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Imaginary Girls Blog Tour: Secret #3



Please welcome Nova Ren Suma to GreenBeanTeenQueen! Nova is visiting blogs and spilling secrets about her new book, Imaginary Girls and I've got secret #3! Check out Nova's Twitter for all her tour stops! Be sure to enter for your chance to win a signed copy of the book!!



I’m here spilling secrets about my book Imaginary Girls. As the cover says, “Secrets never stay below the surface.” I guess not, because here’s another one bubbling up now…

Secret #3: I don’t always know my characters’ full names. And sometimes I steal names from questionable places.



I know everything about Ruby and Chloe, the two sisters in Imaginary Girls. I created them, I built them up from nothing, and I know what they’d say, what they’d think, and what they want for breakfast. But there’s one thing about them I’ll admit to you I don’t know, something I never decided. Their last names.

All I know is that Ruby and Chloe have different fathers—they’d slap you if you called them half-sisters, so don’t do it; they’re sisters, wholly and completely—but because of who their fathers are, they don’t share the same last name. For a long time, I kept cycling through last names for them, giving one to Chloe, another to Ruby, taking both back and changing them up, until finally I realized that their full names didn’t need to be in this story for them to be full characters. I guess their true last names are the one secret they kept from me, even after all the time we spent together.

Now I admitted that, I have one more secret to reveal about my characters’ names in Imaginary Girls. Sometimes I’ll borrow a name from somewhere I shouldn’t, with the intention of changing it later. That’s what happened with London. She got her name because while I was writing a draft of this novel I was also nursing a serious reality-TV addiction. America’s Next Top Model was on… And one of the girls on that particular season was named London… And you guessed it. I liked the way it sounded for my London, so I used the name as a place holder. Unfortunately, when the time came to change it, I couldn’t do it. London Hayes was London Hayes, and she refused to be called anything else. I guess this is one of the dangers of using temporary names while writing, and also one of the great risks of watching too much television.




Interested? Check out this sample of Imaginary Girls and then enter for your chance to win!
-One winner will receive a signed copy of the book
-US Address only
-Contest ends June 28 midnight, central time
-One entry per person

Comments

  1. That is hilarious, because I was literally watching reruns of ANTM during the time I read your book, and I noticed there was a girl named London on the show!

    I would love to know where the names Ruby and Chloe came from, too. It's always so hard to name characters, I think.

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  2. Well, names are a hard thing to pick. I'm having a baby soon and I'm stuck on picking a name.

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  3. Sarah, Thank you so much for hosting me on the IG blog tour!

    And thank you to everyone who entered to win a signed book!

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  4. I'm reading this one right now. It's a bit creepy (in a good way) and I'm unsure what is really happening. Both make it a compelling and fantastic read. I don't think I'll know what's really going on until the very bitter end.

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  5. I'm reading this book right now!! I love it and I'm only 11!! :D The first murder story I've ever read... What I think is weird is that Ruby reminds me of my older sister, my sister is also like a celebrity in my town too! She's beautiful and nice, and we share an amazing bond that only sisters could share, too :) But of course, my sister didn't bring anyone back from the dead, or date more guys than she could count XD

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