Recommend Responsibly Part 2: A Book for Everyone

 

As promised, we’re discussing what books to recommend and to whom. Reading isn’t one size fits all and, as writers (or readers) who want to support the book industry, we know we need to recommend responsibly. We do that by encouraging so-called  ”non-readers” to read and thus, hopefully, converting them into at least occasional book-buyers. But, we can’t do this by impressing non-readers with our love for dense, flowerly prose or by insisting that they’ll love whatever genre we write in. Or by peddling every book we love. We recommend books like we give presents–we think of the recipient.

Rule Number Two: We ditch the snobbery. A lot of writers aren’t fond of celebrity authors. Who can blame them? Here we are working our bums off, fighting through rejection, and in walks Lauren Conrad with a three book deal. But BIG books, like these celebrity books sell. People like them. We *want* publishers to make money so they can take risks on other manuscripts. So, if you think your Aunt Matilda would like to read Maureen McCormick’s new book, then get it for her, or recommend it! No worries.

Ok, so I’ll need y’alls help making this list, but I’m going to try to start thinking of types of people and what types of books they like. When it’s done I’ll add it to the books I recommend page.

 

Middle School girl: Beacon Street Girls, Savvy by Ingrid Law, The Floating Circus by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, Gallagher Girls series by Ally Carter

Middle School boy: Zen and the Art of Faking It by Jordan Sonnenblick, The Wishlist by Eoin Colfer, The Giggler Treatment by Roddy Doyle, Antsy Does Time by Neal Shusterman, The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkein

High School girl: Girl, Hero by Carrie Jones, The City in The Lake by Rachel Neumeier, Shift by Jen Bradbury, Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr, The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart

(If looking for non-edgy-Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson)

High School boy: Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher, Ink Exchange by Melissa Marr, Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkein

College girl: The Undomestic Goddess by Sophie Kinsella, Story of a Girl by Sara Zarr, Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr, Bergdorf Blondes by Plum Sykes, Magic Lost, Trouble Found by Lisa Shearin, Kitty and the Midnight Hour by Carrie Vaughn, Are You There Vodka? It’s Me, Chelsea by Chelsea Handler

College boy: Foundation by Isaac Asimov, Lolita by Nabokov, John Adams by David McCullough, Blink by Malcolm Gladwell, Freakonomics by Stephen Dubner

30s-40s-50s women: The Mermaid Chair by Sue Monk Kidd, Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen, A Lotus Grows in the Mud by Goldie Hawn, Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovich, The Sinner by Tess Gerritsen

30s-40s-50s men: American Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson by Joseph J. Ellis, Marley and Me by John Grogan, Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin

 

For the Southern fic reader: Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

For the no-nonsense, none of that fantasy junk reader: Sophie’s Choice by William Styron

For the historical fiction lover: The News from Paraguay by Lily Tuck

For the hopeless romantic: The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks

For the woman growing up: Eat Love Pray by Elizabeth Gilbert

For the why-would-I-read-fiction-unless-I’m-learning-something reader: Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett

For the vampire lovers (adult): Interview with a Vampire by Anne Rice

For the vampire lovers (young adult): House of Night by P.C. and Kristin Cast

For the celebrity gossip lover: Confessions of An Heiress

For the lawyer: One L by Scott Turow

For the guy searching for the meaning of life: The Zahir by Paulo Coelho

For the I-Miss-Harry-Potter reader: His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman

 

Ok, wow, that was exhausting! I’m sure I’ll think of more later. But help me out!

Book Review: Twilight Saga Continued–New Moon

I reviewed Twilight last week and as the release of Breaking Dawn grows closer I thought a review of the second book in the Twilight series would be fitting.

Like Twilight, I read New Moon in about 2 days. Again, it being summer, I’m going to evaluate in terms of its ability to force me to turn each of its 500 pages.

I really don’t know what it is about these books. The writing is repetitive. The description can be painful to read. And there is a whole heap of teenage angst. You’d think after the 900th time Bella gets dizzy or the 1,800th time Edward’s body is described as marble, I’d be thinking “Enough already!” But, no. It’s more like “Give me more! Give me more!”

