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Winners!

random.org has selected the winners of the two copies of Pat Conroy’s My Reading Life his publisher so generously gave me. So, Merry Christmas to

Joanne and Teddy!

Enjoy!

They also gave me a review copy(which in no way effected my review)pile-lucy but, as a new blogger–or at least new to people giving me free books–what do you do with all the books you accumulate? And since I also write book reviews, I seem to have an endless parade of books ending up on the TBR pile next to my bed. My mailman(and his back) hate me.

Of course some I give away some books on my blog, some end up on my bookshelf, some end up on the bookshelves of friends, and a few I’ve donated to my local school and public library. I’m even giving away one of my books as a “door prize” at the next meeting of my writers’ group. It was supposed to be for the holiday party but because of crazy schedules I didn’t make it. So I guess we’ll be having a bit of Christmas in January.

Any other suggestions for finding good homes for my books?

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5Ws with Sybil Baker

Talismans

Author: Sybil SybilbookcoverBaker

Paperback: 180 pages

Publisher: C&R Press(Dec. 7, 2010)

I couldn’t remember if I had ever read a linked short story collection when I began Sybil Baker’s latest Talismans. It was a unique experience…like be immersed in someone’s life as they recounted memories for you-a story here, a story there. I enjoyed the fact that Elise’s search for the secrets of her family led her on an actual journey: Virginia, San Francisco, South Korea, Vietnam, Thailand.

Sybil generously agreed to participate in 5Ws. Check out her other stops on her WOW Blog Tour for a chance to win a copy of Talismans!


Who – Who inspired you to write?

My first grade teacher, Miss Hunter.

What – What does your writing spot look like?Sybilauthorpic

I don’t have a particular writing spot–it’s where ever my laptop takes me. Sometimes it’s the kitchen table, sometimes it’s the sofa.

Where – Where would you go on your dream trip?

India, as long as my husband went with me. It wouldn’t be as fun without him.

When – When was your writing first published?

It was first published in The Silhouette, Virginia Tech’s student undergrad literary magazine in the 1985 and 1986. My first story published in a literary magazine after that was in 1990 in Kalliope.

Why – Why is your short story collection called Talismans?

Talismans is the name of one of the stories in the collection. Most of the characters have some kind of talisman that helps them get through their problems. For the main character Elise, her talismans are a photo of her father and her grandfather’s Navy pea coat from the Korean war.

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Want to Help Your Local Library?

Tell your favorite librarian about this great contest for libraries! All they have to do is send a photo of their librarians holding at least three books written by members of Sisters in Crime(there are 1523 authors to choose SinC banner1from!–find the list here)! And they could be chosen to receive $1000 for book purchases. In these days of library budgets being slashed that would be a welcome prize. Learn more at the Sisters in Crime blog Into the Depths of Mystery

What a wonderful Christmas gift for your local library!

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I’m Visiting…

my old friends at The Muffin. If you want to learn my super secret stop by at the Muffin today.

Wicked Good: Co-Writing

Today’s my little brother’s birthday…he’s around 35 although he always seems about 20 to me. Ever since he was a kid he’s been drawing. In school it was mostly cars doodled on his school books but now he’s taken up painting. Landscapes. Since he has two kids and I have three he thinks we would be a perfect pair to write a children’s book–him with illustrations, me with words. I’ll let you know how that turns out!

But recently I met a sibling pair who actually did write a book together. Amy and Joanne Lewis–who by the way are both lawyers by day, asmy and joannewriters by night–wrote Wicked Good. It’s the story of a mother, her adopted son with Asperger’s Syndrome, and the search for his biological parents. And even more amazing than the fact that two sisters managed to write an entire novel without driving each other crazy is the fact that they did while Joanne was living in Florida and Amy in Maine!

You can read part of their novel on their blog Wicked Good. You can contact them at wickedgoodthebook@gmail.com. They’re new(as in joined TODAY) to Twitter and Facebook and would love a few followers and friends @wickedgoodbook and wickedgoodthebook.

