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Interview with JF Kristin

Q: Have you always known you wanted to write?
Luckily, yes. I’ve been writing since I could pick up a crayon. Before I learned how to spell, I’d tell my stories to my parents. In first grade, writing stories in my class journal was my favorite part of school. In second grade, my teachers started sending me to young authors’ conferences, which had been geared toward fourth-graders and upward. In third grade, I decided I was going to journalism school and that’s exactly what I did after graduating from high school. After finishing my journalism degree, I decided to do an M.A. in English part-time, outside of work, purely out of love for language and writing.
Q: What inspired your first novel, Rock Star’s Girl?
I started freelancing as a promotional writer and web designer for musicians when I was a senior in high school. That led to making friends and acquaintances who are musicians, and then meeting their friends who are musicians, and so on. Some of them are in independent bands, and others are or have been in more popular bands signed to major labels. Several are guys I’ve gone on dates with, or have been in relationships with.
When you meet someone who is known in the music or entertainment world, in a context that’s entirely separate from their career—usually it’s been through mutual friends, or friends of mutual friends, or at a friend’s show or something—you just don’t really think about what they do for a living. You forget that there are people out there who follow their lives, or who would recognize them in a crowd, or discuss and dissect things they’ve said or done, or even what clothes they’ve worn somewhere.
I was reminded of this one weekend afternoon while hanging out with someone I knew who is in a fairly well-known band. We’d met through mutual friends, and to this day I’ve never seen one of his band’s shows, so the career/public-self wasn’t the context I knew him in. We were at his place, and he was looking at something on his computer. When he explained that he was reading a message board about his band, to check on what people were saying about him or all of the band members that day, it made me stop for a second. It was a really strange moment, and it made me think about what it would be like to read what people are saying about you when they know your face and name, but don’t know YOU. The idea for Rock Star’s Girl initially came out of that moment. I wanted to explore that idea from the side of someone who didn’t have a career in the entertainment industry, and who would never expect to be in that situation at all.
I should also mention that I have nothing but good things to say about any of my friends who are musicians. Cory and Jesse (characters in Rock Star’s Girl) are very much fictional.
Q: What was the most difficult process in writing for you?
The first big revision of Rock Star’s Girl was definitely the most difficult part of the process. Anyone who remembers writing their first novel can probably relate to this. Here you have this manuscript, finally complete at between 80,000 and 90,000 words. You’ve been working on it for ages. You want to query agents, or send it out into the world. Then you start getting feedback and suggestions and realize that something could be much more effective if you changed this, or changed that, or added this subplot. Before you know it, you’re deleting 20,000 or 30,000 words from your manuscript, and that’s only the first revision. They become much easier to do after that, I think.
Q: Can you tell us about your second novel?
My second novel is about as different from Rock Star’s Girl as you can get. It’s not chick lit. Think more along the lines of something you’d study in a contemporary literature class. It experiments a bit with form and with concepts of time. Plot-wise, I’m keeping that under wraps for a while. I know that’s really vague!
Q: Do you have a certain writing schedule you try to stick to?
Writing something every day is the schedule I most try to stick to. It isn’t always fiction-writing, although working on a novel-in-progress is something I aim to do the majority of the days each week. For me, the most important part of getting a manuscript finished is to work on it consistently most of the week, every week. It doesn’t matter if it’s writing only a sentence or two, or if it’s writing 9,000 words over a weekend, as long as I’m writing something every day. It’s when I leave something sitting for a week or two that I slow down a lot.
Q: I noticed from your website and blog that you are really into fitness. What are some of your go-to workouts?
I’m a cardio nut right now. You can usually find me on the elliptical three times a week, doing about 6 or 7 miles each time. About once a week after the cardio, I’ll do the lighter hand weights for more arm toning, or use some of the weight machines. I also walk my dog three or more times a day, so that gets added into the mix.
