
8 Awkward Questions for SUPER AWKWARD author Beth Garrod

Lucas Maxwell: What is the biggest challenge you face when writing from the perspective of a teenager?
Beth Garrod: I think the biggest challenge is the fear of getting it wrong?! Young people get so badly represented by the media, and get associated with so many lazy stereotypes, I would be mortified if I added to that in anyway. On a more practical level, it’s about trying to be as accurate as possible about what it means to be a young person now, without sounding like an old person who’s just learned about Snapchat Discover for the first time.
LM: What is the first book that made you cry?
BG: My memory is pretty bad, so I can’t remember the first, but I can remember crying so much at The Fault In Our Stars that a stranger offered me a tissue. Why on earth I thought I could read it in public, I have no idea?!LM: Have you ever experienced READER’s block?
BG: Of course! Especially after you read a book that you LOVE. Then the next one – even if it’s amazing – can feel a bit of a slog. I do sometimes put a book on hold and come back to it.
LM: How important is it that teens see themselves in your books?
BG: Well, I’d love them to – whether they do or not is up to every individual reader. For me the dream is that they identify with it enough to find it funny – that it might give them a bit of cheer in their day. And the mega-dream is that they’d see that the characters don’t always get it right, and that they don’t always feel like they fit in -and that’s just fine.
LM: How did your background in TV & Radio help prepare you to write a YA novel?
BG: I think the main thing is that it means constantly being around young people. Which is great. And that chatting about Taylor Swift conspiracy theories is a legitimate way to spend my working day. Working on digital platforms also means constant feedback and input from the audience – which is invaluable.
LM: What are you reading right now?
BG: I’m just finishing up When Dimple Met Rishi which I have LOVED – it made me feel a little bit like I was falling in love too.
LM: What advice do you have to teens who will look back on their lives and wish they had some good advice to hang on to?
BG: Some good advice is probably to not come to me for good advice?! I’m still pretty clueless. But I am a big believer that people shouldn’t rule themselves out of being able to achieve certain things, like becoming a writer, or awesome scientist, or photographer, or whatever – because in ten years time there will be new people doing all that stuff, so why can’t it be them?
LM: Finally, and I ask this of every author I interview. If you had to choose a TV family to live with, who would you choose? Also, you have to live with them…FOREVER!
BG: I took a long time over this question. A LONG time. Can I go with the Cohen’s from The OC? Then I be actual friends with Seth and Summer, live in California, legitimately drink from red cups AND their house is so huge I could basically have my own wing and all my friends could visit.