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Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts

Monday, May 13, 2019

Blog Tour- SHIPWRECKERS by Scott D. Peterson & Joshua Pruett. Scott Interviews Josh & A Giveaway!



I am happy to be hosting a stop on the blog tour for SHIPWRECKERS by Scott D. Peterson & Joshua Pruett! I have a fun interview between Scott and Josh share with you today check it out and enter to win the giveaway below!

About The Book:




Title: SHIPWRECKERS
Author: Scott D. Peterson & Joshua Pruett
Pub. Date: May 21, 2019
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Formats: Hardcover, eBook
Pages: 336
Find it: GoodreadsAmazonKindleB&NiBooksKoboTBD

When Dani and her big brother Mike find themselves aboard the ill-fated river expedition of careless adventurer, Captain Kevin, they must work together to save themselves and the captain from all manner of deadly trials and traps.



Complete with treacherous temples, ancient idols, and plenty of explosions, Shipwreckers is a big adventure that brings humor along for a dangerous and thrilling ride up the Amazon. In a place where laughter meets non-stop action, you'll find Shipwreckers and its cast of soon-to-be fan-favorite characters.





Now on to the interview!
QUESTIONING JOSH

SCOTT: Does having little to no experience make it hard to write a book?

JOSHUA: Shipwreckers is actually my fourth or fifth book (they just haven’t all been released yet), but I think it’s hard writing any book because it’s always THAT BOOK’S first time being written. Every book is different and has its own needs. Books can be VERY BOSSY, demanding things their authors don’t necessarily feel like writing. I have found that experience is not as useful or as helpful as BLIND OPTIMISM and DELUSIONS OF GRANDEUR; believing you can do something whether you’ve ever done it before or not. There’s a bit of Captain Kevin in that and I think living that way can be much healthier and more fun than approaching the world with cynicism.

SCOTT: Since you were a little boy, you wanted to draw. When did that dream die?

JOSHUA: When I found out HOW MUCH MORE WORK IT WAS than writing! Both require A LOT OF TIME and effort, but storyboard artists absolutely have the hardest, most labor-intensive jobs in animation. Before that step in the process, cartoons are just words on paper, and after a board artist has done their job, there’s something for every other department to work from and react to. My favorite part of being an artist and storyboard artist was MAKING STUFF UP, and as a writer, I get to do more of that, and I get to do it faster, and therefore more often. It’s WIN-WIN for me.

I still draw AND storyboard, but now that TV writing is my primary source of income (I pay the bills with BAD JOKES YAY!) I can draw more for myself and be more selective about what storyboarding work I take on (like the work I did for Mystery Science Theater 3000 dream come true!).

SCOTT: In my experience, few true artists are adept at writing and few true writers are talented at illustration. What makes you think you can do both?

JOSHUA: Like I mentioned earlier: DELUSIONS OF GRANDEUR! I’ve been doing both since I was a very small, poorly dressed child with long legs and curly hair, so I find it difficult to separate the two disciplines. I do think I’m a better writer than I am an illustrator/storyboard artist, but I still love doing both. And I think both of them are tied directly to my desire to be a STORYTELLER; sometimes a drawing is better at communicating an idea or moment, other times it’s a particular line of dialogue or dramatic moment succinctly described that sells the drama, but often its BOTH working in concert that really makes magic, whether that’s in comics, illustrated novels, TV animation or feature film!

SCOTT: Your two adorable moppets are the perfect ages for Shipwreckers. What do they think of it? And did you write it just to keep them occupied for a few hours?

JOSHUA: I am very lucky that my son, eight, and my daughter, ten, are THE PERFECT age to dive in and enjoy SHIPWRECKERS. They actually quote the book back to me from time to time, which is a surreal experience, but an absolute joy too. True story; I actually tested some of Captain Kevin’s sillier journal entries out on them as we were writing the book. In fact, one of my favorite memories of the book was reading the Captain’s first journal entry to them out-loud. Any joke they didn’t laugh at I took out. So, if there are jokes in the book you don’t think are funny, it’s TOTALLY THEIR FAULT!

And yes, reading the book we spent four years writing is a GREAT way to keep your kids busy for a few hours!

SCOTT: You often tell the story of putting your all into a storyboard test - which was then completely rejected.  That’s a funny story.  Tell that one.

JOSHUA: I once did a storyboard test for a big animation studio and the evaluator hated my work and for some reason decided to take it personally. I didn’t get that job, obviously, and was VERY discouraged. I was out of work and had a Wife and two small kids at home to take care of. But I took that same test to the team at the original LEGO MOVIE and Dan and Swampy at PHINEAS AND FERB and got two job offers off that same “failed” storyboard test IN THE SAME WEEK. I went with Phineas because I’d get WRITING CREDIT for the work I was doing and my whole life and career changed after that. Taught me a valuable lesson; we shouldn’t depend on others to define our self worth. I did my best, and then found folks who really responded to my best. People who don’t respond to your best aren’t worth your time.

