Friday, June 29, 2012

Win ROAD TO VALOR by Aili and Andres McConnon


Combining the inspiring, against-the-odds appeal of Unbroken with the poignancy and heartbreak of Life Is Beautiful, ROAD TO VALOR is the untold story of Italian sports legend and World War II hero Gino Bartali --- and you can win your own copy!

ROAD TO VALOR: A True Story of World War II Italy, the Nazis, and the Cyclist Who Inspired a Nation
by siblings Aili and Andres McConnon

Gino Bartali, “The Lion of Tuscany,” is best known as an Italian cycling superstar: the man who not only won the Tour de France in 1938 and 1948, but to this day holds the record for the longest time span between victories.  However, there is another thread to Bartali’s epic story—his secret efforts to help save Jews in Italy during the Holocaust and German occupation—the full details of which have not been revealed until now.

Set in Italy and France against the turbulent backdrop of an unforgiving sport and threatening politics, ROAD TO VALOR: A True Story of World War II Italy, the Nazis, and the Cyclist Who Inspired a Nation (Crown Publishers, June 12, 2012) is the breathtaking account of one man’s unsung heroism and his resilience in the face of adversity. Based on nearly ten years of research in Italy, France, and Israel, including interviews with Bartali’s family, former teammates, a Holocaust survivor Bartali saved, and many others, it is the first book ever written about Bartali in English and the only book written in any language to fully explore the scope of his wartime work. 

Authors Aili and Andres McConnon chronicle Bartali’s remarkable journey from childhood to champion, starting in impoverished rural Tuscany where a scrawny, mischievous boy painstakingly saves his money to buy a bicycle and before long is racking up wins throughout the country. At the age of 24, he stuns the world by winning his first Tour de France and quickly becomes an international sports icon.

After Mussolini’s Fascists try to hijack Bartali’s victory for propaganda purposes and as the Nazis occupy Italy, Bartali, a devout Catholic, becomes involved in the Italian resistance and undertakes dangerous missions to help those being targeted. In addition to sheltering a family of four Jews in an apartment he financed with his cycling winnings, Bartali smuggles counterfeit identity documents past Fascist and Nazi checkpoints. Recognizing him simply as a national hero in training, the soldiers never suspect he’s hiding precious papers in the hollow frame of his bicycle, documents that helped save countless Jews hiding in Tuscany and Umbria from deportation to work and death camps.

After the grueling wartime years, Bartali fights to rebuild his career as Italy emerges from the rubble. In 1948, the stakes are raised when midway through the Tour de France an assassination attempt in Rome sparks nationwide political protests and riots. Despite numerous setbacks and a legendary snowstorm in the Alps, the chain-smoking, Chianti-loving, 34-year-old underdog comes back and wins the most difficult endurance competition on earth. Bartali’s inspiring performance helps unite his fractured homeland and restore pride and spirit to a country still reeling from war and despair.

An epic tale of courage and redemption, ROAD TO VALOR is the untold story of one of the greatest athletes of the 20th century.

About the Authors:

AILI McCONNON is a Canadian journalist living in New York who has been a staff writer for BusinessWeek and has also written for the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Guardian. She has appeared as a commentator on ABC, MSNBC, and CNN.
 
ANDRES McCONNON has been a historical researcher for several books. He graduated magna cum laude from Princeton University. Aili and Andres are siblings, born in Toronto.




To win a copy of ROAD TO VALOR by Aili and Andres McConnon, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "ROAD TO VALOR” 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 12, 2012. Good luck!

Win EAT THE CITY by Robin Shulman


I am so excited about this book, Eat the City: A Tale of the Fishers, Foragers, Butchers, Farmers, Poultry Minders, Sugar Refiners, Cane Cutters, Beekeepers, Winemakers, and Brewers Who Built New York by Robin Shulman, and you can win your own copy!

