Archive for January, 2009

Tuesday Quote of the Night

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

“Style is knowing who you are, what you want to say and not giving a damn.”

- Gore Vidal

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Tuesday Evening Book Reviews

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Russ Baker of The Huffington Post has good things to say about Larry Beinhart’s new novel, SALVATION BOULEVARD.

Sometimes you want a book just for its cover.  I hope it’s good, because it looks that way - Gregory Berman’s and Anthony W. Haddad’s, WTF? HOW TO SURVIVE 101 OF LIFE’S WORST F*#!-ING SITUATIONS.

AuthorScoop’s friend, Jamie Ford, appears on my review hunt for the first time with his fiction debut, HOTEL ON THE CORNER OF BITTER AND SWEET.  They liked it!  Congratulations, Jamie.

The International Herald Tribune goes to some length to ready us for John Grisham’s THE ASSOCIATE.

5 Minutes Alone… With Simone Elkeles

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Simone Elkeles is an award-winning Young Adult Fiction author celebrating the release of her fourth teen drama, PERFECT CHEMISTRY.

We’d like to thank her for taking the time to be part of our “5 Minutes Alone” interview series.

AuthorScoop: What was your very first publication credit?

Simone: My novel How to Ruin a Summer Vacation.  It was released in 2006 and was voted #3 on the Teens Top Ten list by YALSA, a division of the American Library Association.  It’s a young adult novel about a 16 year old American girl who goes to Israel for the summer with her father.  She’s got an attitude, a funny outlook on her surroundings, and a chip on her shoulder…which makes for a very funny read.  I receive a lot of email from teens who profess to “hate to read” but love How to Ruin a Summer Vacation.

AuthorScoop: Tell us about your latest release.

Simone: Perfect Chemistry is a contemporary Romeo and Juliet story – a romantic and edgy teen novel about Alex Fuentes, a suburban Latino gang member from the suburbs of Chicago, who is paired with the rich and popular blonde cheerleader Brittany Ellis for chemistry class their senior year of high school.  Alex makes a bet with his friends to lure the spoiled rich girl into his life.  Soon Alex and Brittany learn that the stereotypes they have of each other is far from reality, and both teens are shocked that a person who is their total opposite can share so many of the same trials and tribulations.  Perfect Chemistry has been enjoyed by teen girls as well as teen boys.

I created a funny parody rap video “book trailer” for it, and hired a director and Chicago actors to do the rap (I even have a small cameo in it).  You can watch it on my website at www.simoneelkeles.net

AuthorScoop: Aside from your own hard work, who else do you feel has contributed to your success?

Simone: My father was a workaholic.  I know it sounds cliché, but he really did teach me that whatever I wanted to achieve I could do it if I just worked hard enough at it.  That’s a huge lesson, and one that I learned by merely watching him.  If he wanted a sprinkler system put in, he did it himself…if he wanted to build a model solar car, he built it himself.  He wanted to open up his own business and be a successful entrepreneur, and he did it.  I hope by watching me, my children learn that they can do anything they want if they work hard at it (although I hired people to install my sprinkler system and have yet to pull out the shovel to dig that hole in my backyard for that pool I’ve always wanted).  When I first started writing, I got lots of rejections.  But I kept at it, worked hard on writing more books, and never gave up.

Judy Blume, who wrote edgy teen novels that I read as a teen, has definitely inspired me.  If I can write “real” teen novels like Judy Blume, I’ve done my job.  I can’t end this question without mentioning my wonderful friends who read the awful rough drafts of my novels and critique them.  They are the ones who give it to me straight…and a writer definitely needs friends like that to challenge them to make the end product better!  Don’t tell me my rough draft is great when it’s not…just tell it to me like it is!

AuthorScoop: At what time of day or night do you do your best writing?

Simone: When the kids are not home, whatever time that might be.  I do well in the morning when it’s quiet, and after the family is asleep when it’s quiet.  If I could just get my dogs to stop barking when someone walks by my house during the day, when the UPS truck drives by, and when the mailman comes I would really get a lot of writing done.  Life around my house is never boring, that’s for sure!

AuthorScoop: Finally, what advice would you give to new or unpublished writers?

Simone: I get that question a lot.  Most aspiring writers I talk to have a “work in progress.”  My suggestion is to finish the book, because most people who start a book never finish it.  You learn by writing, so even if you aren’t the best writer or even if you don’t have a degree in writing, or even if you’re a teenager with an idea for a book…or even if you’re a stay-at-home mom who has that great book idea…FINISH the book.  If you have writers block, get over it.  Nora Roberts (I think it was her, forgive me if it wasn’t) said, “You can’t revise a blank page.”  Those words echo in my head, especially when I feel writers block coming on.  So I release my inner critic and let myself write ridiculous stuff or stupid stuff in a scene…because I know I can always go back and revise it.  But if the page is blank, there’s no way to revise it.  I have to be honest and most times I go back and what I thought was crap was in reality just a slow time and is actually good.

