Katie CotugnoKatie Cotugno
Tellin' stories, eatin' snax. NYT bestselling author of messy, complicated, feminist love stories
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Ladies + Fandom 0 comments

Ladies + Fandom: Carrie Mesrobian

Katie

June 24, 2015

You guys! It is a great day, because it is the day I am talking Carrie Mesrobian about Ladies + Fandom! In addition to writing one of my favorite YA books of the last couple years, Carrie has one of the best twitter feeds in the whole universe. I knew she’d have interesting stuff to say about this topic, AND I WAS RIGHT.

carrieheadshot-150x150

 

Carrie Mesrobian is the author of the YA novels Sex & Violence, a 2014 Morris Award finalist, Perfectly Good White Boy and Cut Both Ways (forthcoming, September 2015). A native Minnesotan, she teaches writing at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis, where she lives with her husband and daughter. Find out more at www.carriemesrobian.com or follow her Twitter: @CarrieMesrobian

 

Who/what are you fannish about? Why do you love it/them so much? Is there anything you don’t love about it/them?
 
At the moment I’m very fannish about The Walking Dead and Supernatural. Supernatural I’m late to getting into and haven’t watched up to the current season but I’m in total love with the Winchester Brothers and the whole insanity of the show. I couldn’t say exactly what it is about that show that I love, beyond always loving demonic horror and male banter. Also, on Supernatural, even though it’s casted heavily with bros, there is SO MUCH CRYING. BRO TEARS! It’s like Christmas for me.
The Walking Dead is a little more complicated to explain. I don’t like gore or zombies, really. And I haven’t read the comics. But what I love about TWD is similar to what I loved about that show Friday Night Lights. The Walking Dead isn’t really a show about zombies, though the first few episodes really are heavy on the gore and grossness. Friday Night Lights, while centered on football, isn’t really about football; it’s about the relationships surrounding the football coach and his family. The Walking Dead is about survival and how that mandate changes human interaction.
My favorite character is Daryl Dixon, who is played by Norman Reedus. Daryl isn’t even in the comics; they wrote him into the show and he became a fan favorite even though he wasn’t a part of the main cast at first. What I love about Daryl is the very real fantasy he provokes: he’s a man’s man, a survivor, someone uniquely bred to live outside of civilization as a savage. He’s perfect for the Zombie Apocalypse. But the fantasy is that he’s also a man who has a deep moral core. Daryl is so brimming with compassion and empathy that he’s never been given a chance to express and his tragic irony is that he’s finally able to be his best self now that the world is become barbaric. I don’t think that’s how a man like Daryl would behave necessarily, but I enjoy entertaining the fantasy. Also, I’m a total marshmallow of a person. In terms of post-apocalyptic survival, I’m not making it in anyone’s life boats. I hate shooting guns; I hate camping. I’d be a total ninny about bugs and discomfort. So nothing is more attractive to me than someone who embodies all those skills. People like that make me feel literally and psychologically safe.
It also helps that I find Norman Reedus so goddamn beautiful it makes my stomach hurt.
 
What’s your favorite part of being a fan? What’s your least favorite part?
 
My favorite part is the unity of both my friends in real life and online. In real life, we have Sunday Night Walking Dead potlucks on my street, where we all make food, eat together, and then watch the show. (You don’t really want to eat while watching TWD.) Even when the season ends, we still maintain the practice because there is so much good TV that is scheduled on Sunday nights (like Game of Thrones, another show you shouldn’t eat while watching). It’s a nice way of easing back into Monday, I think.
I love talking about TWD and Supernatural with people online because we have a shared short-hand reference and also it’s just fun to be enthusiastic about things that aren’t real. Which is really the best part of fandom.
My least favorite part is having to explain to people why I love these things, especially if they are snobby about watching television. I feel sorry for people who don’t watch television sometimes. And I hate how they act like I’m some consumerist loser for enjoying TV narrative. There’s a lot of shit on TV, no doubt. But so many of the serial dramas are at the top of their game.
 
Have you ever written fic or made fanart (of this thing or of other things)? Would you? Would it wig you out if someone wrote fic or made fanart of your work, would you think it was awesome, or somewhere in between?
 
