Sunan21: Hello everyone JsmnStrm: Okay, I'm ready to cover surf. :) TheUsurpKing: Hi all GalloDon: Is this where I start? HOST WPLC Lyric: Yes, I'm stuck in NY and borrowing a friends computer so I cannot log, so please Gabby, would you? OnlineHost: BrownDvs has entered the room. OnlineHost: Rdpelleg has left the room. G1ft0fgabn0t: Jas, I can cover backup. G1ft0fgabn0t: <~Logging HOST WPLC Lyric: I have 10:01 is that about right? G1ft0fgabn0t: yuppers :) Dhewco: yeah HOST WPLC Dee R: And I'll do the back up HOST WPLC Dee R: Don is here promptly OnlineHost: TrounceM13 has entered the room. OnlineHost: Rdpelleg has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Don, we'll wait another four minutes for the room to settle down if that's okay? Dhewco: what's the topic tonight HOST WPLC Lyric: Adam , are you greeting? OnlineHost: Braguine has entered the room. OnlineHost: Fjm3eyes has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Tonight we welcome Don Gallo noted editor of Young Adult short story anthologies to Writing to Publish Braguine: Gutt iffnincks, Room Roomies BrownDvs: AYe HOST WPLC Lyric: This will be a protocol session. OnlineHost: Genjii555 has entered the room. G1ft0fgabn0t: <><><><> OnlineHost: BornToVector has entered the room. OnlineHost: GwynnaL has entered the room. SPultz: Hi All HOST WPLC Lyric: We are very lucky to have someone like Don tell us the inside scoop on YA fiction. OnlineHost: Rdpelleg has left the room. OnlineHost: Dhewco has left the room. GalloDon: Fine with me. OnlineHost: Hillwithit has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: so I'd like everyone to welcome him now. OnlineHost: Dhewco has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: :::: APPLAUSE:::::: GwynnaL: <><><><><><> OnlineHost: Rainlyte has entered the room. TrounceM13: Thanks for taking the time, Mr. Gallo. Sunan21: Welcome Don HOST WPLC Dee R: Glad to have you with us, Don OnlineHost: Dhewco has left the room. BornToVector: Welcome Mr Gallo OnlineHost: AttyBBlack has entered the room. SPultz: welcome Don,thanks for your time OnlineHost: Dhewco has entered the room. OnlineHost: Deluge7 has entered the room. OnlineHost: SteeIBtrfl has entered the room. GalloDon: I'm happy to be here. Thanks. Fjm3eyes: Hello, Mr. Gallo SteeIBtrfl: Hello everyone - :::waves::: G1ft0fgabn0t: Steel*** JsmnStrm: Hi stee JsmnStrm: steel, JsmnStrm: lol OnlineHost: KD et al has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Protocol works differently in this chat. We MAY take comments ! before questions ? provided they are ON POINT Fjm3eyes: he Steel HOST WPLC Lyric: Please do not abuse this priviledge, k? OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Sushi has entered the room. AttyBBlack: k HOST WPLC Lyric: All colors and bolded fots should be off except for the hosts and Don OnlineHost: TheUsurpKing has left the room. OnlineHost: KD et al has entered the room. OnlineHost: KD et al has left the room. AttyBBlack: I think I've dated a couple of bolded fots G1ft0fgabn0t: roflol HOST WPLC Lyric: fonts HOST WPLC Lyric: sorry guys! :-[ OnlineHost: DH020903 has entered the room. OnlineHost: Jlasp39 has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Okay, Let's get started. Don, will you tell us a little about yourself and maybe more about what YA fiction is? OnlineHost: Trina Pink has entered the room. OnlineHost: Bookheadsortails has entered the room. OnlineHost: ABNEY47 has entered the room. OnlineHost: Bookheadsortails has left the room. Trina Pink: Sorry I'm late! Trouble with AOL. I had to reboot. :-( OnlineHost: COUNTRYFAN07 has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Don is having some AOL problems so lets be patient, k? GalloDon: This is tough, since I c an't cut and paste more than a line or two. I'll try. OnlineHost: Kathi Smith 116 has entered the room. OnlineHost: JES No Time has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: If anyone has questions please address them to DeeR or Sushi, because