When I have days with a little bit more free time, I like to hike. One of my favorite places to hike, Runyon Canyon, is mentioned in Rock Star’s Girl. Kundalini yoga is also one of my favorite things to do. I find that it really strengthens my abdominal area, and also puts me into a great headspace.
Q: Your philosophy is “dream big.” How do you put this philosophy into your life, and how do you think you can influence others to do the same?
The biggest part of “dream big” for me is getting to the true, most ultimate dream or goal, and not selling myself short. It’s about asking yourself what you would do, where you would live, and what your life would be like ideally, and not taking into consideration anything perceived as a limitation or restriction. That’s important. If something is a dream, and you’re restricting or limiting yourself in that dream, then where else in your present-day life are you constructing restrictions or limitations that don’t have to be there?
If there is something you want to do in your life, just do it. Don’t talk about wanting to do it, or write it off as, “One day I’ll do this,” or “I want to do this, but�” Writing a book is a good example of this. A lot of people never get to that point. It’s abandoned a few pages in, or several chapters in, or even after a first draft. Or they think, “Wow, I could never do that,” or are daunted by the concept of a word count and don’t begin at all.
Something I’ve enjoyed a lot lately is discovering aspiring writer’s right around me, whom I never knew had the ambition to write. Since finishing Rock Star’s Girl, I’ve found myself in conversation with people I’ve known for years, hearing about how they want to write a screenplay but don’t know where to start or if they’re doing it right, or how they want to write a book but don’t know if they can. It’s great to be able to talk about the perceived limitations that keep people from writing, and to help them shift their focus from hypothetical roadblocks to achieving their dream.
I strongly encourage everyone out there to think about what they truly want to do and the places in this world they want to explore, and to go after their dreams. You may come across people who question what you want to do, but the important part is to listen to what you know about yourself, and not what others think they know about you or see as limitations.
Q: What are some of your favorite Sephora products?
My number one, can’t-live-without product that I purchased from Sephora is the Jonathan Beauty Water Shower Purification System, but I don’t think they sell it anymore. I wish they did! When I first moved to California, the building I lived in had ridiculously hard water with a lot of copper in it. I have blond hair, so it started looking not-so-blond until I got the filter. I’ve also noticed that if I wash my face using only the filtered water, instead of tap water from the sink, I don’t get skin blemishes. Results may vary by person, but what this filter removes from water is amazing.
Second is Bare Escentuals mineral veil, although you can get that from several places. I usually get it from Sephora, though. I love this stuff, and have been using it for about four years.
For the summer months, I also really like the self-tanning gel made by Clarins. My skin is very fair, and although it doesn’t burn easily, it also just doesn’t tan. I was always afraid of self-tanner turning my skin orange, but when I read the first 50 great reviews of this product on Sephora, I decided to try it. It gives your skin a really natural-looking, “just-got-back-from-the-beach” type of glow.
Q: What are you currently reading?
Right now I’m reading White Noise by Don DeLillo and The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield. Next up is The Tenth Insight, also by James Redfield.
Q: What are some top places on your travel wish list?
The top places right now are London, Paris, Brisbane, and Sydney. I’ll hopefully visit all of these places soon!
Q: What would be your advice to aspiring writers?
My advice to aspiring writers is the advice I discovered in a post on Write It Sideways that helped me forge ahead with Rock Star’s Girl. The advice was simple: don’t edit as you write. When I began writing Rock Star’s Girl, I was in the habit of going back over every sentence I’d written and editing it, then editing it again. When I stopped doing that and left it for the many revisions to come, it was amazing how quickly the rest of the novel came to life.
The second piece of advice I have is to write something every day. It doesn’t have to be something for your current writing project, but the very act of just sitting down and writing for even five or ten minutes every day can move mountains. Once you get your mind used to switching over to writing mode by writing every day, writer’s block really does become a thing of the past.

