Stay

Stay

2012 Best Fiction for Young Adults

Junior Library Guild Selection

“Fear has made Clara a fiercely good observer of detail, and Caletti’s powerfully descriptive prose serves her character well, as she provides insight into ideas about love, power, and who we forgive.”

—Publisher’s Weekly

"Taking an honest look at the dangers of obsession and stalking, Caletti writes a beautiful story that somehow remains hopeful even when the plot takes a sinister twist. Through the story, all characters come to life and become understandable, if not likable. Recommend this book to every teen and parent. This is a danger often overlooked until it is too late because of its subtlety, and the guilt and shame involved."

—VOYA

"Caletti's prose is at its best. Perfect for fans of Sarah Dessen's books, this is a moving tale of a young woman learning how to love, to live, and to forgive."

Booklist

“The suspense rises like the tide while readers applaud the teen’s healthy new life and relationships but fear that she hasn’t seen the last of the unstable and unpredictable Christian. Characters and new love ring true and would make this fine chick lit in and of itself, but the looming specter of the ex-boyfriend finding Clara makes it a novel with an appealing edge. Fear tinges this summer romance and underscores the issue of abusive and claustrophobic relationships among teens.”

—School Library Journal

“A rich, believable story with important but not heavy-handed lessons.”

—Children’s Literature

They never told you that stranger might be someone you knew.
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A dark, romantic novel of love and obsession from Printz Honor medal winner and National Book Award finalist Deb Caletti.

Clara’s relationship with Christian is intense from the start, like nothing she’s ever experienced before. But what starts as devotion quickly becomes obsession, and it’s almost too late before Clara realizes how far gone Christian is—and what he’s willing to do to make her stay.

Now Clara has left the city—and Christian—behind. No one back home has any idea where she is, but she still struggles to shake off her fear. She knows Christian won’t let her go that easily, and that no matter how far she runs, it may not be far enough…


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One of the hardest tasks as a human being is knowing when to keep an open mind, and when not to.

Stay: Deception Pass

STAY, as you probably know, is a book about a girl and her father who run to a remote seaside town in order to escape her obsessive boyfriend. And for my essay for this particular book, I know that some people might expect me to write about obsessive boyfriends, stalking, what to do if you find yourself in this situation, or better yet, how NOT to get there at all. It might even be seen as my writerly duty. But I’ve never liked doing what I’m supposed to do. Ask my Mom and Dad. Or better yet, my poor sister, who got stuck doing the dishes when I managed to find every fake stomach ache or head throb to weasel out of it. Once again, sis, I’m sorry. 

So let’s just agree. If you are in any situation that sounds remotely like the one Clara was in, speak up. Tell someone. Look after yourself. Get help, if you need it. You probably need it. It’s a dangerous place to be. Most of all, be safe. Please. Listen to me on this one. Deal? Excellent. 

Now, instead, here’s what I really want to talk about: The setting of STAY.

STAY takes place on Bishop Rock, an island I made up, loosely based on a real one: Whidbey Island. Whidbey is a short drive (or ferry ride) from Seattle, where I live. To get there by car, you have to go over Deception Pass, and its looming, frightening, thrilling bridge. After Clara crosses this bridge, she feels a sense of pride: “It had a sort of significance, though I didn’t know what kind. It had to – you didn’t cross the perilous distance over deception without it meaning something.” (Sorry for quoting myself. I hate that. Still, you get the idea.) 

Smiling nervously while thinking “No way am I going up there.”

Smiling nervously while thinking “No way am I going up there.”

My husband and I took a trip back over Deception Pass ourselves to Whidbey last weekend, to revisit the setting of STAY, and to just plain enjoy a great day trip. Although I have walked across that bridge in the past, I didn’t do it this time. I’m telling you, that’s one scary dude. But it’s also dramatic and spooky and magnificent. It struck me again what a perfect setting it was for STAY. Even the clouds that day at first looked just like the book cover.

Haven’t I seen those clouds on the STAY cover?

Haven’t I seen those clouds on the STAY cover?

Creating setting is one of my favorite parts of writing a book. If you’ve read my other books, too, you’ve probably guessed this. The towns I create reappear in my books, and I love spending time in those places, even in my imagination: Nine Mile Falls, Parrish Island, and Bishop Rock. I especially loved “spending time” in/on Bishop Rock, so much so that I set my next book, THE STORY OF US, there, too. Since it takes a year or more for me to write a book, it helps to enjoy the setting I’m “in.” Writing about Bishop Rock was like being on a mental vacation. 

To me, setting is one of the most important elements in a book. When I create setting, I think of it as a character. I believe it should live and breathe as a character would; it should have its own quirks and traits as a character would, too. Its moods should shift and evolve. Every town (or city or beach or anywhere) I’ve lived or visited has had its own pulse and heartbeat and personality. A place, not just its people, has a temperament, too.

Happy author at Whidbey lighthouse

Happy author at Whidbey lighthouse

The Pacific Northwest is character everywhere you look, from its craggy, tumultuous mountains to the mysterious, solitary islands set about in the waters of the Puget Sound, under which whales sing and slumber. See? I’m getting carried away again just thinking about it! I won’t break into a rousing verse of “America” and Purple Mountains Majesty lyrics, I promise! (Which as a kid, I always got wrong anyway: Above thy putrid grain. Very patriotic.) The point is, “setting as character” is easy here. I look around and feel it. I step outside, and there it is, offering itself.

The names around here are character-filled, too. Clara and her father joke about the heavy metaphors in the names of places around the island, but most of the names are the actual ones. Deception Pass is, and so is Possession Point, set at the tip of Whidbey Island. While I wish I could credit my imagination for those, the names-as-metaphor were already right there when I moved my characters to that particular island.

Climbing the lighthouse stairs

Climbing the lighthouse stairs

And that’s part of what is so great about setting, particularly, setting here, in the Northwest where I live. It’s all given to you, like the biggest, most beautiful present. Setting as character, moods, temperament, even names…  Artistry. It’s all right here already. All I have to do is pay attention. I just need to be a good, appreciative audience. Which is not hard. Which is pure pleasure, actually. That day, we drove over Deception Pass, and out toward Possession Point, and we stopped at the Whidbey lighthouse. We stuck our toes in the freezing water, edged down the same cliffs Clara’s father broke his ankle on. We saw four eagles and a seal, climbed the lighthouse stairs and looked out over the haunted waters of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, where ships went missing long ago.

Guard your ankles…

Guard your ankles…

Maybe I love writing setting so much because I love living setting so much. It’s given and you take it, you take it in, and it changes you. That day, I think I felt a little like Clara did at the end of the book. The ocean and the air and the beach had worked their magic. I felt the past, and I felt the present. And I felt the wind, pushing me forward.

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“WE'RE AS GOOD AT TALKING OURSELVES OUT OF FEAR AS INTO IT, AREN'T WE? MAYBE BETTER.”


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