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AW Author Article: Emily Wing Smith, Author of Back When You Were Easier to Love

Posted By Danielle on July 15th, 2011

Today I have the opportunity of sharing something a little fun with Chick Lit Readers! Author Emily Wing Smith’s recent novel Back When You Were Easier to Love revolves around Joy, a girl whose boyfriend Zan just up and left her to live in California. After deciding to track him down with his very attractive, but mildly annoying best friend Noah she learns he might not be what he was cracked up to be. Well, today I am sharing a few of the books Joy would have read while growing up and during this difficult time courtesy of the author, Emily Wing Smith! Take a look…

Junie B. Jones (complete series)
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
The Sky Is Everywhere by Jandy Nelson
The Norton Anthology of Contemporary Fiction
Elements of Style by Strunk and White
Love Is a Decision by Dr. Gary Smalley

Thank you so much Emily for this great list of books! I can definitely see where they’d easily fit into Joy’s life, especially when it comes to her and her relationship with Zan.

I’ll be sharing my review of Back When You Were Easier to Love next weekend, so make sure to look out for it!

What’s worse than getting dumped? Not even knowing if you’ve been dumped. Joy got no goodbye, and certainly no explanation when Zan - the love of her life and the only good thing about stifling, backward Haven, Utah - unceremoniously and unexpectedly left for college a year early. Joy needs closure almost as much as she needs Zan, so she heads for California, and Zan, riding shotgun beside Zan’s former-best-friend Noah.

Original and insightful, quirky and crushing, Joy’s story is told in surprising and artfully shifting flashbacks between her life then and now. Exquisite craft and wry, relatable humor signal the arrival of Emily Wing Smith as a breakout talent.

AW Book Review: Attachments by Rainbow Rowell

Posted By Danielle on April 15th, 2011

Beth and Jennifer know their company monitors their office e-mail. But the women still spend all day sending each other messages, gossiping about their coworkers at the newspaper and baring their personal lives like an open book. Jennifer tells Beth everything she can’t seem to tell her husband about her anxieties over starting a family. And Beth tells Jennifer everything, period.

When Lincoln applied to be an Internet security officer, he hardly imagined he’d be sifting through other people’s inboxes like some sort of electronic Peeping Tom. Lincoln is supposed to turn people in for misusing company e-mail, but he can’t quite bring himself to crack down on Beth and Jennifer. He can’t help but be entertained-and captivated- by their stories.

But by the time Lincoln realizes he’s falling for Beth, it’s way too late for him to ever introduce himself. What would he say to her? “Hi, I’m the guy who reads your e-mail, and also, I love you.” After a series of close encounters and missed connections, Lincoln decides it’s time to muster the courage to follow his heart . . . even if he can’t see exactly where it’s leading him.

Written with whip-smart precision and charm, Attachments is a strikingly clever and deeply romantic debut about falling in love with the person who makes you feel like the best version of yourself. Even if it’s someone you’ve never met.

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AW Book Review: The Uncoupling by Meg Wolitzer

Posted By Danielle on April 8th, 2011

When the elliptical new drama teacher at Stellar Plains High School chooses for the school play Lysistrata-the comedy by Aristophanes in which women stop having sex with men in order to end a war-a strange spell seems to be cast over the school. Or, at least, over the women. One by one throughout the high school community, perfectly healthy, normal women and teenage girls turn away from their husbands and boyfriends in the bedroom, for reasons they don’t really understand. As the women worry over their loss of passion, and the men become by turns unhappy, offended, and above all, confused, both sides are forced to look at their shared history, and at their sexual selves in a new light.

As she did to such acclaim with the New York Times bestseller The Ten-Year Nap, Wolitzer tackles an issue that has deep ramifications for women’s lives, in a way that makes it funny, riveting, and totally fresh-allowing us to see our own lives through her insightful lens.

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Book Review: Hothouse Flower and the Nine Plants of Desire by Margot Berwin

Posted By Danielle on August 13th, 2010

In the heart of New York City, hidden in the back room of an old Laundromat, are nine rare and valuable plants. Hothouse Flower and the Nine Plants of Desire tells the story of this legendary garden, and the distance one woman must travel—from the cold, harsh streets of Manhattan to the lush jungles of the Yucatan Peninsula—to claim what is hers.

