![]() ![]() I told your editor and she would like a phone call.” Pennypacker remembers Malk telling her, “I hope it’s okay but I couldn’t help myself. ![]() I then realized I had just given him an entire plot summary of a novel.”Īlthough Pennypacker swore Malk to secrecy, he called her a short time later to confess that he had just gotten off the phone with her editor, Donna Bray. If it was to know that they both went on and became who they were supposed to be, I left room for that.”Īfter her agent, Steven Malk, informed her that he too was receiving letters from readers wanting to know what happens next to Peter and Pax, Pennypacker recalled that, “for some reason” she responded, “Of course I know what happens.” She then wove a tale for Malk narrating what happened to Pax after he left Peter to rejoin his four-legged companions. ![]() ![]() “If your emotional investment was to get Peter and Pax back together again, you can imagine that. Calling the conclusion of Pax “a great ending,” Pennypacker said that she initially resisted writing a sequel because she wanted readers to feel “that the right thing happened” to Peter and Pax. Pennypacker said that she received “a ton of letters” from readers wanting to know what happened after Peter and Pax are reunited in the novel’s closing pages. ![]()
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