By Nickky Faustine P. De Guzman
Her love stories spring from serendipity: an e-mail sent to the wrong person, a chance encounter at an airport, and getting stuck in an elevator. Jennifer E. Smith, the author behind the young adult (YA) books This is What Happy Looks Like, The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, and The Geography of You and Me, believes in fate and chance.
鈥淚鈥檝e been obsessed with moments in time that act as hinges, a split on before and after. Yesterday your life is one way and tomorrow it鈥檚 entirely different. I just love exploring themes on fate, timing, and chance,鈥 said the author whose books have been translated into 33 languages.
Her brand is about happenstance, and she鈥檚 happy to find this voice as a writer to set herself apart from other novelists.
鈥淓ver since I wrote the Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight I鈥檝e got so many comments from readers who have met the love of their lives on a plane. These things absolutely happen in real life, and that鈥檚 what makes them fun to read,鈥 she said.
It follows that her latest book, Windfall, is about statistics: What are the odds of winning the lottery?
Alice, who is secretly in love with her best friend, Teddy, buys him a lottery ticket as a birthday gift. Their friendship and love story are soon changed after he wins $140 million.
鈥淓verybody has areas of interest, and about chances happen to be mine,鈥 she said in an interview with 大象传媒 on Nov. 9, two days before she held a book signing in Cebu.
Always drawn to tales of good luck, the book she is currently writing, well, follows the same theme: a love story set in a train traveling from New York to San Francisco. It鈥檚 not yet done, and she feels no pressure to finish it anytime soon, since the book won鈥檛 be out until 2019. In between travelling for work and pleasure, she sits down to write, but she is quick to share that the right words don鈥檛 often come out.
鈥淚 try to write every day but it always doesn鈥檛 shake out. I don鈥檛 have a strict process, I wish I was more methodical but I鈥檓 in the mindset where if it鈥檚 not working in a day I don鈥檛 get stuck there in my computer for hours. I go out and take a walk or something. But if there鈥檚 something, on the flip side, if it鈥檚 working really well I鈥檒l cancel my dinner plans and work through the night. Keep it going,鈥 she said.
Asked about the significance of the written word in the 鈥減ost-truth鈥 digital age of 鈥渇ake news,鈥 she said fiction will always provide optimism.
鈥淎t times like these when you think the world is falling apart, you worry that it is less to be writing small stories. But it is actually the small stories that provide hope and empathy. I鈥檓 a firm believer that books are the lights in the crack 鈥 and we are in darkness right now. I think in a way it is more important than ever to be writing stories that are full of hope,鈥 she said of her novels.
鈥淚t鈥檚 too broad to say that all YAs are escapism, but you can call my books as such,鈥 she said.
Her books may be anchored on love stories, but they tackle universal stories on ambition, family, friends, and achieving dreams.
Her stories are also bankable when translated from page to the screen. At this moment, the team behind The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight movie production is castings. Dustin Lance Black (Milk) wrote the script and will direct the film adaptation.
Still, the written words are always better than the moving pictures, she confessed. 鈥淚 would like to think that any movies made from my books would be an exception because it only gets better with other people鈥檚 visions and interpretations, but in general, I do think that books are better than movies. You know, it鈥檚 a translation. It鈥檚 not the same thing, and I do tend to love books more than the movie,鈥 she said, smiling.
But then again, we might as well visit the movie houses 鈥 and bookstores 鈥 because who knows what we might find there. A new love, perhaps?
Q&A WITH JENNIFER E. SMITH
Some people are very snobbish about YA because they think it鈥檚 too mushy or it鈥檚 for the kids only, how do you change these notions?
I think everyone was 16 once. There鈥檚 a wonderful nostalgia to YA. There鈥檚 so many great stories and writers working on the genre right now. There鈥檚 so many disparaging articles written about teens, but try to read books about them, see where they are coming from, what they are thinking. They are good books that just happened to be about 16-year-olds.
How has social media and the Internet changed the art of writing?
It can be a distraction, so I try to limit myself so I鈥檓 not perusing all day. I try to do it in chunks of time and give myself 20 minutes in the afternoon and at night, for example, but less focus on reading because of the political climate in the US where it鈥檚 a little bit bleak sometimes to be there all day. You sometimes need to step away but then it is important to keep up with what鈥檚 happening. I found it a lot harder this year than ever before. I particularly love Instagram, but I am not so active that it hindered my writing but I learned a lot by following other writers on Twitter. Following even If I鈥檓 not talking [to them] I learn a lot.
How do you deal with feedback, especially the bad?
I try to tune out, not because I don鈥檛 appreciate what people say. Sometimes it鈥檚 a huge privilege for me when people take the time to read and comment. If you read a review that is 99% great, that one thing that is negative is what you will remember a year from now. So it can be really hard, it can be distracting. And I don鈥檛 want to be crowdsourcing based on what people think should happen. Once it is out of my hands, it does not belong to me anymore, but the readers. They are completely entitled to their opinions, the same way I am entitled to mine when I read.
What would you do if you win the lottery like your character, Alice in Windfall?
I think there are a lot of themes in the book Windfall about good deeds, random kindness, and volunteering, and those are things that are important to me. There are, of course, things that I鈥檇 want to do that are a little bit more personal or selfish. I would love to travel even more than I already do, [would] love to buy cottage in Scotland. There are things I want to buy, like a bookstore. There鈥檚 something invigorating about the idea of winning enough money to help people鈥檚 dreams come true, especially now, it is so important to give kindness to the world. I don鈥檛 really play the lottery, and the odds are small, but you never know.