Posts Tagged 'book marketing'

movie

I haven’t had a chance to announce it yet, but I’ll be self-publishing a new book pretty darn soon.  I know, I know, I have a publisher and while I love her to pieces, I want to see what this self-publishing thing is all about.  Granted, I’m not entirely new to the process having self-published a few ebooks in the past, but this was before anyone even knew what  a Kindle was all about.  I sold or gave away these ebooks on my website, took one of them on tour (before Pump Up) and basically just concentrated on building up my business.  Since Pump Up Your Book went into business five years ago, I’ve not had much time to write at all which made me happy the business is a success but made me sad, too. ;o(

I needed two of me!

As authors started coming in, I noticed a lot of them were self-published.  I listened to their stories and thought I would steal some time to finish my books I have had sitting for like ages and see what all the excitement was all about.  One book is getting ready to go to my publisher but being as I didn’t want to wait for years before I had a new one out, I thought why not write another and see what all this “being in the Kindle store” was all about and self-publish it. 

I. Am. Excited.

Anyway, back to what this blog post was supposed to be about!  The book that is going to the publisher is about soul mates.  The book I am writing (almost done) that I’m going to self-publish is also about soul mates.  So this little movie I’m going to show you that I made has to do with soul mates.  Go figure.

Really, this is cool.  Xtranormal is a website where you can make your own 3D movie.  My head is twirling thinking of all the things you can do with this.  Xtranormal offers a wide variety of characters, sets, and animations that you can easily add to any movie you create.  Cast your actors, write your script, and share your movie with your buddy/buddies and family.  And the best part is, you don’t need a huge budget or a film crew.  Believe me this thing is addicting.  And the cool thing is you can download it to YouTube.

I mean just think of the possibilities with this.  You could have two of the characters in your upcoming book talk about the book’s release.  I think that would be really cool.  Let’s say you’re a blogger and you don’t have a book, have people talk about your blog, what they can find there and mention the link!

Tell you what.  If anyone out there in blogland decides to try it out, I will give you a full free day here at Literarily Speaking spotlighting your handiwork.  Are there any budding producers out there?  When you make your video, leave the link in the comment section and I’ll feature it absolutely out of the kindness of my heart.  Seriously.

So here’s mine.  I messed up in one place.  See if you can find the goof?  I double dare ya.  Whoever is the first to find it and leaves the answer in the comments below wins…let me scrounge through this goodie bag and see what I can come up with…

A

FREE

PUMP

UP

YOUR

BOOK

CAP!!!!

Woohoo, is that exciting or what?  A Pump Up Your Book cap comes in handy for all sorts of things besides taking up space in my goodie bag, so watch the video carefully and if you’re the first person who can find where I  goofed up, a FREE CAP will be in the mail tomorrow heading toward your house.  Is this exciting or what???

Good luck!

Incidentally….I have a little secret….Pump Up Your Book will celebrate its 5th year anniversary during the whole month of April where we will be appearing on lots of blogs and giving away prizes at every stop.  Did I say stop?  Yeppers!  We’re going on our own virtual tour right along with the April authors!  If you would like to be included in our month long birthday bash, drop me a line at thewriterslife(at)gmail.com and I’ll give you the details!

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Dorothy Thompson is CEO/Founder of Pump Up Your Book, an innovative public relations agency specializing in online book publicity tours.  You can visit us at www.pumpupyourbook.com.  Let us take your book to the virtual level!

023

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

blog 8Like the new design?  It freezes for me every time I go here (it might be my computer) so if it is downloading long for you, please leave me a comment and let me know?  The reason why I even changed the template was because the other one was too BUSY and hopefully this is all my aged computer’s fault.

Not only did I change the template, but I also want to focus in on more than just interviews, guest posts from others, that sort of thing.  I had thought about starting a new blog to talk about my own interests and publishing and promoting journey, but I have this perfectly fine blog so today marks the day I start giving my unadulterated opinions on what’s happening in the publishing world today from my own perspective whether the world is ready for it or not.

Today’s topic is all about using your blog in other ways – like producing material for future books.  I have a relationship type blog (www.SoulMateTriangle.com) in which I am honing up on my relationship stuff but while I was over there the other day I noticed some of the stuff that I have in draft would be perfect for this new book I’m putting together.

Did I mention this?

I’m about 30 odd pages through, quite a few more to go but I did some thinking and why not grab some of the material I have written and re-purpose them?    I’ve heard of publishers finding future books to represent that way but that’s not my intentions.

I’m self-publishing.

I love it when someone posts about their self-publishing journey on their blog with sales statistics, the whole nine yards, and that’s what I want to do here.  I want to see just what all the hubbub is all about.  The main goal for me is to have this new book in the Kindle store, that’s it.  I’m not interested in the paper edition, I want to see what I can do with this first.

Back to blogs generating material for future books, Bob Barker had a great article go up on his blog today (or at least I found out about it today through Google alerts).

I love this blog post. Bob lists seven reasons why all authors need a book blog but the reason that stood out most to me was #5.  Bob says, “While you’re honing your craft every week, you are stockpiling a small library of content.  And that content can some day  be re-purposed into articles, reports, white papers, and even new books.  Creating new content (via your blog) should be an ongoing activity.”

I so agree with this as well as the other points Bob makes.

Here’s something else that’s interesting while we’re on the subject of blogs to books.  I was on this website earlier today – Blurb.  Turn your blog into a book.  I can’t endorse it because I’ve never used it before but for $3.95 it doesn’t sound like it’ll break the bank.  It’s not exactly what I was talking about because I’m not talking about taking your entire blog and making it into a book, just bits of pieces of it.  But this does look fun.

Have you re-purposed any of your blog posts for  future books?

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , ,

Reversible_Skirt_front-cover-webWriting my memoir, Reversible Skirt, was a push-pull process that took place over many years. I didn’t have a flash of inspiration that motivated me to sit at my desk, begin writing and press on with full confidence that I would produce a story worth reading.

Amid the rafters of my garage I have cardboard boxes of journals going back decades. I expect if I were to pull them down and leaf through their pages, I’d find many memoir beginnings discarded for one reason or another. It seems for a long time, no matter where I began, what point of view I took, how well I crafted a scene or created dialogue, the project always ground to a halt, and quickly.

Many factors led to this repetitive cycle of beginning then abandoning my memoir, not the lease of which was my mother’s suicide, which occurred when I was two years old, an event my family buried so deeply that I first had to overcome decades of enforced denial before I could allow myself to open up and see what I actually felt about the formative events of my childhood.

Another thing that caused me to stumble a fair amount was a feeling that I have nothing worthwhile to say and that books should be written by people far more important and talented than I am. I do know, however, that whenever someone speaks the truth with an authentic voice, the message is a powerful one. And powerful messages conveyed with artful language are the stuff of books that people hold dear to their hearts long after they’ve read the last page.

If it had been up to me alone, the adult Laura, I probably never would have  written Reversible Skirt. There are plenty of things to write about, many forms writing can take: plays, songs, poems, stories, feature articles, essays, business profiles, data sheets, websites, manuals. I’ve learned a good deal from exploring all of those forms. But when my conscious mind was occupied with those things, the little girl inside of me was stewing, and every so often, she’d poke me, reminding me to tell her story.

I don’t know what caused me to realize the child I used to be was never going to stop bugging me until I wrote the story. But one day, at last, I did realize this. So I sat at my desk fully committed for the first time to seeing the project through.

Being inspired is energizing; it’s intoxicating; it’s sublime. I’ve found much inspiration in the words of other writers of memoir and autobiographical fiction, for instance, on the pages of Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” “The Woman Warrior” by Maxine Hong Kingston, Connie Mae Fowler’s “Before Women Had Wings,” and “This Boy’s Life” by Tobias Wolf. If I hadn’t read books such as these, it might never have occurred to me to write a memoir.

But it was my commitment that led to Reversible Skirt, a book that vividly portrays the confusing, gut-wrenching decade after my mother’s suicide from my point of view as a young child. It has sorrow, but also song; cruelty, but also compassion; disappointment, but also victory. I hope what I’ve brought to light in this book inspires those who read it, and if you are a writer with a book in mind, I hope you fully commit to turning your idea into a manuscript sooner rather than later.

***

rsz_1laura_44

Laura McHale Holland’s memoir, Reversible Skirt won a silver medal in the 2011 Readers Favorite book awards. Her stories and articles have appeared in such publications as Every Day Fiction Three, Wisdom Has a Voice, the Vintage Voices anthologies, NorthBay biz magazine, the Noe Valley Voice and the original San Francisco Examiner.

A member of both Redwood Writers and the Storytelling Association of California, Laura has been a featured teller at the Lake Tahoe Storytelling Festival.

To keep up with her, please visit http://lauramchaleholland.com.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

5 Things5 Things You Should Know About Writing

1.    You do not need a shed at the bottom of the garden to write—earplugs works well.
2.    The main part of your job is to minimise distractions and write (see my post).
3.    Some of your good friends and family members will never read your work. You will not cry about this.
4.    You may work best with some added pressure. So create a date to finish the first draft.
5.    Listen to your editor. They have your best interest at heart.

5 Things You Should Know About Book Promotion

1. Writing a good story is only part of the deal today—next you have to gather a following, create a platform and get connected.
2. You probably don’t have a similar numbers of followers to authors like Paulo Coelho or Neil Gaiman yet, but join Facebook and Twitter and start anyway.
3. When you’re ready, go on a blog tour.
4. Word-of-mouth is still one of the most powerful ways to sell books.
5. Create a promotion to ignite the fire.

5 Things You Should Know About The 58th Keeper

1. All the places “The 58th Keeper” goes to are real: London, Istanbul, Paris, Rome.
2. If you read it and review you may win a Kindle or Nook.
3. Vincent is the son of one of England’s wealthiest men.
4. Book two will be finished soon.
5. Archy does look like a young Prince Harry.

5 Things You Should Know About R.G. Bullet

1. He was born in England but lives in Miami.
2. He has lived in nine different countries.
3. He has written a Victorian zombie short story series titled: The Caldecott Chronicles (PG13)
4. He’s addicted to Red Bull.
5. He once won a scratchcard lottery.