Stephenie Meyer is a whiz at creating suspense. She creates hundreds of little moments that contain big suspense. Bella riding a bike. Bella walking around in an empty house. In Meyer’s hands, these down moments are transformed into scenes that keep the pages flipping. I thought the suspense in New Moon was better crafted than in Twilight, but while the action payoff was “cool,” but it was ultimately less climactic than in the first book.

I’ve heard that New Moon is the worst of the three books out and I’m not sure whether I liked it better than Twilight or not. I will say that the Romeo and Juliet alternative ending idea is fascinating and the conflict set up in the love triangle introduced during the course of the book is fantastic. It is one of those books that will make fans choose sides. Kind of like some people wanted Harry and Hermione to end up together while others were happy with Ron. Or Mychael v. Tam in the Raine Benares series by Lisa Shearin. That kind of conflict makes fans and keeps them because it’s the stuff that drives discussion boards and fan sites.

While I don’t want to give away too much, I will say that I would have liked Bella to choose the opposite of her final choice in this book.

Finally, despite the edge-of-your-seat, my-eyes-hurt-cuz-I’ve-been-reading-so-long type of suspense found in New Moon, I find the Twilight saga to be incredibly relaxing to read. I think part of that results from the repetitive description that can be comforting to a reader in a book filled with adventure. Moreover, I’m going to stick with my theory that the repetitive description and lack of character development outside the few main characters is meant to mirror Bella’s tunnel vision and helps the reader to progressively fall for Edward.

So, if you are looking for an incredibly fun read and you aren’t an analyze-to-death kind of reader pick it up! It’s always fun to be “in” on the series when new books and movies come out, so now is a great time to jump into Twilight.

To purchase Twilight click here: Twilight (The Twilight Saga, Book 1)

To purchase New Moon click here: New Moon (The Twilight Saga, Book 2) 

Not a Twilight fan, but need your vampire fix? I think you might enjoy the House of Night series. Check out my review here.

 

 

Status: Packing and working on moving stuff today. The query letter is up on a page devoted to SCOUT. I’m waiting to put artwork up until I have a little more to show you. I’m excited for you all to see, but I think that waiting is the right thing to do.

Nate will be here soon and we are headed to Atlantic City tonight. I’ve never been and this will be my first time gambling!

Writing–not just a figure of speech

A lot of people like to call themselves writers. I don’t know if it’s because of the girls, the aura of mystery and intellect, or perhaps just the license to drink at 10 am in the name of “inspiration.”

 

But here’s the thing: last time I checked, you have to actually write something to be a writer. Weird, right?

 

Anyway, a big step in accomplishing the whole writing part is goal setting. And can’t we all agree that goal setting is much more meaningful when you shout it from the modern equivalent of a mountain top–my blog?  I would say Facebook, but, let’s be serious, I’m not that brave. 

 

So here are my writing goals for the rest of 2008:

 

By the end of June-15,000 words of SCOUT first draft

Query at least 100 agents, but with any luck, sign with one before!

Complete SCOUT and revise 

Query SCOUT or turn into agent (whichever relevant at the time)–also see goal below

Simultaneously write a graphic novel script for SCOUT, work with an artist, and make a decision on which avenue to pursue

Continue to grow Fumbling with Fiction and by mid-July have at least 500 hits a day. By mid-September–1,000.

 

#1 Goal: No matter how many manuscripts I have to write or how many times I have to revise–sign with an agent. 

—-Note: Things seem to be looking promising. Everyone keep your fingers crossed and maybe hold your breath for good measure. Thanks.

 

What are your goals?

 

Status: Read Magic Lost, Trouble Found at the pool today. Good so far. I’ve really been looking forward to this book, so I think I’ve set the bar for it super high. I will say, it is great to read an author’s debut novel. Miss Snark once advised aspiring authors to read debut books because it gave a much more realistic view of the market. So, that’s something for everyone to think about. 

 

I’ll probably write a little bit tonight, so I’m looking forward to that. It’s usually slow going when first starting out, but then speeds up substantially. 

