Babs BookMark Issue 2 | Page 57

TB: Of the books you’ve written, which one is your favorite and why? My books are all my babies, so I love them all. That said, I’ve two that are especially dear to my heart: RUFUS AND MAGIC RUN AMOK, about ten-year-old Rufus Breckenridge who discovers he has magical powers but refuses to tell his family because they’ll make him take magic lessons, and GIVING UP THE GHOST, a Long Island-set ghost mystery. Bad-boy Cameron Leeds knows that his death was no accident. He nags Gabbie Meyerson, who rents his family cottage, until she agrees to find out who murdered him. Even though I wrote it, I get choked up thinking about Cam’s final farewell to the woman he loves. TB: What books have most influenced you as a writer? I imagine everything I read when I was young influenced me as a writer. I started reading novels for adults very early on. If I remember correctly, I was in second grade when my mother took A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN away from me, claiming its subject was too “adult.” I did get to finish it the following year. I loved reading series, most of which were mysteries, and I’m sure they had an impact: Nancy Drew, Trixie Belden, Judy Bolton, and Cherry Ames (she was a nurse.) TB: What do you find to be the most challenging part of writing? And the most rewarding.