5 Ways to Connect With R.G. Bullet

1. Check my my website: www.RGBullet.com
2. Follow me: Twitter: @rgbullet58
3. Blog: TheWindsorTimes.com
4. Facebook/rgbullet
5. Or email me rgbullet58 {at} gmail.com

About R.G. Bullet

rg_bullet-photoR. G. Bullet was born in Berkshire, UK. After living in nine different countries he has finally settled in Miami Beach, USA.

He is addicted to tea, reading, writing, motorbikes and shamefully Call of Duty.

His middle grade debut novel: The 58th Keeper has just been released.

To learn more go to www.rgbullet.com

Follow him on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/RGBullet58
and join the fan page for the latest updates and fun competitions
www.facebook.com/rgbullet

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Chronicles of Zee and ZoeyTitle: The Chronicles of Zee & Zoey: A Journey of the Extraordinarily Ordinary
Author: Deborah Barnes
Genre: Nonfiction
Paperback: 180
Publisher: ZZP Publishing
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-0983440802

BOOK SUMMARY:

Combining a warm, humorous, and conversational style of writing with stunning photos and charming artwork, readers are immediately immersed into the world of Zee, a lovable male Maine Coon cat, and Zoey, a high-spirited female Bengal cat, as they share their amazing relationship and bond that formed between the two of them in The Chronicles of Zee & Zoey. What makes this story so compelling, is that the author narrates the journey of the cats through the personal trials and tribulations of her own life. Readers will easily be able to relate to the many moments the author shares and her spot on accuracy in understanding the many nuances of a cat is so realistic, one might think the author was a cat herself!  You will be certain to smile and laugh on more than one occasion as you share this incredible journey with Zee and Zoey and learn the ultimate message they teach us – to embrace the ordinary in life and dare to make it extraordinary.

BOOK REVIEW:

I’d like to start off by saying I’m a huge animal lover.  I’ve had cats – lots of them – dogs, rabbits (well, one), hamsters, birds, you name it, so I knew I couldn’t wait to get my hands on The Chronicles of Zee & Zoey: A Journey of the Extraordinarily Ordinary by Deborah Barnes.  I can’t even begin to name all the reasons why I love this book but if I had to narrow it down to one – the pictures are breathtaking and worth the price alone.

Deborah begins her book by telling us about how her animal kingdom started and let me explain about this “animal kingdom” first.  Deborah is a very conscientious animal owner.  Throughout the book, as she’s talking about each one, you can sense this is someone who doesn’t take pet ownership lightly.  The real stars of this book are, of course, Zee, a Maine coon cat, and Zoey, Bengal cat.  Pictures cannot justify how beautiful these animals are.  But what I loved about this book was how Deborah took us on a journey in itself into her life with these cats, showing us their quirky personalities and wonderful dispositions.  If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to buy from a cattery (which I found particularly interesting) or how these two breeds interact in a  household of other cats, you will love this book.

The photographs in this book are beyond beautiful.  Barnes’ writing style is superb and the storyline keeps you captivated.  Owners of Bengal and Main coon cats will particularly love it, but if you’ve ever wondered what it’s like to own one of these cats, this book will help guide you and show you what to expect.  I do want to also note the cover was the most beautiful cover I have ever seen – kudos to the designer!

Cat lovers everywhere will fall in love with The Chronicles of Zee & Zoey and it makes the perfect coffee table book.  The pictures alone are great conversation starters!

I would give this 5 out of 5 stars.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

5 Things

History made fun! In this fast-paced and action-packed time travel adventure, the wise-cracking whiz kid, Puggie Liddell’s modified Gameboy activates a time travel portal and he lands in the 1890s with his sibling rival, annoyingly prissy teen sister, Gigi, who thinks history is like-totally-gross.

The kids must learn to work together to find a time travel portal back to the present before the eccentric scientist, Nikola Tesla, or his arch nemesis, inventor Thomas Edison, can steal the Gameboy and use it to complete a death ray machine, an invention powerful enough to disturb the very fabric of space-time and create an instantaneous world disaster.

5 Things You Should Know About The Incredibly Awesome Adventures of Puggie Liddell

1.  Puggie LiddellSibling rivals Puggie and Gigi Liddell travel back in time and visit the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair, which was so spectacular, it inspired both the Emerald City in the Wizard of Oz and Disneyworld!

2. Puggie and Gigi also have an opportunity to ride the original Ferris Wheel, which made its debut at the Chicago World’s Fair.

3. Puggie and Gigi became two of the 38 million visitors, who marveled at P.T. Barnum’s magnificent American Museum, which held a wide array of animals, fascinating objects, human oddities, before its demise in 1865.

4. Author Oscar Wilde toured the United States in 1882 but was caught in a time-loop when he met Puggie and Gigi on a train in 1893.

5. Puggie and Gigi learned to work together to save the world from rival inventors, Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, who wanted to use Puggie’s Gameboy to complete a death-ray machine, an invention powerful enough to destroy the planet.

Dr. Karen Mueller Bryson is an optioned screenwriter, produced playwright and published novelist.

She is the author of several romantic comedy novels for adults and is the creator of Short on Time books, a series of fast-paced and fun novels readers can finish in one sitting.

The Incredibly Awesome Adventures of Puggie Liddell is Karen’s first novel for young people.

For additional information about Karen Mueller Bryson, visit her website: http://www.ahorsewithnoname.com

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Nine Lives of ChristmasTitle: The Nine Lives of Christmas
Author: Sheila Roberts
Genre: Holiday Fiction
Paperback: 224
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
Language: English
ISBN-13: 978-0312594497

BOOK SUMMARY:

Bestselling author Sheila Roberts brings us a humorous, heartwarming Christmas novel about a matchmaking cat who brings a couple together just in time for the holidays. When a guy is in trouble, he starts making deals with his Creator…and Ambrose the cat is no exception. In danger of losing his ninth and final life, Ambrose makes a desperate plea.  He’ll do anything—anything!—if he can just survive and enjoy a nice long, final life. His prayer is answered when a stranger comes along and saves him, and now it looks like he has to hold up his end of the bargain.

The stranger turns out to be a fire fighter named Zach, the quintessential commitment- phobe who’s in need of some serious romantic help. If Ambrose can just bring Zach together with Merilee, the nice lady who works at Pet Palace, it’s bound to earn him a healthy ninth life.  Unfortunately for Ambrose, his mission is a lot harder than he ever anticipated.  Now it’s going to take all his feline wiles—and a healthy dose of Christmas magic—to bring them alltogether in time for the holidays.

BOOK REVIEW:

First of all, I love cats, I love Christmas stories with a happy ending and I love Sheila Roberts’ books. In this whimsical holiday tale that’s just the right ticket to get you into the holiday spirit, Ambrose the cat is a cat with a mission.  Having survived the last eight lives, his ninth one is a bit more precious as that’s it!  In walks Zach who needs help only he doesn’t know it.  He’s horrible in the commitment department and Ambrose decides that if he helps Zach see the light and fall in love with the cute Merilee who works at the local pet shop, he will be redeemed, only it’s not quite that easy.

I thoroughly loved this cute Christmas tale.  Not only was it written exceedingly well, the storyline just won’t get out of my head, not that I’d want it to because it’s all about love and redemption.

I especially loved Ambrose.  He reminded me a lot of Garfield.  The same sassiness but Ambrose knows to be good this 9th go around and strives hard to bring Zach and Merilee together no matter what obstacles are in the way.

If you love Christmas, cats and happy endings, Sheila Roberts’ The Nine Lives of Christmas is the ticket to great holiday reading pleasure!

BTW, if you’d like to listen to an excerpt, click image below!

Nine Lives Audio 2

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Heidi SmithHeidi Ann Smith grew up in the Chicago area and began publishing poems as a child. At a young age, she won various local and academic awards for her writing; based on her writing abilities, she was awarded a scholarship to a private high school and attended college courses during her high school years. After high school she began raising a family and was taken away from her writing, but soon returned to complete a Bachelor of Arts from Eastern Illinois University. She then earned a Master of Arts in Humanities from California State University and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Goddard College. Several of her poems recently found homes in various journals, and she published a scholarly thesis on the German artist George Grosz. Heidi is currently a PhD student studying Creative Writing at Middlesex University in London, England. THE CLARA ANN BURNS STORY is her first novel.

You can visit the website at www.monkeypuzzlepress.com.

About The Clara Ann Burns Story

The Clara Ann Burns StoryIn Heidi Ann Smith’s short novel THE CLARA ANN BURNS STORY, a woman who suffered child abuse looks back over her turbulent life as she approaches her fifties. Smith describes it as “a story of a young girl, Clara Ann Burns, who was tortured, abused and neglected by her family. When she was old enough to go out on her own, she got herself into situations that were not always the best. But in the end she raises her own family and holds onto the hope of healing and living without fear.”

Smith explains that the story “is based on some of my life experiences,” which included sexual abuse. “I needed to write this book–and I needed to have the right and the freedom to bring together different events.”

Rather than creating a traditional narrative text from start to finish, in THE CLARA ANN BURNS STORY, Smith–who holds one master’s degree in fine arts in creative writing, another in humanities, and is a PhD student in creative writing–chose to express child abuse and loss by experimenting with literary genre. The result is that the protagonist, Clara Ann Burns, tells her story through written memories (short stories, lists, poems, one-minute plays) and memorabilia (hospital records, photographs, personal records). All are presented without explanation: a grandmother cooks breakfast while she speaks to her deceased husband; a mother scalds her child in a bathtub; the funeral processions of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr.; the death of a child’s father; and the rape of a stepdaughter. This multi-genre approach, Smith feels, more accurately conveys “the impossibility of piecing together this story, and reflects the inconsistencies of an abuse victim’s memories that tend to jump from one instance of abuse to the next, rather than flowing through, perhaps, what might be considered the normal ups and downs of life.”

In addition, Smith points out, “These isolated memories of abuse that flash through Clara’s mind are what it means to have post-traumatic stress disorder. I suggest further that these isolated incidents also represent the perplexity of healing from prolonged neglect and abuse, since a constant state of fear is what is most familiar to Clara since she was abused by family members and friends for many years. If a child believes his or her own family is not adverse to his or her own torture, neglect, or rape, the child cannot survive as emotionally or psychologically intact. In Clara’s case, the abuse is pervasive, there is no relief for many years, nor hope of relief until she is an older woman and capable of looking at what happened to her objectively through the instantiation of the events as presented in the text.”