I write fan fiction for The Walking Dead. I had never done that before, though. I had never understood why people do this! I thought it was crazy that my teenaged students wrote fan fiction. I felt like they needed to be more “original” or something. But since then I’ve met up with enough fans online who kind of explained it to me. How fan fic and fanart are often compensatory, making up for narratives that exclude certain populations, like LGBT folks or people of color. I think that’s very cool and subversive and also just so fucking fun!
Also, I think teenagers should write fan fiction. It’s a great way to practice story-telling and sentence-making. And it’s much like the imitative training all students of a creative craft undertake: drawing nudes, painting bowls of fruit, writing novels that are total Harry Potter ripoffs, etc.
I like fan fiction that has sex in it, because I am a total sleazy prurient dirtbag. All my fic is rated Explicit because, you know, why the hell not, right? All of it involves Daryl Dixon, though his partners vary (usually Carol, once Michonne and once Beth). The thing that’s enjoyable about this is that it’s writing, but since it’s not my world, I have less at stake. I’m doing it just for the enjoyment of writing. There’s no deadline, no contract, no money involved. It’s very pure. I work out lots of different themes that I didn’t even know I was considering in fanfic. And a couple times I’ve lifted key turns of phrase in sex scenes that have ended up in later drafts for “real” books. So that’s kind of handy, because I think part of writing good sex scenes is coming up with fresh turns of phrase about these very familiar physical activities.
I would LOVE it if someone did fic of my books! It would signal their enthusiasm and their willingness to immerse themselves into my world. It would highly flatter me to think that someone else was as immersed in my Fake World and its Fake People to the same degree I am! A lot of fan fic is written because people have curiosities about secondary characters that they want to see more involved; that would be nothing to me but complimentary.
What has your experience been as a lady in fandom? Do you feel like fandom is a gendered space? Have there ever been times you felt unwelcome?
 
The main fandom I’m involved in is TWD and that’s basically the Caryl fandom – people who ship Carol Peletier and Daryl Dixon. It’s mostly women my age (I’m 40) and so aside from it being very heterocentric, it’s felt quite welcoming and good. I’ve never felt unwelcome; in fact, I’ve had my stories entered in little fan contests and people were really nice about inviting me to submit stories and be a part of various fansites. I like that they don’t know anything about me except for my fanfic, too; it feels like a true complime
 
What has being a fan taught you? 
 
It’s taught me that the obsessive enthusiasm that I’ve always had isn’t anything to be ashamed of. And that’s good, because it’s a major fuel for writing my stories.
 
How do you think being a fan (of this thing or of other things) interacts with or influences your writing? 
 
I think I’m always mulling over male archetypes of one shape or another. I’m very influenced by masculine power, because I’m really bewildered, annoyed and angered by how patriarchy hems in my life. I want to understand how men move through this world that is very dangerous and hostile toward me as a woman and I want to imagine myself into a world where men could be different. The funny thing is, I was not that enamored of the TWD story line or Daryl Dixon himself, until Carol Peletier, who is a mother and a woman living with domestic abuse, entered the picture. To see carol become strong, to become an object of focus and admiration for Daryl, who is living with his own history of abuse, was the thing that was fresh and new for me. Carol starts out as a mother and wife and the show proceeds to strip her of both identities in short order. She’s in a weird, in-between place. And that is where following the story becomes central to my own concerns, because this strays from the tropes just a tiny bit, and yet it feels so dynamic and surprising. That pivot of cliche when it comes to gender and culture is what interests me greatly.
 
Anything else you want to add?
 
Follow your fannish impulses, kids! There you will find so many riches for your own creative adventures.

these days 0 comments

these days

Katie

June 23, 2015

 

listening to a lot of florence, especially third eye
eating a lot of cherries and peaches from a little farmer’s market near my house called costco
anticipating revisions on book number three and
kicking around some ideas for what’s next
shrugging off the half-dozen holes in my bedroom ceiling courtesy of a leaky roof
getting my 10,000 steps (most days) thanks to my fitbit and a certain amount of compulsion on my part
reading jellicoe road and really liking it so far
watching the first episode of true detective and not even tim riggins could save it, that is how stupid it was
considering risotto with pesto for dinner tonight
fighting a cold that’s gnarly enough to make this terrifying garlic concoction seem like a viable option
feeling grateful it hit this week instead of next
loving this post from kim about saying goodbye
teaching a workshop on plot on friday morning
graduating from my mfa program on saturday
leaving on a jet plane for the philippines on monday
wishing i could pack you all up and take you along
(look for more these days posts later this summer. and check back here tomorrow for the latest in #ladiesandfandom!)

