Monday, February 27, 2012

Nice Article/Interview in The Patch

http://bedford.patch.com/articles/local-pages-a-killer-thriller-magical-non-fiction






Todd Strasser's 'Kill You Last'

For the past 35 years Larchmont resident Todd Strasser has made an art form of getting into the mind-set of the teens for whom he writes. As a best-selling author, with 140 published novels to his credit, Strasser has done it again; his teen thriller, Kill You Last, has been nominated for the prestigious 2012 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Young Adult literature.

Kill You Last’s heroine, Shelby Sloan, is a carefree, over-privileged teen living in the affluent town of Soundview, NY. Then her father’s sudden alleged involvement in the disappearance of teenage girls leaves her family in crisis. Shelby puts her pampered persona aside and dives into the case with her own brand of high-tech teenage sleuthing.

Strasser has created a deliciously paranoid world of suspense, unpredictable plot twists and teen angst. He will learn if his novel wins the Edgar Award on April 26, at the Edgar Awards Banquet in New York City. 

Here, Todd Strasser gives us the inside scoop on his novel:

Patch: Receiving a Poe nomination is quite a distinction. Did you know that Kill You Last was special while you were writing it?

Todd Strasser: I honestly didn’t know it was going to be any different than any of my other books. I’m not sure you ever know. You do the best you can; sometimes the results are below your hopes and sometimes they exceed your hopes.

Patch: Does Shelby rank as one of your favorite characters?

TS: My favorite character is usually whoever I am inhabiting at the current moment.

Patch: Speaking of inhabiting characters, how were you able to perfectly personify a texting-savvy, angst-ridden, teenage girl?

TS: I had an 18-year-old daughter and a son (now 28 and 24). When I was working on the first draft of this thrillogy I was talking to one of my kids about the e-mail exchange in the book. My kids said, “Dad, kids don’t e-mail, they text. E-mailing is so uncool!” A big part of it is staying in touch with my kids.

Patch: Kill You Last is set in Soundview, NY. Is this a real town?

TS: Soundview is the fictional town that I’ve been writing about for many years that is based on the Larchmont area.

Patch: What’s next for you?

TS: I’m actually working on my first fictionalized memoir—a coming-of-age story about growing up in the early 1960s during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I was 12 when the crisis happened, and my father decided to build a bomb shelter. This caused a lot of interesting concerns for me; I was always worried about what would happen if our neighbors wanted to get in our bomb shelter, or how would I get home to the shelter in time if I was at school?

Monday, February 13, 2012

RAVES ABOUT A CLASS SKYPE


Dear Todd,

Thank you so much for taking time out of your day to speak with our 8th grade students.  I cannot tell you how much they enjoyed themselves.  They were engaged and interested in the things you had to say (they found your story about reading in 4th grade particularly inspiring).

For the students to speak with an author who knows the ins-and-outs of writing, both as something pleasurable and as work, really gives them insight.  One of my students had to walk through the library to get lunch immediately following your Skype with us, and she stopped to give the librarian the list of book titles she took down when you shared them with us, exclaiming to the librarian, "We really need to get these.  They sound good, and we got to speak with the author.  I want to read them all!"  What a gift, inspiring thirteen- and fourteen-year-olds to want to read more for fun!

Our computer teacher who stopped by to set up the Skype for me remained for your entire discussion because she thought it was so wonderful.  And I have to say, I completely agree.

I cannot thank you enough for allowing the students a unique opportunity to ask questions, and to hear candid answers, not to mention my gratitude for your ability to garner enthusiasm for the writing process.

Sincerely, Emily Justesen


NOTE FROM TODD:  I've been doing these Skypes for no fee, and intend to continue. They usually last about 1/2 an hour.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

VERY NICE SLJ REVIEW FOR KILL YOU LAST


"High school senior Shelby Sloan’s father is the chief suspect and only link in an investigation of three missing girls who booked him and his staff to shoot their modeling portfolios…. Convinced that he is not a killer… Shelby begins her own investigation. The deeper she digs, the darker the secrets become, revealing the sketchy pasts of her father and his staff. All of the titles in this cyberthriller trilogy stand alone, and readers who pick up one are likely to enjoy the others. However, Strasser steps up his pacing and story line for Shelby's story. The large list of suspects and number of secrets revealed will keep readers engaged in the rapidly unfolding plot. "

(Abbreviated version of review) 

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Kill You Last nominated for the 2012 Edgar!!!!!

Kill You Last nominated for the 2012 Edgar (as in Poe) Award by the Mystery Writers of America

Competing against books by Harlen Coben and Maureen Johnson

http://www.theedgars.com/nominees.html#YA


Kill You Last .... Very Good Book List Review


Advanced Review – Uncorrected Proof
Issue: February 1, 2012
Kill You Last.
Strasser, Todd (Author)


After three teenage girls go missing, the police and the media camp outside Shelby’s home, where her fashion-photographer dad had previously taken photos of the girls as part of his modeling business.

Everyone knows Dad is “borderline creepy” with young girls. Is his agency a scam? Is he the serial killer?

 As in the best mysteries, the final revelation is both a total surprise and yet no surprise at all; how could Shelby––and the reader––have missed the prime suspect?

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Nice WISH YOU WERE DEAD Review


http://princessoflit.blogspot.com/2011/12/wish-you-were-dead-by-todd-strasser.html

My Review: I loved this book! Which is funny, because I hated the first Todd Strasser book I read, Famous...but whatever. It was exciting and fun to read, and I really liked the main character, Madison. She was sweet and simple---not too complicated and annoying. The plot was really intriguing and it even started to creep me out as it went on, which is good, because "creepy" books RARELY creep me out. It was a quick, fast read, and cut straight to the point. The short POVs from the killer were actually pretty scary! I'll admit, the end kind of let me down a LITTLE, because it wasn't as freaky as I thought it'd be...but it was freaky enough, for a teen thriller, and so I'm good.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Garrison School Visit 11/15/11


 Novelist Todd Strasser led energetic, engaging writing workshops with all of our Middle School English Language Arts classes today.  His presentations today were described as "beyond fabulous!"