Tuesday, October 02, 2012

Win PEACHES FOR FATHER FRANCIS by Joanne Harris


The bestselling author of Chocolat and The Girl with No Shadow returns to Lansquenet in this enchanting new novel
                                          

PEACHES FOR FATHER FRANCIS

 By Joanne Harris



*Advance Praise for PEACHES FOR FATHER FRANCIS*

“Harris’s skill at vibrantly depicting the charm and eccentricity of rural French life is at the heart of this delightful novel…Harris has used this story as a plea for tolerance and understanding, but her message is not the least pedantic. Fans of the first two books will delight in becoming reacquainted with Vianne, her dashing man, Roux, and her clever daughters.”—Library Journal
 
* UK Praise *
“Like Chocolat, this book is a feast for the senses. Every page of the book is steeped in scents, colours and tastes, without ever tipping into the pretentious or showy.  The writing is seductive and engaging throughout; and the magic, too, is intrinsic without ever being soppy or embarrassing. What is magic (or religion), after all, if not an ability to understand the human heart? Peaches for Father Francis is a wonderful return to form for Harris.”—Literary Review

“Absorbing and atmospheric...Joanne bravely tackles religious differences head-on but very sensitively. It's expressive, rich, vibrant and even shocking in parts.”—Heat Magazine

“A delightful jumble of the sensuous sights, sounds and smells the author describes so well.”—Glamour


Anyone who has read Joanne Harris’ best-seller Chocolat will be familiar with the deliciously warm character of Vianne Rocher. In Harris’ latest novel, PEACHES FOR FATHER FRANCIS (Viking; Strict On Sale: October 2, 2012; $26.95; ISBN: 978-0-670-02636-4), it’s eight years later and Vianne receives a letter from beyond the grave from her friend Armande, summoning her back from her life on a houseboat in Paris to the quaint village of Lansquenet where she used to run her chocolate shop.

Upon returning with her daughters Anouk and Rosette, Vianne discovers that everything and nothing has changed in the small village. Her adversary, Father Francis Reynaud, still feels persecuted and misunderstood—only this time he needs Vianne’s help. Her one-time best friend, Josephine, still has an ambiguous relationship with Vianne’s lover Roux, and, unbeknownst to Vianne, has an eight-year-old son born just days after Rosette. And Lansquenet itself has changed with the arrival of a large number of Moroccans. The cultural mix is welcomed by some and resented by others.

Ultimately, Vianne is left to unravel the mystery of newcomer Inés Bencharki, who is part of the new Muslim community and is stirring up things. Inés insists on dressing in the traditional full black veil, under which “she seems as impervious to hostility as she is to gossip, scandal or offers of friendship.” Tensions between these two communities reach a fever pitch and it’s up to Vianne to rescue Father Francis and to discover what’s really going on in Lansquenet before it’s too late.

About the Author:
Joanne Harris  is the author of the Whitbread Award-shortlisted Chocolat, which was made into an Oscar-nominated feature film, and eleven other bestselling novels.   She is published world-wide, in approximately 50 countries, and is the winner of several international and UK awards.  She is an Honorary Fellow at St Catharine’s College, Cambridge and lives with her husband in Yorkshire .

I am delighted to be able to offer one lucky reader copies of both Peaches for Father Francis and Chocolat along with peach truffles! To enter, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “Peaches for Father Francis” as the subject. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone.

All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends October 15, 2012. Good luck!

Monday, October 01, 2012

Win Homegrown in Florida!



Homegrown in Florida

Edited by William McKeen

 “Sparkles with all the colors of our childhood, like the Florida sun setting over the Gulf. A surprising cross-section of thirty-four talented writers, poets, politi­cians, and entertainers transport us to a state where anything was possible, where memories take on a life of their own and have lasting consequences.”— Victor DiGenti, author of the Windrusher series

“Brings back a world in which kids played outside unsupervised, when grand­mothers wore pearls and smelled of talcum powder and cooked hot breakfasts, and when a mother might spend Sunday morning immersed in the Miami Herald but felt it her duty to have grace said at the dinner table.”—Joy Wallace Dickinson, author of Remembering Orlando

Florida can seem like a child’s dream of paradise: endless sunny days, trips to the beach to swim and build sandcastles, bike riding without a jacket in the middle of January, and magical themeparks only a short drive away. But what was life really like for those who grew up here?

During a recent reunion, writers Bill McKeen, Tim Dorsey, and Jeff Klinkenberg found themselves lamenting that so many of their childhood memories were fading away. For them, and for many, Florida is not just a place people go to, it’s where they come from.

That can mean many things to many people, as the stellar cast of writers, journalists, and musicians eloquently reveal in Homegrown in Florida. This utterly satisfying and powerful anthology aims at the heart of the glories of childhood and the pain of growing up. Both a celebration of the exotic, untamed wilderness of a youth filled with moss-draped oaks and citrus fields, evergreen winters and palmetto fronds, and a reminder that innocence often gave way to experience as bike paths became private developments, and swimming holes were paved over by interstates, Home­grown in Florida is filled with tears and laughter alike.

Featuring contributions from Carl Hiaasen, Tom Petty, Zora Neale Hurston, Michael Connelly, and many more, this is a book for every child of old Florida, and every child at heart.

William McKeen is the author of nine books, including Mile Marker Zero, Outlaw Journalist, Highway 61, and Rock and Roll Is Here to Stay. He teaches at Boston University, where he chairs the Department of Journalism.

To win your own copy of Homegrown in Florida, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “Homegrown in Florida” as the subject. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone.