Despite the personal inspiration behind THE CLARA ANN BURNS STORY, Smith’s academic and scholarly understanding of both creative writing and fine art informs the book’s power. She likens writing to fine art: “All the great artists I studied reflected their life; in a great work of art, you cannot extricate the artist’s life from their work. When you look at a work of art by Van Gogh or Caravaggio you see some truth about their life. For me, the truth does not necessarily read like a biography; there are details that are blurred from your view. When I was engaged in the writing process, some things that were hidden from my view came out–which may grab the reader because it hit me as well.”

Smith hopes that readers who can identify with THE CLARA ANN BURNS STORY will find some comfort in it. “When I was a little girl I was very sick and I didn’t have a happy home life. I started reading poetry, and I felt some kind of resonance and a kindred spirit with the other writer’s work. I hope my work will reach someone and that they will also know that they are not alone.” And, she adds, “I also hope the work is received as a work of literature.”

christmas garland

Happy holiday, Heidi! Is Christmas your favorite holiday?

Christmas is my favorite holiday in the sense that it is a time when our family is together.  Three of my five children live in various states in the USA.  My children have always been each other’s best friends.  Christmas is an opportunity for our family to come together.  We enjoy making each other laugh.

How do you prepare for the holidays?  Do you decorate?

The primary concern for the holidays is figuring out what games to play and what prizes will be won.

What was Christmas like when you were a kid?

My childhood was less than idyllic.  I remember screaming, crying and verbal and physical confrontation.

candleWhat’s your most favorite ornament?

All of the ornaments my children made when they were small.

What’s your favorite outside activity during the holidays?  Or are you a winter hating humbug like me?

Our family and friends play poker or bingo after dinner.  The person who wins picks out a gift to give to someone else.  Usually the gifts are board games, classic comic films, toys or coloring books.

What’s your favorite holiday movie?

We love the Marx Brother films and “Go West” in particular.  “Go West” really does not have anything to do with Christmas except that as a family we never get tired of watching it together.  Our entire family thinks the Marx Brother’s are hilarious.  At my daughter’s wedding this summer she had a harpist play a number of the songs from a variety of the Marx Brother’s films.  Our family was fighting back the tears.  “Everyone says I love you, But just what they say it for I never knew, It’s just inviting trouble for the poor sucker who says I love you …”

Favorite holiday story or book?

“Twas the night before Christmas and all through the house …”

What is the best present anyone could ever give to you?

Listening to my children and husband laughing.

If you could go anywhere in the world during the holidays, where would that be?

I have been living in London for almost two years.  To borrow the words of Dorothy in the Wizard of OZ … there is no place like home.

Solid white lights or multicolored lights?

I noticed a new white light that has a blue tint to it.

Christmas bellFavorite holiday song?

“I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus”

Have you ever had to spend a Christmas away from home?

Yes – after my husband and I were married I was a waitress.  I had to work on Christmas.

What do you want Santa to bring you this year?

Laughter.

Have you been a good little boy or girl or a naughty one?

When I was a child my mother frequently told me that I was naughty and that Santa would not bring me presents. Before my first communion I had to go to confession for the first time.  The truth was I had never lied nor done anything truly wrong. I was five years old.  In preparation for my first confession the nuns instructed all of the children in Catechism classes that we had to tell the priest what we had done wrong.  I made up a story about having lied to my parents, which was my first real lie.

One last question, isn’t this fun?  What does Christmas mean to you?

We tend to have informal Christmas celebrations.  The dress code is pajamas and slippers.  Friends drop in to play games and laugh. While we usually have plenty of food we do not spend the day in the kitchen.  The goal is to relax and to enjoy each other. There is a lot of hugging, joke telling, dancing and hand holding that goes on.  If it is not too cold everyone goes for a walk, plays with the dogs outside and has a snowball fight. If we all watch a movie together on the television short naps are encouraged.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Guest Blogger 2Dealing with Rejection

By Veronica Blade

Writers, like other artists, deal with more rejection than any other profession. Our work, our heart and soul, is put on display for all to see and, because people have their own personal tastes, everyone is a critic. There will always be someone around to crush all your hopes and dreams, intentional or not. Because all art is subject to personal tastes, there will always be people who don’t like what you write. But that doesn’t necessarily mean you’re not any good. It means the story or style didn’t resonate with the reader.

Something WitchySo how do you avoid rejection? Simply put, you can’t. If you want to be successful in a creative field, you have to submit/publish your work. Even if you’re a best-selling author, you’re bound to get some negative reviews. The only way to prevent negativity is to stop putting your work out there. Give up. Where’s the fun in that?

If you’re getting excessive rejections and can’t seem to make it to the next level, it could be that you haven’t honed your craft well enough. Though rejection is inevitable, there is a way to decrease the number of them by controlling the quality of your art to make your manuscript shine. If your manuscript is professionally presented and polished, rejections will more likely be due to taste, it being too similar to others in the same genre or simply not suitable to their needs. You can work to give your plot a new twist, add unusual subplots, but there’s nothing you can do about taste. But, assuming it’s a craft issue, how do you improve your manuscript?

Beta readers: These are people who give your book a test run. Kind of like guinea pig readers.  Don’t give your baby to someone who only reads mysteries if you write urban fantasy romance for teens. You won’t get quality feedback because it’s not that reader’s genre and they won’t have experience (or possibly interest) in what you write. They’ll want you to change the plot or the characters when those things may not be a problem. Their feedback can hurt your work instead of help.

I seek out Twi-hards because my work is more similar to Twilight than anything else. Not that I have sparkly vampires (sometimes no vampires at all) or human heroines. But I do always have a supernatural element, my hero and heroines are always teens, and my stories are heavy on the romance. Just the thing Twi-hards go for.

You want beta readers who are brave enough to be honest with you, who get your work and who will give it to you straight when something sucks, but will say so without being mean. You shouldn’t have to pay a beta readers since their feedback is payment for the hours you’ve entertained them.

Be open to what your readers say. You, as a writer, must thicken up that skin, put your big girl/boy pants on and fix what’s wrong. Then you do it all over again with the next beta reader. Keep in mind that if a few of your beta readers point out a flaw in your manuscript, then there’s a greater likelihood that paying customers won’t like it either.

Critique Partners: Once your beta readers have navigated past the trickiest plot holes (I usually pass it through at least five beta readers), your manuscript needs to go to a professional — or two or three. These professionals are fellow writers who understand plotting, characterization, motivation, goals and conflicts — all the elements crucial to a good story. They also look for bad writing (c’mon, we all have that), like repetitive words/phrases and clichés. Sending your manuscript to another writer to critique is a reciprocal process. They are your critique partner, therefore the trick is that you must also critique their work for them. So, make sure you choose a critique partner whose work you love and whose feedback you respect.

Contests: Once your manuscript has been through the above steps and you’re sure it’s the best it can possibly be, enter it in some contests. If you’re a finalist, this is a great way to get your polished work in front of editors or agents who frequently judge literary contests. Warning: Actual contest feedback can be unpredictable because you might have a perfectly executed story and there will still be judges that don’t connect with your work, no matter what you do. Bottom line: These judges just didn’t like it. They may not know why. They just didn’t and they’ll come up with all sorts of reasons why it’s not working. But they may not be right. If you try to please everyone, very likely, you’ll please no one. But pay attention to their feedback. If you see the same comments from two or more judges then it’s time to have another look at your work. Be open to change and be honest with yourself.

Happily, there will also be judges who love your work. When enough judges agree at the same time, you might place in a contest. If the final judge is an editor or agent, you’re finally there, right? You’ve made it? Not necessarily. If you only place once, it could be a fluke — you happened to have three judges who weren’t as critical or who weren’t looking at a manuscript the same way an editor or agent would. But after you’ve made it to the finals in several contests, now we’re talking! You should feel confident in your abilities and your manuscript.

Keep in mind that you might have the next Twilight or the next Harry Potter and still get rejected. Jack London garnered about 600 rejections before he was published. Dr. Seuss received 27 with his first book. Walt Disney was fired from a newspaper for lack of imagination. Clark Gable was told his ears were too big. Harrison Ford was told he just didn’t have “it.”

Moral of the story?  Rejection is part of the business. If you get caught up in it, moving forward is much harder. It’s not personal, so get over it. If you love to write, if you love it so much that a part of you would die if you stopped, then you must be persistent. Learn your craft, put your work out there and never give up. Most importantly, you’re a writer. That’s what you do. What are you waiting for? Get writing!

Veronica BladeVeronica Blade is married with children and living in Southern California. By day she runs the family business, but each night she slips away to spin her tales. She writes stories about young adults to relive her own childhood and to live vicariously through her characters. Except her heroes and heroines lead far more interesting lives — and they are always way hotter.

Her latest book is Something Witchy This Way Comes.

Visit her website at www.veronicablade.com. Connect with her on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=100000174247353 and Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/VeronicaBlade.

Join Veronica Blade at the Pump Up Your Book Live! November Author Chat / Book Giveaway Party on Friday, November 18 starting at 8 p.m. eastern!

Veronica will be giving away a copy of Something Witchy This Way Comes simply by attending the chat and asking Veronica a question. All there is to it!

For details on chat, visit the official chat page for the November authors at Pump Up Your Book Live!

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

The Nine Lives of ChristmasJoin Sheila Roberts, author of the women’s fiction novel, The Nine Lives of Christmas (St. Martin’s Press), as she virtually tours the blogosphere November 1 – 23 2011 on her fifth virtual book tour with Pump Up Your Book!Bestselling author Sheila Roberts brings us a humorous, heartwarming Christmas novel about a matchmaking cat who brings a couple together just in time for the holidays. When a guy is in trouble, he starts making deals with his Creator…and Ambrose the cat is no exception. In danger of losing his ninth and final life, Ambrose makes a desperate plea. He’ll do anything—anything!—if he can just survive and enjoy a nice long, final life. His prayer is answered when a stranger comes along and saves him, and now it looks like he has to hold up his end of the bargain.

The stranger turns out to be a fire fighter named Zach, the quintessential commitment- phobe who’s in need of some serious romantic help. If Ambrose can just bring Zach together with Merilee, the nice lady who works at Pet Palace, it’s bound to earn him a healthy ninth life. Unfortunately for Ambrose, his mission is a lot harder than he ever anticipated. Now it’s going to take all his feline wiles—and a healthy dose of Christmas magic—to bring them alltogether in time for the holidays.