I'm not at a computer that I know, JES No Time: Hi All GalloDon: A word of caution first: I was cut off AOL several times earlier today for no apparent reason, plus the connection between my modem and the phone line has worked itself loose three times today. COUNTRYFAN07: can anyone give me a tpic to write about? Fjm3eyes: Hi Jes HOST WPLC Dee R: We're used to AOL, so we'll understand, LOL OnlineHost: The13thDr has entered the room. GalloDon: But if suddenly you stop hearing from me in the middle of this chat, youll know why, and Ill get right back on as quickly as I canprobably in less than a minute. HOST WPLC Lyric: we sure do! country, we're in protocol COUNTRYFAN07: protocol? GalloDon: Before I talk about writing and publishing short stories, you need to know that I have never published a short story myself. In fact, Ive never published any fiction. Ive written mostly informational things, academic things. OnlineHost: ABNEY47 has left the room. OnlineHost: MEIE6 has entered the room. GalloDon: Because I was first a junior high school English teacher and then a university professor for nearly 40 years, I wrote a number of articles that were published in professional journals; MEIE6: :-D GalloDon: I wrote reading guides; I wrote reports and analyses. I published a book that is a combination of biography and literary criticism of author Richard Peck. JsmnStrm: Meie, I can't IM you... Please turn on your IM's. HOST WPLC Sushi: [MEIE you are not taking IMs so I just emailed you] OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Sushi has left the room. OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Sushi has entered the room. GalloDon: Ive also written reading textbooks for seventh and eighth graders, including the student workbook lessons. And lots of book reviews. OnlineHost: TheClassicQuill has entered the room. GalloDon: The bulk of my publications have been things Ive edited. Dhewco: so you're the one to blame for the nightmare that was 8th grade:P? HOST WPLC Dee R: Dhewco, we're on protocol OnlineHost: MEIE6 has left the room. GalloDon: Ha! Love it. COUNTRYFAN07: ? GalloDon: I'm having trouble cutting and pasting stuff I;ved previously written that's more than two ,lines long. It won't fit in the allotted space. OnlineHost: TheClassicQuill has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Country we will open the queue to questions much later on HOST WPLC Lyric: hold questions for now, guys HOST WPLC Dee R: Don, if I can add, that I've read your editing of YA short story collections have done more than enything else to establish the genre and a market for it. HOST WPLC Dee R: I'm saying that, in case, you're shy...lol OnlineHost: Leylex1 has entered the room. GalloDon: True. Someone named me the godfather of the young adult short story. OnlineHost: Jlasp39 has left the room. HOST WPLC Dee R: Yes, a good title...lol OnlineHost: PMCx85 has entered the room. PMCx85: Hey HOST WPLC Lyric: We're in protocol PMC HOST WPLC Lyric: talking about YA fiction GalloDon: I was teaching English and realized that there were no collections of good short stories for teens written hby a variety of authors who wrote novels for kids. PMCx85: so no color.. got it. GalloDon: So I asked several authors if they'd be interested in writing a story--some said yes. I appropached two publishers about the idea. One said yes. . OnlineHost: Leylex1 has left the room. JsmnStrm: ... JsmnStrm: (sorry, thought my screen froze) HOST WPLC Dee R: nope, it didn't HOST WPLC Lyric: Guys, Please be patient, poor Don is having AOL problems HOST WPLC Lyric: he's trying as best he can OnlineHost: GwynnaL has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: We're sorry this is slow, but it will be worth while TrounceM13: Just an excuse, I tell you. Who has ever had an AOL problem? JsmnStrm: LOLOL HOST WPLC Dee R: lol BrownDvs: lol Genjii555: LOL G1ft0fgabn0t: tee hee COUNTRYFAN07: uh me HOST WPLC Lyric: While we're waiting for Don, how many here have written