New York is not a city for growing and manufacturing food. It’s a money and real estate city, with less naked earth and industry than high-rise glass and concrete.   Yet in this intimate, visceral, and beautifully written book, Robin Shulman introduces the people of New York City  - both past and present - who  do grow vegetables, butcher meat, fish local waters, cut and refine sugar, keep bees for honey, brew beer, and make wine. In the most heavily built urban environment in the country, she shows an organic city full of intrepid and eccentric people who want to make things grow.  What’s more, Shulman artfully places today’s urban food production in the context of hundreds of years of history, and traces how we got to where we are.

In these pages meet Willie Morgan, a Harlem man who first grew his own vegetables in a vacant lot as a front for his gambling racket. And David Selig, a beekeeper in the Red Hook section of Brooklyn who found his bees making a mysteriously red honey. Get to know Yolene Joseph, who fishes crabs out of the waters off Coney Island to make curried stews for her family. Meet the creators of the sickly sweet Manischewitz wine, whose brand grew out of Prohibition; and Jacob Ruppert, who owned a beer empire on the Upper East Side, as well as the New York Yankees.

Eat the City is about how the ability of cities to feed people has changed over time. Yet it is also, in a sense, the story of the things we long for in cities today: closer human connections, a tangible link to more basic processes, a way to shape more rounded lives, a sense of something pure.

Of course, hundreds of years ago, most food and drink consumed by New Yorkers was grown and produced within what are now the five boroughs. Yet people rarely realize that long after New York became a dense urban agglomeration, innovators, traditionalists, migrants and immigrants continued to insist on producing their own food. This book shows the perils and benefits—and the ironies and humor—when city people involve themselves in making what they eat.

Food, of course, is about hunger. We eat what we miss and what we want to become, the foods of our childhoods and the symbols of the lives we hope to lead. With wit and insight, Eat the City shows how in places like New York, people have always found ways to use their collective hunger to build their own kind of city.

ROBIN SHULMAN is a writer and reporter whose work has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, Slate, the Guardian, and many other publications.  She lives in New York City.

To win a copy of EAT THE CITY by Robin Shulman, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "EAT THE CITY " 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 10, 2012. Good luck!



Thursday, June 28, 2012

Win FULL BODY BURDEN by Kristen Iversen


I am delighted to offer two lucky readers copies of Full Body Burden: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats by Kristen Iversen. 

A gripping work of narrative nonfiction, ten years in the making, about a young woman growing up next to Rocky Flats, a secret nuclear weapons plant once designated “the most contaminated site in America.”

*A 2012 Barnes & Noble Discover Great New Writers Pick*

Radioactive contamination. Misplaced plutonium and other radioactive materials. A sealed grand jury report.  Stonewalling by government officials. These are among the real-life incidents occurring at nuclear sites worldwide.  In the wake of the 2011 Fukushima meltdown, as well as nuclear disasters and accidents at nuclear power plants and weapons sites such as Chernobyl in the Ukraine, the Mayak facility in Russia, Rocky Flats in Colorado, and former nuclear weapons sites like Hanford in Washington and Fernald in Ohio, the safety of America’s nuclear industry is receiving fresh scrutiny, as are the issues of waste disposal and global nuclear disarmament.  The health effects of short-term, high-level radioactive contamination are fairly well known. Yet, what are the health effects of long-term, low-level exposure? While scientists and physicists continue to debate the topic, one fact is certain: there is no safe level of exposure to plutonium. Even one millionth of a gram, which is easily inhaled, is potentially lethal.  And too many of us are at risk of exposure to this or other radioactive substances.

Kristen Iversen’s haunting new book, FULL BODY BURDEN: Growing Up in the Nuclear Shadow of Rocky Flats (Crown; June 5, 2012), skillfully combines investigative journalism with personal memoir.  Drawing on extensive interviews, FBI and EPA documents, and class-action testimony, along with her own experiences growing up just miles from Rocky Flats, Iversen presents a full picture about a childhood lived in the shadow of the Cold War, in a landscape at once startlingly beautiful and—unknown to those who lived there—tainted with invisible deadly particles of plutonium.