All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends October 10, 2012. Good luck!

Saturday, September 29, 2012

29th MIAMI BOOK FAIR INTERNATIONAL


Readings, Author signings and Topical Discussions
29th MIAMI BOOK FAIR INTERNATIONAL 
Presented and produced by The Center @ MDC
Nov. 11 – 18, 2012/ MiamiBookFair.com

The 29th edition of the nation’s finest and largest literary gathering, Miami Book Fair International, presented by The Center for Literature and Theatre @ Miami Dade College (MDC), will take place November 11 – 18, 2012, at Miami Dade MDC’s Wolfson Campus, 300 NE Second Ave., in downtown Miami. The always-popular Street Fair runs Friday through Sunday, November 16 – 18, with more than 200 exhibitors from around the country selling books in a festive atmosphere.

The Fair, MDC’s flagship cultural event, will treat book lovers to eight days of cultural and educational activities, including the beloved Evenings With… series, the IberoAmerican Authors program, myriad learning activities for children, and programs for food enthusiasts in partnership with the college’s Miami Culinary Institute.

TOP CONFIRMED AUTHORS
 The Fair continues to raise the bar of excellence by offering a fine roster of writers from the U.S. and abroad, and this year will be no exception. Confirmed authors include  talk show host Bill O’Reilly, actress Molly Ringwald, political commentator Andrew Solomon, historians Robert Caro and Deborah Dash Moore, David Maraniss, Michael Grunwald; Pulitzer Prize winning Junot Diaz; essayists and commentators Adam Gropnik and Camille Paglia; novelists Sandra Cisneros, Emma Donoghue, Jess Walters, Ann Lamott Lauren Groff, Robert Goolrick, Thane Rosenbaum, personality Lemony Snickett;  fashion designers Isabel and Ruben Toledo; best selling authors James Patterson, Jo Nesbo, RL Stine, Justin Torres, and opening the Fair on Nov. 11 is novelist and journalist Tom Wolfe, to name just a few of the 300 plus authors coming to Miami from all over the world to read from their newest works, to meet their readers and sign books.

The IberoAmerican program will present an array of Spanish-speaking literary voices from around the world, including Homero Aridjis (Mexico), Mayra Santos Febres (Puerto Rico), Abilio Estévez (Cuba-Spain), Santiago Roncagliolo (Perú) and more.   
Back again this year is the fall edition of The Miami Writers Institute, with workshops taught by novelist Margot Livesey, literary agent Kimberly Witherspoon, and award-winning author Teresa Dovalpage with a workshop in Spanish, among others.

This year, the Fair continues to expand its children’s programming with Generation Genius Days, a component for toddlers, children, tweens and teens to explore, discover and learn through reading and writing, storytelling, art-making, music and theater. Age-appropriate, book-inspired activities will be offered, and will include a “musical petting zoo”, where kids can handle instruments; map-making and star-gazing; junior engineering projects and science experiments; creative writing and theater workshops, computer storyboarding for comics and cartoons, and other activities that can lead to learning and discovery in the various subject areas, such as English, math, history, geography, the sciences, the visual arts and others. An additional day of author readings for students on field trips is now on the schedule, as well as a fourth day of readings, storytelling and entertainment on the two children’s stages.

The Fair also continues special programming for educators with the day-long School of Comics and Graphic Novels -- a series of workshops on how to use comics in the classroom--and adds workshops on how to teach creative writing to K-12 students.  Miami Book Fair International 2012 promises to be another exceptional literary event!  For regular updates on the Miami Book Fair, please visit www.miamibookfair.com

MIAMI BOOK FAIR INTERNATIONAL AND The Center @ MDC
Miami Book Fair International is the largest and is regarded as the finest literary gathering in America. It is the premier event of The Center for literature and theatre at Miami Dade College. The Center promotes reading and writing throughout the year by consistently presenting quality literary activities open to all in South Florida. Literacy projects target children of all ages—from kindergarten to high school—as well as college students and adults. Established and emerging writers from South Florida and all over the U.S. read, lecture, and teach workshops. They work with K-12, MDC students, and diverse members of the community, helping to deepen their understanding of literature, and encouraging their work of writers at all stages of development. The Center envisions South Florida as a nexus of literary activity in the Americas and beyond, and will continue to champion its mission of promoting the advancement and appreciation of the literary arts in all forms.

Miami Book Fair International is made possible through the generous support of the State of Florida and the National Endowment for the Arts; the City of Miami; Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners; Miami-Dade County Public Schools; the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau; the Miami Downtown Development; and the Friends of the Fair; as well as many corporate partners.

ABOUT MIAMI DADE COLLEGE
Miami Dade College has a long and rich history of involvement in the cultural arts, providing South Florida with a vast array of artistic and literary offerings including The Miami Book Fair International, The Florida Center for the Literary Arts, The Miami International Film Festival, the MDC Live! performing arts series, The MDC Tower Theater Cinema Series, the Miami Leadership Roundtable speakers’ series, the National Historic Landmark Freedom Tower, numerous renowned campus art galleries and theaters, and the nationally recognized School of Entertainment and Design Technology. With an enrollment of more than 174,000 students, MDC is the largest institution of higher education in the country and is a national model for many of its programs. The college’s eight campuses and outreach centers offer more than 300 distinct degree programs including baccalaureate, Associate in Arts and Science degrees and numerous career training certificates leading to in-demand jobs. MDC has served nearly 2,000,000 students since it opened its doors in 1960.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Win THE MEMORY THIEF by Emily Colin


In Emily Colin’s exquisite debut novel THE MEMORY THIEF (Ballantine Trade Paperback Original) one man’s vow to his wife sparks a remarkable journey that tests the pull of memory and reaffirms the bonds of love.

