About Author

Emily K. Johnson

Emily K. Johnson
BIOGRAPHY

Emily Kay Johnson lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, sons, and cats. She writes a middle grade comedy series called The Dudes Adventure Chronicles, which you can find in ebook, paperback, and audiobook.

With much support from family and friends, she has started her own publishing company called Epic Spiel Press where you can find The Dudes Adventure Chronicles and planned future books including an animal series, a medieval fantasy sci-fi series, and a comedy spy series–all for middle grade readers.

Emily K. Johnson's Books

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Book
Dudes Take Over
$3.99 kindleeBook, Paperback, Audio,
Dudes Take Overby Tyler Reynolds & Emily Kay JohnsonPublish: Dec 20, 2018Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
Dudes Dystopia
$3.99 kindleeBook, Paperback,
Dudes Dystopiaby Tyler Reynolds and Emily Kay JohnsonPublish: Aug 21, 2023Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
$0.99 kindleeBook, Paperback, Audio,
Save the Dudes (The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Book 1)by Tyler ReynoldsPublish: Jul 29, 2018Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
Summer of the Dudes (The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Book 3)
$3.99 kindleeBook, Paperback, Audio,
Summer of the Dudes (The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Book 3)by Tyler ReynoldsPublish: Jun 01, 2019Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
Dudes in the Middle
$3.99 kindleeBook, Paperback, Audio,
Dudes in the Middleby Tyler Reynolds & Emily Kay JohnsonPublish: Oct 19, 2019Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
Dudes Dog Days (The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Book 5)
$3.99 kindleeBook, Paperback, Audio,
Dudes Dog Days (The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Book 5)by Tyler ReynoldsPublish: May 01, 2020Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Collection: Books 1-3
$5.99 kindleeBook,
The Dudes Adventure Chronicles Collection: Books 1-3by Tyler ReynoldsPublish: May 25, 2021Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's
Dudes Hard Target
$3.99 kindleeBook,
Dudes Hard Targetby Emily K. JohnsonPublish: Oct 01, 2021Series: The Dudes Adventure ChroniclesChildren's

Emily K. Johnson's Series in Order

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Emily K. Johnson Interview On 05, Apr 2022

"Emily K. Johnson grew up in a suburb of Birmingham, AL. Lover of all kinds of humor and adventure, Emily always bought books at the school book fair. She started out with the traditional publishing route, which was all that existed in the 1990s. She writes a middle-grade comedy series called The Dudes Adventure Chronicles. She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, sons, and cats."
What was your early life like and where did you grow up?

I grew up in a suburb of Birmingham, AL. I loved all kinds of humor and adventure in books and TV. Both my parents worked, so my brother and I had free time to get into mischief after school before they came home. I didn’t have friends in walking distance, so I used my imagination a lot and read funny adventures like Henry Huggins. My brother happened to have several friends who lived close by, and I watched them try various schemes and get into crazy scrapes. It felt very safe where we lived in the suburbs, but also very boring. I had imaginary friends and imaginary adventures too. I climbed trees and my dad built us a treehouse. I would explore the local woods and sneak onto the golf course to catch crawdads in their creek. Gender roles were more strict there than they are where I live now in the West. I liked “boy stuff” and “girl stuff”.

Asian and South Asian families as well as Europeans and Latin Americans had family members who worked or studied at the University of Alabama Birmingham medical school. Iranian professionals were settling the area after leaving a conservative crackdown in Iran. We didn’t celebrate diversity back then, but I think I benefited from being surrounded in school by many different types of faces and names.

At the same time, my school was “desegregated” which meant that a small contingent of black kids (who lived across town) was bused to our school. I never witnessed them being treated badly, but there was never more than one in any of my classes. Which, I’m sure, was harder for them than I knew. Only black kids rode buses. White parents were averse to busing because of the association. So all the local kids aside from African Americans had to form carpools driven by those mothers who were stay-at-home. (Or, in my case, my Dad.)

At what age did you read your first book?