FULL BODY BURDEN is also about the destructive power of secrets—both family secrets and government secrets. Her father’s hidden liquor bottles, the strange cancers in children in the neighborhood, the truth about what they made at Rocky Flats (cleaning supplies, her mother guessed)—best not to inquire too deeply into any of it. But as Iversen grew older, she began to ask questions. In her early thirties, she even worked at Rocky Flats, typing up memos in which accidents were identified merely as “incidents.”
A brilliant work of investigative journalism—FULL BODY BURDEN is a shocking account of the government’s sustained attempt to conceal the effects of the toxic and radioactive waste released by Rocky Flats, and of local residents’ vain attempts to seek justice in court.

“Superbly crafted tale of Cold War America’s dark underside.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review

“In this powerful work of research and personal testimony, Iversen, director of the M.F.A. creative writing program at the University of Memphis chronicles the story of America’s willfully blinkered relationship to the nuclear weapons industry through the haunting experience of her own family in Colorado.” —Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Iversen seems to have been destined to write this shocking and infuriating story of a glorious land and a trusting citizenry poisoned by Cold War militarism and 'hot' contamination, secrets and lies, greed and denial....News stories come and go. It takes a book of this exceptional caliber to focus our attention and marshal our collective commitment to preventing future nuclear horrors.” —Booklist, starred review

“With meticulous reporting and a clear eye for details, Iversen has crafted a chilling, brilliantly written cautionary tale about the dangers of blind trust. Through interviews, sifting through thousands of records (some remain sealed) and even a stint as a Rocky Flats receptionist, she uncovers decades of governmental deception. Full Body Burden is both an engrossing memoir and a powerful piece of investigative journalism.” BookPage

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
KRISTEN IVERSEN grew up in Arvada, Colorado, near the Rocky Flats nuclear weaponry facility and received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Denver. She is director of the MFA Program in Creative Writing at the University of Memphis and also editor-in-chief of The Pinch, an award-winning literary journal. She is also the author of Molly Brown: Unraveling the Myth, winner of the Colorado Book Award for Biography and the Barbara Sudler Award for Nonfiction. Iversen has two sons and currently lives in Memphis. Visit www.kristeniversen.com/.

To win a copy of FULL BODY BURDEN by Kristen Iversen, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "FULL BODY BURDEN" 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 5, 2012. Good luck!

Win THE LITTLE WOMEN LETTERS by Gabrielle Donnelly


I am delighted to offer two lucky readers copies of THE LITTLE WOMEN LETTERS by Gabrielle Donnelly. 

Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women remains as beloved today as when it was first published in 1868.  Gabrielle Donnelly’s THE LITTLE WOMEN LETTERS brings the story 150 years into the future through the imagined lives of Jo March’s descendants—three sisters living in London who are thoroughly modern and at the same time thoroughly March.

Sisters Emma, Lulu, and Sophie Atwater couldn’t be more different. They adore each other and drive each other mad in equal measure. Middle sister Lulu feels that she is the failure of the family. One day, she goes to the attic in search of a book and stumbles across a collection of letters written by her great-great grandmother Jo March. Finally, Lula feels there is someone who would understand her. It seems that Jo didn’t always adore her own sisters Meg, Beth, and Amy, and like Lulu, Jo found herself alone at a crossroads in life.

As Lulu discovers hidden secrets about her ancestors, she also finds solace and guidance in Jo’s words, discovering that they share so many similarities, even though they are worlds apart. And that the fierce, undying—if sometimes infuriating—bond of sisterhood links the Atwater women today every bit as firmly as it did the March sisters all those years ago. The Little Women Letters is a warm, engaging tip of the hat to the multitudes of Little Women fans who wonder what Jo’s descendents would be like today. 

Praise includes:

“Fans of Louisa May Alcott can rejoice” (USA TODAY) as Gabrielle Donnelly brings Little Women into the future and imagines the lives of Jo March’s ancestors. 

“The perfect pool-side read.” —The Washington Post 

“A light, spirited tale about modern women with old-fashioned values.” —Publishers Weekly

“Donnelly writes with obvious passion for the classic tale and successfully applies a fresh sensibility to the three modern sisters….Beautifully crafted.” —Booklist

"For those who yearn for the verve and wit and chagrin of Alcott, The Little Women Letters offers a thoroughly modern…twist." —The Seattle Times

To win a copy of THE LITTLE WOMEN LETTERS by Gabrielle Donnelly, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "LITTLE WOMEN LETTERS" 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 9, 2012. Good luck!