Deftly weaving together two strands of plot, THE MEMORY THIEF spins an unforgettable tale of love lost and found. Though she has lived with her husband Aidan’s adventure-seeking tendencies for the entirety of their relationship, Maddie has particularly strong reservations when Aidan tells her of his plans to summit Alaska’s Mount McKinley. When she eventually gives in to him, Aidan promises her, “I will come back to you.” Yet, late one night, she receives shocking news: Aidan has died in an avalanche. Confronted with grief, newfound single parenthood, and the realization that J.C., Aidan’s climbing partner and best friend, has been in love with her for years, Maddie must swim through her swirling emotions in a quest for understanding.

Across the country, Nicholas Sullivan awakes from a motorcycle accident. Unable to remember any part of his life to this point, he finds that his dreams are haunted by images of a beautiful woman and a young boy. Feeling as though these mysterious people may hold the answers to his own problems, Nicholas is driven to find them. Nicholas’s journey leads him to great discoveries—which not only change his life, but Maddie’s, too.

Poignant, yet ultimately triumphant, THE MEMORY THIEF is a unique and compelling love story that marks Emily Colin as a young author to watch.

I am delighted to introduce Emily Colin, my guest blogger for today:

When people hear about my debut novel, The Memory Thief, one of the first questions they usually ask me is, “So, are you a climber?” I’ll admit, this makes me giggle. For one thing, I am most assuredly acrophobic, the kind of person who white-knuckles the steering wheel and says a prayer to St. Michael—the patron saint of high places—whenever the vicissitudes of life require me to drive across a bridge. (Coming from a nice Jewish girl, this ought to tell you something.) For another, my poor athleticism is rivaled only by my extraordinary lack of grace.

Still, given the circumstances, their question isn’t all that unreasonable. After all, two of the characters in my book are high-altitude mountaineers. And as Madeleine, The Memory Thief’s female protagonist, says upon meeting the man who will later become her husband:

I considered it an act of supreme balance if I walked the morning’s first cup of coffee across the room without spilling it, and here he was, feeling embarrassed because he hadn’t made it to the top of the tallest mountain in the world. If there was ever a sign that two people were mismatched, this was it.  

Truly, I felt the same way when it came to writing about climbing.  Which begs the question—why?

Needless to say, I did a lot of research in the process of writing The Memory Thief—which blends high-altitude mountaineering, a love story, a ghost story and a mystery. And what I came to, ultimately, is this: I will never be a mountaineer (as anyone who’s known me for more than ten minutes will doubtless attest). But for the year-and-a-half that I worked on this book, I got to try on another identity, to slip into its skin and see what life looked like from the dark side of the mountain. This changed the way I saw the world, the ideas to which I was drawn and the issues that caught my interest. It changed me.

I think at its most basic level, that’s what writing fiction does—it allows you to become someone else for a little while, to see what might have been if your life had led you down a different path. And when you find your way back into the real world, you take this knowledge with you; you carry all the alter egos of the people you might have been.

When I wrote this book, I wasn’t living in that real world, not really. Most of the time I wandered around in a haze, even clumsier than usual, bumping into everything because all I could see was my imaginary landscape, the one where my characters lived. I wrote and wrote and revised. And then I revised some more.

In the end, I picked my head up and realized that I’d still never climbed a mountain—but with all the risks I’d taken; the unshakeable belief that writing a novel was something I could do; my focus on a single, far-reaching, attainable goal—well, I sure felt as if I had.

And that, as they say, has made all the difference.”


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
EMILY COLIN is the Associate Director of the DREAMS Center For Arts Education, a nationally award-winning nonprofit dedicated to building creative, committed citizens through high-quality arts programming. Prior to DREAMS, she served as Editor-in-Chief of Coastal Carolina Press, and co-founder of Carolina Women’s Partnership. She also works closely with the North Carolina Arts Council. In Though Colin is not a mountain climber—she’s actually afraid of heights—she spent innumerable hours doing research for THE MEMORY THIEF: shadowing Outward Bound instructors as they scaled cliffs in Colorado’s Rifle Canyon, conducting reconnaissance missions in an indoor rock-climbing gym closer to home, and speaking with alpinists who took on Alaska’s Mt. McKinley—and lost. For more information, please visit the author’s website at www.emilycolin.com.

To win your own copy of THE MEMORY THIEF by Emily Colin, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “MEMORY THIEF” as the subject. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone.

All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends September 30, 2012. Good luck!

Friday, September 14, 2012

The Crime Fiction Academy



 
Amazon.com & The Crime Fiction Academy Make Crime Fiction Notoriety Accessible for Creative New Yorkers

