Writing 'Prophecy' proved to be inspirational



Flavia Bujor has been surprised by her success.
By DEEPTI HAJELA
ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK -- After a few years of starting stories that never got finished, Flavia Bujor decided it was time she completed something.
So at the age of 12, she decided to write a novel. She was 14 when the book was published.
Writing "was a passion for me since I was very young," Bujor, now 15, said in a recent interview with The Associated Press at the Soho Grand hotel. "I had written a lot of little things when I was growing up."
Bujor, who lives in Paris, was in New York recently to promote the American release of her book, "The Prophecy of the Stones." It's the story of a hospitalized young girl who imagines another world where three heroines band together with the help of some magical stones to save their land.
The book has made it onto best-seller lists in Europe, and more than 20 publishers elsewhere in the world have bought the rights to put it out in their countries. Miramax/Hyperion Books for Children released it in the United States at the beginning of this month.
Why she wrote it
Success comes as a surprise to Bujor, who wrote the book primarily to see if she could. She would write a chapter and then pass it on to family and friends to see if they liked it and thought she should continue.
"For me it's like a dream," said Bujor, a soft-spoken, slender and tall young woman with long brown hair. "I really didn't think it was possible to publish it."
"The Prophecy of the Stones" caught the attention of a French publishing house when a distant family friend sent in some pages Bujor had mailed to him for his opinion. Publisher Anne Carriere contacted Bujor, ready to offer her a contract.
"I was astonished by her maturity and I thought it was very amazing that a such a young girl can write like that," Carriere said.
Since then, the novel has sold 20,000 copies in France and Italy, and more than 30,000 in Germany. In the United States, the initial print run is 65,000 copies, publisher Kathy Schneider of Miramax said.
Her parents don't add to the hype. They would not talk to the AP about their daughter and they don't attend her promotional events.
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