While you’re writing, try and join a writers’ critique group (it helped me!) because you can get feedback while you’re writing.  And giving feedback to other aspiring writers is also a huge learning tool, because “writers are readers!”

John Updike Dies

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

John Updike 1932 - 2009

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John Updike Dies (Washington Post)
US novelist Updike dies of cancer  (BBC)
John Updike, prize-winning writer, dead at age 76 (AP)
Pulitzer prize-winning novelist dies from lung cancer aged 76 (Guardian)
American Novelist John Updike Dies (Sky News)
John Updike, prize-winning writer, dead at age 76 (Sacramento Bee)

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Afternoon Viewing: Talking Authors Encounters

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

From the YouTube description:

Amy Tan and Alexander McCall Smith chat about their encounters with fans at inopportune moments:

Tuesday Morning LitLinks

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

American Library Association announces award winners, including Neil Gaiman’s Newbery.

New Yale exhibit explores Picasso’s relationship with writers.

Atlanta writing program saved from extinction.

How football fed Blago’s poetic soul.

Dr. Andrew Harvey examines the strange vortex of politics and poetry.

Diamond Comic Distributors’ new purchase order benchmarks send shockwaves through smaller, indy comic publishers.

Midnight Poetry: “art, bitch”

Monday, January 26th, 2009

art, bitch
(S. A. Kelly)

amazing fuck-culture gurus
spit in furious faces
(gaping monkeys grumble)
naked statues glistening
flaccid stone penises
in a long pale hall
gawkers walk and ogle
camel-toe girls instead
(giggling cell phone snapshots)
grinning vampires gather later
in a coffee shop aroused
and (predictably)
unaware
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(Read more from S.A. Kelly here)

Editor’s note: ‘Midnight Poetry’ is a showcase for work by poets across the spectrum—from the pantheon of literary giants to contemporary, underground and new voices.

If you would like to submit your work for consideration, please see our Submission Guidelines.

Monday Quote of the Night

Monday, January 26th, 2009

“We don’t write what we know. We write what we wonder about.”

- Richard Peck

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Monday Evening Book Reviews

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Next dead President up for exhumation and vivisection - Alexander Hamilton.  Thomas DiLorenzo splits the hairs of this founding father in HAMILTON’S CURSE.

…while Library Journal features Honest Abe himself, IN LINCOLN’S HAND: HIS ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPTS WITH COMMENTARY BY DISTINGUISHED AMERICANS.

Val McDermid’s twenty-second novel, DARKER DOMAIN, is well-received at The Grand Forks Herald.

Post election, Joe Gandelman of The Moderate Voice thinks Marty Beckerman’s, DUMOCRACY, is funnier and more pointed than when it first came out.

Afternoon Viewing: Peter Thomas

Monday, January 26th, 2009

From the YouTube description:

Billy Bee Children’s book author Peter Thomas is inteviewed doing a school presentation with the illustrator John Mahomet. Topics discussed are the obstacles Peter Thomas had to overcome to achieve his dream of being a published cildren’s book author. His early childhood difficulties that were ovecome wth determination, planned action and self belief. A good moral human interest story that will be enjoyed by all ages.

Monday Morning LitLinks

Monday, January 26th, 2009

The Plain Dealer offers a glimpse behind the scenes of the Newbery committee.

Silicon Valley to select its first-ever poet laureate.

The Guardian slices and dices the late Adrian Mitchell’s famous quote: “Most people ignore most poetry because most poetry ignores most people.”

With a February deadline fast approaching, the children’s book industry is turning up the heat in its fight to be exempted from the lead-testing requirements of CPSIA.

Gawker lampoons “Fashionista Socialite’s Important New Novel”.

Sunday Evening Book Reviews

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Sports stories are usually about things more universal than the sport in question.  So it seemingly is with Doris H. Pieroth’s new biography of Seattle’s basketball legend , WE STILL CALL HIM COACH: THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF LES HABEGGER.

Simon Barrett of Blogger News Network absolutely loved Terrell Harris Dougan’s memoir, THAT WENT WELL: ADVENTURES IN CARING FOR MY SISTER.

CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY was written by a spy.  I’m not kidding.  Unless Jennet Conant is yanking my chain with THE IRREGULARS, Ronald Dahl was a British operative.

Author Martin Clark novelizes brotherly ties in his newest thriller, THE LEGAL LIMIT.

Afternoon Viewing: Larry Doyle on Book Tours

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

From the YouTube description:

Thurber Prize winning author and former writer for “The Simpsons,” Larry Doyle discusses book tours as part of his keynote address at the Baltimore Writers’ Conference (November 8, 2008).