 

 

 

 

Topical Tuesday: E-books, Dollars, and Sense

Today’s topic: E-books, the Amazon Kindle, and the popularization of reading material

 

For a great related article that inspired this topic check out Nathan Bransford’s blog.

And, for a different take, be sure to go to our resident intellect Jay Solomon’s blog.

 

Here goes.

 

My first thought was that the advent of electronic media was nothing but good. It gives authors another medium in which to sell the work. It makes reading more accessible to more people. It is a cheaper way for publishers to publish more titles.

All good things.

Yeah. I thought so, too. Until I did a little research.

Paul Krugman seems to be quite the authority on the subject and he brings up a great comparison: mp3s and e-books.

The creation of mp3s has forced bands to use merchandise and concert tours as their main source of revenue. Krugman and Bransford speculate that at some point authors may turn to website ad revenue and appearances to make money. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want a bunch of ad banners every time I visit my favorite authors’ sites. (Now, if it will make me money to put them here, then…just kidding.)

Further, because of the ease of transmission of electronic media, prices are driven downward, thus narrowing profit margins for authors and publishers alike. Ugh.

 

However, there is a silver lining (I apologize, I forgot where I found this comparison).

If e-books/print books become more comparable to the price of magazines perhaps reading will increase.

Let me explain.

Consumers do not feel as much guilt buying a magazine at the price of $3 and flipping through it, then throwing it away and buying a new  mag. However, a $17 book, they feel like they MUST finish before they allow themselves to purchase again. So, it might be possible that if book prices became cheaper due to downward market pressure people would feel more comfortable buying titles outside their “comfort zone” and buying more of them.

 

My $.02.

 

Status: Starting Magic Lost, Trouble Found today. Working on a series proposal for the new book. A different avenue. I’ll let you know how that pans out!

 

Chelle Cordero tomorrow!!

Friday Forecast

So as y’all know, I’m in Austin right now. Therefore blogs will be short. Update: The bf and I are having a blast and I think we found him the perfect apartment! 

On to the Friday publishing forecast, which requires a bit of homework on your part, but not really because you can still answer the question based on speculation and opinion alone. 

The Numbers Guy of the Wall Street Journal (http://blogs.wsj.com/numbersguy/are-americans-really-reading-less-303/?mod=WSJBlog)recently came out with an article entitled “Are Americans Really Reading Less?” The article references a New Yorker piece that criticizes a National Endowment for the Arts study called “To Read or Not to Read: A Question of National Consequence.” The New Yorker (
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2007/12/24/071224crat_atlarge_crain
) claims that the NEA failed to show that lack of book reading would result in dire consequences. The question the article seeks to answer and the one I’m asking you: “What will life be like if people stop reading?”

Would there be dire consequences? 

You tell me.

 

 

Status: No writing updates, but I did get to pick up Magic Lost, Trouble Found by Lisa Shearin from the library before my trip. Yay for the speedy librarians of Philadelphia!

 

Binge-Reading

It’s true. I have a problem.

I legit can’t help myself right now.

I don’t know about y’all, but when I write, I can’t read. If I am reading a book and trying to write my own work everything I spew out sounds like whomever’s book I’m reading at the time.

I learned this the hard way when the first three chapters of my book came out sounding like Confessions of Nat Turner. Believe me, it wasn’t working.

So, I learned to put the book down and focus on finding my own voice.

But, now that I’m done it’s like someone forgot to fill my water bowl for the last two months. I started Wicked Lovely by Melissa Marr yesterday afternoon and I’m almost done. I ordered Magic Lost, Trouble Found by Lisa Shearin when I was at the library yesterday, but it won’t get in until next week. What will I read until then??

Anyone else get this syndrome-slash-any suggestions as to what to read in the meantime?

Bonus Status: I just got a request for the first two chapters of Weird Tattoos (The working title of my book is Weird Tattoos and Low IQs, by the way) from a FABULOUS agent! That’s 6 agents with parts of my manuscript now: 3 fulls, 2 partials, 1 first two chapters request (not sure if I’d consider that a partial) and 0 rejections! *So far*