Showing posts with label stephanie burgis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stephanie burgis. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Review: Kat, Incorrigible by Stephanie Burgis

Tags: middle grade, historical fantasy, Regency England, magic

Summary

12-year-old Kat Stephenson wishes she could do something to help out her family. Her brother is in debt, her father is weak, her stepmother is borderline evil, her sister Angeline has been casting love spells that go awry, and her oldest sister Elissa might have to marry the sinister Sir Neville to save their family from ruin.

It’s a good thing, then, that Kat has inherited her mother’s magic skills. However, it’s hard to know who to trust, especially when it appears that there are people who might be interested in her family just for their magic…

Review

If KAT, INCORRIGIBLE had been around when I was in middle school, it would’ve been my favorite book of ALL TIME. It has an amazing narrator and charm to the likes of which I haven’t seen since I read Gail Carson Levine’s Ella Enchanted for the first time in fifth grade (and which still remains one of my favorite books to this day).

Kat is undeniably the best part about this book. Unlike other historical fiction heroines I’ve encountered in the past, Kat’s modern-day stubbornness and rebelliousness feels perfectly natural. She is at that wonderful age when she can resist societal conventions without appearing petulant or immature, and she defies all our expectations, much to our endless delight. She has moments, for example, when she consciously refuses to act like the silly, spineless heroines in her sister’s favorite gothic novels, the similarity to some 21st-century YA lit too good to go ignored. It takes great skill to write a historical character with modern appeal, but Stephanie Burgis does it like she was born to write this.

The villains in this book may be rather straightforwardly sinister, but it works for its middle-grade audience, and besides, it’s the “gray” characters—the complex supporting ones—that showcase Burgis’ extraordinary talent for creating and developing characters. Kat’s older sisters, Elissa and Angeline, have distinct personalities and are enjoyable in their own way. Throughout KAT, INCORRIGIBLE, Kat struggles to figure out whom she can entrust her secrets to, and we can empathize with her confusion and suspicion as the adults circling her approach with a variety of motives.

KAT, INCORRIGIBLE charmed me into a place of childlike giddiness that I haven’t encountered in too many years. This deceptively easy read is actually rich with character development and possibilities for future books in the series. Without a doubt I would not hesitate to hand this out to every girl I know between the ages of 10 and 14, and I highly recommend you check this delightful book out, and fall under Kat’s benevolent charms. I can’t wait for more of Kat’s adventures!

Similar Authors
Gail Carson Levine (Ella Enchanted)

Writing: 5/5
Characters: 5/5
Plot: 5/5

Overall Rating: 5 out of 5


Cover discussion: It's cute! Although admittedly not what I was expecting as a cover. Still, the more I've looked at it, the more I like it.

Atheneum / April 5, 2011 / Hardcover / 304pp. / $16.99

Received for review from Simon & Schuster. Thank you!

Monday, March 14, 2011

Author Interview + GIVEAWAY with Stephanie Burgis!

I'm beyond ecstatic to have a special author visiting my blog today. UK-based Stephanie Burgis is the debut author of Kat, Incorrigible, already out in the UK (as A Most Improper Magick) and coming out in the US from S&S Atheneum on April 5, 2011. I had the opportunity to read this book last year and, you guys, it is STUPENDOUS. My review of it will be up sometime soon. In the meantime, I have this treat for you. Welcome, Steph, to Steph Su Reads!

1. Kat reminds me of some of my favorite fantasy heroines when I was younger. Who are some of your favorite fantasy heroines? Who did you draw upon for your inspiration for Kat?

Some of my favorite fantasy heroines when I was Kat's age were Harry from Robin McKinley's THE BLUE SWORD (she gets to sword-fight AND have a sizzling romance!), Beauty from Robin McKinley's BEAUTY (who reads Latin fluently and loves books more than almost anything else), and Tamora Pierce's Alanna (who gets to be a knight). Since I grew up, I've added lots more to the list, including Ysabeau Wilce's Flora from FLORA SEGUNDA and FLORA'S DARE.

My list of favorite books has always been split pretty evenly between fantasy novels and Regency-era historical romances (especially on the romantic comedy end of the spectrum). When I was 12, I loved Robin McKinley AND Georgette Heyer, JRR Tolkien AND Jane Austen. So Kat's inspiration really came from both of my favorite genres.

Lots of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer’s romantic heroines have younger sisters who don’t show up all that much in the books. When they do, though, they tend to be pretty snarky and disrespectful of their older sisters, the heroines of the books! So in my book, I wanted to make the snarky younger sister (rolling her eyes at her older sisters’ romantic misadventures) the true heroine, and give her lots of exciting magical adventures of her own. And I wanted to make her as smart and as brave as all the fantasy heroines I’ve loved the most over the years.

2. Is Kat's relationship with her sisters in any way similar to your relationship with your siblings growing up?

In some ways, we’re the exact opposite: Kat’s the youngest in her family, with two older sisters (and one hopeless older brother who doesn’t show up much in Book 1). I’m the oldest in my family, with two younger brothers and no sisters at all. But on the other hand, I definitely worked from my own experience in creating a noisy, loving family, full of siblings who may get into a lot of arguments and have very different ideas about how to solve each other’s problems…but they’re also deeply, deeply loyal to each other at the core, and they won’t let ANYONE hurt their family.