CLP for Breast Cancer Awareness

A few weeks ago, I posted an article outlining a few ideas I had for October- which is Breast Cancer Awareness month. I had some great feedback from that original article, so I am going to move forward with my plans. Big thanks to everyone who emailed me with their ideas and support!
First, I have posted a donate button on Chick Lit Plus through PayPal. I will be taking donations all throughout October that will go towards the Susan G. Komen organization. Second, I will personally be donating $1 for every review that is posted during the month of October for the Chick Lit Reading Challenge. And third, I am going to be running a month long contest that will feature your stories. I am looking for submissions that talk about your experiences with breast cancer. This is pretty open topic that can range from if you had breast cancer, a family member or a friend had cancer, what you do to support and find a cause, how you raise awareness, etc. This will be based on how many submissions I get, but I would like to choose a winning story each week. That story will be published on Chick Lit Plus, the weekly winners will be able to choose a book from my personal bookshelf that I will send to them, and each winner will be entered into a drawing for a $50 Amazon gift card. At the end of the month, I will write an article that will feature snippets from each story that was submitted.
So that is my plan for October! Please help spread the word about the submissions to your friends, families, and followers. I’m hoping we can get some inspiring stories that come in and I’m looking forward to October and doing my part. I will be posting a Call for Submissions post shortly with more information on the articles. Thanks again to everyone who gave their ideas and feedbacks!

Amazon Kindle and Customer Service

When eReaders first came out, I was skeptical. When eReaders started to become popular, I was still skeptical. What was this little device that was trying to take over my lovely paperbacks? I didn’t want one. But with CLP gaining speed and more and more review requests coming in, I knew I would have to take the plunge. More authors are publishing eBooks, and some are publishing eBooks only. I knew I couldn’t continue to be stuck at my computer reading off the screen, or wasting trees by printing out the book. So I caved.
Well, technically, my mom caved. She is the one who bought me my Amazon Kindle for Christmas. When I first got this lightweight little…thing…in the mail, I’ll admit- I wasn’t sold yet. Turning it on, letting it power up, having to read the directions and log on to Amazon to create my account…these aren’t things you have to do with reading a book. You just open it. So far, I wasn’t getting along with my Kindle.
But then, things changed. After the initial set-up process, I understood why people are raving for these eReaders. Fast downloads, easy to read print, I can read my Kindle anywhere, I can stick it in my purse when I go to work. I was falling in love! Do I want my Kindle to replace my paperbacks completely? Never. There’s something about a great book with a beautiful cover to hold in your hands that is just not replaceable. But I now am a fan of my Kindle, and urge other readers (especially book bloggers) to own one.
Another reason I am so impressed with my Kindle is because of Amazon in general. I started using Amazon a few years ago, buying and selling on the popular website, then became an affiliate when I started CLP. When it was time for me to buy an eReader, the Kindle is what stood out to me. I had no troubles until about seven months into owning it. One night, it just wouldn’t work. The screen was frozen, none of the buttons would work, trying to reset it wasn’t working, zilch. I remember panicking, because I had eBooks on there that needed to be read and reviewed for deadlines. I called Amazon, and a helpful woman walked me through the steps of resetting it, tried to have me charge it fully then reset it, and when all of the above failed, told me she would send me a new Kindle ASAP. No charge, no fees, nothing. Two days later, my brand new Kindle arrived. I deposited my broken one into the box and shipped it off- again with no charge. My new Kindle works beautiful, all my files transferred over without a problem, and I am one happy Amazon eReading customer.

In My Mailbox: Week of September 25

In My Mailbox: Week of September 25

Title: Recession Proof
Author: Kimberly Lin
Received: From Kimberly Lin via CLP Blog Tours
Synopsis: Sometimes going after what you want is the hardest thing you will ever do… Meet Helen. Smart, successful and obliviously trapped. For the past six years, Helen has given her life and her heart to her cushy corporate finance job and to Mark without question. However as the Recession sweeps the Nation, she is one of many left unemployed and with the burning question of what does she really want in life. RECESSION PROOF is a debut novel for anyone that has settled in their career and relationship but has discovered that what really matters in life is living it…