New York, NY (September, 2012) - The Center for Fiction is pleased to announce that their one-of-a-kind writing program, The Crime Fiction Academy (CFA), is one of the most recent recipients of an Amazon Grant. The grant program, offered by Amazon.comprovides funding for exceptional nonprofit author and publisher groups that, “foster the creation, discussion, and publication of books.” The $25,000 grant will allow the CFA to offer significant scholarships of 50% or more to incoming Fall 2012 students.
The Crime Fiction Academy launched in February 2012 as the first ongoing program dedicated exclusively to crime writing in the United States. Each student enrolled in CFA attends a 12-week Writing Workshop, a once a month Master Class, a Crime Fiction Reading seminar, as well as up-close-and-personal discussions with leading agents and editors in the field including Megan Abbott, Lawrence Block, Lee Child, Harlan Coben, Thomas H. Cook, Linda Fairstein, Susan Isaacs, Dennis Lehane, Elmore Leonard, Laura Lippman, Val McDermid, Joyce Carol Oates, Jason Pinter, S.J. Rozan and Karin Slaughter.  Students also receive 24-hour access to the Center for Fiction’s Writing Studio and free admission to all Center for Fiction events.
Admissions for the Fall 2012 session are rolling and classes begin October 1, 2012. Students can apply directly through the Center for Fiction’s website and grant scholarships will be awarded on as case-by-case basis. Tuition may be paid in person at the Center, online, over the phone, or by mailed check.
About the Center For Fiction: The Center for Fiction is the only nonprofit in the U.S. solely dedicated to celebrating fiction, and works every day to connect readers and writers. Time Out calls The Center one of the top three reasons to stay in Manhattan for literary events, citing the innovative panels, lectures and conversations that take place in the beautiful landmark building on East 47th Street. The CFF features workspace, grants, and classes to support emerging writers, reading groups on classic and contemporary authors, and programs to help get kids reading.  The CFF recognizes the best in the world of fiction through their annual awards, and operates one of the few independent fiction bookshops in the country.  The CFF is also an important piece of New York City history, continuing to build their renowned circulating library collection, begun in 1820 by New York City merchants before the advent of the public library system.
About the Crime Fiction Academy: The Crime Fiction Academy made its debut in mid-February 2012 as the first ongoing, serious program exclusively dedicated to crime writing in all its forms.  Students accepted into the program are taught by successful practitioners of the genre, and classes take place in The Center’s eight-story building at 17 E. 47th Street in Manhattan. Every writer enrolled in CFA attends a 12-week Writing Workshop, one Master Class each month, and a Crime Fiction Reading seminar.  In addition, each writer has access to special lectures and discussions with editors and agents from the world of crime fiction publishing, round-the clock membership in The Center’s Writers’ Studio, free admission to all Center for Fiction events, and access to the Center’s extensive circulating collection, which won a Mystery Writers of America Raven Award for its amazing in-depth collection of crime fiction. All classes, workshops, and lectures take place in the evening. 

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Win SCARED SH*TLESS by Cary McNeal


Win a copy of Scared Sh*tless: 1,003 Facts That Will Scare the Sh*t Out of You by Cary McNeal!

You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, you’ll s#*t yourself!

Did you know that William Shatner was once paid $25,000 for a kidney stone he’d recently passed? Or that Mickey Mouse creator Walk Disney was afraid of mice? In the same vein of the successful bestseller 1,001 Facts That Will Scare The Shit Out Of You, which sold more than 100,000 copies in its first year, Emmy-award winning producer and comedy writer Cary McNeal has written a the follow-up collection that will be sure to even further push the boundaries with SCARED SH*TLESS: 1,003 More Facts That Will Scare The Shit Out Of You (Perigee Trade Paperback; September 4, 2012; $13.95).

With more chapters and a wider variety of facts than ever, this fascinating, upsetting, and laugh-out-loud guide covers everything from the size of the world’s largest recorded turd, to what JFK was really doing with when the Bay of Pigs invasion began, to the secret (and disgusting) ingredient in your toothpaste. SCARED SH*TLESS leaves no stone unturned, shedding freaky facts on your favorite celebrity, food and drinks, bodily functions, and sex:

  • ·         Despite what men might claim, only 15% have a penis longer than seven inches. Only 3% have a penis more than 8 inches long.
  • ·         One study suggests that bacon affects the brain the same way as cocaine and heroin, overloading pleasure centers and requiring increasing amounts to be satisfied.
  • ·         Up to 18 percent of identity theft victims don’t learn about the crime for four years or more.
  • ·         McDonald’s McRib sandwich contains some of the same ingredients used to manufacture gym mats and running shoes.
  • ·         The first man to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel died fifteen years later after slipping on an orange peel and fracturing his leg, which became infected.
  • ·         A third of Texans believe that humans and dinosaurs roamed the earth at the same time.
  • ·         Hitler and Napoleon each had only one testicle. Together, they were nuts.
  • ·         About 1,600 people are bitten by other people very year in New York City.
  • ·         Women who read romance novels have sex twice as often as those who don’t.


In addition to 1,001 Facts That Will Scare The S#*t Out Of You , Cary McNeal is also the author of Crap I Bought On eBay. An Emmy-winning TV producer who has written comedy for Mike Myers, Jackie Chan, and Fred Willard, he lives in Atlanta . For more information, please visit his website at www.carymcneal.com.

To win your own copy of Scared Sh*tless by Cary McNeal, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “Scared Sh*tless” as the subject. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone.

All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends September 18, 2012. Good luck!


Thursday, August 30, 2012

Designers & Books Fair

Tickets for the inaugural Designers & Books Fair (October 26-28, 2012 at the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan) go on sale this Saturday, September 1.


At the Fair, some of the field’s most notable names—Todd Oldham, Simon Doonan, Andre Leon Talley, Michael Graves, Billie Tsien and Paul Goldberger-- will come together to talk about architecture, fashion, graphic design, interior design, landscape architecture, product and industrial design, and urban design through the lens of a lasting format—the printed, tangible page.  The programming curators of the event include Michael Bierut, Wendy Goodman, Paul Goldberger, Steve Heller, and Valerie Steele. The Fair is the brainchild of Steve Kroeter, founder of the popular website designersandbooks.com, which has received over 1 million page views from people interested in books as sources of inspiration for creativity, innovation, and invention.