CONTEST!!!

In honor of Ambrose the Cat, Sheila is having a fun contest over at her blog!  Leave a comment telling Sheila in 25 words or less about the coolest cat you have ever owned and she will pick the best entry on November 30 and announce the winner on December 1.  Sheila says, “If you have the coolest cat of all we’ll send you a Sheila holiday reading package, consisting of my three Christmas novels, ON STRIKE FOR CHRISTMAS, THE SNOW GLOBE, and THE NINE LIVES OF CHRISTMAS. Contest ends November 30th and we’ll announce our winner on December 1st. Can hardly wait to hear about your awesome kitties!” Leave your comment about your coolest cat at her blog here!

Please show your support for such a talented lady by visiting her official tour page at Pump Up Your Book by clicking here!

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

You Never KnowTitle: You Never Know: Tales of Tobias: An Accidental Lottery Winner
Author: Lilian Duval
Publisher: Wheatmark Press
Paperback: 354 pages
ISBN: 1604945206
Genre: Literary Fiction

What happens when an ordinary person becomes extraordinary?

Tobias starts out in life much the same as any of us—not rich, not poor, with imperfect parents and unlimited ambition. When he’s twenty years old, his future is altered in irreparable ways after a tragic car accident pushes him down a new path. The once-promising anthropology major is forced to abandon his dreams in order to care for his orphaned, brain-damaged younger brother.

In his late thirties, Tobias works in a bookstore, trying desperately to make ends meet to support his family. His daily grind only reinforces the sadness that broken dreams and bad luck bring in their wake.

How many times have you heard someone say, “If only I won the lottery?”

When Tobias finds he has won the Mega Millions lottery, his unimaginable bad luck seems to have changed into unimaginable good luck … or has it?

Over peaks and valleys, this uplifting journey will challenge the limits of luck, life, and what we value most.

Find out more about the complications of Tobias’s friendship and rivalry with his best friend, Martin; the effects of all this bad luck and good luck on his marriage; and the struggles of his brother, Simeon, once a talented cartoonist, in … You Never Know.
Book Excerpt:

Chapter 1
Saturday, December 23, 1989, was the kind of tepid winter day that made people ask, “What winter?” Dark by four in the afternoon, but no wind, no bite, a gray curtain over the sky for most of the day, just barely cold enough to freeze the slush into a treacherous skin of black ice that coated the streets like slime in a dirty shower stall. Tobias skidded on it when he stepped off the New Jersey Transit bus from Port Authority.
He was to call home from the bus station as soon as he arrived. He would wait in Amy’s Coffee House and pop out with his luggage when his father double-tapped the horn.
The bus had pulled into Woodrock, New Jersey, at four-thirty PM, half an hour late in Christmas traffic. Tobias slung his overstuffed book bag over his shoulder and dragged his valise into the crowded restaurant. He bought a giant latte and sat on a bar stool at the end of the counter. Other college students were chatting about ski trips and courses and their current romances. Christmas carols played on an endless loop. The place smelled of cinnamon.
The location of home was debatable. The longer he stayed away, the more separate he became from the family still living in Woodrock, to the point where he could almost forget them. Home was where his life was: Abington College in Maryland and the off-campus apartment he shared with Martin, his tennis partner, a math major planning on business school, who called Tobias a “liberal arts lefty.” They got along fine, were evenly matched on the courts, and took turns abandoning their apartment for a few hours when one or the other had a girlfriend over. They were both twenty, going on twenty-one, seesawing between adolescence and adulthood.
Tobias took a gulp of coffee and scalded his tongue. His father would be sitting in front of the TV now, doing nothing, waiting for the phone to ring. His mother would be delaying dinner preparations, sneaking another glass of wine. His brother, Simeon, would be upstairs in his room, sketching or drawing.
He sipped half the coffee and folded his arms over his book bag. Simeon, age fifteen, was a cartoonist. His pictures had appeared in the high school newspaper, the town newspaper, and the state magazine. Their mother was an art teacher, but no one had taught him cartooning; he just drew all day long–in class, where he was warm in art and cold in every other subject; at home, where he holed up in his room, away from the fighting; and anyplace he went where he had to wait in line. He didn’t talk much.
When Tobias was eleven, Simeon was six, and already attracting attention with his cartoons. He entered the school art contest with a drawing of his first-grade teacher, emphasizing her long earrings and long face, a caricature that was otherwise flattering. The school principal called and demanded to know who, in fact, had drawn a picture too advanced for a first-grader. Their mother huffed off to school, carrying a Grand Union bag crammed with Simeon’s cartoons of the last year or so, mostly of family members, to back him up. Simeon won the prize: a drawing set containing colored pencils, chalk pastels, an eraser, a sharpener, and a blending stump, all in a tin box with compartments like a Swanson frozen dinner.
Watching him sketch at the kitchen table, Tobias told their mother, “He’s talented because he practices so much. He never does anything else.” Simeon went on drawing without seeming to listen.
“No,” their mother said. “He practices so much because he’s talented.”
Tobias first saw his baby brother when he was two weeks old. He’d been sent alone at age five on a plane to his aunt Joyce in Encino, California, hovered over by flight attendants, at the time called stewardesses. Joyce, accustomed to covering for her alcoholic sister, took care of Tobias competently and joylessly for a month. On his return home, his father showed him the baby, asleep in a crib. “Here’s your new brother,” he said. “Just like you, only smaller.”
By the time Tobias was twelve, his mother was drinking in the mornings, her coffee mug filled with wine, and couldn’t get Simeon off to elementary school. Tobias packed his brother’s lunch every day before he left for middle school, taught him to tell time, and made sure he got out the door on time, while their mother went back to bed.
Tobias finished his coffee and asked the girl next to him to watch his stuff while he went to the men’s room. Someone was on the pay phone at the back of the restaurant. He ordered another coffee the same size. He wouldn’t be able to sleep. But rather than making him jittery, the caffeine was calming him, and he cast around for something to look forward to after this visit. He was always thinking, When this or that happens, then I’ll be happy. It was never now; it was always later. Maybe happiness is forever anticipating being happy, he thought. Getting what you want doesn’t equal happiness. His was a life always heading somewhere but never arriving.
At the moment, he was looking forward to three things: One, seeing his brother, his only family member who was not stuck in time or moving backward. Two, perversely, for this visit to be over. And three, his undergraduate anthropology fellowship in the rainforests of the Peruvian Amazon and the Yanomami territories of Brazil and Venezuela.
His father had forbidden Simeon to draw or paint until he raised his grades in school, where he was making As in art and Cs and Ds in all his other tenth-grade subjects. Twice, Tobias had mediated on the phone long-distance, to no avail. Simeon could draw with a fingernail in the dirt, but missed his art supplies, which their father had confiscated for the semester.
The phone at the back was free. Tobias felt in the front zippered flap of his suitcase for his family’s presents, all bought at the last minute from the campus store: an Abington College scarf for his mother, an Abington coffee mug for his father, and the book Best Cartoonists of the 20th Century for his brother. He lugged everything to the phone corner and started fishing for coins in his coat pocket, slowly. At the center table, students he had known in high school were staring at him. He turned his back and plunked a quarter into the phone.
“Toby!” a voice boomed from the open door. A man stepped into the coffee shop. “Tobias Hillyer.” The thirty or so customers all stopped talking at once. “Holly Jolly Christmas” warbled on the soundtrack.
Tobias grabbed his backpack and valise, scattering the coins from the phone shelf onto the floor. “Dad, I just got here. I was just calling you.” They hugged.
“An hour late,” his father said, grinning under his winter hat, the kind with ear flaps. He cuffed Tobias on the head– only playfully. It hurt anyway.
“Thanks for coming, Dad. Come on; let’s go.” Murmurs of conversation sprang up as they shuffled to the door.
“Your mother wants us to stop and get Chinese food. No time to cook.” He put Tobias’s bags in the trunk. “So she said.”
“Dad, please don’t put anything on top of the suitcase.”
“How’s school?”
“Good, fine, Dad. I got a work-study job tutoring. Doing all right. So I’d like to invite you all out to dinner.” Getting the family out in public would at least mitigate their initial meeting.
They got in the car. “You still going down there with those pygmies?”
“Dad, they’re Yanomami. Brazilian Indians, some in Venezuela. It’ll be all right.”
“Yo Mama, that what you call them?” He laughed.
Tobias ignored him the rest of the way to the house. He started to unlock the front door, which gave way before he turned the key. Still broken.
“Hi, sweetie!” His mother embraced him. She reeked of wine, and her enthusiasm alarmed him. There would be a confrontation; he could sense it.
“Good to see you, Mom.” He stepped into the kitchen, ostensibly to get a glass of water, but only to check the barrel of corks behind the kitchen door. The top of the barrel reached his waist, and it was full of corks, some still wet from the bottle.
His mother was following him. “Sorry, honey, I didn’t have time to cook.”
His father said, “Tobias has invited us out. He’s into money now.”
“Mom. Dad. Let’s make this a good one, OK? How about in twenty minutes, we all go out and celebrate the Christmas season?” His head was hurting. If it weren’t for Simeon, he would have stayed on campus with the foreign students who lived too far away to go home on a holiday. He went upstairs to the room he had shared with his brother, who still had not emerged to greet him. Their bedroom door was closed. He knocked and walked in without waiting for an answer.
“Toby!” Simeon grabbed him, laughing and jumping like a little kid.
Tobias hugged him hard and thumped him on the back. “What are you doing, kiddo?”
“Just goofing around.” Simeon’s desk was covered with cartoons drawn on notebook paper with pencil, his other materials still under lock and key. There were caricatures of school friends; drawings of girls he favored, endowed with plus-size breasts and deep cleavage; and one picture of their mother, wine glass in hand, and their father, apparently scolding her.
Simeon was tall and thin like Tobias, but nearsighted. His rectangular glasses were always slipping down his narrow nose. “Toby. I got you something special. For your trip.” He opened his desk drawer. “Open it now.”
“Today’s only the twenty-third.”
“No, I have a regular present for you for Christmas. This is extra.”
“Aw, I feel bad, Simmy. All I have is one gift for you.”
“Doesn’t matter. This is for sticking up for me. Open it,”
Simeon said, handing him a wrapped box.
“Why now?”
“Hey, you never know.”
The present was heavy and solid, the size of a book, but denser. Tobias undid the wrapping paper. “Oh, man, Simmy, these are expensive.” It was a pair of Swarovski binoculars, 10 x 50 power, good enough for ornithologists in the jungle. “Oh, my God, Simmy, how could you do this?”
Simeon took the box from his brother and spilled the accessories out on the bed. “They’re waterproof and fog-proof.” He took out the lens covers, eyepiece covers, carrying case, and neck strap. “I won some art contests.”
“Simmy. Thank you. Thank you so much. I need these.” Tobias fingered the focusing knob. “These are great. Wow.”
Simeon laughed. Someone was starting to climb the stairs. They packed up the binoculars, hid the box under the pillows, and hurried downstairs.
Their father wanted to go to Vinny’s, their usual family restaurant. Tobias imagined the scene that would ensue. His mother would progress from tipsy to downright drunk. His parents would fight over how much she was drinking. Vinny’s had low ceilings, and you could hear every word from table to table.
“Dad, in honor of this special occasion, I’d like to take you all somewhere fancy.” The town’s other Italian restaurant, the upscale one, had no liquor license and poor acoustics, where you could hardly hear a word across the table. “Come on, everybody. I’ll drive.”
His mother was carrying a bottle of wine in a canvas tote bag.
“No, Toby, you never drive at school. Sit in the back.” She opened the door of their Ford Escort.
“He can drive,” his father barked and handed the keys to Tobias, and then sat in the front seat. Tobias wanted his brother to sit with him but didn’t complain. One hurdle cleared, and ten more days to go. He didn’t know how he was going to make it; his head was already throbbing. Simeon sat in the back behind Tobias and kicked the driver’s seat three times. Tobias grinned at him in the rearview mirror.
All during dinner, Simeon drew. On a typewriter pad from his brother’s book bag, he sketched a detailed cartoon of Tobias. In the drawing, Tobias was wearing a safari hat and hip boots and carrying a butterfly net. A pair of binoculars hung from a strap around his neck.
Their father scowled. “Simeon, quit scribbling, and join the family.”
“He’s not scribbling; he’s drawing,” his mother said.
“He’s OK, Dad.”
Simeon was exaggerating his brother’s thick, dark hair in the cartoon, letting it droop over his forehead. In the picture, Tobias’s nose was pointy and slightly bent, but his real-life nose, though aquiline, was fine and straight, its hook scarcely noticeable. His features were so symmetrical that you would have to compare his photo and its mirror image to spot any irregularities. Simeon’s own nose was ineffective in holding up his glasses, which he poked upward every now and then. He printed Toby at the bottom of the picture, signed it SIM, and turned to a new page.
“The food here is great,” Tobias said. He sprinkled some crushed red pepper on his spinach gnocchi in marinara sauce, which was delicious. He was ravenous, having skipped breakfast to catch the Greyhound bus from Baltimore to New York and having had nothing to eat all day but a bag of Fritos at a rest stop.
“Yeah, great,” his father said. “Try this.” He poked a meatball with his fork and dropped it onto Tobias’s plate.
“No thanks, Dad. This is fine.” Tobias returned the meatball and wiped his fork on the side of his plate.
“He’s a vegetarian, remember?” his mother said.
“Oh, sure, I forgot. He’s one of those tree huggers,” his father said. “At least put some cheese on that.”
Tobias was about to explain about being a vegan when he had another idea. He reached out his hands to his father opposite him and his mother on his left. “Mom. Dad. Simmy. I love you all.” His mother clasped his left hand. “It’s Christmastime. We’re together. We’re doing OK.” His father clasped his right hand. “Let’s enjoy this meal and stop bickering.” Simeon stopped drawing and joined the circle of hands. Their mother’s eyes teared.
Tobias paid the bill in cash over the objections of his father, who left a 20 percent tip. Simeon helped his mother with her coat. They got into the car in the same seats as before: Tobias in the driver’s seat, his father next to him, his brother behind him, and their mother next to Simeon.
“Oh, rats! I forgot the sketch pad.” He started to undo his seat belt to run back in for Simeon’s cartoon, dreading the fight that might erupt among the other three at close range.
“I’ll go, Toby. Stay there.” Simeon jumped out and ran into the restaurant before Tobias could open the door.
On the way home, his father asked him about his fellowship and the trip to South America. Tobias, happy to break the tension, explained he’d be living among the Yanomami Indians and sleeping under nets, learning their language, taking notes for his research.
“You’re distracting him,” his mother complained. “It’s icy.”
“Goddamn it, stop interrupting,” his father snarled. “This doesn’t concern you.”
Tobias approached the four-way intersection slowly and put on his left blinker. The light was red.
“Careful,” his father said.
“Let him be,” his mother said.
Tobias checked all the mirrors. The light turned green. In the back seat, his brother was smirking. As he went into the turn, out of nowhere, a larger vehicle ran the light, sped into the intersection, and skidded into the right side and back of the Hillyers’ car. Tobias heard the deafening crack, like a thunderclap in the mountains, before registering the impact.
The Ford spun around 180 degrees on the black ice. There were screams, splintering glass, scraping sounds, the sputtering motor. His hand turned the key and shut off the engine. His neck hurt.
He shouted, “Mom! Dad! Simmy!” No one answered. He jumped out of the car, tried to open the doors on the other side. The entire right side of the car was crushed. His parents weren’t moving. In the street lights, he could see blood oozing out of their mouths. He ran back to the driver’s side, opened the back door. “Simmy. Simeon. No, no!” he screamed.
“Somebody help, please!”
Sirens, police cars, ambulances appeared as if in a nightmare. Paramedics brought something called the jaws of life. By the time his parents had been extricated, they were both dead. They were wheeled to ambulances on covered stretchers.
Simeon was unconscious but alive. No injuries were apparent. They rushed him to the emergency room at Woodrock Hospital. A police officer drove Tobias to the hospital with sirens on and lights flashing.
The emergency room doctor came out of a white-curtained cubicle, holding a clipboard. “Mr. Hillyer?” he asked.
Tobias looked around. The doctor meant him. “Yes.”
“Who’s your next of kin?”
“My parents,” Tobias said. “My brother. Where’s my brother?”
“Your brother has a concussion and possibly some other head injuries. He’s unconscious. Any other family members nearby?”
“My aunt in California. Grandparents in Florida. Can I see my brother?” The pad with Simeon’s drawing was under his arm.
“We’re testing him now. Any other relatives? Other grandparents?”
“One in a nursing home. One dead. That’s all. Please take me to where my brother is. What’s wrong with him?”
“He’s in a coma. We suspect a diffuse axonal injury,” the doctor said. “It’s a type of traumatic brain damage.” He looked behind Tobias, but no one was there besides the police officer who had brought him in. “How old is your brother? How old are you?” he asked.
“He’s fifteen. I’m twenty. Twenty-one in March.”
The doctor put his arm around Tobias. “I’m sorry, son,” he said.