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

June 19, 2015

I will level with you: this week was kind of just shit! It was a sit at my desk and cry at the news week, it was an I had to get shots and they gave me a fever week, it was a hey I have a ton to do and none of it seems to be happening week. But the whole point of five good things is not to do it when it’s easy. It’s to do it when it’s hard. So here goes!

1. Every year there is a day in the summer when I get off the subway at my stop and the whole entire neighborhood smells like the ocean. It’s the best day.

2. My immunologist, who looked and spoke like the Count from Sesame Street and wore yellow striped glasses and paused halfway through my travel vaccines to tend somebody who’d been bitten by a bat so that they would not turn into a vampire.

3. My husband, who re-insulated our whole house this week and then ripped off our ugly heavy screen door for me as a surprise so that I won’t sklonk myself in the ankles with it every morning and night anymore.

4. The girl on the T this morning who was carrying the tiniest, tidiest, most adorable dark brown cross-body leather purse, and how I thought for a moment, I should get a purse like that, and then I laughed to myself and continued humping it up the stairs dragging my ginormous Mary Poppins bag with four library books and a slice of toast inside it.

5. I had a steamy dream about Mark Ruffalo last night. I don’t even like Mark Ruffalo that much! BUT I DO NOW.

Happy weekend, loves of mine. Go pet a dog or snuggle a baby or eat something really, really good.

Ladies + Fandom 0 comments

Ladies + Fandom: Corey Ann Haydu

Katie

June 17, 2015

Anybody who’s spent time in this space (or has met me for more than five seconds) knows that when I love something, I love it VERY MUCH. Fandom’s in my bones, it’s one of my big happinesses, and over the years it’s also been a way to connect with some of the raddest women I’ve ever had the honor to know. And so I had an idea: why not chat with some of those awesome ladies about the awesome stuff they’re into? Each Wednesday this summer you’ll find an interview with a different author-friend about what she loves, why she loves it, and how she shows that love to the world.

AND WE’RE STARTING WITH COREY ANN HAYDU.

Corey Ann Haydu: Author Headshot Session by Navdeep Singh Dhillon of Pataka Design

Corey Ann Haydu: Author Headshot Session by Navdeep Singh Dhillon of Pataka Design

Corey Ann Haydu is the author of OCD LOVE STORY, LIFE BY COMMITTEE, MAKING PRETTY and her upcoming middle grade debut, RULES FOR STEALING STARS. A graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and The New School’s Writing for Children MFA program, Corey has been working in children’s publishing since 2009. In 2013, Corey was chosen as one of Publisher Weekly’s Flying Starts. Her books have been Junior Library Guild Selections, Indie Next Selections, and BCCB Blue Ribbon Selections. Corey also teaches YA Novel Writing with Mediabistro and is adapting her debut novel, OCD LOVE STORY into a high school play, which will have its first run in Fall 2015. Corey lives in Brooklyn with her dog, her boyfriend, and a wide selection of cheese.

 

Who/what are you fannish about? Why do you love it/them so much? Is there anything you don’t love about it/them?
I am a huge Counting Crows fangirl. I discovered them 20 years ago, when I was twelve and getting my first CD player. Up until that point my musical taste had been limited to Oldies 103.3, an excellent Boston radio station that played Beach Boys and Beatles and The Temptations and everything great that  came out of the 60s. But at twelve I was ready to dive in to music that went darker, and Counting Crows fit the bill. I’m not sure how it’s possible that songs that appealed to me at 12 are still my favorite songs at 32, and every age in between. But August and Everything After is the definition of a great album– every song hits something different and important in me, and when I listen I feel understood. I am a devoted fan– I didn’t mind when they went a little more mainstream in the late 90s and early 2000s. I’m on board for anything they do. I love Adam’s voice and I love how he performs– emotionally, dramatically, creatively. But mostly I love their lyrics and the way they understand the intersection of love and pain.
 
What’s your favorite part of being a fan? What’s your least favorite part?
 