SCOTT: Despite the dreary reality of your life and career, you maintain a very positive, pro-active outlook. Why?

JOSHUA: Mostly I do that in order to combat the morose cynicism YOU bring to every day, and every project we work on together. It’s a survival tactic. I’m the bright sunshine in your dreary doldrums. The peanut butter in your bland baker’s chocolate, the crunchy cereal in your spoiled milk. Makes us a good team.

Real answer: my Dad died when I was nineteen and it changed how I looked at the world and in particular, how I approached my career. He was a DREAMER like I am, and I try and remember how important it is to use the time we’re given to make things, bring light and love people. I also really like inflicting laughter on others. Makes me feel good too.

SCOTT: When you were late for a deadline on Shipwreckers, you often said, “My home office flooded.” What will your excuse be on the inevitable sequels?

JOSHUA: I have a whole laundry list of BRAND NEW excuses just waiting to be applied, all the way up through “SHIPWRECKERS BOOK TWENTY THREE: NO THANKS, THERE’S NO MORE. GO HOME.”

SCOTT: Do you have any other scribblings printed up that we can read?

JOSHUA: For older kids who like horror and weird fiction, I have a collection of short stories called THE MISERY COMPANY on Amazon. For HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON fans, there’s a special POP UP book that covers the whole trilogy that I wrote some words for, out June 4th. Then next year, a scrapbook set in Nickelodeon’s AVATAR universe focusing on Uncle Iroh and the Fire Nation!

SCOTT: What other books do you have in the works?

JOSHUA: I’ve got a BIG, FUN and SILLY, Douglas Adams-like take on a Greek Mythology MIDDLE GRADE ADVENTURE EPIC making the rounds right now, trying to find a home and an editor! And some weirder ones behind that
And you and I have a few things coming, the first of which is a SCARY MIDDLE-GRADE, STRANGER THINGS-esque THRILLER with monsters that we’re editing now, and preparing to launch on an unsuspecting world soon! (*LAUGHS MANIACALLY, CHOKES, THEN LAUGHS AGAIN*).

SCOTT: Do you have any ideas for Shipwreckers 2?

JOSHUA: I have WAY TOO MANY IDEAS, for that book plus at least thirty-two others in the series AND a separate trilogy of HOLIDAY THEMED Shipwreckers books too! If you let me write the Christmas one, I’ll let you write the Halloween one. Deal?

SCOTT: Self-promotion is a big part of being an author. When you market yourself, why do you still rely on a Halloween costume from nearly a decade ago?

JOSHUA: Because it was an ALIEN CHESTBURSTER with my nine-month-old daughter as the bloody yet adorable xenomorph and we got a WIN on FAILBLOG. I’m internet famous, kind of. Search EPIC WIN DAD in Google images. We’re there. Promise.

SCOTT: Your wife is an avid reader and part-time ice skater.  My wife knows precisely where my half of the book starts because I’m a better writer.  Thoughts?

JOSHUA: Your wife is a lovely person but I can’t really vouch for her TASTE. I mean, she MARRIED YOU, didn’t she? Nuff said.

SCOTT: You rarely stop prattling on about Dr. Who and MST3K.  Why do these two franchises get your nerd heart racing?

JOSHUA: MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 is my favorite show of all time. DOCTOR WHO is my favorite show of all TIME AND SPACE.

I saw MST3k for the first time at like three in the morning at a friend’s house when I was thirteen and was HOOKED; still have my fan club membership card and everything. It really was a major influence on my creative life and my sense of humor too. It was also a bit like a film school; I still contend you can learn much more from a BAD MOVIE than a GOOD one. And while it was making fun of bad movies and big, dumb rubber monsters, it had a warmth and optimism and good natured-ness I really responded to. Plus sassy robots and hand-made sets!
Getting to actually write and storyboard on the new show was a mindboggling bit of bucket list actualization.

I first caught Doctor Who while visiting my Dad in New York and it SCARED ME SO MUCH. I hid behind the couch and everything. Tom Baker, the guy with the long scarf, was my first Doctor. When the modern series returned in 2005 it blew my mind and changed my life. It was so full of love and life and hope and WRECKLESS OPTIMISM. I read the books from BBC and Penguin UK and listen to the audio dramas produced by BIG FINISH. Writing for DOCTOR WHO is next on my bucket list.