About Lilian Duval
Lilian DuvallLilian Duval has been fascinated with lottery winners for years, and they´re the inspiration for her intriguing novel You Never Know, which explores how an ordinary man copes with terrible luck, and later, amazing luck, when he wins the Mega-Millions lottery. Her story collection, Random Acts of Kindness, will be published in 2012.

Lilian and her husband are both survivors of the 2001 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. They live in a small house in New Jersey overlooking a large county park. She´s an amateur classical guitarist and enjoys attending concerts, plays, and movies in New York City.

You can visit her website at www.lilianduval.com or follow her at Twitter at http://twitter.com/#!/lilianduval and Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lilian-Duval/121776657899250?sk=wall.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Guest Blogger 25 Things You Should Know About Becoming a Published Author

by Shobhan Bantwal

1. The path that takes one from aspiring author to published author is a tough one to navigate. Until a writer actually steps on to it, she is not likely to know the challenging journey that she is about to undertake.

2. IFull-Moon-Briden the world of traditional publishing, unlike vanity publishing, an author generally needs to sign on with a reputable literary agent first. Most established publishing companies refuse to take on a new author without an agent. This is a fact that many new authors are not aware of.

3. While getting a publisher to notice one’s writing is tough enough, it is equally difficult to capture the attention of a good agent. Reputable agents are very busy individuals with multiple clients and are naturally reluctant to take on new ones. Their rejection rate is extremely high, some close to 99 percent. Therefore to be able to sign on with a well-known agent in itself is a serious challenge. An agent takes on a new client only if she is entirely convinced that the writer has a saleable manuscript and can sustain a long writing career.

4. Once an agent has successfully brought an author’s manuscript to the attention of an editor at a publishing house, the next step is contract negotiation. This is where a good agent is worth his/her weight in gold. The agent needs to carefully negotiate everything from advance money to copyright to royalties and long-term author rights.

5. Editors are in charge when it comes to getting the manuscript published. Meeting editor’s deadlines, making revisions, accommodating the editor’s suggestions, galley revisions, and final proofing are part of the long and arduous process of getting that book into the bookstores. Along the way, besides the various editors, there are dozens of people involved in designing the cover art, production, sales, shipping, promotion, public relations, marketing, and accounting. A single book, despite its simplicity, is a complicated multi-person, multi-step process. A new author is always in awe of how much is involved in getting her manuscript into the hands of readers. It is also a humbling experience.

Shobhan BantwalBesides authoring five novels, Shobhan Bantwal is a freelance writer and award-winning fiction writer featured in publications such as The Writer, India Abroad, Little India, India Currents and New Woman India. She regularly donates a portion of her book earnings to women’s charities. For information on her books, contests, events, recipes, photos, contact, and favorite charities, visit her website at www.shobhanbantwal.com or her facebook page at www.facebook.com/ShobhanBantwal.author

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

1111Pump Up Your Book is happy to announce a very cost-saving special for December to help you promote your book during the holidays. Because we want to give back to the community and we know how everyone is strapped buying presents and getting ready for the holidays, we are offering a 2 week special only applicable during the month of December. If you are an author with a new release or a book that was published years ago and you want to give it new life, click here to find out how you can get a terrific deal for your next book campaign!

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

10 Things You Need to Know About Virtual Book Tours

By Dorothy Thompson, CEO & Founder of Pump Up Your Book

By now, most authors know what virtual book tours are or at least have heard of them.  They’re that wonderful marketing tool that should be a must have in every new book’s campaign.  With each new book I write, I’m making a game plan before the book is even published and a virtual book tour is the first promotional venue on that list.