Now it’s time to meet the ladies responsible for this cross country(well, not exactly cross…shall we call it up-and-down country?)writing fest. First, Amy(after all, she is the oldest):

It was March. The snow was dirty brown and the sun was absent here in Maine. I was spending a lot of time on my sofa, channel surfing and landing nowhere. Joanne called.

“Wanna write a book together?”

I wrapped the afghan around me tighter and yawned from lack of blood flow to my brain.

“Sure,” was the best response I could muster.

I am a lawyer by day and single mom to two teenage boys by day and night. My oldest is diagnosed with asperger syndrome, a form of autism which has been of mixed blessings to my life. Joanne suggested a story about a relatively mad scientist who had discovered the cure for cancer in a rare strand of DNA. The cure required the death of one specific boy, a teenage boy in Bangor Maine with asperger syndrome. My contribution was to write the parts with the boy in it.

We ran into two significant problems with this story line. First, my actual scientist friend was quite offended. “Why do people always write about mad scientists!” She exploded at me as we rode our bicycles one day. “Besides, curing cancer with DNA is a stupid idea.” She said more but her words were lost to the wind as I slowed to let her pedal ahead – way ahead.

Second, although Joanne was surprisingly good at creating criminal characters and gruesome situations, we wrote really bad chase scenes. Weeks went by as we attempted to write the scene of the mother and son being chased in a forest.

Joanne is the brains behind this outfit. I can only write based upon my life experiences. Without Joanne moving the plot along, we would be nowhere. She would give me the plot line and I would write. We discussed plot and character development. If we disagreed on anything, I let her win. That, of course, applies only when we write! I am four years older.

I love dogs. I tried several times to add dogs to the story and plot line. She refused to let me. Our next novel will definitely include dogs!

The novel is complete. We have been waiting to get Joanne’s murder mystery novel published before pushing for publication of this novel. While waiting, I had missed working with her. So we decided to post it chapter by chapter on a blog. Joanne has friends in the writing field and I use facebook so we got the word out that way. I love working with her again! We talk at least once a day; text constantly and I am always emailing her photos of dogs. I would love to write another novel. I could not do it alone. I will do any project she wants except that I am not that interested in Renaissance Italy. If I could write a dog into Renaissance Italy then maybe I would.

While Amy’s working out how to work a dog into Joanne’s new book about Renaissance Italy here’s Joanne’s side of the story…

First, tell us a little bit about yourselves and how you ended up on opposite corners of the country.

JOANNE: We are from New York. I went to undergraduate and law school in NYC but I never wanted to practice law there. I can honestly say I moved to Florida for the weather. I’m not sure what Amy’s excuse is. She went from cold to coldest!

When did you begin writing?

JOANNE: I wrote my first book when I was eleven years old. It was called The Book on Weather and I covered it with orange and yellow wallpaper and it was put in my elementary school library. I’ve been writing ever since. I’ve written 10 novels.

I write murder mysteries and historical fiction novels. I have a novel called Make Your Own Luck that my agent, Donald Maass, is shopping right now. I met with him in NYC last weekend and he seems positive about being able to sell it although he says this is the worst market he’s ever seen. I’ve also completed a historical fiction novel called The Lantern and I’m working on another one called Sleeping Cupid.

Co-writing a novel is a wild project. How did you ever decide to tackle something like that?

JOANNE: It was March, 2008 and I had finished Make Your Own Luck and was looking for my next project. I was talking to Amy on the phone and I said “hey, let’s write a book together”. I’m sure Amy said okay, thinking the book would be about dogs. When we agreed to do it, I don’t think either one of us knew what to expect. I took the lead when it came to plotting, conflict, structure and things like that. Amy kept the characters realistic. If I had Archer or Rory do something that Amy said they would never do, I changed it immediately.

I co-authored a non-fiction book but my co-author and I were each assigned different chapters. How do you write your book…do you each write alternating chapters, did you work out a plotline before you started, do you write each chapter together?