Publishers will have their latest and most popular design titles available for sale and authors will be signing books.  Rare and out-of-print book dealers will also be exhibiting and selling.  Attending publishers include ACC, Actar, AMMO, Artbook DAP, Bauer & Dean, Lars Muller, MIT, Paint Box, Norton, Princeton Architectural Press, Rizzoli, and Thames & Hudson.

For more details about the Fair visit www.designersandbooks.com/bookfair.  

2012 PEN Literary Awards

The PEN American Center announced the winners and runners up for the 2012 PEN Literary Awards. This year PEN will present 18 awards, fellowships, grants and prizes, including two awards offered for the first time ever: the PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction and the PEN/Steven Kroll Award for text in an illustrated picture book. Winners and runners-up will be honored at the PEN Literary Awards Ceremony on October 23 in New York City. See a complete list of winners and runners-up here. Highlights include:

PEN/Bellwether Prize for Socially Engaged Fiction ($25,000): Good Kings Bad Kings by Susan Nussbaum
PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize ($25,000): Zazen by Vanessa Veselka (Red Lemonade)
PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction ($25,000): E.L. Doctorow
PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award ($10,000): The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood by James Gleick (Pantheon) 
PEN/Diamonstein-Spielvogel Award for the Art of the Essay ($5,000): Arguablyby Christopher Hitchens (Twelve)
PEN/Jacqueline Bograd Weld Award for Biography ($5,000): Catherine the Great: Portrait of a Woman by Robert K. Massie (Random House)
PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing 
($5,000): Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball’s Longest Game by Dan Barry (Harper)
PEN/Steven Kroll Award Honoring the Author of an Illustrated Children's Book
($5,000): Never Forgotten by Patricia C. McKissack (Schwartz & Wade Books)

Thursday, August 09, 2012

Win LINE OF FIRE by Stephen White!


I am excited to offer one lucky reader a copy of Stephen White’s latest thriller, LINE OF FIRE.

New York Times bestselling author Stephen White returns with a gripping thriller about the one devastating secret that could cost Alan Gregory everything—the first of the dramatic two-part conclusion to his acclaimed bestselling series.

Alan Gregory is finally beginning to feel settled, hopeful that a long period of upheaval in his private life is behind him. He refocuses his energy on his clinical psychology practice, where a beguiling new patient is challenging his values. The interlude of calm doesn't last, of course: Alan's dear friend Diane is showing signs of a long-simmering emotional collapse, and Alan's greatest fear—the exposure of his most dangerous secret—has become something he can't ignore.

A new witness has surfaced, causing authorities to reopen their investigation into the suicide death of a woman named J. Winter Brown. When Alan and his equally culpable friend Sam Purdy inadvertently disclose details of their involvement in her death to a desperate drug dealer, any confidence they felt about riding out the new investigation evaporates. The trail that leads back to Alan and Sam, once cold, has turned white-hot.

With his vulnerability mounting daily, Alan begins to fear that his mesmerizing new patient may be the catalyst that can cause everything he treasures—his marriage, family, friendship, and future—to implode. As the authorities close in, the story hurtles toward a conclusion that will set the stage for the most unexpected of outcomes: the final act of the Alan Gregory saga.

The reviews have been great…

"Line of Fire is a Stephen White thriller at its best -- a juicy and very complicated crime with characters drawn close to the heart." --Denver Post

"Fans will love how the threads from the other books weave into a complex tapestry. Newcomers will find a compelling mystery set against the beautiful Colorado landscape amid raging wildfires." --Associated Press

Visit http://www.authorstephenwhite.com/ to read an in-depth interview with Stephen, to read an excerpt and more reviews, to see photos of some of the real places mentioned in Line of Fire, and much more.

To win your own copy of LINE OF FIRE by Stephen White, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “LINE OF FIRE” as the subject or click here. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone.

All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends August 18, 2012. Good luck!

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

Win THE AGE OF DESIRE by Jennie Fields



Courtesy of Viking

A Glimpse into the Life of Edith Wharton…

For fans of The Paris Wife, a sparkling glimpseinto the life of Edith Wharton and the scandalous love affair that threatenedher closest friendship

They say behind every great man is a woman. Behind EdithWharton, there was Anna Bahlmann—her governess turned literary secretary, andher mothering, nurturing friend.

When at the age of forty-five, Edith falls passionately inlove with a dashing younger journalist, Morton Fullerton, and is at last openedto the world of the sensual, it threatens everything certain in her life butespecially her abiding friendship with Anna. As Edith’s marriage crumbles andAnna’s disapproval threatens to shatter their lifelong bond, the women mustface the fragility at the heart of all friendships.

Told through the points of view of both women, TheAge of Desire takes us on a vivid journey through Wharton’s earlyGilded Age world: Paris with its glamorous literary salons and dark secretcafés, the Whartons’ elegant house in Lenox, Massachusetts, and Henry James’smanse in Rye, England.

Edith’s real letters and intimate diary entries are woventhroughout the book. The Age of Desire brings to life one ofliterature’s most beloved writers, whose own story was as complex and nuancedas that of any of the heroines she created.


Q&A with Jennie Fields, authorof THE AGE OF DESIRE

Courtesy of Anthony Scarlati
The relationship between Edith and Anna is very complex.Did you always plan on making their troubled friendship central to the book, ordid it grow out of your research?