YA? OnlineHost: Harterone has entered the room. G1ft0fgabn0t: I have HOST WPLC Lyric: shout out HOST WPLC Lyric: me AttyBBlack: me G1ft0fgabn0t: ME Fjm3eyes: not me The13thDr: considering it Genjii555: I've made attempts at it Rainlyte: Lyric, I've not written young adult but I am writting curriculum. Trina Pink: I have a little (short story only). PMCx85: What exactly is YA? BrownDvs: "Not I," said Adam <-------------all hail Dr. Suess. HOST WPLC Dee R: I have...short story and book G1ft0fgabn0t: <~Daugher is with me tonight and SHE writes YA too ;) Fjm3eyes: at least, I don't think so :) HOST WPLC Lyric: so that's great and applicable here Rainlyte BrownDvs: <-------is honored to be in same room with Gabby and daughter. HOST WPLC Lyric: Okay, to help out don, I'm going to copy and paste his lecture here Kathi Smith 116: no YA but i write short stories HOST WPLC Lyric: please note that this is from Don not me Genjii555: Oooo.. Donna I could see you writing stuff like that... oh, darn it, what's her name HOST WPLC Dee R: Lyric to the rescued HOST WPLC Lyric: I will post in Black as Don BrownDvs: I've already fallen in love with Donna's story. HOST WPLC Dee R: lol Tiff HOST WPLC Lyric: Everything else Ive edited has been directed at teenagers: a book of one-act plays, two volumes of autobiographies of Genjii555: That author with all the scary YA stories HOST WPLC Lyric: authors who write for teenagers, and a dozen anthologies of short stories for teenagers. For each of those anthologies, I HOST WPLC Dee R: okay...back to protocol HOST WPLC Sushi: Our guest Country hopes to write YA The13thDr: Stine HOST WPLC Lyric: have been responsible for contacting the authors, editing their work, and putting the materials together, including my writing The13thDr: R.L. ?? Stine HOST WPLC Lyric: brief introductions to each of the stories, the introductions to the books themselves, and the biographical sketches of the contributing authors. GalloDon: YA stands for young adult. No group has yet agreed on what ages YA is. But most agree that it equals teenagers. HOST WPLC Lyric: Its been my working with numerous authorsthe most highly respected and most honored people in the fieldover more OnlineHost: AnemoneStar has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: than 20 years that has given me the insights into whatever knowledge I possess about the writing and publishing process. Among those authors are Richard Peck, Jack Gantos, Walter HOST WPLC Lyric: Dean Myers, M.E. Ker, Robert Lipsyte, Jane Yolen, Joan Aiken, Chris Crutcher, Jerry Spinelli, Ron Koertge, Joan Bauer, and Virginia Euwer Wolff. During the past two and a HOST WPLC Lyric: half years I also have been conducting extensive interviews with authors, such as those above, who write for teens, for a website HOST WPLC Lyric: called Authors4Teens.com. (Ive completed 42 interviews to date and am currently in the middle of three others.) Among HOST WPLC Lyric: the many (as many as 70) questions I ask each author are ones about their writing processes and publishing experiences. So in HOST WPLC Lyric: addition to having the reputation of being the godfather of the young adult short story and having edited more anthologies HOST WPLC Lyric: for teenagers than anyone else ever has, I can provide you with insights about writing fiction that I have learned from the best HOST WPLC Lyric: in the business. And I can, of course, talk about my own processes and experiences writing nonfiction. HOST WPLC Lyric: So thats my background. I hope it makes me sound like I know what Im going to talk about instead of sending you scurrying to another chat group. HOST WPLC Lyric: Are there any questions or comments about my background before I start explaining how my interest in short stories developed? ga HOST WPLC Dee R: Nope, it does sound good... BrownDvs: Sounds good to me. HOST WPLC Lyric: Don, one of our absent members, Pheeren, wants to know when YA fiction started, and when the YA short started? OnlineHost: BarkovicKissfrk6 has entered the room. OnlineHost: Pine106887 has entered the room. OnlineHost: Trevor said has entered the room. G1ft0fgabn0t: ? COUNTRYFAN07: ? GalloDon: Good question. Contemporary YA books started in 1967. HOST WPLC Lyric: Which is considered the first? GalloDon: Then S.E. Hinton published THE OUTSIDERS and there were a couple of others. BrownDvs: ? GalloDon: The Contender by Lipsyte. Mr and M HOST WPLC Dee R: ? HOST WPLC Lyric: Okay, let's let our last question from Balksander go ahead HOST WPLC Lyric: and then if you would make those comments, don? HOST WPLC Lyric: Balk ga Fjm3eyes: I would, Don BALSKANDER: My earlier question was answered so I wondered if there is a market for stories with gay teens? OnlineHost: Deluge7 has left the room. OnlineHost: Harterone has left the room. OnlineHost: Witnes4JC has left the room. OnlineHost: Witnes4JC has entered the room. OnlineHost: DRB Tabor has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: we will hold all questions until Don is done with his comments on short stories, okay gang? GalloDon: Gay teens--yes. Read the collection COMING OUT FROM THE SILENCE, ed. by Marion Dane Bauer and LOVE AND SEX ed. by Michael Cart. GalloDon: Okay--teen stories. OnlineHost: Thunder21Storm has entered the room. GalloDon: What makes a good short story for teenagers? Basically the same things that make a good novel or play, with the added requirement of brevity, so everything has to be compacted. GalloDon: You cant spend a whole chapter developing character; you need to do that in a few paragraphs. OnlineHost: MsMelancholy has entered the room. OnlineHost: MsMelancholy has left the room. OnlineHost: MsMelancholy has entered the room. GalloDon: You cant ease into the conflict; you need to get to it immediatelythe opening line isnt too soon. In fact, I give more attention to the beginnings of stories than to any other part. GalloDon: I like to see some action in the opening paragraph, or at least an attention-getting first sentence. Grab the reader by the collar, if not the neck, immediately. OnlineHost: BALSKANDER has left the room. GalloDon: Like Richard Peck does in Shadows (from Visions): GalloDon: From the very beginning I knew the place was haunted. I wasnt frightened. Far from it. Ghosts were the company I came to count on. GalloDon: You know immediately what this story is going to be about, and you already know something important about the narrator. GalloDon: [Incidentally, all of the examples Ill give here will be from one of my anthologies.] OnlineHost: BALSKANDER has entered the room. GalloDon: Or this one from Midnight Snack by Diane Duane (in Sixteen): Dad came down with the flu that week, so I had to go down to the subway and feed the unicorns. GalloDon: Unicorns in the New York subway? And this kid feeds them? Gotta read that one. GalloDon: Or this, my favorite opening line, by Will Weaver, from The Photograph (in No Easy Answers): Naked? GalloDon: Just a one word paragraph. (Something your English teachers told you never to useright?) That one word gets a lot more attention than some lengthy setup. It makes it impossible not to want to read further. GalloDon: And then you find out the naked person was the girls phys.ed teacher who was seen skinny dipping in a nearby lake, and the high school football players discussing it GalloDon: feel they must have a look for themselves. And try to photograph her. So youve GOT to find out where that leads. GalloDon: In one way, short stories are easier to write than novels because with a short story you have to write only a few pages--maybe 12 to 20 manuscript pages--compared with 200 or more pages for a novel. OnlineHost: MsMelancholy has left the room. GalloDon: If the writing goes well, you could complete a story in a week, maybe less, instead of the months and months you might spend constructing a novel. Thunder21Storm: ? GalloDon: But, as I said, for some people short stories are harder to write than novels because