their capacity for empathy. As a former teacher, I understand how literacy opens doors of opportunity throughout life. So, first of all, I hope my book will spark more children to become life-long readers. Sometimes it only takes one special book to get them started. My world growing up was not much bigger than my neighborhood, but I “traveled” around the world in the books I read.
More specifically, I hope readers of Just Like Click will come to realize that they have superpowers and can choose to use them to change their world, to help themselves, and to help others.
RHP: What advice would you give to an aspiring author?
SG: Live generously. Practice bravery. Read widely. Write even when you don’t feel like it. Find your writing people. Don’t forget to laugh. Don’t be afraid to start over. Never give up.
Indeed, writers are among the bravest people I know. We compose words from our hearts and put them out to the universe for review. When rejection comes, we tell ourselves it’s not personal, but it almost always stings. Perhaps it’s the rejection that makes praise all the more glorious. When Fitzroy Books chose my novel as the winner of the 2022 Kraken Book Prize for Finely Crafted Middle Grade Fiction, my joy broke loose in tears.
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