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Speed Interview with Daphne Kalmar, Author of Stealing Mt. Rushmore

Interview Author Daphne Kalmar

The Children’s Book Review

Daphne Kalmar was an elementary and middle-school teacher for over twenty years. Exploring the natural world with kids was her passion as an educator—she owned seventy-five pairs of rubber boots so she could outfit each new class in September and lead weekly expeditions to local creeks and ponds. She has an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is the author of A Stitch in Time, on Bookpage and NPR’s lists of Best Books of 2018. Stealing Mt. Rushmore is her second novel for young readers.

The Children’s Book Review: Which five words best describe Stealing Mt. Rushmore?

Daphne Kalmar: Heartbreak, Hope, Awakening, Betrayal, Family

Can you share a highlight from the book? Or maybe your thoughts on, or an excerpt of, your favorite sentence, paragraph, or page?

Nellie’s dad, Ron, retreats to his bed when he’s angry or upset. His depression is a heavy burden for both him and his kids throughout the story. Nellie’s mom was never very sympathetic.

Nellie narrates:

“When he’d walk up the stairs Mom would make some crack. “Go on, hide under the covers. Have a good sulk.” I didn’t think he was sulking. I figured he was staying away from everyone so he wouldn’t get more angry but the staying away let the sadness creep in like darkness slips under a bedroom door when the lights in the hall go out.” (page 19)

What has been the best reaction from a reader, so far?

Many readers tell me that they love the relationship between thirteen-year-old Nellie and her little brother Teddy. This makes me happy—Teddy and Nellie’s relationship is the solid core of love and caring in the book that allowed me to explore the sadness and hurt Nellie experiences over the course of that summer in 1974.

What’s on your nightstand? Any books?

Kekla Magoon’s sequel to How It Went Down, titled Light It Up; Jenn Bishop’s new middle grade novel, Things You Can’t Say; James Bird’s wonderful debut, The Brave; and the newest adult fantasy by N.K. Jemison, The City We Became. The pile is about two feet tall but those are at the top right now.

For your writing energy: sugar or salt, tea or coffee?

Coffee. Strong coffee. And salty beats sugary any day.

Writing tools: computer, pen and paper, or all of the above?

I go to pen and paper for exploring my characters—I can uncover their secrets while I’m innocently scribbling in my notebook with a pencil. I write all my drafts on the computer with a dedicated playlist of classical music humming in the background.

Can you tell us one more thing we may not know about Stealing Mt. Rushmore, your writing and illustrating style, or yourself?

I read all my drafts aloud. Over and over. My dog, Yoyo, is my companion in my writing shed curled up in the chair next to my desk. When I’m done reading aloud he goes outside to the muddy pond to hunt frogs.

For more information about Daphne Kalmar, visit:
DaphneKalmar.com | Twitter: @DaphneKalmar | Facebook: Daphne Kalmar, Author

Stealing Mt. Rushmore

Written by Daphne Kalmar

Publisher’s Synopsis: In Stealing Mt. Rushmore, Daphne Kalmar brings to life the social and political upheaval of the 1970s, revealing the heart of a family on the verge of falling apart and the courage of a young girl who does all she can to bring them together.

She almost always made things worse. But at least she’d be standing there.
I hated her for stealing the money. But I want her back.

Nellie’s dad had planned on having four boys to name after the presidents on Mt. Rushmore. He got George, Nellie, Tom, and Teddy. No Abe.

It’s the summer of 1974. Nellie’s turned thirteen. Her best friend, Maya, has a crush on a boy. President Nixon might get impeached. And her mom’s run off. The money for their family road trip to see Mt. Rushmore is missing and her dad’s crawled into bed and won’t get up.

Nellie’s sure the trip out West will fix her family, and she’ll do almost anything to come up with the cash. But she begins to wonder why it’s always her, the girl, who’s stuck with the dishes and everything else. And how can a mom just up and leave with no note, no forwarding address, no nothing?

Ages 8-12 | Publisher: Feiwel & Friends | August 18, 2020 | ISBN-13: 978-1250155009

Available Here

Book Giveaway

Enter for a chance to win a copy of Stealing Mt. Rushmore!

Three (3) lucky winners receive:

Giveaway begins August 18, 2020, at 12:00 PM PST and ends September 18, 2020, at 11:59 PM PST.

How To Enter

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This speed interview with Daphne Kalmar, author of Stealing Mt. Rushmore, was conducted by Bianca Schulze. For similar books and articles, follow along with our content tagged with , , , and . Be sure to follow along with our series, too.

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