Friday, June 22, 2012

Don't Miss These Great FREE Kindle eBooks!


Free Two Days Only!
Saturday 6/23 &
Sunday 6/24
Courtesy of Oceanview Publishing
Fortuna
by
Michael R. Stevens



 Longing for escape from his mundane existence, Jason Lind signs up to play Fortuna, an online role-playing game set in Renaissance Florence. 

But this game is anything but a great escape, because in the world of Fortuna, it's not how you play the game; 
it's if you survive. 
  
 "Fortuna will captivate you. An intriguing story of today's cyber world tied into the everyday world. And an intriguing mind wrote this book."
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Rabbit in the Moon


Rabbit 
in the 
Moon
by
Deborah & Joel Shlian


Rick Bullock takes the road less traveled when he quits his job as an ad exec to become director of a homeless shelter.To honor her mother's dying wish, Dr. Lili Quan travels to China, where she meets her grandfather, Dr. Ni Fu Cheng, a man with a remarkable discovery: the secret to long life. But the fight for control of this earth-shattering find could become a deadly international game.  


"This thriller is at times so fast-paced it leaves you breathless. A thoughtful, educational read."  
Mystery Scene Magazine 

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Spirit Horses
by
Alan S. Evans
When a mysterious mustang shows up on his Tennessee farm, Shane Carson, a gifted horseman, learns that what we least expect sometimes leads to what we need most. How would one of the Spirit Horses, a rare, wild herd from the Shoshone reservation in Wyoming, find its way to Shane?
"Spirit Horses is a wonderful book that reads like the best of gripping movies. A visually impressive and emotionally stirring work."
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Conspiracy of Silence
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Conspiracy 
of 
Silence
by
Martha Powers
  
Imagine learning your entire life is a lie: Clare Prentice has been dealt a devastating series of harsh blows-learning she was adopted, knowing virtually nothing about her adoptive mother, and finding out that her birth mother was murdered. 
For Clare, trying to piece together the truth might be deadly.  
"A remarkable tale filled with unexpected twists that will leave the reader guessing until the end." 
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Egrets to the Flames
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 Egrets 
to the 
Flames
by
Barbara Anton
 There is trouble in the fields for the Hamptons, a wealthy family of sugar cane growers. What holds this family together may ultimately tear them apart.

A steamy saga of passion and greed, Egrets to the Flames explores the tug-of-war between when to hold on, and when to let go. 
"Like a Danielle Steele epic...
 steamy, riveting and so beautifully written" 
Front Street Reviews
Fatal February
by
Barbara Levenson
For Miami criminal defense attorney Mary Magruder Katz, life gets completely complicated when she breaks off her engagement, gets fired from her former fiancé's law firm, starts her own practice, and lands her first client, Lillian Yarmouth, the prime suspect in what's become the Miami society murder of the year.  
"When I read this I thought immediately of Patricia Cornwell, Sandra Brown and Janet Evanovich. Mystery mixed with humor, legalese and drama create the perfect setting for this plot of suspense." 
Readers Favorite Reviews  

Win TEN BEACH ROAD by Wendy Wax



I am delighted to offer a copy of one of my favorite summer reads last year, TEN BEACH ROAD by Wendy Wax. The paperback just came out and one lucky reader can win a copy! Scroll down for information on how you can win and to read an excerpt.

If you loved Jennifer Weiner's Fly Away Home...then try Ten Beach Road

“Great escape reading, perfect for the beach.”Library Journal

"Sexual magnetism...and a secret...add dramatic tension...showcasing three women who rise above their shattered realities with grace, determination, and a little elbow grease."   Publisher's Weekly

“Full of laughter, heartache, secrets, loyalty, and courage… run out and pick up a copy!” —Night Owl Reviews

When Wendy Wax introduced Madeline Singer, Avery Lawford and Nicole Grant and shared their story of friendship, family and triumph in TEN BEACH ROAD, USA Today cited the book as one of “six that belong in your beach bag.” Now, this highly praised novel, which has already gone back to press seven times since its original trade paperback publication, is also available as a mass market paperback.