JOANNE: We talked almost daily and e-mailed back and forth too. I pretty much told Amy what I thought needed to happen next from a dramatic perspective and to make sure there was conflict and a character arc and all those other requirements. Amy made sure the characters were realistic. We got along really well. We would discuss what would happen next and then one of us would volunteer to write it. We did not alternate writing chapters. We did not write the chapters together although we revised together. We did not work on a plotline ahead of time which is because of me since I do not outline my books.

We would share what we had written and the other would recommend changes. I’m pretty sure Amy mostly agreed to all my changes and if I objected to any of hers it would have been due to some rule I had read in one of my books on writing. I seem to recall her insisting on something staying in the book which I thought should be edited out. She won. She is the older sister, after all.

I definitely know that whenever she wanted to add a dog to the book I nixed it! By the way, I am a dog lover. There just wasn’t a place for a dog in Wicked Good without it being too sappy. I think at one time we did have Archer volunteer at the Humane Society but it didn’t work. I’m sure there will be dogs in the next book we write together.

During one of my trips to Maine, we took a road trip to Gloucester and Salem, where some of Wicked Good takes place.

At this point, I really do not know who wrote what. It was truly an equal effort.

How long did it take you to write Wicked Good?

JOANNE: We started writing it in March 2008. We finished around January, 2009. We had our mother’s book group read it and they gave us great comments. That was in March, 2009. We made further revisions from there.

Wicked Good is available to read online at your blog. How did that happen?

JOANNE: Yes, Wicked Good is available to read online at our blog:. Amy and I were talking about what to do with it recently and we decided we wanted to do something with it together. So I mentioned starting a blog. When we were writing Wicked Good, we never thought about posting it on a blog or even about getting it published. We were just having fun.

We are uploading Wicked Good chapter-by-chapter. We just posted chapter 19. There are 78 chapters so there is still a long way to go. We are also posting “breaks” along the way such as photos, mock interviews, and other things that inspire us or just make us laugh. Not too much though, we don’t want to take away from Archer and Rory. As you can probably guess, The Daily Puppy on the side of our blog is because of Amy! Actually, the puppies make us both smile.

Our followers have commented on the direction Wicked Good is going but not very often on the blog. We’d love to know how people feel about Wicked Good.

The only complaint we’ve received is frustration for what Archer is going through. But for readers to be that immersed in the character doesn’t make me take it as a complaint but as a compliment.

We would love for Wicked Good to be published. I’m hoping my agent will be interested in shopping it one day. Or, if there are any editors or publishers out there interested in Wicked Good, let us know. Of course, we think Wicked Good should be published. And so do our parents!!!!

Would you write another book together?

JOANNE: Yes. Dogs or no dogs!!

Any advice for people considering co-authoring a book?

JOANNE: It worked out really well for us. We grew closer. So I would say – do it. But check your ego at the door. Amy and I played on each other’s strengths. She is not a novelist but she is an avid reader plus she has direct experience with what it means to be a parent of a child with Asperger Syndrome. I was too hung up on following all the writing rules. She taught me a lot. And her grammar is much better than mine!

What projects are coming up next?

JOANNE: I’m working on a historical fiction novel called Sleeping Cupid which tells the story of a statue made by Michelangelo which ends up in an attic in a small town in Florida. Sleeping Cupid’s journey from 15th Century Italy to Florida today is told from the statue’s point of view.

Amy is saving the world – one dog at a time!

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Chronicle Books Giveaway

Sadly, we didn’t win the Chronicle Books Happy Haul-iday Giveaway. The grand prize winner was….(drumroll please)

CakeSpy

But Chronicle Books does have a little holiday gift for even us non-winners.