My grandmother was a teacher and gave me leveled readers to entertain me when I was 6. I read about Dick and Jane and Spot. But I always imagined more was going on behind the scenes in their pretty suburb. I always bought books at the school book fair. I remember being entranced by Misty of Chincoteague and The Black Stallion. My mom had a collection of what used to be considered childhood classics:, Treasure Island, Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates, Huckleberry Finn, Heidi, Gulliver’s Travels, Robin Hood, Robinson Crusoe. These were really adult books and written in very complex language. They are proof that the crossover of YA/childrens’ books to the adult market happened in reverse first. I devoured anything with adventure. The Chronicles of Narnia set me on the road to fantasy. My local library had a great collection of science fiction by Andre Norton--some of which was specifically for kids. I read it all.

Why do you think that it is so important to introduce literature and reading to children at a young age?

Reading isn’t just about improving your test scores and facility with language. Stories feed the imagination, giving you a place to turn to in times of emotional distress. They are a place to work out what you believe and what is important. I never, and my kids never responded to the kind of literature in which “kids with a problem work things out”. I’m very much about reading as living an adventure in your mind. It can be entertaining, funny, exciting, and end happily. Books don’t have to be serious or have a moral to teach you something.

Your thoughts on conventional vs. self-publishing? What route did you choose and why?

I started out with the traditional publishing route, which was all that existed in the 1990’s. I did everything right. I honed my craft, sold short stories to childrens’ magazines, and networked at writers’ conventions and organizations. I had confidence in my work. But the outlook for every being traditionally published grew progressively worse. The magazine market dried up. Publishing houses shuffled employees and stopped reading unsolicited manuscripts. At the same time, agents were saying I wasn’t worth their time unless I was already famous or at least had a large social media platform.

I decided to go the self-publishing route because I knew that I had never chosen a book based on the author’s social media presence. At the time, children’s writers were making money by giving talks in schools and selling to parents who heard about them that way. Again, this seemed round-about. I wasn’t a salesperson. I was a writer. Amazon’s online presence would allow me to simply sell books using the book itself and advertisements pointing to it.

Who were some of your heroes as a kid and how have you incorporated them into your writing (if you have)?

My heroes have always been characters. I wanted to be Robin Hood and Captain Picard and Indiana Jones. When I write child characters, these are the heroes they are emulating. The Dudes are adventurous and swashbuckling in their own suburban neighborhood.

Take us back to when you were writing your first book. What inspired the story and how did you go about picking a suitable title and book cover?

The Dudes were inspired by my kids and their friends. Our basement was the place where everybody came to hang out, which was both a blessing and a curse for me as a parent. As I observed these boys, I was drawn back to my own middle grade years and the antics of my brother and his friends. Between the two influences, the Dudes were born.

As for the cover, I knew it was important to have a good, professional cover. I also wanted my publishing business to help other artists make a living. So I determined to pay union scale, and I looked for an artist on HireanIllustrator.com Jacquelyn B. Moore was just out of art school, but her portfolio stood out to me immediately. She had drawn a series of scenes of a diverse group of preteens. The kids were obviously getting into some kind of mischief and their faces showed their hilarious reactions. I knew this was the perfect artist to portray the Dudes, and she’s done the cover art on all six books so far!

What were some of your goals with the book "Dudes Hard Target"?

School life is always changing. My kids’ district recently spent a lot of money on security upgrades, which sparked some ideas about how the Dudes would deal with these changes. There is a lot of fear and craziness around school safety issues in our age of school shootings. If parents and PTA and school administrators feel anxiety, how must the students feel? I think humor can break the tension and give kids a sense of control over how they approach scary things. So, I guess, as always, my goal was to find the fun!

What is the main message that you wish to spread with "Dudes in the Middle"?

That peer-pressure is all mind games. I mean, I’m telling it in a funny way, with the Dudes creating a fake trendsetter and deciding to make the student body love bluegrass music. But people follow fads in order to feel like they belong, and there is usually someone who benefits from your fear of not belonging, whether it’s a celebrity or a fashion company or the popular clique. But what if you see it as all stupid and meaningless? Then you are free to like something weird or hang out with who you want or just feel “normal” for being who you are.

