You are SO not invited to my Bat Mitzvah!
By Fiona Rosenbloom
About the book: Stacy Friedman is getting ready for The Most Important day of the year- her Bat Mitzvah. All she wants is a perfect dress, a perfect dance with the perfect boy and maybe even a perfect kiss. But things don’t go as Stacy has planned them at all… she’s forced to buy a bridezilla dress and her best friend is caught in a compromising scene. Stacy then utters the unthinkable and ruins her social life: You are so not invited to my Bat Mitzvah!
About the guide:
This guide is designed to work with youth book clubs, mother/daughter book clubs or literature circles. It discusses the themes of friendship, growing up, sibling and parent relationships, peer pressure and faith.
Discussion Questions:
Projects:
Design your own dress for an important event in your life. Create sketches by hand (or digitally) and find fabric swatches (free at any fabric store) to add to the project. Or, pour through magazines until you find one there. Cut it out and write one of those catalogue type descriptions of it.
Another more fun option: hit the mall and take a picture of yourself in theperfectdress. Before you go: You must write at least ten “absolutely nots” that do not match chapter 17 but are inspired by them.
Write an email or text message from Andy Goldfarb to Stacy about her Bat Mitzvah. Be sure to make it sound just like him and don’t have any big realizations as he probably never had one.
Create a poster for your wall that has at least five “Statements of Fact” that apply to your life. What have you realized that others might be missing? Post on your locker, wall or door so those who enter have a clue.
Rewrite chapter 25 to fit your own life/crush. (You might want to pick someone famous to save face. Read: Orlando Bloom!)
Author Interview:
I wish my answer to this was better. It wasn’t because I was so traumatized by
mine, or conversely that I am still so attached I needed to re-live it. The
truth is much more basic and I fear, boring. Bat Mitzvah has a prominent role
because I was approached to write a book that centered around a Bat Mitzvah.
See? I told you.
Not as interesting.
No, Stacy is really just Stacy. Her voice came to me very very quickly and sort
of shaped the tone of the rest of the book. Her voice is very distinct to me, as
is the rest of her. I can picture her and hear her. Perhaps she’s a composite of
several people but I’d have to strain to realize who and I fear if I do that,
Stacy would never forgive me.
I suppose the most important lesson here is to know what is worth fighting for
and what is best to let go. Stacy knows in her heart that friendship is
important to her and slowly she begins to understand that what she gets from
Lydia is more important than what she is getting from the boy she believed she
loved. Stacy lost sight of her original beliefs and began fighting for false
ones until she recognized that what she was fighting for was something she
actually didn’t believe in or want.
What
are you working on next?
I find it very difficult to say exactly what I want to say and writing for me is
my chance to work at that expression. It is incredibly rewarding to struggle
with a sentence only to see it finally fall into place. I build from there and
then watch as one person morphs into another unexpectedly or see the shift in
story lines and witness the issues that rise up between people. I say, “see” and
“watch” and “witness” as if I’m not a part of it, because in many ways, I’m not.
I’m just the pen taking it all down.
The advice I have is to read a lot. In between reading a lot, you need to write
a lot. People are writers because they write, every single day. Whether it’s
simply in a journal, or a poem or thoughts scribbled on a napkin, the writing
center of the brain should be activated all the time. I also would recommend
getting a notebook to write your thoughts, observations and ideas in. I use a
regular composition notebook, the kind normally reserved for science class and I
glue stories ripped out of newspapers in there, I draw in it, but mainly, I
write in it. I write everything from To Do lists to ideas for other novels. I
keep it in my bag at all times. I think I would feel bereft without my notebook.
I am thinking about doing another book with Stacy but I’m not sure. I suppose
I’ll see how the audience reacts to this book and decide whether they want more
Stacy. I’d love to see her at camp or on a school trip abroad (maybe to Italy?)
I’m not sure. Send ideas if you have them!

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