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Pretty Little Mistakes by Heather McElhatton
Pretty Little Mistakes by Heather McElhatton










Pretty Little Mistakes by Heather McElhatton

It's all I've been working on.'Ê"īut unlike her experience with the rejected manuscript, an admittedly purple novel set on the island of Sapelo off the coast of Georgia, McElhatton says she had four major offers for "Pretty Little Mistakes" in four days. She says she gave the book to her agent "like I was handing her a sack of used Kleenex. "And it was a great book to write, because it helped me chase down a lot of those demons and figure out that I'm actually probably exactly where I should be," she adds.įor McElhatton, dashing off "Pretty Little Mistakes" in 11 months helped her deal with the loss of her dream to become a novelist. McElhatton, 37, who has worked as a producer for Minnesota Public Radio and Public Radio International, says her book is "all the roads I didn't take." From there, you (the novel is written in second person) keep choosing the next step - open a hummingbird sanctuary or open an orchid farm - until you wind up in a happy or a bad ending. McElhatton (it rhymes with "tackle Latin," she says) starts "Pretty Little Mistakes" on the last day of high school - "the last time I remember being where I was supposed to be."įrom there, the reader can decide to go traveling (as McElhatton did in real life) or go to college. Already in its seventh printing since being published in May, "Pretty Little Mistakes" has 50,000 copies in print. Billed as a "do-over novel," it allows readers to choose which plot lines to follow to one of more than 150 endings. I was literally drinking a giant bottle of wine and trying to figure out where I'd gone wrong and what I should have done," McElhatton recalls.īut the result was "Pretty Little Mistakes," her hit debut book.

Pretty Little Mistakes by Heather McElhatton

"I wasn't laying out the skeleton of a book or the structure of a book. MINNEAPOLIS - When her first novel was rejected by publishers after six long years of writing, Heather McElhatton sat down and tried to figure out where "the train jumped the tracks." She began diagramming her life's choices on a discarded 6-by-10 hunk of linoleum.












Pretty Little Mistakes by Heather McElhatton