While most of us know what they are, there are still a few new authors who might have heard of them but have no idea what they involve.  I give you my top 10 things you need to know about virtual book tours so that you will know what to expect.

  1. Virtual book tours are the BEST way to get the MOST online exposure for your book. Not only are you presenting your book and yourself to thousands of people, all of your interviews, guest posts and reviews are archived which means months down the road, you’re still selling your book because of that one tour.
  2. Virtual book tours ARE a lot of work. Not only are you searching for the perfect blogs to host you, you are acting as the middle man between you and the blogger unless you are using a paid service such as Pump Up Your Book who will do all the work for you.  Even if you do sign up with Pump Up Your Book, there is still lots of work to do completing assignments – filling out interviews and writing guest posts unless you choose an all review tour.  Even though it requires a little bit of your time to fill out interviews and write guest posts, it’s well worth it.
  3. You will learn more about your book than you ever did. I had an author tell me that through the interviews and guest posts she had to complete, she never learned so much about her book which caught her off guard.  Now when she is interviewed on radio shows and makes television appearances, she is better prepared.
  4. Virtual book tours will build up your author platform.  No matter if you’re a fiction author or a nonfiction author, virtual book tours will build up your author platform using your key search words.
  5. Your reviews are guaranteed. Offline publicists while they mean well do it all wrong.  They query a book blogger, make arrangements to send the book, then that’s where it stops.  The review is not a guaranteed thing.  The reviewer can post the review anytime they see fit.  With virtual book tours, your review is guaranteed on a certain date unless the reviewer jumps ship which rarely happens.  I had an author tell me she signed up with an offline publicist who sent out many books and only one or two reviewers actually came through for them.  That was money loss for the author.  Books don’t come cheap these days so coming up with a date you and the reviewer can agree upon guarantees that review will be a given thing.
  6. Many reviewers now take ebooks which save you money. Thank goodness someone was smart enough to invent a device that automatically loads a book in a few seconds (no waiting to go to the book store anymore my friend) and makes it fun to read.  When Amazon lowered their price of the Kindle, sales soared and book lovers started talking about getting one.  What that means is that it opened up a wonderful way to get these books to the book reviewers quickly and less expensively.  Have you noticed how much books are and how much it takes to ship them?  Not saying all reviewers will take ebooks, but as time goes on, most will have an e-reader and, as a matter of fact, will prefer an ebook.
  7. More website hits, more blog hits, more Twitter hits and more Facebook Fan Page hits. All authors should have a website or blog and accounts at Twitter and Facebook.  No matter if you think they’re all a waste of time.  A virtual book tour will definitely give you more hits at all places as long as your links are in your bio.
  8. Going on a virtual book tour raises your Alexa rankings. What is Alexa?  Alexa measures how well you are doing in the search engines.  By going on a virtual book tour, and including interviews and guest posts during that tour, your website and blog links are included in every bio (or should be!).  Those are incoming links which Alexa uses to measure your ranking.  The more your website or blog link shows up on other sites, the more valuable your site is to them and thus, your rankings soar.
  9. You will learn how to sell your book through media exposure. Not all authors take advantage of their interviews and guest posts by gearing them toward their audience, thus luring them to their book and/or website/blog.  I’ve had many authors on tour and the ones who really take the time to make their interviews and guest posts effective selling tools are the ones who profit the most.  The key thing here is to make your audience curious.  One liners in the case of interviews may not cut it.  Of course there are only so many ways you can answer “What’s your book about?” but take your time and get your audience’s curiosity peaked so that they do make your way over to your website or your book’s buying link.
  10. Virtual book tours teach you how to connect well with others. There is no better way to learn how to network.  All these wonderful book bloggers who agree to host you are your new friends in your extended network and they will be there for you the next time you have a book to promote (unless they completely hated it of course).  You’ll also learn how to use the social networks effectively as you study how to get people over to your stops by persuasive wording.  Remember to talk to your audience, not at them.

There you have it.  10 reasons I feel you need to know about virtual book tours in a nutshell.  If you have a tour coordinator as opposed to setting one up yourself, she will walk you through it so that it will be a fun experience for all.  Your book will thank you for it.

Dorothy Thompson is CEO/Founder of Pump Up Your Book, an innovative public relations agency specializing in online book publicity.  You can visit her website at www.PumpUpYourBook.com or follow her on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pumpupyourbook and Facebook at www.facebook.com/pumpupyourbook.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

LS Story-Behind-Book4

The Story Behind the Book is Literarily Speaking’s newest feature. Here we find out either the inspiration behind authors’ books or how they got published. Today’s guest is Greg Messel, author of of the historical romance novel, Expiation (Trafford).

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

One of my life experiences which contributed to the story in “Expiation” was my relationship with my wife. My wife and I were high school sweethearts. I played sports in high school and she was very cute and popular. Then she left the Bay Area, where we both grew up, to go out of state to college. Our relationship held together despite the separation and we have been married for over 40 years. If it had not worked out and we somehow had unexpectedly reunited later in our life and were both single, would we try to rekindle our old romance? Absolutely. I also experienced some of the events during the 60s and 70s in Berkeley and San Francisco. If I wasn’t directly involved in some of the events described, I lived through it and it was part of that atmosphere at the time.

I’ve been to most of the places mentioned in Expiation. Recently I was driving through Ballard (a Seattle neighborhood where Dan and Katie lived) with some out of town visitors. As I drove through Ballard, I showed them the restaurant where Dan and Katie met, the park where they walked on Christmas Day and Ballard High School. My visitors were amazed and said “wow, this is real.”

It is real. Even though it is a fictional story it is much more realistic if it happens in real places.

I have had a lifetime love of San Francisco. Also, Seattle is one of my favorite places on earth. In both cases, I love the rainy, cool, foggy atmosphere of both cities. I was very happy with cover of “Expiation.” I thought it captured these atmospherics well.

I chose one of my favorite places in San Francisco for a climactic scene in “Expiation” between Dan and Katie. It is Fort Point at the foot of the Golden Gate Bridge. It is so beautiful and has an astounding view of the Bay and downtown San Francisco. It is a very romantic place.

I focused on the reuniting events in the plot but I thought it made it more interesting to be occurring against the background of these amazing historical events. There are many flashbacks in “Expiation” but I chose to have the “present day” be the end of 1999 just before Y2K. It was such a time of uncertainty and it is an interesting setting for the uncertainty of trying to reclaim lost love.

One reviewer recently quipped that “Expiation” is one of the first books she has read that deal with Y2K as a backdrop. She wondered if some younger readers may say “what’s Y2K?”

Greg Messel has spent much of his life in the Pacific Northwest living in Portland, Oregon and in the Seattle area since 2008. He has been married to his wife, Carol, for 40 years. Greg and Carol were high school sweethearts just like the couple in “Expiation.” He has lived in Washington, Oregon, California, Utah and Wyoming. Greg grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area and graduated from high school there and also attended a year of junior college. Greg went to Brigham Young University with Carol and then began a newspaper career in rough and tumble Wyoming town of Rock Springs. Greg and Carol have three married children and nine grandchildren.

Greg has always loved writing. He worked as the news editor and sports editors of the Daily Rocket-Miner newspaper. He won a Wyoming Press Association award for his column. He also submitted and had published articles in various sports magazines. He left the newspaper business in 1981 and began a 27 year career with Pacific Power. Greg retired in 2008 and moved to Seattle.

It was there that he returned to his first love of writing. He has written two unpublished memoirs and published his first novel with Trafford in September 2009. His first novel was called “Sunbreaks.” The second novel “Expiation” was published in the spring of 2010 with Trafford. A third novel is in the works.

Currently, Greg and Carol live on the Puget Sound in Edmonds, Washington, just north of downtown Seattle. They have three adult children who are all married and have nine grandchildren. He also enjoys running, he has been in several races and half marathons.

Visit his website at www.gregmessel.com.

Connect with him at Twitter at www.twitter.com/gregmessel and Facebook at www.facebook.com/greg.messel.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , ,

John AmesJoin John Ames, as he tours the blogosphere March 1 – April 29 2011 with Pump Up Your Book to talk about his new coming of age novel, Adventures in Nowhere (Pineapple Press). John will be on a nationwide blog tour giving interviews, giving away copy of his books and meeting and greeting new and old fans!

John has a master’s degree in English from the University of Florida, where he was a Ford Fellow. After graduation, he built a rustic house and lived for several years on the edge of a spiritual community located near Gainesville, Florida. John’s search for enlightenment ended when he decided that he was too far from a movie theater. He moved inside the Gainesville city limits and taught English and film for thirty years at Santa Fe College.

He has produced and acted in numerous short films and videos, including the cable TV series the “Tub Interviews,” wherein all the interviewees were required to be in a bathtub. For ten years he reviewed movies for PBS radio station WUFT.  He has appeared as a standup comedian and has designed and marketed Florida-themed lamps.  He coauthored Second Serve: The Renée Richards Story (Stein and Day, 1983) and its sequel No Way Renée: The Second Half of My Notorious Life (Simon & Schuster, 2007), and Speaking of Florida (University Presses of Florida, 1993). You can visit his website at www.johnamesauthor.com.

Adventures in NowhereAdventures in Nowhere is an absorbing story of the search for self, allowing a reader to live for a while in the mind of a remarkably thoughtful and intense boy caught at the final edge of childhood.

Adventures in Nowhere is told from the wry perspective of ten-year-old Danny Ryan whose realm is 1950s Florida, long before theme parks crowded out the possibility of real magic. Danny refers to his neighborhood as Nowhere, because it seems trapped in time, some parts on the verge of rebirth and others slowly falling apart. Among the things falling apart is the Ryan family, which is dominated by a schizophrenic father who makes every day an adventure, yet Danny keeps his good humor, seeking escape on the nearby Hillsborough River or in the little community of Sulphur Springs with its puzzling mix of the glorious and the shameful. These outings provide Danny a diverting blend of comedy and drama.

But Danny’s adventures take a fateful turn when he begins seeing a mysteriously changing house across the hyacinth-choked Hillsborough. Is he going crazy like his father? Though he feels terribly alone, Danny comes to realize that he has faithful allies among Nowhere’s eccentric inhabitants: Alfred Bagley, a quirky youngster whose fondest desire is to become a junk dealer; Abigail Arnold, an intellectual eleven-year-old with a penchant for blunt talk and red candy lipstick; Donna, a young woman of supernatural beauty and unfathomable motives; Al Gallagher, proprietor of Al’s Swap Shop, a business that is more than it seems; and Buddy Connolly, a confident teenager who prompts Danny toward an odd but powerful salvation.