I love that I have something that feels like it helps define who I am. It’s comforting to hold on to tangible things, and say this is me! I am a person who really loves Counting Crows! It gives me so much comfort to listen to their music. I feel less alone, I feel emotionally present, I feel connected, even, to my former selves– the 12 and 15 and 24 year old who also loved Counting Crows. I’ve changed so much over the last 20 years and I love that there’s something consistent in my love for this music.
As for my least favorite part, I’ve never been a Good Fan in terms of being knowledgable. I’ve seen Counting Crows perform almost every year for the last 15 years and a few times before that as well. But I don’t have a connection with the band members as individuals. I think Adam Duritz is a really special performer and I think the rest of the band is exceptional as well, but I’m not interested in who they are individually. I don’t know anything about them. I don’t know all the inspiration behind their songs– I know what they’ve meant to me, and what they’re about for me.
 
Have you ever written fic or made fanart (of this thing or of other things)? Would you? Would it wig you out if someone wrote fic or made fanart of your work, would you think it was awesome, or somewhere in between?
 
I haven’t ever made fan art (NO ONE would want to see my attempts at art of any kind) and I’ve never written fan-fiction. I think it’s related to what I said above– that I’m not as interested in the community aspect of fandom. I actually wish I was– I think it’s a beautiful thing and I love being part of passionate communities. Theoretically, it sounds great. But it’s not where my heart is. My personal fandom is about crying at a concert with a hand over my heart when I sing along with A Long December and feeling like the song is being sung directly to me or putting in my headphones and absolutely blasting Holiday in Spain or Anna Begins or hell, St. Robinson in his Cadillac Dream which has one of my favorite Counting Crows lines ever: “There’s a hole in the ceiling down through which I fell

There’s a girl in the basement coming out of her shell
And there are people who will say they knew me so well
I may not go to heaven..
I hope that you go to hell!”

 
As for fans of MY work– I’d be so honored to receive any kind of fan art or fan fiction! I think however people want to express their love of a work of art is fantastic– for me that’s being alone with it, reliving memories in my head, touching base with the feeling of surviving sad moments and connecting to the idea that someone has written an exterior expression of everything in my heart. But I love that for other people that expression of love for a project is a drawing or a poem or a continuation of the characters’ journeys. The point is to connect– and sometimes that happens soul to soul and sometimes that happens in more tangible ways. 
 
What has your experience been as a lady in fandom? Do you feel like fandom is a gendered space? Have there ever been times you felt unwelcome?
 
I suppose since my fandom feels more personal and less community oriented, this hasn’t been a huge problem for me. That said, I do think that expectation to have Facts About the Band instead of “just” Feelings About Their Work feels somewhat gendered at times. I think the idea that memory and personal connection has less meaning that a trove of trivia can have gendered implications.
That said, when I’m at a Counting Crows concert, it feels like a decidedly ungendered space. The wonderful thing of being a fan of something that’s been around a while is that most of the other really big fans are also tried and true, old school fans. I think the division is more generational than gendered. And if I’m honest, I probably participate in the generational judgment. When I’m at a show, I want to see other people in their 30s and 40s connecting to the music with me. It’s a snobby, unfair thing.
 
What has being a fan taught you? 
 
I think I’ve learned the value of loving something hard. I’m not a natural fan– I love a lot of things, but most of them with a bit of detachment. But there’s something to the pure joy of fandom– the reveling in something someone else has made– that I think I needed in my life. I’ve learned that you can love without a “point” and without “hipness”. I’ve learned about owning something that feels mine, and not apologizing for it. I’m going to Rome in a few weeks and of course I am going because Italy is amazing and I need a vacation. But the idea for the trip came about because Counting Crows are playing there and I felt secure enough in my fandom to say “It would mean something to me to go see this band perform in this particular city.” I don’t apologize for being a fan anymore. I don’t act like it’s silly to spend a night in Rome at a Counting Crows concert. I’ve decided it’s okay for that to be a real, serious, important part of my life. I’ve decided it doesn’t have to be a silly thing. It can be a real thing. It can matter in a real way.
 
How do you think being a fan (of this thing or of other things) interacts with or influences your writing? 
 
Honestly, it’s easy to shut down a bit emotionally when I’m writing– to write from a more logistical place. Some days I have to write from a less emotionally open place, a less vulnerable place. But being a fan (specifically a Counting Crows fan) reminds me to open up when I’ve been too boundaried. Being a fan reminds me what it is to be moved by something. Also, that music in particular gives me something to draw from when I’m feeling emotionally empty. It’s not always an option to draw from your personal life or the people you love. But Counting Crows are always there for me to engage with. They help me find the emotional, open, ready place in myself.
Being a fan also reminds me of why I write– to move people and connect with them and give voice and expression to bits and pieces of the human experience. It’s easy to forget why we write. Fandom reminds me.
 