Wax set TEN BEACH ROAD at two of her favorite spots in the world—St. Pete Beach, the city in which she was raised, and the famous Pass-a-Grille beach—where she brings together three women, thrown together by fate, and challenges them with choices that will change their lives.

Madeline, Avery and Nicole are very different from one another. Madeline is a homemaker coping with an empty nest and an unemployed husband. Avery is an architect. At least she was until she ended up as the sidekick on her ex-husband’s television program—the one she created, sold and co-hosted. Nicole, dating guru, matchmaker extraordinaire and founder of Heart, Inc., is living in the shadow of her biggest mistake—trusting her only brother. All are at the end of their financial ropes, the victim’s of a Bernie Madoff-style Ponzi scheme. All they have left is shared ownership of the once-glorious Bella Flora mansion, now a beachfront ruin.

Madeline, Avery and Nikki have to make a choice—cut their losses and sell the historic property for whatever amount of money they can get or trade sweat equity for the backing of a local contractor in order to restore it and their bank accounts. The women choose to save Bella Flora. There amidst the rubble and former glory, in the midst of a sweltering summer and the backbreaking tasks of renovation, they begin to redefine themselves, and to discover their own strength and the power of friendship. Then, as Bella Flora again stands magnificent and proud, secrets begin to pull them apart and fate steps in once more, ready to destroy everything they’ve built.

Once again, Wendy Wax has imbued the lives and dialogue of her protagonists with energy and insights that immerse readers in their story from the very start.


ABOUT WENDY WAX
A St. Pete Beach native and longtime Atlanta resident, Wendy is perhaps best known to readers for her exploration of women’s friendships and the emotional bonds tying people to their families, friends and work. Her writing has been called “entertaining and informative” (St. Petersburg Times) and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution praised her “breezy wit and keen insight.”  TEN BEACH ROAD is the first of Wendy’s novels to use her hometown as her primary setting.

Wendy has always been a voracious reader. Her love affairs with language and storytelling paid off beginning with her first shift at the campus radio station while studying journalism at the University of Georgia. She returned to her home state, and then studied in Italy before graduating from the University of South Florida and going to work for the Tampa PBS affiliate, WEDU-TV. She was best-known in the Tampa Bay area as the host of Desperate & Dateless, a radio matchmaking program that aired on WDAE radio, and nationally as host of The Home Front, which aired on PBS television affiliates across the country.

The mother of a toddler and an infant when she decided to change careers to write professionally, Wendy has since written eight novels, including OCEAN BEACH, Ten Beach Road, Magnolia Wednesdays, The Accidental Bestseller (a Romance Writers of America Rita Award finalist), Leave It to Cleavage, 7 Days and 7Nights, and Single in Suburbia. Her work has been sold to publishers in ten countries and to the Rhapsody Book Club. Her novel, Hostile Makeover, was excerpted in Cosmopolitan magazine.



To win a copy of TEN BEACH ROAD by Wendy Wax, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "TEN BEACH ROAD" 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 10, 2012. Good luck!


Excerpt from TEN BEACH ROAD
by Wendy Wax

An eternity later, they hobbled out to the backyard just as the sky was beginning to pinken.  Bedraggled, they dropped into the beach chairs with a scrape of aluminum against concrete.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been this dirty in my entire life.” Madeline plopped a family-sized container of hummus and triangles of pita bread on the upside down packing box that their Sam’s purchases had been carried in.

“Me, neither.”  Avery dropped a bag of Cheez Doodles beside it and swiped the back of her forearm across her forehead, managing to add another streak of dirt to her face.

Nicole set an unopened bottle of Chardonnay on the pool deck next to her bare feet and handed a plastic cup to each of them.  “If there was an inch of water in this pool, I’d be in it.”  Nicole slumped in her chair.  “I think we should make it a top priority.”

“We barely have a working bathroom,” Avery pointed out.  “It took me forever to clean the shower and tub up in the hall.  There’s pretty much no water pressure.  I’d rather have a shower than a swim in a pool.”

