Sitting at a table in what used to be part of a practice
field at Exeter High School, alumna Allison ‘Michl’ Bitz was back on her old
stomping grounds to sign copies of her recently published debut novel.
Bitz quickly sold out of more than 20 copies during the
special signing event during Exeter/Exeter-Milligan alumni weekend. A Lincoln resident, Bitz will be back in
Exeter during Exeter Days on Saturday July 29 and will sign and sell copies of
her book from 10-11 at Exeter Public Library.
Bitz started her fictionalized story of a young teenage girl
headed to a college prep boarding school for music back in 2017. “Honestly, I
just wanted to write something fun. . .mainly to entertain myself.”
Bitz was inspired to write, “The Unstoppable Bridget Bloom,”
by Disney’s “The Little Mermaid.” Her
main character Bridget, like Ariel, just “feels like she doesn’t belong in her
current world.”
She also found inspiration for several of her characters in
the book from Elle Woods (from “Legally Blonde”) and Rachel (from the TV show
“Glee”). Reading the first few sentences
of her book you can see the references to others close to Bitz in real life
including a shared Grandma Evelyn with Bridget and a necklace made by her own
grandfather like the necklace Bridget has.
Bitz emphasized that
Bridget “is not me! Things happen to her that were inspired by me. . .being a
plus size teen, but she is not me.”
As she was signing books a former classmate and fellow
Exeter band member came in and visited Bitz.
They shared memories and Bitz explained that some of their band camp
memories were also experienced by Bridget.
Bridget hails from Lynch, Neb. a small town in northern Nebraska
that Bitz thought she made up (her apologies to the real town of Lynch). However, Bridget experiences the same
feelings that Bitz did growing up in small town Nebraska, “I was looking
through the lens of not always feeling like you fit in in a small town. I am definitely weird in this town, but not
in a bad way. I value Exeter.”
Bitz talked about how she wasn’t sure how much of her
perceived weirdness was just in her head as a teenager. Bitz, who has a PhD in
psychology and works as a counselor in Lincoln used some of her “psychology
stuff and therapy know-how” in the book and wanted to emphasize “body
positivity – you can be beautiful and graceful and live a life at any size.”
Bitz mentioned both Mrs. Betty, her English teacher, and
Mrs. Murphy, her music teacher as influencing her future success. “Mrs. Betty told me I was a good writer and
Mrs. Murphy was all about the music.”
Bitz shared the process of how she went from a seed of an
idea to a published hardback novel. Her
process has evolved to where it is now, an outline that she expands on by
plotting scenes using a spreadsheet. She
also employs what she calls a word dump or a “word vomit” to get a flush or
paragraphs down. She sometimes uses the word vomits but mainly it’s time to
begin writing and re-writing.
Once the book is done it’s time for revisions. This involves
both her agent and the publisher, “Basically, it’s unrecognizable from its
original form,” explained Bitz.
Her original agent didn’t feel Bridget was “on brand” for
Bitz and so Bridget went “in the drawer” until 2021 when a new agent sent her
proposal to multiple publishers and “pretty quickly’ her book was picked up by
Harper Collins and Random House (yes there were a few rejections in there but
she accepted a “very good offer from Harper Collins”).
Holding that first hardback copy of Bridget gave Bitz “a
sense of surrealness, like ‘okay I know I wrote this but can this be real?’”
She is currently writing a second book which is scheduled to
be released in 2024 from Harper Collins.
It’s called “Three Things About Emmy Crawford.”
Bitz shared that it is the story of an influential senator’s
daughter who is a “kid in the spotlight, a high school senior who is good a
debater and falls for her chief debate rival.”
Emmy, like Bitz, has Crohn’s disease and she has
incorporated the challenges she has faced battling the disease in her upcoming
novel. “I’m using it so people know about Crohn’s. I’m not ashamed about having Crohn’s I don’t
want it to limit my life. I ignored it
but got really sick. So does Emmy.”
She has had several virtual events to launch the book but her
publisher sponsored one in New York City at a library in the Bronx and her
husband, James and children, Evie and Jonah, attended along with her parents,
Alan and Shari Michl, and brother Nate
and his wife, Abby.
In addition to signing books at Exeter Days, Bitz will also
be greeting fans and signing copies of her book in Seward at Chapters on
Monday, July 3 from 1 – 2 p.m.