Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

How About a Two-fer?

Clip art courtesy of Webweaver

Don't you just love a Two-fer---two treats for the price of one? As it happens, your click to my blog has afforded you the coveted Two-fer.  Below are links to a pair of happy places:

1.  Cathy C's Hall of Fame is offering a wonderful contest, free to enter.  One lucky NEW follower to Cathy's blog will win a $20.00 gift card from Barnes and Noble.  But here's the part I really love: Let Cathy know I sent you and if you win, so will I!  Now that's what I call a real Two-fer.

2.  Love the ooky and the spooky? Link to Darkside Digital, a publisher of all things horror. This caught my interest because of the wide word count range in which they are interested (from 2,000-40,000, original horror fiction only).  Here's part of the official blurb from their website:
Darkside Digital is now accepting submissions. We have teamed up with Delirium Books to offer both digital and print contracts to authors who submit work from 15K words to 40K words. For submissions less than 15K we will consider them for only a Darkside Digital release as an e-book.

Did I mention this is a paying market? 25% royalties off the cover price paid quarterly via Paypal by their parent company Horror Mall, who also pay the Paypal fees. If you love to write about things that go bump in the night, this may be the place for you!

So there you have it, buttercup, your Wednesday Two-fer.  First, zip on over to Cathy's blog to enter her nifty contest, and then visit Darkside Digital to read their complete submission guidelines and submit your best scary stuff. Good luck in both places!

Til next time -
Lisa

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Write For Charity: Helping Kids



Write for Charity is an organization dedicated to bringing writers together to raise money for children's charities.  The resulting book, From the Heart: A Collection of Stories and Poems from the Front Lines of Parenting, is an anthology I am proud to say includes my work. St. Jude's (Children's Hospital and Research Center) is a beneficiary of this charity; it also happens to be my personal charity of choice, so when this opportunity arose I jumped.

The Q&A below offers details about the project. I hope you'll keep reading and perhaps purchase the book.  Maybe you will even offer a story of your own to be included in the next Write for Charity anthology.



Q: Tell me a little bit about this project. 
A: From the Heart is the brainchild of the ladies at Write for Charity.  After finding out that her youngest daughter needed surgery, our chief editor, Beth Davis, felt a driving urge to make a difference in the lives of children, particularly sick children.  The idea of writing a book for charity had been thrown around our office for some time, but she jumped in with both feet to get it moving.
Understanding that writing a book in a short period of time would be an unrealistic task, the ladies went full steam ahead in search of collaborators.  They searched magazines, the blogosphere and writers groups from around the country for the best and brightest writing talent they could find, extending invitations as they went.  After sorting through over 300 submissions over the course of several months, From the Heart was born. The book is a creative collaboration of nearly 100 different stories and poems from all aspects of parenting.  July 1st was the kickoff to our 90 Day Challenge and we’ve been moving ahead with book sales ever since!

Q. What is the 90 Day Challenge? 
A: The 90 Day Challenge is a book sales drive that represents a goal that we set for ourselves and the collaborative authors who are choosing to participate.  The goal is to jumpstart sales of From the Heart in the first 90 days by selling 10,000 copies of the book and raising a large lump sum of money for charity immediately.
The book is currently only available for sale on our website at www.writeforcharity.com, but it will be available at many other retail locations following the 90 Day Challenge.

Q: Why not make it available through a national distribution channel during your 90 Day Challenge?
A: We elected to sell the book at www.writeforcharity.com during 90 Day Challenge and wait to distribute the book into bookstores like Barnes and Noble and Borders and on websites like Amazon.com due to the costs associated with a distributor.  By selling the book on our website, we are able to control in house costs, raise profit margins and, in turn, donate more money to our selected charities.

Q. Who will benefit from this project?
A: The desire to contribute to children’s charities has driven this project from the very beginning.  Since the minute we decided to publish this book, we knew that children’s hospitals and juvenile disease research foundations would be the beneficiaries when it came to fruition.  All of the profits from this book will be split between various Children’s Hospitals and St. Jude’s Children’s Research Center.

Q: So, 100% of proceeds from this project go to charity?
A: One hundred percent of profits will go to our selected charities.  Obviously with a project like this, you have printing costs, but other than that, we have committed all of the funds to our selected charities.  Our authors have donated their work, our editors have donated their time and our graphics people have donated their talent.  We are very lucky to have such a wonderful group of talented people involved in this project.  For a list of contributors, visit www.writeforcharity.wordpress.com/the-authors

Q: Tell us something we don’t know about your project. 
A: Well, the biggest thing would definitely have to be the caliber of our contributors.  We have several nationally recognized writers in our group of nearly 80 contributors and many of our contributors have been featured in nationally distributed publications, on popular websites or on television.  Their willingness to donate their work to our cause is admirable and I know that everyone who reads this volume will enjoy their poems and stories.  Together with our contributors, we have begun a grassroots effort to raise funds for our wonderful charities that is growing by the day.  Their eagerness to help get the word out about the book is admirable and we appreciate their support.

Q: What’s in it for me to support this project?
A: The charity situation on a national level has taken a severe beating as of late. Many incidents of run ins with unsavory “charities” have appeared in the media in the past several years.  Many individuals and companies have completely lost trust in those trying to do good work because of a few “bad eggs.” 

Many individuals have contributed time and effort to put this project together.  Our authors contributed their work out of the kindness of their hearts and our editor, layout artist and designers all contributed time as well.  Because they believe in the mission behind this project, to help children in need, we hope you will take the time to support us and purchase a copy of the book.  The book in itself is a fantastic product and by purchasing, you are helping a good cause.