“I want both,” Nicole said, lifting the cup to her lips.  “It’s not an either/or sort of thing.”

“Well, it is here.”  Avery took a long sip of wine as the sun slipped farther toward the Gulf.  “Everything’s not going to get done at once, but I will talk to Chase about the schedule and how things should be prioritized.”

Madeline looked ruefully down at herself.  Together they could have posed for the illustration of “something the cat dragged in” – even Nicole in her high-end running clothes and her hair pulled back in a glittery clasp.  This was only day one;  she could hardly imagine what they’d look like after the long, hot summer that lay ahead.
Her arms were so tired that it took real effort to lift even the small plastic cup, but she nonetheless touched it to the others.  “Cheers!” she said, and they nodded and repeated the toast.  “Will you be able to run your business from here?” she asked Nicole as they contemplated the sinking sun.

Nicole’s cup stopped midway to her lips.  In the pass, a boat planed off and gathered speed as it entered the Gulf.  “Sure,” she finally said.   “Have laptop and cell phone, will match make.” She turned her gaze from the boat that was now disappearing from view to focus on Madeline.  “How about you?” Nicole asked.  “Can you really leave home for the whole summer?”

Madeline finished the last drops of wine and set her glass on the makeshift cocktail table.  “You make it sound like going to camp,” she said in what could only be described as a wistful tone.  “I was hoping my husband, Steve, would come down and help for a while.”

“Oh, is he retired?” Avery asked.

Madeline felt her cheeks flush.  Nicole raised an eyebrow and poured them all another glassful.

“Not exactly,” Madeline admitted.  “He was a financial planner who made the mistake of putting all his clients’ money in Malcolm Dyer’s fund.  Along with his family’s.”

Her teeth worried at her bottom lip.  She hadn’t meant to say so much.  Or sound quite so pathetic.

“He stole my father’s entire estate,” Avery said.  “Everything he’d built over a lifetime of hard work went into that thief’s pocket.”  She grimaced and shoved her sunglasses back up on top of her head.  “I still can’t believe it.  Anything short of being drawn and quartered would be far too good for him.”

Madeline saw Nicole shiver slightly.  “Are you cold?”  The sun had not yet set, but its warmth had diminished.

“No.”  Nicole turned her attention to the boat traffic in the pass.  A Jet Ski swooped close to the seawall, its plume of seawater peacocking behind it.  The rider was big shouldered and solid with jet black hair and heavily muscled arms.  Nicole watched idly at first, presumably because he was male and attractive, but straightened in surprise as the rider locked gazes and offered a mock salute before revving his engine and zooming away.

“Do you know that guy?” Madeline asked Nicole, surprised.  “He waved at you.”

“No,” Nicole said.  “I don’t think he was actually waving at me.  He …”

“Yes, he was,” Madeline insisted.  “He acted like he knew you.”

“That guy was definitely hunky,” Avery said.  “And he was definitely eyeing Nicole.”

“He must have thought I was someone else,” Nicole took a sliver of pita and chewed it intently before changing the topic.   “So, how many kids do you have?” she asked Madeline.

“Two,” Madeline said, unsure how much information to share.  “My son’s struggling a bit at school; he’s in his freshman year at Vanderbilt,” she said.  “And my daughter, well, right before I left she lost her job-she’s a filmmaker- and she came home unexpectedly to live.”  She cleared her throat as if that might somehow stop this bad news dump.  “That was right after my mother-in-law moved in.”

“Good Lord,” Nicole said.  She lifted the bottle, eyed the little that was left, and poured the remaining drops into Madeline’s glass.  “No wonder you want to go away to camp.”  She smiled with what looked like real sympathy.  “Drink up. Girl; I’d run away from home, too, if I had to deal with all that.”

They sat in silence for a few minutes, sipping their wine, as the sun grew larger and brighter.  A warm breeze blew gently off the Gulf, stirring the palms and riffling their hair.

“Maybe you should get your daughter to come down and shoot some ‘before’ video for us,” Avery suggested.  “That’s actually what led to Hammer and Nail.” She furrowed her brow.  “I had no idea what was coming down the pike when I shot that first ten minutes.”