everything has to be done in a shorter space. GalloDon: CHARACTERS & CONFLICTS Its probably a toss-up whether the characters or the conflicts are more important in good stories. GalloDon: When you are thinking about what to write, you can begin to formulate your story either by creating an interesting character or by conceiving a thought-provoking conflict. GalloDon: But a good story needs both interesting characters and a strong conflict. GalloDon: Whether you are writing a novel or a short story for teens, you MUST have an interesting main character. And in most works for young adults, that main character is a teenager. GalloDon: Ive read some stories directed at teenagers where the main character is an adult or a younger child--theres nothing wrong with either of those approaches, if the resulting story is good. OnlineHost: SOKRPLYR40 has entered the room. GalloDon: But I figure that if I expect these stories to attract teenagers, and most teenagers want to read about characters who are like themselves, then the main focus of these stories GalloDon: ought to be teenagers and their problems, not little kids or adults and their problems. The choice is yours: you have to balance what you want to say with who you expect to read it. GalloDon: Also, most stories and novels for young adults are written in the first person, and that narrator is almost always a teenager. OnlineHost: Harterone has entered the room. GalloDon: First person stories seem to create a greater intimacy between the story and the reader, because the narrator seems to be speaking directly to the reader as a friend. GalloDon: Your character should be placed in situations that almost every teenager is likely to face. Or at least be able to consider what he or she would do if placed in that situation. OnlineHost: The13thDr has left the room. OnlineHost: Genjii555 has left the room. GalloDon: One such character is Seth in Todd Strassers very popular story On the Bridge (in Visions). Seth is an ordinary, pretty good kid who admires the tough guy in his school, Adam. OnlineHost: TrounceM13 has left the room. GalloDon: . Except that emulating Adam leads Seth into trouble that he didnt expect. GalloDon: Perfect for middle school kids, especially for boys who want to act macho but who follow a leader who deserves no respect. GalloDon: This doesnt mean that all your characters have to be contemporary American kids, especially white female, suburban, middle school kids (who are the ones who buy the most books). GalloDon: But if your main character is someone out of the ordinary, like the Laotian teenage refugee Saeng, in The Winter Hibiscus by Minfong Ho (in Join In), GalloDon: it is helpful if that character has something in common with ordinary teenage readers. GalloDon: In Saengs case, she is about to take the test for her drivers license, something almost every 16 or 17 year old in America does, GalloDon: and shes so worried about failing that she does just that. Easy for any teenager to identify with. HOST WPLC Lyric: Don, let us know when you're ready for questions again. GalloDon: The conflict or the main issue in your story should not only be appealing, but its even better if it makes readers think. GalloDon: That story I mentioned earlier, about the skinny-dipping teacher, is interesting just in the situation thats created initially. GalloDon: The teacher does skinny-dip and one guy does get a photographs of her . . . and a lot more. How they obtain those photographs makes for entertaining reading. GalloDon: But what the boys do with those photographs makes the story even more interesting, and thats not just entertaining, but it also provides readers with the opportunity to think about making sensible OnlineHost: Witnes4JC has left the room. GalloDon: choices and being responsible for the consequences of ones actions. However, you must be careful to let the story imply the lesson; you should never preach or moralize. Teens can think for themselves. GalloDon: I'll take Qs