It wasn’t until three months into the writing of the bookthat I decided to add a secondary protagonist, someone who could view Edithobjectively.  Anna Bahlmann seemed the perfect character as she was withEdith on and off since her days as Edith’s governess until the year Anna diedin 1916.  To have kept Anna with her so long, I assumed they must be veryclose, but biographers had hardly mentioned her. 

Then after I’d already written many chapters of the book, amiracle occurred.  Over 100 letters from Edith to Anna which had beenmoldering in an attic came up for auction at Christies! Everything I supposedabout their relationship was true.  They were loving and close sinceEdith’s childhood, and she trusted Anna with a great deal.  I grew moreand more intrigued with this shadowy figure.

Questions began to arise.  Why, for instance, duringthe summer after the onset of Edith’s affair with Morton Fullerton, was Annasuddenly sent to Europe on a trip that was considered a gift fromEdith?   Earlier, in letters to other people, it was clear Edith wasupset and even annoyed when Anna wasn’t around to help her, so why was itarranged for them to be suddenly so much apart? Though I have no hard evidencethat Anna was disturbed by Edith’s relationship with Fullerton , many eventssuggested she’d been sent away.  I wanted Anna to be the book’sconscience.  If Edith was unhappy, disturbed by her splinteringrelationship to Morton, it made sense she’d send Anna off on a trip.

Another intriguing coincidence is that I had created a warmalliance between Anna and Teddy.  After I’d written most of the book, Ifound letters from Edith to others that said that Anna was a calming influenceover Teddy on his worst days, the only one patient enough to sit with him, thathe was asking for her—exactly as I had written it. 

 Anna supports Edith’s writing as a typist, earlyreader, and—in a way—editor. Did Edith ever include Anna in herAcknowledgements? How did Anna’s involvement in Edith’s work complicate theirrelationship?

Though she never acknowledged Anna publicly as far as Iknow, in letters directly to Anna, she thanked her.  In fact, in oneletter early in Edith’s writing career, she sent Anna the check she receivedfor a story saying, “The story is so associated in my mind with the hours thatwe spent in writing it out together, & I owe its opportune presentment& speedy acceptance largely to the fact that you were here to get itwritten out at a time when I could not have done so, that I have a peculiar feelingabout your having just this special cheque & no other as a souvenir of ourwork together.” 

In her published biography, A Backward Glance,she spoke warmly about her relationship to Anna when she was a child “mybeloved German teacher, who saw which way my fancy turned, and fed it with allthe wealth of German literature, from the Minnesingers to Heine.”

But in a later autobiographical fragment that was neverpublished she said, “My good little governess was cultivated &conscientious, but she never struck a spark from me, she never threw a newlight on any subject, or made me see the relation of things to eachother.  My childhood & youth were an intellectual desert.”

If she is referring to Anna in this sentence, (I hope she isnot) it saddens me a great deal.  In any case, I believe Edith saw Anna assomething of a servant.  She certainly did straddle Edith’s world and theworld of the household staff, as beloved and essential as she seemed tobe.  At the same time, Edith generously took Anna on foreign trips, out todinner and to the theatre with her.  Without Edith, her life might wellhave been merely that of a teacher.

As I have written Anna, she sees her place in life as ahelpmate and accepts that Edith is the chosen one.  She is proud of herassociation with Edith and content with her place in life.

 Edith Wharton is one of your favorite writers. Howdid that influence your writing?

Well, I must say, I felt very conscious of the language Iused.  I wanted it to be appropriate to the era, hard-working andbeautiful all at once.  I could never dream of writing as exquisitely asEdith.  I often get chills when I read her writing.  If angels couldwrite, they’d write as she did.  The music of her language is instructiveand breathtaking.  But I tried to write in a way that I felt might pleaseher.  Also, I often started my writing sessions by reading a few pages ofone of her books.  I never get tired of her books, no matter how often Iread them.

 The book follows Edith’s sexual awakening. What wasit like writing sex scenes for such a well-known writer?

Not many people know this, but when Edith died, among hereffects, her literary executor found some pornography that she’d penned. There was nothing shy about this work.  It was bold, shocking, and also,of course, exquisitely written.  While I did not use any of the languageof this piece (named Beatrice Palmato, for those who are curious—and yes, it’son the internet) it did instruct me as to how she viewed sex and passion, andgave me insight into what excited her. 

Paris figures heavily into the book. What did thecity mean to Edith? What’s your relationship to  Paris  and did itfigure into the writing of the book?

Edith adored Paris .  It was everything that New Yorkwasn’t: culturally oriented, worldly, beautiful.  She found New Yorksociety closed and stifling.  She blossomed when she finally moved toFrance full-time, and her devotion to France is clear in how she helped thewomen of France during World War I with her workrooms and charities. ( Franceawarded her the Cross of the Legion of Honor for her work during the war.) Shehad loved Paris as a child, and even more as an adult.  And of course, shefell in love with Morton while in Paris . That would forever insure a place forParis in her heart.
There was a period where I did not like Paris .  Ifound it jostling and sad.  But about the time I began the book, I alsobegan a new relationship to Paris , and fell in love with it all overagain. 

By the end of the book, Edith’s husband Teddy is not avery sympathetic character. Did you know much about Teddy when you began thisproject? Did you find yourself taking sides?