Lila Nova lives alone in a plain, white box of an apartment. Recovering from a heartbreaking divorce, Lila’s life is like her home: simple, new, and empty. But when she meets a handsome plant-seller named David Exley, an entire world opens up before her eyes. Late one night Lila stumbles across a strange Laundromat and sees ferns so highly-prized that a tiny cutting can fetch thousands of dollars. She learns about flowers with medicinal properties to rival anything found in drugstores. And she hears the legend of nine mystical plants that bring fame, fortune, immortality, and passion.

The owner of the Laundromat, Armand, presents Lila with a test: if she can make the cutting from a fire fern grow roots, he will show her the secret of his locked room. But Lila is too trusting, and with one terrible mistake she ruins her chance to see Armand’s plants. The only way to win it back is to travel, on her own, to the Yucatan.

Deep in the rain forests of Mexico, Lila enters a world of shamans and spirit animals, snake charmers, and sexy, heart-stopping Huichols. Alone in the jungle, Lila is forced to learn more than she ever wanted to know about nature—and about herself. An exhilarating journey of love and self-discovery, Hothouse Flower and the Nine Plants of Desire brings together mystery, adventure, and heat, in every sense of the word.

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American Saturdays: Author Article - Robert Rave

Posted By Danielle on August 7th, 2010

As soon as I found out I had the opportunity to be a part of the book tour for Robert’s newest release, Waxed, I knew I wanted to have him chat with us a bit about a topic that may be a bit controversial. Men, writing Chick Lit. More specifically, how he feels about the stigma attached to it and why he didn’t decide to just go with a pen name to avoid that. What he came up with was just perfect! Enjoy!

At a dinner party not so long ago, I found myself enjoying an amazing glass of Riesling and I was about to devour a mouthwatering scoop of raspberry sorbet when someone brought up a very heady book review that recently appeared in The New Yorker. After Marianne, our host, hemmed and hawed over the brilliance of this highbrow book nearly everyone at the table swore they were going to go home and order it immediately. Except for me. I knew they were lying.

The reality was that I knew my friends and I knew their taste in books. To prove this point, I went around the table as quickly as I could and asked what they were reading. However, I didn’t want to give them the opportunity to be able to name some book that they’d only read about but not actually read in an effort to sound more intellectual.

The answers were nearly all the same. “Oh, just a beach-read” followed by an ashamed shrug. One friend literally turned red in embarrassment when she told me the name of the author she was reading because this author was considered “chick-lit.”

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Book Review: Waxed by Robert Rave

Posted By Danielle on August 6th, 2010

Waxed is the story of three relationship-challenged sisters working together at New York’s hottest waxing salon, catering to socialites, actresses, and regular folk alike.

Yank. On the surface, glamorous Carolina Impresario—big sister and owner of Impresarios—unapologetically wants it all, but secretly she is caught between her successful boyfriend and the only man she has ever truly loved.

Pluck. After a painful divorce, middle sister Anna reluctantly reenters the workforce and puts on a brave face while attempting to raise her children, one of whom is decidedly different.

Tear. Newlywed Sofia is a hybrid of her two older sisters: She loves the idea of a domestic life like Anna’s, but is entranced by New York nightlife and a new best friend, resulting in some major complications at home.

Amid the sticky confines of a perfectly manicured world, these three sisters search for love, friendship, and better versions of themselves.

Waxed is a funny and heartfelt novel that illustrates the lengths to which some women will go to present a seemingly flawless exterior, even when it involves pain. . . .
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Book Review: Seven Year Switch by Claire Cook

Posted By Danielle on July 19th, 2010

Just when Jill Murray’s finally figured out how to manage on her own, her ex-husband proves that he can’t even run away reliably. After seven long years missing in action, he’s back—crashing into the man-free existence Jill and her ten-year-old daughter have built so carefully. And what’s a good mother to do? To a child, even a deadbeat dad is better than no dad at all.

Jill’s life just hasn’t turned out quite the way she planned. By now, she’d hoped to be jetting around the world as a high-end cultural coach. Instead, she’s answering phones for a local travel agency and teaching cooking classes at the community center.

Enter free-spirited entrepreneur Billy, who hires Jill as a consultant for an upcoming business trip. Is their relationship veering off in a new direction? And what about her ex? Jill couldn’t possibly still have feelings for him . . . could she? Suddenly, her no-boys-allowed life is anything but.

They say that every seven years you become a completely new person, but Jill isn’t sure she’s ready for the big change. It takes a Costa Rican getaway to help her make a choice—not so much between the two men in her life, but between the woman she is and the one she wants to be.

