Finishing up last-minute Book 2 edits before it goes off to copy edits this week AND I'm sitting on the fiercest repackage for the NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS paperback... we are so back.
Posts by meredith adamo đź’«
"When I was creating these characters—or, in this case, these suspects—I wanted their motives to explain their possible guilt, of course, but also offer a valid reason for their innocence."
We spoke to @meredithadamo.bsky.social about her YA #thriller: www.writersandartists.co.uk/advice/qa-au...
Not to be dramatic but I'm honestly and truly GAGGED by the paperback repackage for NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS and I cannot waittttt to share it with the world.
Votes recorded on hr 7661 in House Committee for Education and Workforce Development’s markup.
HR 7551, the National book ban bill, has passed the markup and is being recommended to the House with amendment. Here’s who voted how.
This isn’t over. CALL YOUR HOUSE REPS NOW.
guess what girl it's one year later and your book actually only became a book like a few weeks ago
After a long stretch of Book 2 being so over, I'm thrilled to announce we're so back.
This is going to be shocking but for once publishing is the MOST NORMAL part of my life at the moment.
My favorite kind of edits are the ones where my editor asks me to clarify something and then I just delete the sentence entirely.
Last month, eight books were removed from Georgia's statewide reading book for students. It was teenagers who brought this censorship to the spotlight–even though it's not their job to clean up grown-up messes.
Get to know 3 of those teens here.
bookriot.com/teens-who-ov...
Ahhhh YAY!!!
EVERY BOOK BANNED FROM THE READING BOWL HAS BEEN RESTORED!!!!!
The kids will be able to read and compete over all 20 books. Raising the issue made a difference. Teen advocates made a difference.
docs.google.com/document/u/0...
It's so annoying that I figured out a solution to a problem that's been ailing my book for over a year on a random Tuesday morning when I'm doing my day job.
Cannot wait to chat about this book with Nicole this weekend đź’•
"Who submitted the complaints and what authority do they have to have their opinion on the books available to teens across the state for an optional Reading Bowl? Why would the steering committee capitulate to those requests? Why were those books a problem at all?"
UPDATE -- students in Georgia who've participated in the Reading Bowl have launched a petition to get answers as to why these 8 books were banned. Please amplify their petition and message, as well as the story here.
Petition: www.change.org/p/ensure-tra...
So many students from Georgia have been in touch with me this week about the current censorship situation with the Helen Ruffin Reading Bowl — if you have a moment to read and sign their petition, I'd be so grateful. They're doing such incredible and difficult work.
www.change.org/p/ensure-tra...
You know shit's rough when I write a newsletter for the first time since May 2024.
meredithadamo.substack.com/p/been-awhil...
No one will call this anything other than what it is:
pure cowardice.
No one will laud book banners as heroes.
(As if dedicating your time to combing children’s and young adult books for sexual / diverse / mature / ”inappropriate” content is somehow brave or noble.)
In the end—and there will be an end to this someday; I really think that—no one will look back on these coordinated censorship efforts and think of all the kids who were protected.
(Protected from what, exactly?)
(These are rhetorical questions, by the way. We know.)
What’s so terrifying about a teen learning to question her experiences, to think for herself, to use her voice?
What’s so scary about a survivor of sexual assault realizing that she’s not to blame for her abuse?
But what are you so afraid of?
What’s so frightening about a young woman recognizing the ways in which her body has been violated by boys and men and reclaiming it as her own?
Because censorship is about control.
It’s about denying young readers the chance to see their experiences reflected on the page and preventing them from seeing experiences other than their own.
It’s about silencing and dismissing and depriving and restricting.
It’s about fear.
I’m also mad.
And frustrated.
And upset.
And yet still my first impulse is to impress.
Look! Look at my accolades—the medal, the awards, the stars, the “best of” lists, the state recognition. Doesn’t that mean anything to you?
Obviously not, or else we wouldn’t be in this situation.
To start: I do not begrudge the educators and librarians who are being put in impossible positions by their counties, their school boards, their state legislation.
I’m honored to be an ally in this fight against censorship. Right now, most of us are doing the best we can with what little we have.
This week—Banned Books Week—I learned that NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS was one of eight YA titles (and Georgia Peach Book Award nominees) quietly removed from the Helen Ruffin Reading Bowl in Georgia.
I shared my thoughts on censorship over on IG, but I wanted to share them here, too.
Truly impeccable timing to learn that NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS has been banned (yet again) on the first day of Banned Books Week.
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