What sort of direction will you take with the next book in The Dudes Adventure Chronicles series?

The biggest thing that has happened for kids lately is, of course, the Covid-19 pandemic. The Dudes will seize this as an opportunity to act out all their favorite dystopian fantasies.

To be fair, it is the adults, not the kids, who made the pandemic dystopian. But the Dudes are never ones to sit back and watch. They will tackle online school, pandemic bubbles, and social distancing in their usual action-packed, comedic style.

When you start writing something new, what are some things you outline first?

I start with action scenes and jokes. It takes a while for the plot of a book to come together for me. I start by brainstorming the general idea I want to cover in the book. For instance, for Summer of the Dudes, I knew I wanted to talk about emergency preparedness. Disasters are fascinating for kids. So I brainstormed funny scenes like Nate creating an earthquake simulator and the guys locking Deven’s dad in a safe room.

The more I jot down, the more ideas come. Eventually, the Dudes create their own emergency with a robot invasion during the Arts Festival. Stringing the laughs together with cause and effect comes later. I never really have an outline for the Dudes--just a list of chapters.

Which one do you prefer: writing a series or standalone novel? Why?

I prefer series because I prefer stories and characters that go on (and on). I like TV series better than standalone movies too. With several books you have a chance to see characters grow and change, and you can tell a more complex story with the plot too.

Which of your books was the most memorable to write and why?

I’d have to say that Dudes in the Middle is close to my heart. In the book, the Dudes invent an imaginary eighth-grader to help them sway the school’s fads and trends. I found my thoughts frequently going back to a similar time in my tween-hood when my girlfriends and I invented a fake love interest to impress an out-of-state friend. At camping trips and sleepovers, we would make up scenarios and write the friend letters describing them. At one point, “Stewart” was dating two of us at the same time and enlisting another friend for support in “his” deception. The Dudes’ “Stewart” is much more of a team player, (although I think Teresa sees him as a romantic interest).

Besides children's books, have you ever written anything for adults? If not, do you ever plan on doing so?

You never know where your imagination will take you, but I doubt I will ever write for adults. I really appreciate the hopefulness with which children’s literature is imbued. Characters have to be real. Situations can even be gritty. But you can’t give up on a hopeful ending because the young people reading have their whole life ahead of them in which things can change for the better. And young people can drive that change.

What are you currently working on? May we know when we can expect a new book?

I’m hoping to debut a new fantasy series next year. It’s about a girl hero and a wizard’s apprentice. And, of course, I’ll write the next installment of the Dudes series. It should come out in 2023.

How were you introduced to AllAuthor? Has the website reached your expectations and is there anything we can do to improve your experience?

I started with a discount deal offered through my membership with Alliance of Independent Authors and Illustrators. I tried the initial 6 months and was sold on the value of the Pro plan. AllAuthor got me up and running on Twitter, provided a lot of free mock-ups and materials, and even inspired me to be more strategic about all my social media. AllAuthor is smart about Twitter so I don’t have to be. I have very little money to spare for promotion, but this is an expense I don’t question.