I knew nothing of Teddy when I took on the project, but itwasn’t long before I discovered that he suffered in later life from ManicDepression at a time when people didn’t know what to make of that or how totreat it.  Truthfully, I see Teddy as a very sympathetic character whomarried a woman unsuited to him, and then, distraught, fell victim to mentalillness (which seemed to run in his family.)  If Teddy could have spenthis later years at the Mount with his pigs and horses, he might have been amuch happier man.  Edith was an intellectual.  Teddy was anythingbut.  Yet,  he adored Edith.  And for a long time, he was a kindand patient husband to her.  Thinking of Teddy’s life saddens me.

You were an advertising creative director before becominga novelist. Both are creative, but in different ways. How did your past careerhelp in your current one?

My advertising career has affected my fiction writing inmyriad ways.  For one thing, I am always conscious of trying to tell astory in the least words possible.  After years of cramming twenty thoughtsinto thirty seconds, one gets pretty good at writing minimally! Advertising also taught me to be disciplined, to work well under strictdeadlines, and to work every day.  What I loved in advertising alsointerests me in my fiction:  to solve puzzles.  The tighter thestrictures of the assignment, the more intrigued I am. I love being creative ina small box. This came into play with this book.  I had to tell a storythat already existed but I had to shape it into a book.  It was a Rubik’sCube.  The elements were all there, but they needed to be twisted into theright order to create a satisfying pattern.  Also, I was forced to readbetween the lines.  Edith kept such clear diaries; her life was mapped outalmost daily.  But what really happened at the theatrethat night?  Why did Anna leave at that time for New York ?  Why didMorton act the way he did?  It was a delicious puzzle and I very muchenjoyed solving it to my satisfaction.  I hope I’ve done Edith’s lifejustice.

 What’s your writing regimen?

Generally, I walk in the mornings and do errands.  Iwrite in the afternoons.  Usually I read starting at 1 or 2 pm. (While I was working on THE AGE OF DESIRE I always readsomething by Edith). Then, with a strong cup of tea I get down to work bythree.  I write in my writing room, a large old sleeping porch withwindows on three sides overlooking my backyard.  I sit in a comfortablechair with an ottoman, my MacBook Pro on my lap.  I rarely write more thanthree hours at a time, usually less.  But it’s extraordinary what threededicated hours can generate as far as pages.  If I get five good pages aday, I’m thrilled.  But not every day can be a successful day.  Ialways take weekends off—perhaps a holdover from my years in advertising. My brain needs time to recharge!

What’s next for you?

I am writing a book about a woman caught up in the radicalanti-war movement of the 1960s.  She is a woman in her late thirties whomarried young and had no youth.  She goes back to college, and gets drawninto the Weather Underground.  I’ve always been intrigued with how peoplewho were advocates of anti-violence could justify their increasingly violentactivities.

For more information and to view a collection of photosof Edith and those close to her, check out jenniefields.com

To win a copy of THE AGE OF DESIRE by JennieFields send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “AGE OF DESIRE” as the subject or click here. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email will not be shared or sold to anyone

All entries, including names,email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified.This contest ends August 15, 2012. Good luck!

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Win THE TRINITY GAME by Sean Chercover!


I have a copy of THE TRINITY GAME by Sean Chercover available for one lucky reader!

Daniel Byrne is an investigator for the Vatican’s secretive Office of the Devil’s Advocate — the department that scrutinizes miracle claims. Over ten years and 721 cases, not one miracle he tested has proved true. But case #722 is different; Daniel’s estranged uncle, a crooked TV evangelist, has started speaking in tongues — and accurately predicting the future. Daniel knows Reverend Tim Trinity is a con man. Could Trinity also be something more?

The evangelist himself is baffled by his newfound power — and the violent reaction it provokes. After years of scams, he suddenly has the ability to predict everything from natural disasters to sports scores. Now the mob wants him dead for ruining their gambling business, and the Vatican wants him debunked as a false messiah. On the run from assassins, Trinity flees with Daniel’s help through the back roads of the Bible Belt to New Orleans, where Trinity plans to deliver a final prophecy so shattering his enemies will do anything to keep him silent.

About the author:

Sean Chercover is a former private detective turned novelist and screenwriter. A native of Toronto, he has held a motley assortment of jobs over the years, including video editor, scuba diver, nightclub magician, encyclopedia salesman, and truck driver. He is the author of two award-winning novels featuring Chicago private investigator Ray Dudgeon: Big City, Bad Blood and Trigger City. After living in Chicago; New Orleans; and Columbia, South Carolina, Sean has returned to Toronto where he lives with his wife and son. His fiction has won the Anthony, Shamus, CWA Dagger, Dilys, and Crimespree awards, and been shortlisted for the Edgar, Barry, Macavity, Arthur Ellis and ITW Thriller awards.

To win a copy of THE TRINITY GAME by Sean Chercover, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "TRINITY GAME" as the subject or click here. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US or Canada. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone. All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends July 31, 2012. Good luck!

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Win Laura Pedersen’s Planes, Trains, and Auto-Rickshaws!

I am delighted to offer one lucky reader a copy of Laura Pedersen's latest, PLANES, TRAINS, and AUTO-RICKSHAWS!


"It is Pedersen's gift to be able to draw the reader into her world." —Front Street Reviews

"[Pedersen's] wicked, sarcastic, dry, self-deprecating sense of humor won me over and I absolutely loved it start to finish."—Printed Page, of Buffalo Gal

India today is a nation caught between the rich heritage of its past and the great economic potential of its future. In this witty and insightful book, journalist and author Laura Pedersen reveals the tensions and contradictions facing the emerging world power. In particular, Pedersen explores the roles of women and children in India today, providing insight into this important and often neglected issue. Part travelogue, part history, and part cultural reflection, Planes, Trains, and Auto-Rickshaws provides an intimate glimpse of a nation at its turning point. It is a must-read for those who want to understand India beyond the headlines.