now. Then I can talk about dialogue, etc. if you want. HOST WPLC Lyric: Donna ga HOST WPLC Dee R: Are there agents who specialize in YA fiction? And where can we find out about them OnlineHost: SHoffer77 has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Thunder be ready to post and then we'll go on to dialog Thunder21Storm: Is it a good idea to write alot of little short stories to make a series? Or are short stories not good at being added no to? OnlineHost: Zplume has entered the room. GalloDon: Yes--lots of them. Where top find them--I'm not sure off the top of my head. The SCBWI has a lits, I know. Zplume: Hi room HOST WPLC Lyric: zplume we're in protocol Thunder21Storm: shhh GalloDon: That's the Soc. of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators, but you need to be a member to get the list. Thunder21Storm: ok thanks Zplume: protocol? HOST WPLC Lyric: thunder can you clarify your question please? HOST WPLC Dee R: thank you HOST WPLC Lyric: zplume Sushi will greet you please wait OnlineHost: Mastbrowser has entered the room. GalloDon: Thunder, pls clarify. OnlineHost: Harterone has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Well, I don't know what happened to Thunder, Don will you please continue with dialogue then? GalloDon: Sure. GalloDon: You can tell your story in a variety of ways, but just remember: Kids hate lengthy descriptions and love lively dialogue. Heres a bit of dialog from the beginning of Ron Koertges Duet (from No Easy Answers): OnlineHost: SteeIBtrfl has left the room. OnlineHost: JES No Time has left the room. GalloDon: Betsy, youve got to sleep with me. Im going crazy. There was this long silence at the other end of the line. Then she said, Okay. GalloDon: I couldnt believe my ears. You mean it? Right now. This instant. Drop everything and get over here. GalloDon: I looked out my bedroom door, as if I could see down the hall, down the stairs to the dining room. But Moms got dinner on the table. GalloDon: Well, then I guess youve missed your chance, havent you? Cant you wait until tonight? OnlineHost: GGsHEALINGHANDS has entered the room. GalloDon: And play second fiddle to a pork chop? No way. OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Dee R has left the room. OnlineHost: Zplume has left the room. OnlineHost: SPultz has left the room. OnlineHost: GGsHEALINGHANDS has left the room. GalloDon: Theres no way anyone can teach you to write such clever dialogue, but thats the kind of example you have to aim to emulate. There's no way I can teach you how to write dialog like that, but it's a good example . . . GalloDon: to try to emulate. HOST WPLC Lyric: Gee, I can't come up with good lines like that at MY age! So is that really what teens sound like? GalloDon: And one more very important thing: OnlineHost: AnemoneStar has left the room. GalloDon: CATCHY TITLE No one should ever have to say that a good story or a good novel (or a good anything) should start with an attractive, attention-getting title. SOKRPLYR40: lyric.. how old are you? OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Dee R has entered the room. GalloDon: But Ive read some good stories that have awfully dull titles. GalloDon: Although the title might not be the first thing you write when youre starting a new story (for some people, in fact, its the last thing they struggle with), its the first thing any BrownDvs: Don't ask SOKRPLY, she's just putting us on anyway. She's a young lady, not old attall. GalloDon: readerespecially any editorsees. Its the first impression you make with your story. GalloDon: If a reader is leafing through a magazine or a collection of stories, one title is going to catch that readers attention more than the others. You want that title to be yours. SOKRPLYR40: k OnlineHost: Jaralot7 has entered the room. GalloDon: Consider the following pairs of titles (they are all from real stories). Which one of each pair would you read first? Thunder21Storm: shhhh GalloDon: The Child or The Boy with