The Visitors by Katy Newton Naas
Publication Date: September 16th 2014
Genre: Young Adult Science Fiction Romance
~Summary~
Sometimes soul mates find each other in unlikely places. But is love worth it if it risks your life?
Seventeen-year-old Noah is startled when he awakes one day to find that dangerous, irrational, self-serving, and destructive visitors called “humans” are coming to visit his beautiful, perfect society. All citizens are ordered to have limited contact and share minimal information with these visitors.
Sixteen-year-old Jady is thrilled to accompany her father and his crew on a trip to a recently-discovered planet, Verdant. The United States’ crew is hopeful that they can learn from this ad-vanced yet similar species.
Despite their greatest efforts to fight it, it doesn’t take long for Jady and Noah to fall in love and begin a secret affair. But when their relationship is revealed, danger is created for everyone in-volved...
Seventeen-year-old Noah is startled when he awakes one day to find that dangerous, irrational, self-serving, and destructive visitors called “humans” are coming to visit his beautiful, perfect society. All citizens are ordered to have limited contact and share minimal information with these visitors.
Sixteen-year-old Jady is thrilled to accompany her father and his crew on a trip to a recently-discovered planet, Verdant. The United States’ crew is hopeful that they can learn from this ad-vanced yet similar species.
Despite their greatest efforts to fight it, it doesn’t take long for Jady and Noah to fall in love and begin a secret affair. But when their relationship is revealed, danger is created for everyone in-volved...
~About The Author~
Katy Newton Naas graduated from Southern Illinois University-Carbondale with a bachelor’s degree in English Education and a master’s degree in Reading and Language Studies. She currently teaches middle school reading and high school English in southern Illinois, as well as children’s church. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with her family, including her husband, her young son, Aven, and her four-legged sons, Shakespeare and Poe.
From a young age, Katy was always an avid reader and writer with a big imagination. Though she continues to grow older, her true literature love is and has always been young adult fiction. She loves creating both futuristic and realistic stories about teenagers, and feels so fortunate to get to work with them every day as a teacher
~Interview~
1) What are you
working on?
Until very recently, I
have been working diligently on two writing projects! I just finished a novel
titled Healing Rain, and I am also in
the middle of the sequel to my debut novel, The
Visitors. Though they are both young adult fiction novels, they are very
different. Healing Rain is a
realistic contemporary piece about a teen girl starting over in a new town
after a devastating event changed her family and shook her Christian faith. She
is trying to keep her dark past a secret while juggling new friends (and
enemies), new love interest(s), therapy, and fitting in at her new high school.
I actually just received a contract on this story, which I am VERY excited
about, so look for it in the near future! The sequel to the The Visitors (which debuted in
September) is a science fiction piece with romance and action mixed in, but I
can’t give too many details just yet – I wouldn’t want to spoil the end of The Visitors! I’m hoping to have it
finished by the end of this month.
2) How does
your work differ from others in your genre?
I will focus on The Visitors, as this is my debut novel
and it’s currently on the market. I think it will be easier to answer this
question if you already know a little bit about the story, so here is a little
blurb about the novel:
Seventeen-year-old
Noah awakes one day to find that dangerous, irrational, self-serving, and
destructive visitors called “humans” are coming to visit his beautiful, perfect
planet. All citizens are ordered to have limited contact and share little
information with these visitors.
Sixteen-year-old
Jady is thrilled to accompany her father and his crew on a trip to a recently-discovered
planet, Verdant. The United States’ crew is hopeful that they can learn from
this advanced yet similar species.
Despite
their greatest efforts to fight it, it doesn’t take long for Jady and Noah to
fall in love and begin a secret affair. But when their relationship is
revealed, danger is created for everyone involved...
Some of the concepts in
the novel – teen romance, forbidden love, and futuristic space travel – are
universal, which people can relate to. The storyline, however, has several
unique features: I have created my own planet, with a dystopian society of
people who look like humans but are very, very different in the way they think
and live. My main characters, Noah and Jady, are young and get swept away in
love, but they’re both incredibly intelligent, brave, and strong in their own
ways. I hope that my readers will fall in love with them the way I have.
3) Why do you
write what you write?
I have been a writer my
whole life. It’s a passion. These ideas enter my head – sometimes through
dreams, sometimes in conversation with friends or at work when I’m teaching –
and they just won’t leave me alone until I write and release them. Young adult
literature is and has always been what I love. I think my love for working with
young people compels me to write for them as well.
4) How does
your writing process work?
I wouldn’t say I have
one magical formula for writing a novel. Writing BC – Before Child – was much
easier! I get an idea, and then create a rough outline for a story in my head.
I develop my main characters, picturing them as I imagine what their
personalities will become. Then, I just start writing. Some days I write more
than others, but I would guess that I average about ten pages a day, on good
days. Of course, with a full-time job and a family, there are many days that I
don’t reach that goal! I have to do most of my writing when my little man is
asleep. You will often find us in my recliner – him sprawled across my lap
asleep, me leaning over him and typing away on my computer. Once I complete a
novel, I usually step away from it for a few weeks. I then go back and read it
again, editing for any mistakes and changing any scenes that feel weak.
Sometimes this means cutting out entire chapters and rewriting them, so the
editing process can take a few weeks as well.
Thanks for stopping by!
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