Madeline considered the small blonde.  “My mother-in-law seemed to think it was your husband’s show, that he got you on it.”

“A lot of people came to believe that,” Avery said, her tone wry.  “Including my ex-husband.   But the idea was mine.  I’m the one who sold it, and us, to the network.”

They fell silent as the sun burned with a new intensity, shimmering almost white, then turning golden red that tinged the Gulf as it sank smoothly beneath it.

“God, that was beautiful,” Madeline breathed as they all continued to stare out over the Gulf, unable to tear their gazes from the sky and the last painted remnants of daylight.  “It makes me feel like anything is possible.”

No one responded, and she supposed she should be grateful that no one trampled on her flight of fancy.  The show was over, but Madeline could still feel its power.  It moved her in a way her fear and even her resolution and Little Red Henness had not.  She raised her now-empty glass to Avery and Nicole.  “I propose that we all make a sunset toast.  That we each name one good thing that happened today.”

“Good grief,” Nicole said.  “Look around you.”  She motioned with her empty plastic glass at the neglected house that hunkered behind them, the cracked and empty pool, the detached garage with its broken windows and listing door.  “Is your middle name Pollyanna?”

Madeline flushed at the comment, but she didn’t retract her suggestion.  “I’m not saying we should pretend everything’s perfect,” she said.  “I’m just saying that no matter how bad it is it would be better to dwell on the even slightly positive than the overwhelming negative.”

“You’re serious, aren’t you?”  Avery asked.  They all still held their empty glasses aloft.  “How good a thing does it have to be?”

“That’s up to you.” Madeline said.  “I’m not interested in judging; there will be no ‘good enough’ police.”
“Well, that’s a good thing,” Nicole snorted.

“All right, hold on a sec,” Madeline said.  She went into the kitchen and retrieved a second bottle of wine from the fridge, grateful that John Franklin had had the power turned on.  As she refilled their glasses, she searched for a positive.  Nicole was right, it wasn’t an easy task.

“Okay.”  She raised her now-full glass and waited for the others to do the same.  “I think it’s good that three complete strangers were able to reach an agreement and commit to a course of action.”

They touched glasses and took a sip.  Madeline nodded at Avery.  “Your turn.”

“Hmmmm, let me think.”  She looked out over the seawall at the gathering darkness as the three of them sat in a spill of light from the loggia.  A few moments later she raised her glass.  “I think it’s good that this house is not going to be torn down.  It deserves a facelift and a new life.”

They clinked and drank and turned their gazes to Nicole.  Madeline could hardly wait to hear what she would say.

Nicole looked back at the house, then at them.  A small smile played around her lips, and Madeline wondered if she was going to tell them to stuff the happy crap or simply refuse to participate.  But she raised her glass in their directions and with only a small sigh of resignation said, “It’s a good thing no one saw me in that minivan.  I can’t imagine how I’d ever live it down.”

©Wendy Wax






Thursday, June 21, 2012

BookBitchin'

Every now and then I feel the need to vent, and having a blog is just about the best and most public way to do it. So here goes...

Publishers who reissue old books as new books suck. I had a library patron come in all upset because she read THE DECISION by Penny Vincenzi and loved it so much that when she saw what she thought was a sequel, MORE THAN YOU KNOW, she ran out and bought it so she wouldn't have to wait for a library copy. It's the same book. THE DECISION was released in the UK by Headline Publishing Group in 2011 and MORE THAN YOU KNOW by Doubleday in 2012. In small print on the copyright page of MTYK it does say, "Originally published in different form in Great Britain as The Decision..." So now you know.

Writerspace sucks. Who is Writerspace and why do they sign me up for newsletters I never asked for? Not only do they send me their newsletter, but also some authors' newsletters (are you people paying them for this service? Cause it sucks...just saying...) I might actually read the author newsletters if they came to my regular email address and I had signed up for them. But that isn't the case here.

Shelfari sucks tooWhy do I have to opt-out to not receive spam from Shelfari? Shouldn't I have to opt-IN to get their crap?