Yellow Eyes OnlineHost: Braguine has left the room. GalloDon: Shotgun Cheathams Last Night Above Ground? or Dancer GalloDon: The All-American Slurp or Dawn OnlineHost: Jaralot7 has left the room. GalloDon: Hamish Mactavish Is Eating a Bus or The Wedding Cake in the Middle of the Road GalloDon: Except in the last case where both sound weirdly interesting, the decision is easy. This is not to suggest that the stories that follow the less interesting titles are not good stories. GalloDon: But why risk someones skipping over your otherwise very good story because your title wasnt attractive? Make the effort. (But dont be too cutsey.) HOST WPLC Sushi: Thunder had a computer glitch and hopes to try his Q again GalloDon: Enough for now. Q's? Thunder21Storm: ok HOST WPLC Lyric: Thunder ga HOST WPLC Dee R: Don, you have given us valuable information GalloDon: Thanks. Thunder21Storm: When I write my stories do they have to be long to write sequils HOST WPLC Lyric: Thunder do mean novels or short stories? Thunder21Storm: short stories OnlineHost: JsmnStrm has left the room. GalloDon: Lyric, your q about do teens really talk like that? Maybe. Maybe no. But it read well--no? HOST WPLC Lyric: absolutely! OnlineHost: Silenticity has entered the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Well, it's getting late GalloDon: I don't know how to ans. your q, Thunder. Thunder21Storm: so if they are to short I should not write sequils? SOKRPLYR40: lyric.. if you want to learn more about how teens talk.. study some lyrics of bands that teens are into.. i can tell you.. at age 17.. so many of our thoughts come from the music we listen to HOST WPLC Lyric: Thunder the best advice I ever received was just to WRITE, the length will come in time GalloDon: A sequel comes only when the first book demands to have a followup. Thunder21Storm: ok HOST WPLC Lyric: Anyway, thank you DON GALLO for coming tonight Thunder21Storm: lol G1ft0fgabn0t: <><><>Clapping<><><> BrownDvs: ? G1ft0fgabn0t: Thank you for a wonderful session HOST WPLC Lyric: Is there anything new or recent you'd like us to know about and run to our bookstores and purchase, Don? G1ft0fgabn0t: :) GalloDon: You are welcome. I've been glads to be here. Good luck to all of you! Thunder21Storm: *claping* BALSKANDER: great chat thanks HOST WPLC Dee R: Excellent presentation. One of the best we have had...thank you BrownDvs: Yes, thanks for coming Don Gallo SOKRPLYR40: lyric..did you read what i just typed to you? OnlineHost: Silenticity has left the room. AttyBBlack: Thank you so much. That was fantastic! HOST WPLC Lyric: ::::: APPLAUSE::::::::::: HOST WPLC Sushi: Thanks Prof Gallo :-D GalloDon: Well, look for DESTINATION UNEXPECTED, my latest in hardcover, and ON THE FRINGE, in paper. Thanks. Thunder21Storm: :) Dhewco: thx gollo HOST WPLC Lyric: yes, good advice Sop OnlineHost: JJ Joyful has entered the room. SOKRPLYR40: yeah np HOST WPLC Lyric: On the Fringe is wonderful guys HOST WPLC Dee R: yes...about the music, so true JJ Joyful: Good Evenin, All! ;-) Sunan21: Thanks Mr. Gallo, good night all Thunder21Storm: can we all chat about writeing now? HOST WPLC Lyric: Can I ask how many teens are in the room right now? Thunder21Storm: good night HOST WPLC Dee R: I think we are open up to the public now. HOST WPLC Lyric: or who is here under the age of twenty? Thunder21Storm: me SOKRPLYR40: me OnlineHost: Aminminalle2 has entered the room. JJ Joyful: HOST WPLC Lyric: anyone else? G1ft0fgabn0t: <~got one with me tonight ;) HOST WPLC Dee R: that's 2 AttyBBlack: 3 HOST WPLC Dee R: now 3 HOST WPLC Lyric: well, welcome and good luck with your writing to the younger writers here! Thunder21Storm: 15 almost 16 SOKRPLYR40: thanks JJ Joyful: hey, can't teens WRITE or chat about writing too? ;-) Thunder21Storm: thanks HOST WPLC Dee R: Yes, you guys are the future writers G1ft0fgabn0t: thank you HOST WPLC Lyric: I know that those of us who write YA are grateful to Mr. Gallo for coming HOST WPLC Lyric: A great deal of