35% off + free shipping through December 16, 2011

Use this promo code at checkout: HAULIDAYS

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Giveaway: My Reading Life

My Reading Life

Author: Pat Conroy

Hardcover: 352 pages (also available as Kindle, Paperback Large Print, Audio CD)

Publisher:
Nan A. Talese (November 2, 2010)

Synposis:

My Reading Life is fifteen peeks at writer Pat Conroy’s early life—and myreadinglifeearly reads—to attempt to show us why he became the writer he is today. It is a combination of the books he read, the people he met, and the places he went and how they all combined to inspire him first, to write and second, to write the particular books he did write.

Review:

When we meet most writers, either in person or through the pages of their books, they have usually established who they are: a writer. My Reading Life is a chance to meet Pat Conroy before he became A WRITER. In the pages of My Reading Life he is still a military brat, a young high school student, a confused adult floundering to support himself. It’s great fun to meet him before he became PAT CONROY. Conroy clears up some misconceptions I had about him and reveals a few things that make me shout, “Oh, I’m like that too!” And since it’s divided into such short, variable chapters it is a quick read. You’ll find yourself speeding through it, anxious to learn what he has to say next.

In addition to telling us about his early life, Conroy tells us about the books he read that shaped him. About halfway through the book you find you’re keeping a reading list. Perhaps if you read the books Conroy read you’ll magically become a writer of his caliber.

Giveaway: Thanks to the publisher, I’m giving away two copies of My Reading Life. Yes, two! Leave a comment before midnight, Dec. 20 and you could win yourself a great book to put at the top of your 2011 Reading List.

Winners!

Today I’m announcing winners for my past two book giveaways

Small Talk, Big Results…the winner is Robyn

Iris Avenue…the winner is Anna

But don’t forget to enter to win My Reading Life by Pat Conroy

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5Ws with Sheila Connelly

Mystery writers amaze me! Not only do they write multiple books but multiple series. Who can keep all those characters straight? Sheila Connelly,sheilaconnelly is the author of three series. As Sheila she writes the Orchard Series set in Massachusetts and the Museum Series set in Philadelphia.
As Sarah Atwell she writes The Glassblower Series set in Arizona. Her latest, A Killer Crop, is a combination of harvest time at Meg Corey’s orchard, a surprise visit from her mother, a dead English professor, and Emily Dickinson.

Sheila agreed to answer the 5Ws for me today:

Who — Who is your favorite fictional detective?

Lord Peter Wimsey and Harriet Vane

Why — Why did you begin writing mystery books?

I was between jobs. I looked at all the books I had collected over the years and realized that fully half of them were mysteries, particularly cozies. I’d always wanted to write, and mysteries seemed the obvious choice.

Where — Where is your favorite place to write?

I write at my father’s leather-covered mahogany kneehole desk, with my grandmother’s filing cabinet (those old ones are heavy!) and my great-grandmother’s Art Nouveau lamp, on a large stair landing in my 1865 house.

When — When will you be creating a new series?

I’m always working on new ideas (encouraged by my agent). But since I have two series under contract at the moment, it’s hard to imagine taking on another one right now.

What — What would you be doing if you weren’t killercropwriting mystery books?

In my heart of hearts I’d love to be either an archeologist or an art forger, um, restorer.

So there you have it readers! Another writer saved from a life of crime by mystery books!

If you love mystery books and are interested in giving a few books as gifts this holiday check out the Mystery Lovers Bookshop which is giving free shipping on orders over $10. Yay, Mystery Lovers Bookshop!

Writing Blues

Is it the first day of winter, the rainy weather, or the many holidays(in addition to Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s our family has THREE December birthdays)? Whatever it is I’ve got the writing blues. Just don’t feel like doing it! It’s time to shake myself out of this and get back to business!

What do you do when you have the writing blues?

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Happy Thanksgiving

I’m off to my mom’s bearing side dishes to enjoy the holiday turkey. But really I’m just marking time until my mom brings out her super-excellent apple pie for dessert. With the help of my dad she made 17 pies this year and distributed them to family members and neighbors.

Hope you have a super-excellent highlight to your holiday!

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