Title: Fat Girls and Fairy Cakes
Author: Sue Watson
Received: From Sue Watson
Synopsis: TV Producer Stella Weston is over worked, over weight and under fire. Having battled uphill for years to balance her career with her family life, she is repaid by being put out to pasture on a religious gardening programme complete with a nervous vicar, his nymphomaniac wife, and 22 stone Britney wannabe gardener, Gerald. Miles away from her husband and daughter she somehow turns the show into a comedic triumph, only to once more fall foul of her evil and twisted boss, stick thin MJ. Stella decides enough is enough but soon finding herself husbandless and penniless, she realises discovering the courage to quit is sometimes the easy part. Desperate, Stella throws herself into her one true love, cakes, and asks the question: can you really turn a passion into a profession? What follows is a series of comical disasters, hilarious holidays, failed dates, super cakes, accidents, injuries and near death experiences. Full of spirit, heart and girl power, this is a high quality chick lit novel that will have readers everywhere laughing, crying, and reaching for the mixing bowl.

Title: Nothing But Trouble
Author: Rachel Gibson
Received: From Transworld Publishers
Synopsis: Trouble . . .
Chelsea Ross’s acting career has been a total bust. The closest she ever came to stardom was her brilliant performance as “Pretty Dead Girl #1.” But leaving Hollywood to become the personal assistant to a famous hockey player could be her stupidest career move ever.
More trouble . . .
Injured superstar Mark Bressler’s glory days are over. The bad-boy ex-jock could at least be civil to the pint-sized, pink-haired bombshell who the Seattle Chinooks hired to be his P.A. If Chelsea didn’t need the money, she’d be running from the world’s biggest jerk as fast as her feet could carry her.
Big trouble!
Chelsea can deal with Mark’s rotten attitude and dark moods. The problem is those biceps and that red-hot bod! And when the bad boy starts to put the moves on her, Chelsea knows it’s time she banished him to the penalty box . . . if only she could resist the kind of trouble he has in mind!

Interview with Shannon Hart

Q: Why did you decide to start writing?
A: I’ve always loved writing. I used to write short stories for my High School paper and stuff, and I used to write just for my friends to read. One of my close friends encouraged me to write an entire book but I never thought I could do it. Then, after that, I had one too many excuses: marriage, work, having kids – and one day, I had trouble sleeping and started to write some things just to kill time but then it got so exciting. It was like this adrenaline rush and I just couldn’t stop.

Q: Who are some of the authors or novels that inspired you when you were younger?
A: I am a huge Meg Cabot fan and I started reading Danielle Steel when I was quite young too. When I was really young I was hooked on Beverly Cleary’s Ramona books.

Q: Your first novel, Until the End of Forever, features a heroine who seems to be uneasy with her completely perfect life. How did you create your main character and her troubles?
A: I’ve met a lot of people in my life – they have come from various backgrounds, education, and were at different stages. No matter how rich, how popular, how successful, how beautiful they were, they all had something in common: there was always a point in their life when they felt discontent. They got bored of doing the same routine day in and day out, even their marriages didn’t seem exciting anymore and they wanted a temporary getaway. These things become lunch topics when I meet with these people and I just figured that a lot of people could really relate to it.

Q: What was your biggest obstacle when writing this novel?
A: Having a full time job! Everytime I would get an inspiration for a chapter, I’d be at the office in the middle of a meeting or something and by the time I got home to my computer, I already forgot half the things I wanted to write.

Q: Are you currently working on a second novel?
A: I actually already finished my second novel and I am so excited about it.

Q: I read that you lived in Melbourne, Australia for some time. How long did you live there and what are some experiences you will never forget?
A: I was there for about 4 years, studying marketing and business administration. Living there on my own, far from my parents and family was not easy at first, but it turne doubt to be the most valuable experience in my life. I learned how to be independent and this was also the time I found myself to be most creative. I was a part of drama clubs and choirs and just felt like I really matured while I was there.

Q: What are you currently reading?
A: Last Night at Chateau Marmont by Lauren Weisberger

Q: What are the top three stores you could max your credit cards out?
A: Chanel, Miu Miu and just about any denim store. I’m a real denim freak.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?
A: To be honest, I just love traveling period. So anywhere I go, as long as I get to spend it with my family, I’m good.

Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers?
A: This is hard – I’m still aspiring too! But here is my two cents worth: there is no dream too big to chase, so if it’s your life long dream to be a writer, the go sit down and just write. Just sitting down and actually writing a whole novel, and being happy with what you’ve written is already half the battle.

Guest Post from Becky Due

Becoming a Writer

I wrote, but I wasn’t serious about writing until the summer of 1995 when I sold my car, quit my job, and jumped on a greyhound bus with no idea where I was going. My life was a mess and I needed to find myself. I got off the bus to discover new places like Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, and Washington, DC, before I ended up in Moorhead City near Atlantic Beach, North Carolina. There I rented a small house (I think it may have been haunted), bought a typewriter and started writing my story, which became my first novel, The Gentlemen’s Club: A Story for All Women.

“No matter where you go, there you are,” kept ringing in my mind. I had heard the saying years earlier but it didn’t make sense until I was alone, sitting in that house, looking for the answers that were hidden deeply inside of me. While writing my book I got honest with myself, and wanted to face my problems the way Angie, my main character, was facing hers. I had to stop running, get strong and stand up for my life. So with the first draft of the manuscript in my hands, I got back on the bus and headed back to Minnesota.

Once back in Rochester, Minnesota, I returned to my old job at Dison’s Drycleaners. I rented a hotel room; I had to pay rent by the week and had to share the shower with others, but at least I had my own toilet and sink. I liked it. The place was perfect for a writer—old, rundown, lots of character and lots of characters living there; I was one of them. With my feet planted firmly on the ground, I focused on work and my writing.

My writing was giving me purpose and a deeper understanding about life. Feeling confident that I wouldn’t run from my life anymore, and being tired of paying for phone calls and eating out for most of my meals, I decided it was time to find a place to live and sign a year’s lease like normal people. I rented an apartment in an old building—another great writing place. I lived above a variety of always failing businesses—furniture store, hobby shop, record store—and the people in the store below controlled the thermostat for my apartment. When the store was empty, I had no heat. So during the winter, I’d pull a folding chair in front of the open oven door, sit down and write for hours.

Around that time, my mother was cleaning closets in her house and wanted to get rid of a lot of old school art projects, report cards and other keepsakes from my younger years. She packaged it all up and mailed it to me. As I sifted through the box, throwing most of it away, I came across an old test comparing students in the same class throughout the state. As I looked down the column of my x’s, it was clear I was average in everything. But I noticed one x that was further to the right, meaning above average. I curiously followed the x to see what it represented—written expression. I started crying and knew this was a sign that I was on the right path.

Never having had a father, I was taken in by a man who owned a small publishing company. Ray offered to help me but refused to publish my books, claiming I needed a bigger publisher. I took the bus or walked to his place almost every day after work all year long. I didn’t have a car, a warm coat or winter boots, but I’d trudge my way through the Minnesota seasons to his place to use his computer and to get his guidance. Ray disciplined me, motivated me, inspired me and encouraged me to be great, just the way I envisioned a real father would.

At night I’d leave his place and walk two blocks to catch the bus back to my cold apartment. If I was early, I’d step inside the gas station and grab a vanilla coffee from the machine before getting on the bus. Then high on caffeine, I’d write into the early morning hours.

I was writing constantly but publishing nothing, so Ray helped me send out about fifty query letters. Eight agents were interested in The Gentlemen’s Club until they read the manuscript. I was told that the story was good, but the manuscript needed some work. I couldn’t afford a professional editor, so my written books were put on hold and I continued writing.

In spite of this, my many rejection letters gave me a sense of accomplishment—at least I had tried. Every small step I took in my writing career was a step in the right direction, and one step closer to achieving my goals. So for two years, I lived a disciplined life of work, writing and living below my means. I went back to school and I started volunteering with Victim Services. I wanted to do better, and I wanted to be better.