wonderful advice tonight AttyBBlack: This was a wonderful session HOST WPLC Dee R: Don, I will be reading the log over more than once of tonight's session AttyBBlack: Thanks for arranging it OnlineHost: JJ Joyful has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Okay, protocol is over, open chat! AttyBBlack: What is his website again? HOST WPLC Lyric: Don, what is your website? Thunder21Storm: I have allready started my first book, don't worry though it's not short stories! HOST WPLC Dee R: the advice you gave pertains not only to YA, but other styles of writing HOST WPLC Dee R: Good for you, Thunder! GalloDon: Authors4Teens.com. I need to go to bed--it's 11:20 back here in Cleveland, and I'm a morning person. 'Nite. HOST WPLC Dee R: Maybe some day, we'll be reading it Thunder21Storm: thanks AttyBBlack: Thanks again HOST WPLC Dee R: Night! And thanks again Thunder21Storm: I hope so G1ft0fgabn0t: G'nite Don. Thanks very much. :) SOKRPLYR40: thunder HOST WPLC Lyric: Good night Don and thank you! SOKRPLYR40: what do you write about? Thunder21Storm: it will be a By J.S. Beckman OnlineHost: Sunan21 has left the room. Kathi Smith 116: thank you, don, good session Thunder21Storm: rember that name OnlineHost: AnemoneStar has entered the room. HOST WPLC Sushi: I just emailed 5 interested visitors HOST WPLC Dee R: I like that...it has a ring to it Thunder21Storm: will you? OnlineHost: Ghetto girl eb has entered the room. HOST WPLC Sushi: anyone I missed may request info from me :-) Thunder21Storm: thanks OnlineHost: GalloDon has left the room. SOKRPLYR40: thunder..what do you write about? HOST WPLC Dee R: well, I'm off now. Lyric, thank you for getting us this excellent speaker tonight HOST WPLC Dee R: Let's give her a round of applause. Thunder21Storm: I write about..... G1ft0fgabn0t: Yes Sry, thanks for arranging a fantastic evening! HOST WPLC Lyric: I'm glad you all enjoyed it HOST WPLC Lyric: makes it worth doing Thunder21Storm: well midevil type HOST WPLC Lyric: :-) G1ft0fgabn0t: <><><><>applause<><><><> BALSKANDER: clap clap clap Thunder21Storm: myths AnemoneStar: thank you. Kathi Smith 116: thank you, sry OnlineHost: Kathi Smith 116 has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: thanks everyone AttyBBlack: great job Sry OnlineHost: Mastbrowser has left the room. AttyBBlack: Time for bed HOST WPLC Sushi: Tanks verra much, Lyric! :-) OnlineHost: Ghetto girl eb has left the room. HOST WPLC Dee R: night all... OnlineHost: AttyBBlack has left the room. OnlineHost: AnemoneStar has left the room. HOST WPLC Lyric: Well, goodnight everyone HOST WPLC Lyric: thanks to all who logged when I couldn't HOST WPLC Lyric: like Gabby Fjm3eyes: night Dee G1ft0fgabn0t: Niters :) HOST WPLC Lyric: and greeted like Paul and Jas HOST WPLC Lyric: anyone I leave out? HOST WPLC Lyric: Gabby please send the log to Paul, k? OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Dee R has left the room. Fjm3eyes: night G1 HOST WPLC Lyric: We had a grand total of 33 people in here tonight G1ft0fgabn0t: You got it G1ft0fgabn0t: niters Frank G1ft0fgabn0t: An amazing group G1ft0fgabn0t: huge turnout for a wonderful speaker Fjm3eyes: bye Lyric HOST WPLC Lyric: how did some of you new people find out about the event tonight? HOST WPLC Lyric: sokrplyr HOST WPLC Lyric: thunder? OnlineHost: Aminminalle2 has left the room. SOKRPLYR40: yeah? SOKRPLYR40: umm SOKRPLYR40: i searched the chatrooms SOKRPLYR40: this one came up HOST WPLC Lyric: so you guys stopped by for a chat about YA fiction by chance? HOST WPLC Lyric: that's lucky!! G1ft0fgabn0t: sure is :) SOKRPLYR40: i was looking for a chatroom on poetry.. but i said this would do.. HOST WPLC Lyric: well, good chatting guys HOST WPLC Lyric: I'm off to bed SOKRPLYR40: later HOST WPLC Lyric: night all! G1ft0fgabn0t: <~logging off Thunder21Storm: bye BALSKANDER: night everyone OnlineHost: BALSKANDER has left the room. OnlineHost: HOST WPLC Lyric has left the room.
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