Gmail doesn't suck, it's awesome!
 I use Gmail for the contests I run for all the books I giveaway, both here on the blog and on my website at BookBitch.com. The way to enter those contests is to send an email to the gmail account I use just for contests. The mail is sorted automatically for me (thanks, Gmail!) and I don't use that account for anything else. Yet somehow Shelfari and Writerspace seem to think that email address is good for their crap. Here's a hint - everything that isn't automatically sorted into contest email gets put into the spam folder.

Here's another hint for those of you who enter my contests - if you don't have the subject exactly the same as it states in the contest rules and on the link I provide, guess what - your entry gets sorted into the spam folder. Or maybe the trash folder, I forget. Either way, you won't win so pay attention. Trust me, use the link or type carefully - it's great fun to win a book!

And that ends today's rant. Thanks for reading and feel free to rant yourself in the comments.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Win ISLAND APART by Steven Raichlen


From the celebrated author of Planet Barbecue and How to Grill comes a surprising story of love, loss, redemption, and really good food.   

Claire Doheney, recovering from a serious illness, agrees to house-sit in an oceanfront mansion on Chappaquiddick island in Martha’s Vineyard. The New York book editor hopes to find solace, strength, and sufficient calm to finish her biography of the iconoclastic psychotherapist, Wilhelm Reich.

The last thing she expects to find is love. 

Then she meets a mysterious man the locals call the Hermit. No one knows his real name or where he lives. To their mutual surprise, Claire and the stranger discover that they share a passion for cooking that soon sparks something more.

But Claire’s new friend has a terrible secret that threatens to drive them apart forever. The clock is ticking. Can Claire let love into her life once more before it's too late?

Told by a New York Times bestselling author and international TV host with a keen eye for Chappaquiddick's extraordinary natural beauty, Island Apart has it all—romance, history, travel, crime, lovemaking of exquisite intensity, and cooking scenes so vivid, they'll make your taste buds ache with hunger. Steven Raichlen's novel is a smart love story—not to mention a terrific beach read. Think The Bridges of Madison County with better food.

Too often, Lawrence-Lightfoot believes, we exalt new beginnings t the expense of learning from our goodbyes. Exit finds isdom and perspective in the possibility of moving on and marks the start of a new conversation, to help us discover how we might make our exits with purpose and dignity.


Steve Raichlen will be appearing June 24th at 7:00 PM at Books & Books, 265 Aragon Ave, Coral Gables, FL. Please call 305-442-4408 for more information.

To win a copy of Island Apart by Steven Raichlen, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "ISLAND APART" 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 June 25, 2012. Good luck!




Monday, June 11, 2012

Win Exit: The Endings That Set Us Free by Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot


From a renowned sociologist, the wisdom of saying goodbye

Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot is enthralled by exits: long farewells, quick goodbyes, sudden endings, the ordinary and the extraordinary. There’s a relationship, she attests, between small goodbyes and our ability “to master and mark the larger farewells.”

In Exit, her tenth book, she explores the ways we leave one thing and move on to the next; how we anticipate, define, and reflect on our departures; our epiphanies that something is over and done with. The result is an enthusiastic, uplifting lesson about ourselves and the role of transition in our lives.

Lawrence-Lightfoot, a sociologist and a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, has interviewed more than a dozen women and men in states of major change, and she paints their portraits with sympathy and insight: a gay man who finds home and wholeness after coming out; a sixteen-year-old boy forced to leave Iran in the midst of the violent civil war; a Catholic priest who leaves the church he has always been devoted to, he life he has loved, and the work that has been deeply fulfilling; an anthropologist who carefully stages her departure from he “field” after four years of research; and many more.

Too often, Lawrence-Lightfoot believes, we exalt new beginnings t the expense of learning from our goodbyes. Exit finds isdom and perspective in the possibility of moving on and marks the start of a new conversation, to help us discover how we might make our exits with purpose and dignity.

To win a copy of Exit: The Endings That Set Us Free by Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot, send an email to contest@gmail.com, with "EXIT" 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 June 18, 2012. Good luck!

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