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Cally Taylor Guest Post: On The Road to Writing

Posted By Leah on October 16th, 2009

callytaylor5Cally Taylor mentioned on her blog a while ago that she would love to do a virtual blog tour to coincide with the release of her debut novel Heaven Can Wait. We jumped at the chance to be part of that tour and we’re pleased to announce we are the first stop. You can read Cally’s blog here: Writing About Writing. Now I’ll hand over to Cally who is going to tell you all just what it was like to become a published author.

A lot of my childhood memories are hazy but one thing I do remember very clearly is learning to read; the big, bold text and brightly coloured illustrations in the Peter and Jane books I read with my parents are still clear in my mind and if I close my eyes tightly I’m instantly transported into the magical world of Enid Blyton’s The Magic Faraway Tree. As a child I thought authors were magicians – how else could they create such vivid images and adventures in my head? – and I desperately wanted to be one.

When I was eight I wrote a ‘book’ called The Evil Weed about…well…an evil weed who bullied a group of flower friends. They got their revenge on him by pouring tar onto a road and getting him stuck. By the end of the story he was very repentant, wanted to be their friend and they all lived happily ever after. After I’d finished writing my story I drew ‘illustrations’ on the back of each page, hole-punched the whole lot, bound it with wool and sent it off to Penguin Publishers. I was convinced it was the best story ever and was a bit shocked when, two months letter, my first ever rejection letter dropped through my letterbox.Heaven MMP CS12.indd

I had a couple of false starts with novels before I wrote “Heaven Can Wait”. I started one – a story about a man who questions what ‘sane’ is when a friend of his ends up in a psychiatric unit - when I lived in London in my twenties but ditched it after about 5,000 words (I’d never been in a psychiatric unit so had no idea what I was on about!) I started another one in my early thirties – about a young girl, sent off to boarding school after her OCD-suffering mum kills herself (I blame my Psychology degree for my obsession with mental illness!) – but abandoned that too, this time after 50,000 words.

I’ll finish a novel one day, I told myself. There’s plenty of time.

In the summer of 2006 I realised that wasn’t always true. One of my best friends from school died suddenly and unexpectedly and her death made me re-evaluate my life. Becoming a published author was my dream and if I didn’t write my novel no one else would. In early 2007 I started to write the novel that was to become “Heaven Can Wait”. I wrote nearly every night, driven to actually finish this time, and three months and three weeks later I completed the first draft. The sense of accomplishment I felt was huge. I’d done it! I’d actually written a novel!

But now what?

I had no idea if anyone would actually want to publish a supernatural romantic-comedy about a woman who dies the night before her wedding and tries to come back as a ghost (I certainly hadn’t seen anything like it on the tables in Waterstones!) so I came up with a plan - I’d send it off to a few agents and, if no one wanted it, I’d self-publish and donate the copies to charity shops so that maybe someone, somewhere, might pull it off the shelf and read it. That, I realised, was what I wanted more than anything else - to give someone else the same pleasure and escapism books had always given me.

I was extraordinarily lucky. The second agent I approached showed an interest and, about eighteen months after I finished the first draft, I signed with Madeleine Buston at the Darley Anderson Literary Agency. In October 2008 Maddie told me she’d secured a two book deal with Orion (publishers of Ian Rankin, Maeve Binchey and Kate Harrison). I couldn’t believe it! People were actually going to read my book! For weeks after I signed the contract I’d have a small heart attack whenever I received an email from my agent or editor – I kept expecting them to tell me that, actually, they’d made a mistake and I wasn’t going to be published after all.

I won’t believe it’s really happening until I can hold a copy of my book in my hands, I told myself over and over again. Not until then.meandmybook

On Thursday 1st October 2009 my doorbell rang. I hurried down the stairs, expecting to find the gasman or a couple of Jehovah’s Witnesses behind the front door. Instead a delivery man greeted me with a smile and handed me a huge parcel. I can’t remember ordering something this massive from Amazon I thought as I signed for it then carried it up the stairs to the living room. It was only when I realised it wasn’t an Amazon box that the penny dropped. I held my breath as I opened it and peered inside. My book! Twenty-five copies of my book…with a beautiful, beautiful cover, the title in a gorgeous, gold curly font and… my words inside.

I went onto Twitter and shared my delight with my online friends.

“I’ve wanted to be an author since I was EIGHT YEARS OLD,” I typed. “And now I am.”

And then I started to cry.