If you happen to come into the library on Tuesday or Thursday, you
may see Librarian Assistant Lisa Greenwald reading to her sixth grade
book club, or discussing a novel selected by her Middle School activity
group. On the heels of Harry Potter and into the new, Twilight-inspired
Paranormal Romance section at Barnes and Noble, Greenwald says her
students are living in “the golden age of Young Adult Literature.” These
students are also among an emerging voice on the YAL scene. Since the
November release of Sweet Treats and Secret Crushes, her second novel
from Amulet Press in as many years, Ms. Greenwald has been busy with
bookstore readings, school visits, minding her new baby, and, of course,
writing her next work.
Sweet Treats and Secret Crushes begins with three seventh-grade BFFs
on the eve of Valentine’s Day; all eagerly await the special day and the
developments it may at last bring to their secret crushes. But all
Cupid’s arrows are thwarted when a snowstorm brings the rarely
unwelcomed news that school is closed. Needing an alternative, the girls
decide to bake special fortune cookies and distribute them to neighbors
in their Brooklyn apartment building. Largely set over one day, the
novel explores the relationships these girls build with each other and
with their immediate community, who live near, but not otherwise close
to one another. As Ms. Greenwald puts it simply, “They want to make
their building friendlier….They want to make a change in the world.”
This latest novel picks up on the theme of her prior work, My Life in
Pink and Green, published last year. This story also features a
seventh-grade protagonist, Lucy Desberg, who transforms her family’s
fledgling pharmacy into an “eco-spa” and brings the kind of green that
both saves the business and arouses environmental awareness. The story
was inspired from Ms. Greenwald’s work with Rhonda Rigrodsky, Director
of Library Services, who also sponsors the BWL Earth Club. Many young
readers can relate to Lucy’s frustrations: “I can’t wait for the day
when adults take kids seriously,” she says.
Perhaps Ms. Greenwald can make such credible characters because, as
she says, “I sometimes feel like I’m in middle school myself. I can get
back to that feeling very easily.” While there are inherent limitations
to being in this “middle” period, Ms. Greenwald chooses to focus on what
kids this age can do. Her website features concrete, planet-saving
tips; her characters are truly acting locally while thinking globally.
“It’s a hard age,” she says, “but a great age. They take an interest in
things in ways that may be more genuine. In Middle School, there’s more
learning just to learn.” Citing this trend among the independent reading
projects in BWL’s Middle School, she says, “At BWL, kids are encouraged
to read for pleasure.”
Ms. Greenwald’s perseverance provides a model for her students. After
two years in YAL with Farrar, Straus and Giroux, she made the
financially risky choice to pursue a Master of Fine Arts at the New
School, with a concentration on writing for children. Out of this
emerged her first novel, which received thirty rejections and remains
unpublished—for now. My Life in Pink and Green had six rejections before
it was approved by Amulet Press. She admits, “You have to have a thick
skin. I don’t really have one, but I try!”
Her coming work chronicles two high school girls who are making a
documentary about their classmates and the exciting exposure of those,
she says, “whose talents aren’t necessarily recognized.” This taps,
tangentially at least, into her high own school experience. “When I went
to high school, I was not the best in math or science,” she recalls,
“but I wanted to do something and prove that I could do something. Now,
I’ve done something significant that I’m proud about.”