SCOTT: Do you own any clothes other than movie-themed T-shirts? If so, where are they?

JOSHUA: They’re in a box because they’re all long sleeved, button up shirts I can never wear because we live in California and we don’t have COLD anymore. Also, I think I made you take me to Costco so I could buy a few of them, so THANKS BUD; should have saved that money for DVDs.

I do only wear horror movie and pop culture t-shirts, and they’re mostly all black; according to my Wife Amanda, I have thirty-two black shirts. She counted.

SCOTT: Why do you mix two, and sometimes three, sodas into one cup?

JOSHUA: Something I picked up at after school day care in the eighties; they called it a SUICIDE, although we should probably come up with a more responsible name for it. My son loves using those new-fangled MULTI-DRINK machines at movie theaters to make his own! Must be a Pruett-thing.

SCOTT: Despite being a grown adult, you still waste a large portion of your 
disposable income on toys, DVDs, and comic books.  Explain yourself.

JOSHUA: I am a huge physical media guy FOR SURE. I didn’t have much growing up, so I’m sort of making up for lost time. My Wife buys a lot of yarn, so I need DVDs to keep pace with her. We also LOVE BOOKS. They are our TREASURES, and we’ve been that way since we were kids, we dream of BUILT-IN BOOKSHELVES.

SCOTT: What’s with that hair?

JOSHUA: Can’t do a thing with it. But I did have an afro for a bit in High School which made me popular with the ladies for five whole minutes.

SCOTT: What is your personal writing process like? Give us an idea of an average day:


JOSHUA: I prefer to outline what I’m doing first; at least giving myself a ROAD MAP for where I’m headed in every chapter, but allowing for room to improvise and explore. If I’m on script, like for MILO MURPHY’S LAW or THE LAST KIDS ON EARTH, I try to hit a page count, like five or more per day. If I’m working on a new novel, I try to average 500-2000 words per day. I’m most productive first thing in the morning and after 9pm at night.




About Scott:

Scott Peterson (aka Scott David Peterson) is currently the Executive Producer and Showrunner of the upcoming Netflix animated series, "The Last Kids on Earth."

Scott was nominated for a primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program for writing Nickelodeon’s “Escape from Cluster Prime” and for an episode of Disney's "Phineas and Ferb."

He has worked as a writer for Warner Brothers, Universal Studios, Cartoon Network, and Nickelodeon, among others, for the last decade. Most recently, Scott has been a story editor for Disney TV Animation on "Milo Murphy's Law," “Phineas and Ferb,” “Kick Buttowski,” “The Replacements,” and “Emperor’s New School.” He has also written for such series as “Brandy and Mr. Whiskers,” “Danny Phantom,” “The X’s,” “Robotboy,” “Tutenstein,” and “Pet Aliens.” Oh, and “The Sylvester and Tweety Mysteries.” Remember that one?

Scott is also the author of many top-selling children’s books including “Phineas and Ferb's Guide to Life," "Agent P's Guide to Fighting Evil," and "The Book of Doof." He recently co-authored his first novelization of the recently released Disney live-action feature of "The Jungle Book" and signed with Disney Hyperion to write his original middle-grade novel "Shipwreckers" with writing partner Joshua Pruett. He also pens multi-page comics for Nickelodeon and Disney.

He has written for every genre and media imaginable including video games, live action features, IMAX 3D films, interactive internet projects, amusement park venues, instructional DVD’s, hotel comedy wake-up calls, and perhaps most importantly, for the Weekly World News.

He lives in South Pasadena with his beautiful wife and two occasionally adorable children.


About Joshua:


Joshua Pruett is a Primetime Emmy Nominated writer and human-author-person who splits his time unevenly between Gallifrey and Los Angeles with his incredible Wife/High School Sweetheart/Knitter/Singer Amanda and their boy and girl-shaped children. He is currently living out a dream come true, writing dialogue for Weird Al Yankovic's mouth on Disney XD's MILO MURPHY'S LAW (2016).

As a Writer/Artist, Joshua has over a decade of experience inflicting laughter on others, with credits on the history making Kickstarter relaunch of MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 (coming to Netflix in early 2017), PHINEAS AND FERB, and the HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON franchise. He has worked as a storyboard artist, writer and creative consultant for Disney TV, DreamWorks Feature Animation, Nickelodeon, DreamWorks TV, Awesomeness TV, Sprout/NBC Universal, Disney China/Beijing, Zombie Bake Shop, Netflix and Paramount Feature Animation. Most recently, he developed THE HAUNTED MANSION for Disney TV with his friend and writing partner, Scott Peterson.

His first novel, THE JUNGLE BOOK: THE STRENGTH OF THE WOLF IS THE PACK, with Scott Peterson, adapts the 2016 live action feature film into a fun for all ages novel for young readers.