Laura Pedersen has written for The New York Times and is the author of several books including Play Money, Going Away Party, Beginner's Luck (chosen as a Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers selection), Buffalo Gal, and Buffalo Unbound. In 1994 President Clinton honored her as one of Ten Outstanding Young Americans. She has appeared on Oprah, Good Morning America, Primetime Live, and The Late Show with David Letterman, and she writes for several well-known comedians. Pedersen lives in New York City.

To win a copy of PLANES, TRAINS, and AUTO-RICKSHAWS!  by  Laura Pedersen, send an email to contest@gmail.com (or click here) with "PLANES, TRAINS" as the subject by July 27, 2012. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US or Canada only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone. All entries, including names, email addresses, and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Win David King’s DEATH IN THE CITY OF LIGHT: Serial Killer of Nazi-Occupied Paris


Death in the City of Light is the gripping, true story of a brutal serial killer who unleashed his own reign of terror in Nazi-Occupied Paris. As decapitated heads and dismembered body parts surfaced in the Seine, Commissaire Georges-Victor Massu, head of the Brigade Criminelle, was tasked with tracking down the elusive murderer in a twilight world of Gestapo, gangsters, resistance fighters, pimps, prostitutes, spies, and other shadowy figures of the Parisian underworld. 

The main suspect was Dr. Marcel Petiot, a handsome, charming physician with remarkable charisma.  He was the “People’s Doctor,” known for his many acts of kindness and generosity, not least in providing free medical care for the poor.  Petiot, however, would soon be charged with twenty-seven murders, though authorities suspected the total was considerably higher, perhaps even as many as 150.

Who was being slaughtered, and why?  Was Petiot a sexual sadist, as the press suggested, killing for thrills?  Was he allied with the Gestapo, or, on the contrary, the French Resistance?  Or did he work for no one other than himself?  Trying to solve the many mysteries of the case, Massu would unravel a plot of unspeakable deviousness.  When Petiot was finally arrested, the French police hoped for answers.

But the trial soon became a circus.  Attempting to try all twenty-seven cases at once, the prosecution stumbled in its marathon cross-examinations, and Petiot, enjoying the spotlight, responded with astonishing ease.  His attorney, René Floriot, a rising star in the world of criminal defense, also effectively, if aggressively, countered the charges.  Soon, despite a team of prosecuting attorneys, dozens of witnesses, and over one ton of evidence, Petiot’s brilliance and wit threatened to win the day.

Drawing extensively on many new sources, including the massive, classified French police file on Dr. Petiot, Death in the City of Light is a brilliant evocation of Nazi-Occupied Paris and a harrowing exploration of murder, betrayal, and evil of staggering proportions.

To win a copy of DEATH IN THE CITY OF LIGHT by David King send an email to contest@gmail.com, with “DEATH IN THE CITY OF LIGHT” as the subject or click here. Make sure to include your name and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone. All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends July 18, 2012. Good luck!

Thursday, July 05, 2012

WIN THE AFTER WIFE by Gigi Levangie Grazer



I am so excited to be able to offer one lucky reader a copy of Gigi Levangie Grazer's new book, THE AFTER WIFE.

A New York Times bestselling author and ex-wife of famed producer Brian Grazer, Levangie Grazer has her finger on the pulse of the charmed LA lifestyle. In her bestselling novels, including The Starter Wife (which became a miniseries and then a series on USA Network starring Debra Messing and was great!), she has brought us stories of women dealing with life’s daily challenges with both humor and heart. 

THE AFTER WIFE is a charming and spirited tale of love—both lost and found. L.A. is no place for widows. This is what forty-four-year-old Hannah Bernal quickly discovers after the tragic death of her handsome and loving husband, John. Misery and red-rimmed eyes are little tolerated in the land of the beautiful. But life stumbles on: Hannah’s sweet three-year-old daughter, Ellie, needs to be dropped off at her overpriced preschool, while Hannah herself must get back to work in order to pay the bills on “Casa Sugar,” the charming Spanish-styled bungalow they call home.

Fortunately, Hannah has her “Grief Team” for emotional support: earth mother and fanatical animal lover Chloe, who finds a potential blog post in every moment; aspiring actress Aimee, who has her cosmetic surgeon on speed dial; and Jay, Hannah’s TV producing partner, who has a penchant for Mr. Wrong. But after a series of mishaps and bizarre occurrences, one of which finds Hannah in a posh Santa Monica jail cell, her friends start to fear for her sanity. To make matters worse, John left their financial affairs in a disastrous state. And when Hannah is dramatically fired from her latest producing gig, she finds herself in danger of losing her house, her daughter, and her mind.

One night, standing in her backyard under a majestic avocado tree, in the throes of grief, Hannah breaks down and asks, “Why?” The answer that comes back—Why not?—begins an astounding journey of discovery and transformation that leads Hannah to her own truly extraordinary life after death.

THE AFTER WIFE will spice up any summer reading list and is the perfect beach read.

To win a copy of THE AFTER WIFE by Gigi Levangie Grazer, send an email to contest@gmail.com (or click here) with "AFTER WIFE" as the subject . Make sure to include your name  and mailing address in the US only. This contest is open to all adults over 18 years of age. One entry per email address, please. Your email address will not be shared or sold to anyone. All entries, including names, email addresses and mailing addresses, will be purged after winner is notified. This contest ends July 15, 2012. Good luck!

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