Author-to-Author: A YA fiction author teaches your 'tween (9-12 year old) how to write a book!

Author Beth Fehlbaum (Online)

Categories: Creative  |  Ages: 9 - 12 Years  |  Format: Online Live

About
This is a 60-minute weekly class that consists of a digital notebook provided to each participant that is added to week-by-week. You'll share your writing assignment with me by a given deadline and receive meaningful feedback prior to the subsequent class. I promise: my feedback is empathetic, compassionate and helpful: effusive with what’s working, and also clearly indicative of how you can improve so that desired growth is achieved. Class consists of a few minutes an introduction that encompasses a review of where we’ve been, overview of where we’re going, and two Quick Writes per lesson that allow application of the skill being introduced and/or reinforced. You will learn to craft realistic characters, discover the motive behind the characters’ “I want(s),” and develop a plot fueled by delicious conflict!
Makeup policy:
No makeup classes.
Refund policy:
Refund up to 24 hours before first session of 18-week class.
Additional details:
Class policies:
$10.00/week. Class is 18 sessions long: total of $180 for the entire class.

Upcoming Schedule for Author-to-Author: A YA fiction author teaches your 'tween (9-12 year old) how to write a book!

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About
Beth Fehlbaum is the author of the YA novels Find the Moon, Big Fat Disaster, The Patience Trilogy (Courage in Patience, Hope in Patience, and Truth in Patience), and co-author of the creative non-fiction book Trauma Recovery: Sessions with Dr. Matt (Ayni Books).

She is a high school English-Language Arts teacher, where she frequently finds inspiration for her stories. Beth has a B.A. in English, Minor in Secondary Education, and an M.Ed. in Reading. She’s also a freelance editor, specializing in doing “deep dives” into her clients’ manuscripts.

Beth is in-demand as an author-panelist, having presented/appeared at the Texas Library Association Annual Conference, the American Library Association’s annual conference, YALSA, N.C.T.E./ALAN, and numerous YA book festivals. She’s a member of The Author’s Guild, SCBWI, the Editorial Freelancers’ Association, and the Texas Federation of Teachers.

She loves doing school visits and meeting teens, teachers, and librarians!

Beth lives in the woods of East Texas in a house that she and her family built over one very hot humid summer, a task she never wishes to repeat again. Her home is lined by pine trees, and the woods are inhabited by raccoons who consider Beth their cat-food-providing goddess. There is no place she would rather be.

10 Random Things About Beth, in her own words:

I’m an animal lover, and I always name the animals in my books after those in my family, like the dogs in Find the Moon—Jake, Kevin, and Chase—as well as the Nigerian dwarf goats, Onslow and Daisy.
I am a fierce advocate for children and abuse victims.
My daughter got me started on watching “90 Day Fiancé,” and I. Can’t. Stop.
I met my husband when we were 14 and 15, and we’ve been together ever since.
I mostly listen to true crime podcasts when I’m driving or cleaning the house, and I watch so much “Snapped” that my husband is convinced that I’m planning something nefarious.
I began writing The Patience Trilogy when I was in therapy to recover from Childhood Sexual Abuse. Struggling with shame at the time, I found grace and mercy for myself by writing about someone else having endured much the same trauma as I did. Writing Courage in Patience helped me find my voice as an author!
I drew on a lot of my own experiences with Binge Eating Disorder to write Colby’s story in Big Fat Disaster.

Find the Moon is the most challenging book I’ve ever written. I love Kylie and her family—especially her potty-mouthed grandmother and star-gazing grandfather!
I don’t believe that all novels need a Happily-Ever-After ending, but they must have a HOPEFUL ending.
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