Sunday Morning LitLinks

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

How not to write a novel.

What does it mean to say that Obama is a “literary president”?

Heather Stokes, writing for The Book Examiner, muses on the decline of literature.

Time takes a look at Burns Day in Brazil.

Happy birthday, Virginia Woolf.

R.I.P. Jose Torres.

Saturday Evening Book Reviews

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

It’s a little bit specialist, but Mac Engel gives us a retrospective of TEXAS STADIUM.

We had old Russian ballet yesterday and today, The Canyon News gives us more recent Russian politics in PUTIN’S LABYRINTH, by Steve Levine.

Monsters and Critics has an in-depth review of Ray Bradbury’s, FAHRENHEIT 451, and ties it all back to the state of books and publishing from an everyday reader’s point of view.

I like seeing debut novels well reviewed.  Here’s THE LITTLE GIANT OF ABERDEEN COUNTY, by Tiffany Baker, getting a warm reception at The Christian Science Monitor.

Afternoon Viewing: Waiting for Alice

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

From the YouTube description:

Hundreds of people wait outside for a chance to hear Alice Walker give a talk.

Saturday Morning LitLinks

Saturday, January 24th, 2009

The New York Review of Books looks at Google’s influence on the future of authors and publishers.

Comic and graphic novel companies feeling the pinch.

The Warwick Prize announces its shortlist.

Mark McGwire’s brother getting little traction for tell-all proposal.

Child safety regulations may lead to children’s books being yanked off library and bookstore shelves.

5 Minutes Alone… with Adrienne Kress

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Adrienne Kress is an author, actor and blogger.

We’d like to thank her for taking the time to be part of our “5 Minutes Alone” interview series.

AuthorScoop: What was your very first publication credit?

Adrienne: Actually, Alex and the Ironic Gentleman was my very first publication credit. I know, I know . . .

AuthorScoop: Tell us about your latest release.

Adrienne: Timothy and the Dragon’s Gate is kind of a sequel to Alex and kind of not. Ooh, cryptic!

Basically it tells the story of Timothy Freshwater, 11, who has been kicked out of every school in the city for being “too smart for his own good”. After a series of coincidences he winds up being the latest master to a dragon trapped in human form as a servant until the 125th year of the Dragon, where if he then scales the Dragon’s Gate he can resume his proper dragon form again. Of course the 125th year of the Dragon happens to be that year, and Timothy has to help him get to China (though he’s not too crazy about being assigned the task).

The way it is a sequel is that halfway through the story Timothy comes across Alex from the first book the day after her adventure finished. So it’s kind of like their two adventures are running parallel to each other and then merge together. Therefore Timothy can be a standalone, but it also is a sequel, and there are a few inside jokes from the first book that you might not get.

If any of that makes sense . . .

AuthorScoop: Aside from your own hard work, who else do you feel has contributed to your success?

Adrienne: My parents. And it isn’t just their emotional support (which has been a constant throughout my life), but also the physical help they contribute to the books. They go over all the edits with me and when I produce a first draft they read it and comment on it. They are deeply involved in the process and I honestly don’t know what I would do without their help. Yay Team Kress!

AuthorScoop: At what time of day or night do you do your best writing?

Adrienne: It’s hard to say. I guess morning and evening, because I really hate afternoons. It might sound flaky but there is something icky about afternoons to me, might be the lighting. But truly I write any time of day, anywhere. Especially towards the end of the process.

AuthorScoop: Finally, what advice would you give to new or unpublished writers?

Adrienne: Never give up, never surrender! If you want it badly enough, you can get it. But it requires you to do the work. So read. Read everything. Read things that are not in your genre, read different forms (poetry, plays, graphic novels . . .), read from different periods. And write. Learn the rules and then break the rules. Try things out. If they don’t work, they don’t work. Don’t be afraid to fail.

And understand that while this is a really tough heartbreaking road, there is no miracle to getting published. It can be done as long as you are professional and thoughtful about it. It can be done.

Friday Evening Book Reviews

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

When you think Russia, you might think Communism or gulags or maybe even borscht.  But you should be thinking ballet.  Here, this will help - BALLET’S MAGIC KINGDOM: SELECTED WRITINGS ON DANCE IN RUSSIA 1911 - 1925, by Akim Volynsky.

THE TYRANNY OF DEAD IDEAS: LETTING GO OF THE OLD WAYS OF THINKING TO UNLEASH A NEW PEOSPERITY is Matt Miller’s editorializing on how we hit the gas on progress.

The New York Times hosts a podcast full of book reviews and commentary here.

Darwin gets dissected in this 200th anniversary of his birth and The Economist features a compare and contrast session of two notable new releases.

Afternoon Viewing: Terri Cheney

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

From the YouTube description:

Terri Cheney discusses her New York Times bestselling book MANIC, and her lifelong battle with bipolar disorder.