Anything else you want to add?
 
Is this the space where I can say that if you somehow are not intimately acquainted with August and Everything After, get on that? Honestly, listen to every album of theirs and mostly to the lyrics and listen to songs on repeat because listening to songs on repeat is a gift we’ve all been given.
Don’t be afraid to connect with something in a big, ridiculous, intense way. It feels pretty effing good.

miscellany 0 comments

things other people think are horrible that i think are fine or even great, a selected list

Katie

June 16, 2015

little debbie zebra cakes

crocs ballet flats

hanson, obviously

the bear cage episodes of LOST

lena dunham

not being the person in my house who kills spiders or takes out the garbage

yacht rock pandora

dave matthews band

flare jeans

really smutty post-apocalyptic romance novels where all the guys are covered in tattoos

josh groban

shopping on black friday

twilight

kim kardashian

the KFC double down

looking at your phone during dinner, provided the people you’re with don’t care

“sun ripened raspberry” bath and body works smell

man buns

 

come hang out with me on twitter. tell me all the weird stuff you think is fine or great.

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

June 12, 2015

1. On Sunday I tweeted that all I wanted to do was go to New York this summer and see my sister, and by Wednesday that trip was booked and I get to see a bunch of my other best beloveds and stay at the Ace besides. Manifesting! Wine on patios! The pungent stink of Manhattan in the summertime! Yeah!

2. Allen Salkin’s history of the Food Network FROM SCRATCH, which clearly I was always going to be obsessed with. Obviously I read the feud-y stuff first.

3. My house has new siding and appliances are coming and we met all our neighbors this week. Next up is the first floor bathroom, literally every last speck of which I am stealing from the HouseTweaking blog like a huge creep. I bought wallpaper! This is fun.

4. The “Summer Hits of the 2000s” Pandora station, can’t stop won’t stop.

5. GUESS WHAT, there is a super cool summer series starting here on this very blog next Wednesday. Stay tuned.

Happy weekend, peaches. Be good.

goals and plans, HOW LIFE IS 0 comments

59th street bridge

Katie

June 9, 2015

I handed my book in and yesterday I did nothing.

Well, not nothing. I made brownies; I started two loaves of bread. I puttered around in the kitchen like I used to at my mom’s house in the summer in college, when I worked at the children’s library in the mornings and time spread out in front of me like a picnic blanket. I watched TV for a while (a long while). I read.

But mostly: nothing.

I thought over and over: I should get up, I have work to do, all those things I’ve been putting off for weeks while I finished.

I made myself stay on the couch.

It was harder than it should have been, really. I’m not wired for it. It made me feel irresponsible and guilty; it made me feel like I was cutting school. Did you see that up there, how I told you I did nothing and then rushed to amend it, to make sure you knew I wasn’t a total waste of space? Like taking a day off after turning a book in would somehow make me one?

A lot has been written about busy-ness, about how never sitting still is some kind of weird badge of honor, how filling up the calendar pages means we’re somehow getting more out of our lives. And maybe that’s true. But I was happy doing nothing yesterday, and I want to remember that this summer. This summer I want to s l o w  d o w n.

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

June 5, 2015

1. The luxury of this month and how it means the freedom to sit on the couch in front of Sandra Bullock movies all day if I want to, how it means getting to watch the one tomato on my tomato plant get bigger, inviting friends over to sit in my garden and my dad to come up for Father’s Day. Buying flowers cause I’ll be here to watch them bloom. Every day Tom asks me what I think about this renovation plan or that one; the other day four lamps got delivered at once. I didn’t want to clean the bathroom last night, so I’ll do it today or maybe tomorrow morning before his sister gets here. Whatever. There’s time.

2. The Coldest Girl in Coldtown which HOLY HELL I AM OBSESSED WITH, and How to Cook a Wolf which is waiting for me at the library today.

3. Lifetime’s Unreal, the pilot of which is so up my alley it’s like somebody made it just for me. Shiri Appleby was my original Reena. I pulled a picture of her out of Teen People in 2002.