Q: How can I support Write for Charity’s From the Heart?
A: There are a number of different things you can do to support the project.  First and foremost, you can click here to buy a book!  On our website, we have the ever popular blog buttons which I have starting seeing crop up all over cyberspace.  You are welcome to download the “supporter” button for your own website if you are so inclined.
This is the first anthology we have done and with the success we are already seeing with it, we know it won’t be the last.  Contact one of our editors at press@writeforcharity.com for more information on how you can contribute to one of our upcoming projects or help to support our current project.


So that's the scoop! If you love to read, this is a great investment for charity.  If you love to write, perhaps you'll consider submitting a story contribution to the next charitable anthology. 


Thanks for reading!
Lisa

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Water for Elephants



Well, I'm late to the party but glad I showed up.

Water for Elephants, authored by Sara Gruen, has been in bookstores for a few years.  It topped bestseller lists but I never picked it up until last week.  It is exceedingly well-written, engrossing, funny, sad, horrifying, sensual, and the most satisfying read I have experienced in a very long while.  It hits theaters next year starring Reese Witherspoon, Christopher Waltz and Robert Pattinson.  

I'm usually disappointed by the movie version of any book; the only exception to this was Stephen King's Shawshank Redemption which rocked in print and on the big screen. I hope my new fave, Water for Elephants, makes as wonderful a transition from book to film. 

Since discovering this gem it seems that everyone I've mentioned it to has already read it, leading me to believe I've been living under a rock for the last few years.  It somehow slipped past me, but I'm thrilled I found it.  Even had I not been hooked by the story---and I was hooked from page one, make no mistake---I would read for the exceptional writing alone.  Ms. Gruen, originally a technical writer, creates a world the reader can see, taste and feel; no word is wasted, no scene unnecessary.

The writer in me is scrambling to get my hands on Ms. Gruen's other novels, to absorb more of her quality and technique, to learn from her pacing and presentation.  The reader in me wants to hop on the train with her again, to be carried away to wherever she leads. It will be an engrossing ride; I'm sure of it.

If you have read Water for Elephants I'd like your opinion, even if it differs from mine.  If you have not read it, you're missing out on fantastic writing and a wonderful story with multi-faceted characters, not all of them human. The story will draw you into the world of a depression era circus, and the characters will abide in the corners of your mind long after you turn the last page.

Sara Gruen and a link to her website has been added to my list of favorite authors.  Check out my sidebar list for other Authors Who Rock My Socks!

Happy reading -
Lisa

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

"Spatter Don't Matter"

As if life isn't complicated enough, I'm juggling the reading of four books simultaneously.  I pondered slapping the "multitasking" label on this effort, but it would be a big, fat lie.  Mostly the problem is that middle-age dropped a hormone bomb smack in the center of my attention span.  My focus is so kaboomed that CSI would have to invent new technology to analyze the spatter.

Although I'm on my second read of Write in Style by Bobbie Christmas, I took the blog recommendation of my writing Yoda, Cathy C. Hall, and hightailed it to the library to borrow Mike Sacks' And Here's the Kicker, a book on humor writing because, hey, I'll take all the help I can get. While at the library, I nabbed J.D. Robb's latest, Fantasy in Death, because J.D. Robb is really Nora Roberts and who doesn't love Nora?  (Also, there is Roarke, the hunky hubby of the the In Death series' protagonist, Eve Dallas.)

At the drugstore a few hours later I spotted Janet Evanovitch's newest Stephanie Plum escapade, Fearless Fourteen, and it was on sale, y'all.  I picked up the hardback for $5.99! Woo-hoo!

Which of these wondrous books should I read first? How to choose?  I feel like a Labrador Retriever in a field full of tennis balls!  Which is to say, buttercup, that if I had a tail it would be wagging. My only potential problem is that whole attention-span-spatter thingy I mentioned earlier, a condition likely to send me hopping from book to book with eager disregard for organization and order.

You know what? The "spatter don't matter", 'cause I've got books, y'all! Books!

Lovely, lovely books!
Lisa

Photo courtesy of dreamstime.com.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Books of Bones

Very little is more satisfying than a good read.  Well, okay, I can think of a few things that top it, but this blog is G-rated.  The point is, I've finished reading "206 Bones" by Kathy Reichs.  This is her twelfth novel featuring Temperance Brennan, a forensic anthropologist and overachiever who makes Hillary Clinton look like a slacker. 

Ms. Reichs is, like her character, a forensic anthropologist, and her keen knowledge of the subject shines through the stories she crafts.  Her tales are intriguing, and she imparts technical information in terms that even a scientific lightweight like me can understand.  If you ever saw me attempting to noodle out anything science related, you would understand the import of that statement. I actually had a physics teacher in high school--Mr. Greenglass--who literally begged me to stay far away from any science lab, "For as long as we both shall live."  I'm not making this up.

You may be familiar with the T.V. series, "Bones", which is loosely based on the novels by Kathy Reichs.  I prefer the books over the show, but then, given the option, I will always choose to read over watching the tube. I'm a word junkie, especially when the little boogers are strung together so darn well.

If you have read any of Ms. Reichs' novels I'd love to hear your opinion.  If you haven't, start out with the first one, "Deja Dead", and work your way up to #12.  It will be time well spent.  I promise.  And if you refuse, I'll show up at your house with a Bunsen burner and a lab coat. 

C'mon, you always wanted to learn about bones, didn't you?

Til next time-
Lisa