Local author Stephanie Sanders publishes sequel to ‘Villain School’ children’s book

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(Ben Sanders/Special to the Daily News)

A native of Atlantic and graduate of Mount Mercy College, Stephanie admits she has been writing since she could first pick up a pencil and spent years trying to get her stories published, collecting her rejection letters one by one in a folder and struggling, like any writer, with frustration and writer’s block. But then the idea for “Villain School” came one night in a dream. 

“I woke up with an idea about villains going to school,” Stephanie said. “I jotted down just a few words about it, and it became the story. A little over a month later, it was finished.”

Rather than attempting to find a publisher for “Villain School” on her own, Stephanie first began searching for an agent. The Nancy Gallt Literary Agency agreed to represent her and eventually found a willing publisher for “Good Curses Evil” in Bloomsbury, the British company that published J.K. Rowling’s “Harry Potter” series. 

Stephanie said she will never forget the day she learned her book would be published. She and her family — her husband, Benjamin, and her daughters, Kyra and Kaelyn — were driving to Newton from Kellogg on Highway 6 and were just approaching Casey’s General Store.

“My agent at Nancy Gallt Literary Agency, whose name is Marietta Zacker, was on the phone, and she said, ‘This is the call that will change your life.’ I remember I cried and laughed at the same time. I was just so happy.” 

Since then, “Good Curses Evil” has been published in Germany, France, Romania and Turkey as well as the United States. And although the process of getting a sequel on the bookshelves brought far fewer challenges, Stephanie said writer’s block did strike again.

“I had about 80 pages written of the second book, and I got stuck,” she admitted. “I couldn’t even figure out what I originally intended to write, and I got really frustrated. I’ve got this little box of ‘random plot twists’ that sits next to my computer, and my husband grabbed it and said, ‘I’m gonna pull something out of here, and whatever it says, you’re going to write about it.’ So he pulls one out, and it said something like, ‘There’s a prophecy, and the villain is the one that’s described as the hero.’ I was like, ‘That’s perfect!’ I took it and ran with it and wrote a whole story based on it. It was the inspiration I needed to write a whole book.”

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