2 books by American Fork teen hit stores

Published: Friday, Sept. 4, 2009 8:27 p.m. MDT
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The blood rushes to Melissa Rowley's cheeks as she clenches her paper — a quick-write exercise for her English class at American Fork High. She hands it to her neighbor for peer review, heart pounding in her ears.

"I didn't realize we had to read them to each other," the 17-year-old recalled later, rolling her eyes in embarrassment. "It was kind of scatterbrained. I think I wrote it about a parking ticket I got."

Never mind the two paperbacks, branded with Rowley's byline, that hit bookstores all over the country this week. Forget about the 10-book contract she has with Shadow Mountain Publishing. Rowley is just a high school senior — and a shy one at that — who's timid about looking stupid in front of classmates.

"I'm not a very outgoing, share-everything-about-my-life person," she said.

Rowley doesn't even publish under her first name.

"She uses her middle name, M'Lin," said her mother, Deborah Rowley, who has several books of her own on the market. "I think she liked the idea because it allowed her to be anonymous."

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It must have been disconcerting for Melissa Rowley, then, when news crews burst into her creative writing class Tuesday to talk about the release of the books "The Falcon Shield" and "The Silver Coat." The stories, which blend King Arthur lore with modern-day moral lessons about things like saying no to drugs and being honest, are the first in her "Knights of Right" series.

"Things have been weird at school since that happened," Melissa Rowley said.

Now every time the teen passes her papers to classmates, they smile slyly.

"Ooo! This is good," they tease. "We should get it published."

The whole situation still feels unreal.

Melissa Rowley handles her copies of "The Silver Coat" and "The Falcon Shield" incredulously, as if they were her fragile, delicate, newborn children.

"It's a book — a real book — except it has my words inside of it," she said. "I'm so in love with books. To have one that is mine is really neat."

The glossy, lively illustrated covers and seamless binding of her little books, which target six- to 10- year-old readers, enchanted the teen. Printed off on the family computer, decorated with clip art and bound at a nearby copy shop — the first "Knights of Right" books weren't nearly so pretty.

Melissa Rowley wrote the stories in 2007 as a Christmas present for her 8-year-old cousin. He loved knights and swords. She wanted to give him something meaningful to read that might influence him to "stay out of trouble" in the future.

"I never dreamed we'd publish them for real," Melissa Rowley said.

Tate Pace wasn't much of a reader.

Recent comments

So how's grades? Get ready for college... it is coming fast. Write,...

so how's grades? | Sept. 8, 2009 at 6:30 a.m.

Now, take this idea to the next level.

(It is up to you to find...

idea time | Sept. 7, 2009 at 7:53 a.m.

It is self promotion, but then again... that is how the world turns....

hmmmm | Sept. 6, 2009 at 11:34 a.m.

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Melissa Rowley, 17, recently signed a deal to write a 10-book series mixing King Arthur lore with modern-day moral lessons.

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