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Associated Press


New McElhatton novel takes on single woman's quest
 
  By JEFF BAENEN, Associated Press Writer

  Wednesday, March 18, 2009   (03-18) 15:55 PDT MINNEAPOLIS, (AP)

  Like the heroine of her funny new book, Heather McElhatton knows
what it's like to be sick of being single.

  "People are like, 'Hey, why don't you bring anyone by?' And then
eventually they kind of treat you like you have a disease, like, 'How are
you doing? Are you hanging in there?' And you get alternative lifestyle
books from your parents, like, 'We just want to support you. Whatever it
is you've chosen,'" she recounts.

  As for showing up at family gatherings without a boyfriend,
McElhatton says, "You feel like you have a cleaver in your head, like
something hideous nobody really wants to look too closely at."

  McElhatton follows up her successful first book, 2007's "Pretty Little
Mistakes" (now in development as a TV series), with the breezy
"Jennifer Johnson Is Sick of Being Single." She calls it "a dark fairy tale"
about an unmarried young woman "wanting to make her fantasy come
true at any cost."

  Her new book is on sale May 5 and tackles two questions: "What if
getting what you want is the worst thing for you, and how do people
become awful?"

  In "Jennifer Johnson," a spunky career woman feels pressure to land
a mate when both her younger sister and ex-boyfriend plan Valentine's
Day weddings. Jennifer works as a copywriter for a Minneapolis
department store and has developed an addiction to Cinnabon's rolls.
After striking out on Internet dates, she falls for the handsome
department store heir, described as "North Woods, chiseled-jaw
George Clooney-plays-Paul Bunyan stunning."

  McElhatton (rhymes with "tackle Latin," she says) has much in
common with Jennifer, who is stuck writing ads for men's black dress
socks. McElhatton, 38, attended a strict Christian high school, where
she was "a freak," and tried online dating ("a nightmare"). Keller's, the
department store in "Jennifer Johnson," has "a Jesus fish glued to the
Xerox machine" and starts every Monday with an employee pep rally
and prayer.

  As she gets involved with the wealthy Bradford Keller, Jennifer starts
to change the way she looks and talks. She gives away all the retro,
funky junk in her apartment and her cat until all she's left with is a
porcelain figurine of a "sassy '50s working girl," which is "her icon of
freedom," McElhatton explains.

  "I think this happens to a lot of us, where we have a dream, we go
after the dream, we do everything we can to make the dream come
true," McElhatton says. "And it feels tight and scratchy and weird, and
we want to get back out of it. And during that tight, scratchy time, I think
that's when people are awful."

Despite all the red flags that Keller is not the right guy, Jennifer barrels
ahead. The final scene is her wedding.

"And you're sitting there going, 'Is she going to go through with it or
not?' Because at this point, you're like, 'Dear God, no,'" McElhatton
says.

Jeanette Perez, McElhatton's editor at HarperCollins, describes
"Jennifer Johnson" as "anti-chick lit" — an antidote to "the happy
ending fairy tale we've all been taught that might not be real or realistic."

McElhatton, a vivacious redhead with an easy smile and laugh, has
never been married and has no plans to wed. She's been with her
boyfriend for over a year and describes herself as a monogamist.

"I just think if you love someone you should be with them. The
paperwork end of it confuses me. It seems tricky," she says over
cookies and coffee at her sunny new home in an upscale neighborhood
near Lake of the Isles. Her pet pug, Walter, snorts as he snuggles into
his baby stroller. ("I bought myself a high-maintenance Chinese dog,"
McElhatton explains).

Barefoot and casually dressed with only a simple necklace for jewelry,
McElhatton still seems overwhelmed by the success of "Pretty Little
Mistakes."

The "do-over" novel, based on "Choose Your Own Adventure"
children's books, allowed readers to pick their own destiny — from
becoming a waitress at Denny's who is fatally burned when a pressure
cooker of split-pea soup explodes to joining a bizarre Berlin burlesque
circus. McElhatton charted her life's choices on a scrap of linoleum,
which led to the book's more than 150 endings. "Pretty Little Mistakes"
since has gone through several printings and been translated into
Mandarin Chinese and Polish.

It has also been sold to Universal Media Studios, where it's being
developed as an hourlong dramatic TV series with a central character,
Jane, as in "Jane Doe," loosely based on McElhatton. Jason Katims
(TV's "Friday Night Lights") is attached as executive producer. No
network, lead actress or airdate has been announced yet.

McElhatton plans next to write a screenplay — her first — of "Jennifer
Johnson." Her "Pretty Little Mistakes" sequel, "Million Little Mistakes," in
which the reader wins $22 million in a lottery and must decide how to
spend it, is tentatively set for publication in May 2010.

"I live in a state of permanent wonder. Maybe I'll even get married.
Anything's possible, really," McElhatton says.

___

On the Net:

Heather McElhatton: www.heathermcelhatton.com

HarperCollins: www.harpercollins.com
Photo:AP/ JEFF BAENEN