“John Ames has written a superb coming-of-age novel in the tradition of J. D. Salinger’s Catcher in the Rye and Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird. Ten-year-old Danny Ryan wrestles with clashes between his keen observations and deep sensitivities on one side and the cruelties and complexities of adult life on the other. With the Hillsborough River as his trusted companion, the imaginative Danny plunges into adventures, some life threatening, that force him to change, creating a narrative that is dark and delightful at the same time.”

—Bill Maxwell, Syndicated St Petersburg Times Correspondent, author of Maximum Insight

For more information about John Ames’ Adventures in Nowhere Virtual Book Tour, you can visit his official tour page here.

Adventures in Nowhere

Pump Up Your Book is an innovative public relations agency specializing in online book publicity for authors looking for maximum online promotion to sell their books.  Visit our website at www.pumpupyourbook.com to find out how we can take your book to the virtual level!

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

David RichardsPairs by David Richards is the story of Kayley and Adam, a single mom who makes her living writing greeting cards and a young carpenter; and Alexandra and Henry, a former stripper with dual identities and a math teacher with some unusual gender issues. The couples are connected through Henry and Adam, who are cousins, and through Kayley’s friend Helen, who is also Henry’s step-sister. As each couple builds a connection, the joint friendship turns into family. Kayley’s daughter, Terra, becomes a central focus of both relationships; she is loved and nurtured by the village that the couples create.

With the tightening of the bond between the couples, the mission for the pairs—which begins and ends with Kayley—turns to parenthood for Henry and Alexandra. The story weaves the elements of past sexual abuse, sexual dysfunction, problem pregnancies, and absolute devotion to family into a plot that draws the reader into the lives of these very unconventional characters.

We interviewed David to find out more about his new book!

Thank you so much for this interview, David.  Can we start off by asking you why women’s fiction?

David: We can. My short answer is: why not? My less short answer is that I didn’t know that I had written a women’s fiction novel.

Outside of fiction versus non-fiction, I have to confess that I’ve not been one who thinks in terms of genre, which I duly acknowledge is a major marketing no-no. Publishers and agents insist on knowing your genre since they often specialize in specific categories and have established networks and promotional templates. It wasn’t until after writing ‘Pairs’, when I began to think about readership, that I recognized everything had fallen into place for the story to be classified as a work of women’s fiction.

Curiously, I simply set out to write something I’d like to read, a humorous and uplifting story with substance. Add to this the fact that I enjoy creating character-driven stories and that the premise of ‘Paris’ dictated a female protagonist and voila i have a genre - women’s fiction.

PairsYou’re self-published.  Can you tell us the pros can cons of going the self-published route?

David: Self-publishing is like any other autonomous venture. From opening your own business to making an independent film the rewards and the pitfalls come from having complete control over the final product. You better really love what you’re doing, or it can really suck.

Self-publishing by definition means that you are a publisher. And make no mistake, you are a ridiculed publisher. ‘Pairs’ is over 93,000 words in length, and a critic actually had issue with the fact that the word ‘foyer’ appeared ten times. And she was working from a hardcopy, no less, to do the count. I have never seen that kind professional dedication to the craft of critiquing – certainly not in mainstream publishing, anyway. If nothing else, I amazed. Nevertheless, in spite of the critic’s odd obsession, I should be grateful for the exposure as many media outlets won’t review self-published books as matter of policy. Since a self-published author is dealing with a predisposed bias against them the product they put forth needs to standout and the marketing has to be far more imaginative.

Beyond the joy of getting your work out to the world, the major reward is that self-publishing gives far higher returns to the writer, which is part of the attraction to long-established authors such as Stephen King, who have recently self-published some works exclusively on Amazon’s Kindle bookstore.

It is not for the faint of heart. I’m thinking about putting out a brochure on self-publishing. I’ll probably self-publish it, exclusive of the word foyer

Pairs introduces the reader to four very different people, each carrying their own secrets and complications.  Can you tell us more about your main characters?

David: Three out of the four central characters are a tad quirky. The fourth, Adam, while perhaps not the voice of reason, does provide some mooring lines for the eccentricities of those around him.  The protagonist is Kayley, a single mom who earns her living writing greeting cards and is frustrated in her literary aspirations. She becomes involved with the aforementioned Adam, a carpenter, but also develops a deep crush on the gorgeous and gregarious Alexandra. Alexandra is a former stripper dealing with sexual dysfunction who in turn falls for an excessively prim-and-proper math teacher named Henry. The reader first encounters Henry when he has all but given up on dating entirely.

Did you find one part of your book harder to write more than the other parts?  If so, would you like to tell us about that part?

David: The sacrifice that Kayley is willing to make for Alexandra was the most difficult for me to write. It only happened to be the hook upon which the entire story hung. Clearly I love to challenge myself.

Specifically, finding Kayley’s motivation and delving into the nature of her character in order to keep her in a sympathetic, as opposed to pathetic, light with the reader. Though readers may not make the same choice as Kayley under similar circumstances, it was very important that they understood the reasons behind her decision.

What part would you say has that ‘wow’ factor without giving away too much?

David: The wow factor is the way in which ‘Pairs’ ties up at the very end, though I hope not too neatly as there should be the mystery of the unanswered.  In the story I give some scientific credence to the more ‘mystic’ events which take place. I would like to believe that I have delivered a case which makes the implausible arguably possible.

What sets ‘Pairs’ apart from the rest of the other romance novels out there?

David: Primarily that it really isn’t a romance, though I have no issue with the genre. ‘Pairs’ is in part a love story but it is not a romance novel in the classic sense since there isn’t initial conflict between the lovers – whichever permutation of lovers in the story you happen to choose. In general, ‘Pairs’ is set apart by the breadth of the story’s reach. Quantum physics to Wicca, and much that is in between, make appearances in the narrative and are woven together as the storyline moves forward. I could be wrong, but I don’t believe that the superpositioning principle in physics is commonly used in many novels to support spirituality. I may have stumbled upon a niche.

Thank you so much for your interview, David.  Can you tell us what’s next for you?

David: I have a few projects on the go. Currently I’m working with Ucreate Media as a script-doctor for a graphic novel which they hope to build into a screenplay. Additionally, an editor friend of mine has plans for a manuscript I wrote a few years ago. She loves the story and we will be in discussions about it in the coming months. Finally, I have begun the next instalment, in the series that begins with ‘Pairs’. Other than that, I keep my writing chops nimble by maintaining a blog.

Visit David’s website at www.pairsthenovel.com or connect with him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/DW_Richards. You can purchase a paperback copy of Pairs online by clicking here or order the Kindle edition by clicking here.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Christmas Celebrations

Christmas Celebrations from Authors Around the World is Literarily Speaking’s newest features. We ask authors “What’s it like at your house over the holidays?” Today we welcome Susan Wingate, author of the women’s fiction novel, Easy as Pie at Bobby’s Diner (Blue Star Books)!

…………………………………………………….

Susan Wingate ChristmasGreetings from the Pacific Northwest this fine 2010 holiday season!

I love the holidays up here tucked away on our tiny island. During its most crowded time, we have up to twelve thousand residents living here. Right now, that number has fallen to around eight thousand because people have left for warmer climates.

We just spent one of the coldest Thanksgivings the island has seen in decades, certainly the coldest I’ve seen since I first moved here thirteen years ago on Halloween! Scary, eh? But, really, the thermometers bounced down to fifteen degrees Fahrenheit! And, that was the high! The nights got down to seven degrees atop the hills of our island. And, just having spent only a couple of weeks with temps in the forties, fifteen degrees felt downright icy.

Easy as Pie at Bobby's DinerOur island? You ask? Well, it sits just between Seattle and Vancouver Island, British Columbia. Although officially we fall within the boundaries of the U.S., we have the best of both–Canada and the states. With only an hour or so ferry ride we can arrive in Victoria and enjoy a slightly different world there if only for a while.

Goodness, for me, the weather up here compared to Phoenix, where I was born and spent thirty-nine years of my life, feels vastly different. And it is. We get all four seasons here. In Phoenix we only got spring and an oppressively hot summer. In Phoenix, the holidays never felt magical like they do up here. Of course, that’s me. That’s how I feel. Now, ask my mother about Phoenix and she’ll give you quite a different story! :)

Anyway, as I sit typing this article, autumn has made its entrance in a grand manner. A Nor ‘Easterly wind whips the trees in the background creating a wild whooshing sound that lulls you to sleep at night and makes you wrap up in a snuggly throw next to the fireplace during the day. Here, outside we wear mufflers, gloves and woolen hats. Right now, the earth is soggy, so, we even wear rubber boots to protect our feet from the sloppy mud. My boots are lime green! I’ve heard people whisper behind my back in awe, wishing they had a pair just like them. Not really. They actually point and laugh and some, the bolder ones, come right up to me and say, “Nice boots.” Then, they snicker and walk off. But, hey, they’re warm and keep my feet dry! So, let ‘em laugh. That’s what I say!

Still, island life around Christmas time, here in a northern Salish Sea setting (previously known as Puget Sound) looks a lot more like the holidays to me, like the ones I used to see in the movies and on TV growing up than it does in Phoenix. People here wear quilty down-filled jackets and their cheeks and noses look pink from the cold but mostly everyone smiles. The sun sets early in the evening, usually between four-thirty and five o’clock which brings a dreamy quality to our world. Compared to summers up here when the evenings can last until ten o’clock at peak season. But, around the holidays, we’re reminded that the earth needs its sleep. And, because we go to bed earlier, we rise earlier too and, so, we get to work earlier.

Right now, it’s six in the morning. I’m sipping on my first cup of Earl Grey tea and listening to my cats purring–one at my left shoulder, another lying on the ottoman, next to the couch where I work and, Robert, my little Westie, is snoozing next to my right shoulder on top of one of the couch pillows. This probably sounds much like anyone else’s life around Christmas time. I work eight- to ten-hour days, take lunches and make dinner for my husband when he gets home. So, if I had to choose why my holiday season might be different, it has nothing to do with the fact that I’m an author, no, not that at all… it comes because of this enchanted place I’ve chosen to spend the rest of my life.