4. The Copley farmer’s market, which is open for the season and will add a certain amount of happy bougie-ness to my Tuesdays and Fridays all summer long. The other day I forgot to check my change and accidentally paid $12 for a dozen eggs, and I didn’t even care. I mean okay, I cared a little. I will probably go to the other egg place from now on.

5. I am so close to finishing this book I can taste it, you guys. By Monday for sure.

Food 0 comments

trash dinner

Katie

June 2, 2015

It was pouring, it was dinnertime, and I had a fridge full of garbage. I stood on one foot, my food-gazing pose of choice, and considered: How bad did I not want to run out for groceries?

(Really, really bad.)

I considered my options. A tupperware full of grayish leftover mashed potatoes from last Thursday. A package of ground turkey in the freezer.

Hope sprang.

I investigated the crisper: One slightly questionable carrot (you want to save one carrot? he asked me a couple of weeks ago; yes, I said, not knowing what I’d do with it but somehow anticipating this moment). An onion from the bowl on top of the fridge, a stalk of celery I’d bought with great optimism for green juice, and the end of a bag of slightly freezer-burned peas. A container of cooked brown rice from last week’s tacos, half a carton of chicken stock from the quinoa E made the other night. A couple of strips of bacon from Saturday’s egg sandwiches, one slice of prosciutto curled sadly in a Ziploc, and the end of a bag of decidedly low-end pre-shredded taco cheese.

Okay. I could work with this.

Clean-out-the-fridge shepherd’s pie hardly makes me a champion. It wasn’t even pretty enough to ‘gram. But it was delicious, and it fed us, and on a Monday night in June that felt more like one in January, it was a quiet whisper from the back of the pantry, the kitchen in this new house: look. Look again. 

 

five good things 0 comments

five good things

Katie

May 29, 2015

1. Last night’s quick, crazy rainstorm which I had been looking forward to all day, the air getting thicker and the sky getting heavier until all finally it just burst right open, a temper tantrum that lasted for all of four minutes before the sun came out again. I opened all the windows so it smelled like summer in my house.

2. Laura Ruby’s BONE GAP, which I just started but which is already teaching me things about building worlds that shift and change and which is rather lovely reading besides.

3. The BBC1 Live Lounge, which I am obsessed with–my feelings about Sam Smith doing Tracy Chapman and Imagine Dragons doing Taylor Swift are well-documented, but how about George Ezra doing Macy Gray, or OneRepublic doing George Ezra? I JUST REALLY LOVE COVERS YOU GUYS.

4. The #GirlGang tumblr account, which is my new go-to for all things feminist and rad.

5. Everybody’s BEA tweets and photos and how they’ve been reminding me of when I was there two years ago, how it was the first grownup writing thing I did and how afraid I was, how I didn’t know a soul, and the realization that if I went now I would both know people and not be so blindingly scared of my own shadow, and also I would be smart enough to wear more comfortable shoes.

Bonus number six, getting real for a second: right before I went to RT I decided I wasn’t going to be anxious anymore and then by some mind over matter miracle I wasn’t. It’s a trick that has never worked for me before and will probably never work for me again and maybe that wasn’t even what did it; maybe the barometric pressure changed or something, I don’t know. But I just want to say that a month ago I was struggling in a way that felt kind of impossible and trying to hide it from everyone, and now I’m struggling way, way less, and so if you are maybe struggling in that way too (or if you are me, reading this one day in the future, struggling again) I promise that at some point it will get better. I swear on my life that it will.

OKAY REAL TIME OVER, it’s Friday, it’s summer, go drink a margarita. xox

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Love Junkie.

Katie Cotugno

Katie Cotugno is the New York Times bestselling author of eight messy, complicated feminist YA love stories, as well as the adult novels Birds of California and Meet the Benedettos. She is also the co-author, with Candace Bushnell, of Rules for Being a Girl. Her books have been honored by the Junior Library Guild, the Bank Street Children’s Book Committee, and the Kentucky Association of School Librarians, among others, and translated into more than fifteen languages.  Katie is a Pushcart Prize nominee whose work has appeared in The Iowa Review, The Mississippi Review, and Argestes, as well as many other literary magazines. She studied Writing, Literature and Publishing at Emerson College and received her MFA in Fiction at Lesley University. She lives in Boston with her family. 

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