Ask Emily K. Johnson a Question

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    • AllAuthor AllAuthor 2 years ago
      Allauthor
    • Have you ever incorporated something that happened to you in real life into your novels?
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • Ha-ha! Every day. If the adventures of Tyler and his friends don't make it into my books, I might also mention them in my Readers newsletter. Besides that, I'm always collecting other people's kids' stories. Every parent's life is fascinating because kids are such interesting people!
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • Every book isn't for every reader. I cherish the good reviews, of course. Especially the ones that are written my readers (actual kids). I read the bad reviews for specific things I can learn to make my books better. Once a boy told me he felt confused because I didn't explain who the Dudes are right at the beginning. A writing teacher might tell you to start in the middle of the action, but that doesn't work for all kids. I took his critique to heart and started writing prologues in my books to orient the reader.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • Read more. I used to limit my reading time to have more time to write, but the manuscript I was trying to write wasn't working out. Getting pregnant and then nursing my children forced me to spend more time reading. I began to see how other writers structured their books. It helped me understand my own writing better.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • I actually started writing as soon as I learned how to hold a pencil. I wrote a book about a hidden Indian tribe as a school project in second grade. I submitted stories to Analog science fiction magazine when I was a teen. Of course, they weren't published, but that was good experience too. Even when I didn't have time to write, I wrote stories in my head. I wrote fan fiction before there was an internet to share it on. I think stories are integral to who I am as a person.
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    • AllAuthor AllAuthor 2 years ago
      Allauthor
    • If you could choose three people to invite for a dinner party, who would they be and why?
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • I would never invite people for a dinner party. I'm too shy. When I write, I'm inviting you into my imagination and giving you a taste of my sense of humor. This is more open than most people are. But I could never do it in real life. Aside from my husband, my deepest connections are on the page.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • Science fiction, definitely. You can have adventure at the same time that you can explore ideas that are "too political" for some people in the real world. Realistic literature can be very depressing and turn kids off. But science fiction dystopias can be intriguing. It is important to think about positive futures too. I'm a big fan to Star Trek. Kids should be thinking ahead about the world they want to live in.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • I actually really like myself. As a kid, I felt pressured to be a certain way (less shy), but now I know that it's important to accept who you are and grow from that rather than trying to change something. My fears make life a challenge sometimes, but, since I can admit that it's who I am, I can congratulate myself when I do something that is brave for me that would be no problem for someone who wasn't shy.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • I write best with uninterrupted time, so I go to my home office as soon as the kids leave for school. I try to work a couple hours on each of my big writing projects during a day. I really love to turn on my computer and open a writing file and immerse myself in that story for a while. What a great way to start the day!
        I take a 20 minute lunch break that includes eating leftovers while I watch a superhero show on TV: love Flash and Black Lightning! When I'm done eating, I do a few exercises (superhero shows are great to motivate you to exercise). Then I'm back in my office chair where I spend at least an hour (but often more--too much) on marketing stuff like creating ads and posting on my website or social media. I try to save that marketing stuff for after lunch when I'm less focused.
        When the kids get home, I pack it up and take a reading break while they do homework. I make supper and have some time with my husband (more stories on TV). Then I read again for about an hour in bed before lights out.
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    • AllAuthor AllAuthor 2 years ago
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    • What is that one thing you think readers generally don't know about your specific genre?
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • It's actually hard to write comedy. You think, oh this funny thing happened. But some people tell it well and others don't. To get the laugh, I need to set up the event well with details that the readers can imagine so they are anticipating. Then, when the funny moment arrives, it helps to tell it with a twist to surprise them. For instance, in Dudes in the Middle, when the Elephant Gun goes off in carpool: the picture's on the front of the book, and you've seen the Dudes shoot the overpowered dart gun on purpose, and you've seen them put it in the car, so you're just waiting for it to go off. What you don't expect is the police presence that makes it that much funnier because you're imagining Officer Morgan seeing this, and it's like the reader is now sharing the joke with him.
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      • Emily K. Johnson Emily K. Johnson 2 years ago
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      • I assumed I'd need to get a paying job and do writing on the side. People advised me to be a teacher because then I'd have summers to write. I think that is one problem with our educational system. People see teaching as a part-time job for people who care about other things. I think teaching is a calling and a profession and should be treated (and paid) like one.
        But, to get back to writing, it's true that it's hard to make a living as a children's book author. Even though I publish my own books and make a higher percentage on sales than I would working with a traditional publisher, I couldn't live on what I currently make from this series alone.
        In college I studied English literature, but I have also taken several writing, publishing and marketing courses since I left college. If you're self-publishing, which I recommend, a degree is not as important as being willing and able to learn all parts of the business. I'm continually learning, but I am the judge of what I need to know.
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