3. What fascinates you about Regency England?

Wow, that’s a good question. I’ve always found it really fun to “visit” in books and movies (although I’d hate to actually live there), but I’ve never really thought through *why* I’m so attracted to the period. There’s just something about having so many rigid social rules in place that makes it even more fun to create characters willing to break them!

4. With no spoilers, what was your favorite scene to write in KAT, INCORRIGIBLE? What about your favorite scene now that you're done writing it?

They’re actually both the same: I love the first scene where a highwayman shows up! When I was first writing the book, I didn’t actually plan for it to happen at that point. It just came out as I was typing. I actually stopped and stared at the screen. “I can’t do that,” I thought…but then I did! And I was laughing the whole way.

5. Oh, the highwayman scene had me in giggles too. Now, according to your "About Me" page on your website, you have done a great deal of traveling and learning. Can you tell us how one particular learning experience found its way into your writing?

dawsonsbooks.co.uk
When I was doing graduate work in music history at the University of Leeds, I spent a lot of time in the wonderful Brotherton Library, hanging out in the 18th-century literary section. I was supposed to be doing research on late 18th-century Viennese operas, but over and over again I ended up tempted into spending hours reading the letters and diaries of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century Brits, from Jane Austen and Fanny Burney to Mary Shelley and many others. I was doing it just for fun (and to procrastinate!) but it turned out to be perfect background research for Kat.

6. Describe to us what your typical writing day looks like.

Nowadays, it starts after my two-year-old son leaves for preschool, and ends when he comes home three hours later. In the old days before I was a mom, when I was writing Kat, Incorrigible, I had all sorts of routines around my writing. Every day before I started writing Kat, I would take ten minutes to read Jane Austen’s letters, to get myself into the right frame of mind. I also kept a Jane Austen action figure on my desk!

Nowadays, though, I’m too desperate for writing time to be too precious about my rituals. All I need (at maximum) is a cup of tea by my side to start typing…or, if I’m lucky, several squares of good dark chocolate.

7. We've all written things that should never see the light of day. Would you share with us a one-sentence summary of something you've written that you'd lock away in a dark filing cabinet forever?

Oh, gosh, there are so many. Which to choose? How about my first-ever “novel”, a fifty-page epic Gothic romance called The Mystery of Castle Clew, exactly the type of book that would make Kat snort with digust? I wrote it when I was fourteen, setting it in Wales, which I knew absolutely nothing about! Ironically, I now live in Wales, and really love it here.

8. Name three famous people who you think would (or should) enjoy reading Kat, Incorrigible.

In my perfect world: Emma Thompson, Emma Watson, and JK Rowling.

9. What are your favorite ways to relax at the end of a long day?

Reading a really wonderful book, playing Lord of the Rings Trivial Pursuit with my husband (luckily I married a fellow geek!) or watching the BBC Pride and Prejudice miniseries for the 1000th time.

10. I fully approve. :) Now, imagine that Kat magically time-traveled to our 21st century. What movies would she enjoy watching? What things unique to our world would you like to introduce her to?

She’d be thrilled to find out that in the 21st century, women can get a real education and interesting, challenging jobs, so they have SO many more options than Regency women did.

And I think she’d love shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, where smart girls get to kick magical butt!



Thanks for your wonderful answers to my questions, Steph! Check out Steph's author website for more information, and do consider preordering this middle-grade historical fantasy gem. Orrrr, if you're feeling lucky, I have an ARC of Kat, Incorrigible that I'm going to give away to one lucky winner! To enter, please fill out this form here, making sure to answer the question relevantly. Because I feel like spreading the love about this book, I'm making this giveaway international, and it ends Monday, March 28, 2011. Good luck!

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Waiting on Wednesday (43)

A Most Improper Magick by Stephanie Burgis

Her mother was a scandalous witch, her brother has gambled the whole family into debt, and her Step-Mama is determined to sell her oldest sister into a positively Gothic marriage to pay it off--so what can twelve-year-old Kat Stephenson do but take matters directly into her own hands? If only her older sisters hadn’t thwarted her plan to run away to London dressed as a boy and earn a fortune! When Kat makes a midnight foray into her mother’s cabinet of secrets, though, she finds out something she never expected. Her mother wasn’t just a witch, she was a Guardian, a member of a secret Order with staggering magical powers--and Kat is her heir.


Of course, there’s no chance of Kat choosing to join the Order that forbade her parents’ marriage...but Mama’s magical mirror doesn’t seem to understand that. It keeps following her wherever she goes, even when the family travels to Grantham Abbey to meet the sinister Sir Neville, her oldest sister’s chosen fiancĂ©. And what with Sir Neville showing a dangerous interest in Kat’s untapped powers, her mother’s old tutor insisting that she take up her mother’s position as a Guardian, and her sister Angeline refusing to listen to her about anything, *as usual*...well, it’s a good thing Kat kept her boy’s clothing, because she may well have to use it--especially if the rumors of a highwayman are true. [summary from Goodreads]

It's historical fantasy! It's a Tenners book! Kat sounds like she will be a kickass, rebellious, and cheeky protagonist! There's dress-up! (And by that, I mean a girl dresses up like a boy. I'm a sucker for that.)

*sighs happily* I'm content.

A Most Improper Magick will be published in hardcover by Atheneum on April 20, 2010.

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...