Award-winning author, Susan Wingate, gets a monthly column about writing and the publishing industry in her local newspaper, The Journal of the San Juan Islands. She will also be posting weekly discussions about the writing industry for the regional online newspaper, the PNWLocalNews.com site.

You can view Wingate’s discussions by clicking on the “Entertainment” tab and then finding Wingate’s discussions under the “Blogs” section of the Entertainment Page.

Born in Phoenix, Arizona to James & Amie Ajamie (a writer and an artist, respectively), Susan Wingate tried to fly, at age five off the roof of their family house using newspaper, wire hangers and scotch tape. She’s been dreaming of flying ever since. Oh, by the way, she never jumped. Her mother ran out in the nick of time to stop her from take-off.

Wingate realized her dreams when she entered the world of writing. At first, she only wrote songs and poetry but then her writing blossomed when she tried her hand at fiction. In 1997, she devoted her days to writing and in 2004, she began writing full-time. Since then, Susan has written several plays, one screenplay, one short story collection and seven novels with two more scheduled to be written in 2010. In 2008, she started writing a memoir.

A lover of the arts, Susan draws and paints abstracts using oil as her favored medium. She has taken up playing the violin (it’s been a squeakly start) and she loves the theatre. Susan lives in Washington State.

Wingate’s novel, Bobby’s Diner, received three finalist awards in the following book competitions:

■2010 International Book Awards,

■2009 National Book Awards (USA Book News),

■2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards

In May 2010, two of Wingate’s novels were released, they are:

■A FALLING OF LAW, and

EASY AS PIE AT BOBBY’S DINER (the no. 2 book in the Bobby’s Diner Series)

“Camouflage,” Wingate’s fourth novel (written as Myah Lin) received a Finalist Award and an Editor’s Choice Award in the 2009 Textnovel Writing Contest.

To date, Wingate has written seven novels, two short story collections, a memoir, hundreds of poems, a few plays for theatre and one screenplay.

Her books can be found online and in bookstores across the country and her articles, short stories and poetry can be found in magazines, journals and reviews.

Locally, Wingate volunteers with the San Juan Island Library. She offers workshops, readings and presentations at writing conferences, bookstores and libraries throughout the country.

You can visit her website at www.susanwingate.com.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Story Behind Book
The Story Behind the Book is Literarily Speaking’s newest feature. Here we find out either the inspiration behind authors’ books or how they got published. Today’s guest is Susan Wingate, author of the women’s fiction/mystery novel, Easy as Pie at Bobby’s Diner (Blue Star Books

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Easy as Pie at Bobby's DinerIt’s so much fun for me to talk about how one of my books became a book. This one has to do with both subjects–inspiration and publishing. I had sent my original story about Georgette Carlisle called Bobby’s Diner (the no. 1 book in the Bobby’s Diner Series) to a book distributor/publisher for distribution. He liked the story so much that he asked if I would be interested in writing a series and offered to publish it which was not the original intention. After talking with him, we decided to move forward on it.

Now, I had this contract looming over my head and I must say, I was pretty nervous about writing a series. I’d never done it before. So, what I did was re-read Bobby’s Diner and without even a stutter, the second story flowed out of me. It’s as if Georgette’s story is such a compelling one for me (and I hope for others) that I feel I could just write and write about her life at the diner.

It’s like real life to me there at that little diner. The diner sits in the middle of the Arizona desert in a town called Sunnydale, a fictional setting. The diner is situated on a highway and the town is a pass-through kind of place where people don’t come to stay, they come for gas and supplies on their way to towns like Laughlin or Las Vegas. Sunnydale has been fashioned after the little town Wikieup. I love Wikieup and go back often to get the feeling of that place.

But, it’s Georgette’s story–how she came to live in Sunnydale and her life since she moved there–that really interests me.

Initially, she got involved with a married man, Bobby Carlisle. He owns Bobby’s Diner. Not a very noble act for a main character but after you finish reading the novel you’ll see exactly the way her life played out when she first got to Sunnydale. The story begins shortly after Bobby dies. In his will, Bobby leaves the diner to Georgette AND Vanessa, Bobby’s ex-wife. That single act thrusts the story into action.

I actually dreamed the beginning of the novel. The version in the novel however is much more lucid than the dream. But, the original idea came when I was just waking one morning. It’s the truck driver scene–a funny sexy scene.

But, “Easy as Pie at Bobby’s Diner” (the no. 2 book in the series), just seemed to fall from my fingertips when I began writing that story.

Susan WingateAward-winning author, Susan Wingate, gets a monthly column about writing and the publishing industry in her local newspaper, The Journal of the San Juan Islands. She will also be posting weekly discussions about the writing industry for the regional online newspaper, the PNWLocalNews.com site.

You can view Wingate’s discussions by clicking on the “Entertainment” tab and then finding Wingate’s discussions under the “Blogs” section of the Entertainment Page.

Born in Phoenix, Arizona to James & Amie Ajamie (a writer and an artist, respectively), Susan Wingate tried to fly, at age five off the roof of their family house using newspaper, wire hangers and scotch tape. She’s been dreaming of flying ever since. Oh, by the way, she never jumped. Her mother ran out in the nick of time to stop her from take-off.

Wingate realized her dreams when she entered the world of writing. At first, she only wrote songs and poetry but then her writing blossomed when she tried her hand at fiction. In 1997, she devoted her days to writing and in 2004, she began writing full-time. Since then, Susan has written several plays, one screenplay, one short story collection and seven novels with two more scheduled to be written in 2010. In 2008, she started writing a memoir.

A lover of the arts, Susan draws and paints abstracts using oil as her favored medium. She has taken up playing the violin (it’s been a squeakly start) and she loves the theatre. Susan lives in Washington State.

Wingate’s novel, Bobby’s Diner, received three finalist awards in the following book competitions:

■2010 International Book Awards,

■2009 National Book Awards (USA Book News),

■2009 Next Generation Indie Book Awards

In May 2010, two of Wingate’s novels were released, they are:

■A FALLING OF LAW, and

EASY AS PIE AT BOBBY’S DINER (the no. 2 book in the Bobby’s Diner Series)

“Camouflage,” Wingate’s fourth novel (written as Myah Lin) received a Finalist Award and an Editor’s Choice Award in the 2009 Textnovel Writing Contest.

To date, Wingate has written seven novels, two short story collections, a memoir, hundreds of poems, a few plays for theatre and one screenplay.

Her books can be found online and in bookstores across the country and her articles, short stories and poetry can be found in magazines, journals and reviews.

Locally, Wingate volunteers with the San Juan Island Library. She offers workshops, readings and presentations at writing conferences, bookstores and libraries throughout the country.

You can visit her website at www.susanwingate.com.

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Story Behind Book
The Story Behind the Book is Literarily Speaking’s newest feature. Here we find out either the inspiration behind authors’ books or how they got published. Today’s guest is Kandy Siahaya, author of the non-fiction women’s issues novel, Making Light of Being Heavy (Northern Reprographics).

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

making light of being heavyMaking Light of Being Heavy was inspired by my daily life as a fat chick.  Specifically, one summer day a friend and I were in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, with our kids just walking along the sidewalk when this real cute guy driving a pedicab (a ride that is driven by a person on a bike) pulls along side us waiting for a light.  I looked over at him and asked him what the weight limit was on that ride.  Now both my friend and I topped out at over 300 pounds each so you can imagine what this 160 pound guy must be thinking!  He looked at us as though he was trying to come up with a “safe” figure and said “500 pounds.”  I jokingly laughed with my friend and said that we wouldn’t be getting a ride on that anytime soon!  As we were walking away, my friend joked and said how cool it would be to write a book about the funny side of being fat.  Now, of course, this is all perception but I have always had a great sense of humor and I started recalling incidents in the past that had happened that I laughed about specifically regarding my weight.

When I started writing Making Light of Being Heavy and adding my perspective, I realized that this might actually help some women to possibly get a different outlook on their struggles with weight. Being fat is already hard enough with all the negativity that comes along with it.  One of my friends read my rough draft and commented about what a great self-esteem booster it was and how it provided a lot of insight as well.  It made me feel good to know that if I could just get this book out there, it might actually help some women.

So then it began, my goal to get the book published.  Now this certainly is no easy task as many can attest to and after over three years of trying to get a publisher or an agent, I decided to self-publish and then try to promote Making Light of Being Heavy myself.  Again, no easy task but a virtual book tour provides a great platform in which to promote your book.  I certainly do not expect everyone to like my book or even understand where I am coming from, but if it helps even one person put a smile on their face and a new direction with their weight issues then Making Light of Being Heavy is a success.  As I say in my book, I know it is a cliché but life is short so we all need to focus on just what makes us happy and stop worrying about what everyone thinks we should be doing.  Once we are content with ourselves and happy in our own lives everything will fall into place.

I am very excited because on this book tour I have had reviews that totally appreciated my point of view and intention with the book and not only thought it was hilarious, but also extremely insightful as well.  This is very rewarding and confirms that I need to keep going in my goal to get as many as I can to read Making Light of Being Heavy.

# # #

Kandy SiahayaKandy Siahaya was raised in a small town in Maine where she graduated from high school in 1984.  She worked her way up from her first job as CSW to Manager of Kentucky Fried Chicken and ended up in Brunswick, Maine.  When she decided to leave the fried chicken business at age 22, she packed up her little Chevy Chevette and moved to Florida, where she worked as a waitress and had a great time as a single girl in her 20’s.  Reality hit when she was 25 years old and she went back to Maine and received her Associate’s Degree at Beal College and promptly moved back to Florida and started a career in medical transcription.  In 1995 at age 29, she moved to Miami, Florida, and continued with transcription starting her own business.  In 2002, Kandy left Florida and moved back to Maine with her 5-year-old son and continued medical transcription but had an unexpected decline in work which left her with a lot of time on her hands.  This is when she decided to write the book, something she had been thinking about for a few years but never had the time because she was always so busy with her business.  It was meant to be a quick and funny read, something to brighten the outlook of many that really do not see the light through their own tunnel vision.  It was also intended to be insightful for those that could never possibly relate to this specific subject.  Kandy has succeeded in doing just that with Making Light of Being Heavy.

For more information on Kandy and her book visit http://www.makinglightofbeingheavy.com

Related Posts with Thumbnails
  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,