Joshua is also internet famous for getting a WIN on failblog (just type "EPIC WIN DAD" into Google Image search -- he and his daughter's award-winning Halloween costume is the first photo to come up).


Giveaway Details:

3 Winners will receive a finished copy of SHIPWRECKERS, US Only.



Tour Schedule:
Week One:
5/13/2019- Two Chicks on BooksInterview
5/14/2019- Wonder StruckReview
5/15/2019- Feed Your Fiction AddictionReview
5/16/2019- Lone Tree ReviewsReview

Week Two:
5/20/2019- BookHoundsyaReview
5/21/2019- Two points of interestReview
5/22/2019- bookish bibliophileReview
5/24/2019- AURELIA LEOInterview

Friday, January 27, 2012

Adventures in Books at the Thrift Store

I’m a big fan of thrift stores, especially when looking for books for kids and household items. Sometimes I get really lucky and find tons of stuff but other times I walk away empty handed. Now you may ask yourself why I would be sharing this with you. 

Well yesterday I went to a thrift store and of course I headed straight to the book stacks first. As I started looking I saw several books that caught my attention. I ended up picking up eight books for the bargain price of $9.50.  I was totally stoked. I mean I can’t usually buy one book for under $10 let alone eight of them.

What did I pick up you say? Well here’s the list:

For me: Eyes of Crow by Jeri Smith-Ready; Vampire Kisses: The Beginning by Ellen Schreiber; Heavenly by Jennifer Laurens and Van Alen Legacy by Melissa De La Cruz

For my 9-year old: Fudgemania, Superfudge and Tales of Fourth Grade Nothing all by Judy Blume

For my teen daughter: Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

Now that last one is where the adventure comes in, not so much that it happened while at the store itself but what happened later when I gave it to my daughter. My daughter is a fan of Contemporary YA Fiction so when I saw Anna and the French Kiss I knew I had to get it for her. I’ve heard great things about it and the companion book, Lola and the Boy next door.  But anyway, on to what happened; I didn’t flip thru any of the books while at the store. (In hindsight, I really need to do that.) So I pick up my daughter from school and head on over to my son’s elementary school to wait for him to get out 15 minutes later. While waiting I pull out my stash of books and hand her the Anna book.

As she starts flipping through it the first thing she notices is that a whole chapter has been taped up with that magic tape that is used for gift-wrapping. We both think that’s kinda weird but, whatever. I help her get the tape off and discover that it’s chapter fourteen. We both flip thru chapter fourteen to see if there are any pages missing but there aren’t, which is good. However, we notice something else that’s…I don’t even know how to put it…strange?! Weird?! Makes you go, hmmm?! What is it you ask? Well someone has taken the time to white-out several words and in some cases, whole passages. Of course this makes us wonder what could be so bad about these words that are whited out? And it's not just chapter fourteen but now she notices that it happens throughout the whole book. 

My daughter starts trying to scrape off some of the white-out without tearing the paper because of course we want to see what is soooo terrible. Something must be terrible because someone took the time to white-out so much of the book. To our surprise and frankly our giggles and then right out laughter and indignation it is words such as bollocks, ass, god, blimey, the hell, omg, oh my god. It’s not so much that we’re saying people should or shouldn’t use these words but we found it completely odd that someone would buy a book called Anna and the FRENCH KISS and then go censor it. I mean if you can’t handle some of these words WHY, OH WHY are you reading a book with this type of title? It just doesn’t makes sense to me at all.   

Of course now I’m going to have to buy this book at a regular book store because my daughter really wants to read the “uncensored” version. So what the “white-out junkie” really accomplished was us buying Anna and the French Kiss again. Muahahahaha.

Oh and obviously I had to call Jaime right away and let her know what we’d found and she, too found it so funny that she suggested I write a post about it. 


We'd love to know what you all think of this? Let us know in the comments :)  

Here's a cover of Anna and the French Kiss and a synopsis from the inside flap:

Anna is happy in Atlanta. She has a loyal best friend and a crush on her coworker at the movie theater, who is just starting to return her affection. So she's not too pleased when her father decides to send her to a boarding school in Paris for her senior year. But despite not speaking a word of French, Anna meets some cool new friends, including the handsome Étienne St. Clair, who quickly becomes her best friend. Unfortunately he's taken--and Anna might be, too.

Will a year of romantic near - misses end with the French kiss she's been waiting for?

You want to buy your own copy of Anna and the French Kiss you can do so at Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Book Depository or ask for it at your local bookstore. 


UPDATE: For those of you wondering...here's a sample page of what the inside of this book looks like:

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