When the hard work paid off and I had money in savings, I started looking for an editor and investigated independent publishing, which is basically starting your own publishing company. You put up all the money, do all the marketing, promotion, etc., and hope your book sells. The idea was exciting: Instead of going back through the long route of looking for an agent to look for a publisher, I started Due Publications, found amazing people to help me and the rest is history. I published The Gentlemen’s Club, Blue the Bird On Flying, Touchable Love, Returning Injury, The Dumpster and I’m working on my sixth book, and all of my books have either won or been finalists in several national independent competitions. I’ve made many mistakes; I’m still making them, but I love my career.

My Escape: Reading

Everyone needs an escape. A break from a reality, or in some cases, a reality check. We all have different places we can go to escape. Celebrities take exotic getaways after they wrap a blockbuster movie. Newlyweds run to tropical paradise after the stress of a wedding. Some choose the spa as a way to escape, to block out all the stresses and responsibilities the day demands of them and give in to relaxation and pampering. Others simply choose to turn on the Xbox, and get lost playing out a fantasy baseball game where they are the star. I choose a different way of escaping. While I would love to hop on my private jet, take off to Italy or the Caribbean, or drop half my paycheck at the spa, that just won’t work in my scenario. Instead, I turn to fiction.

I have had a fascination with books since I was a young girl. I used to take on the identities of the characters I was reading, because I was so sure I really was them. I used to think I was destined to be an actress, because I loved transforming myself into a different person, placing myself in a different scenario and being someone other than who I really was. As I’ve grown older, I realized that was my escape route as a young girl. Growing up in a broken home, suffering from abuse from one too many people in my life, my books and the characters helped me escape the pain, and the harsh reality I was living. I loved opening a Baby-Sitters Club book, or once I grew out of those, a Sweet Valley High book, and learn how the characters battled through. I learned some life lessons from my reading. I’ll never forget the look on my mom’s face when I pointed out to her in one particular novel that the Easter Bunny was indeed not real. But on a more serious note, I learned about how to handle divorced families, eating disorders, messy break-ups, and deaths of loved ones.

Now in my twenties, I still use that same escape route. I never did move to Hollywood to try my hand at acting. Instead I went on to business school, got an education and a real-world job, and started living a new reality. One where I hoped to start over, to forget things in my past that brought on too much pain. But my love of reading never went away. Almost two years ago, I decided to take my passion to the internet, and started my own book blog. I never expected my blog to take off so fast, and how in love with it I would be. Or how many hours I would need to dedicate to it! Reading started to consume my life as requests from authors, publishers, and agents came pouring in. But I love what I do. Each time I open a new book, each time I meet and identify with a new character is thrilling to me. Because just for a little bit, I can escape. I can become that character, feel the emotions, the struggles. I can put aside my financial troubles, my family fights, and the all-consuming question of what do I want to be when I grow up. I particularly love the genre chick lit, which seems to get a lot of flack in the industry. But chick lit is what I am drawn to. These books are often humorous and light, perfect for escaping. There are times where I simply cannot handle reading a deep emotional book. Where I can’t handle reading about characters whose journeys resemble my own. I need to get away from that, away from the thoughts in my head. And what better way to do that than a fun, and more importantly, funny, good book?

I am twenty-four, but I still couldn’t answer the question of what I want to be when I grow up. I certainly know that I am no grown up yet. I play my stereo loud, I wear too-tall stilettos, and go outside in below zero temps without a hat just so I don’t muss up my hair. But no matter how grown-up we are, how important our jobs may seem, and how time consuming our families may become, everyone will still need that escape. That break from reality, that moment of me-time. I can’t see a time where my escape route will not be a book. Maybe it won’t always be the genre I am drawn to now, chick lit. But I am sure I will find another genre to enjoy, more authors who become must-reads for me, and more characters that I crave to change lives with- even if only for a few chapters. Because that is my greatest escape.

In My Mailbox: Week of September 18

In My Mailbox: Week of September 18

Title: High Heels and Slippers
Author: Ella Slayne
Received: From Ella Slayne via CLP Blog Tours
Synopsis: Meet Josie Jenkins, a Brit living in Texas, fan of indulgent body-scrubs and the odd glass of wine. She’s currently Customer Service Manager at Harpers & Green Co, home of high-end shirts and also, rather unhelpfully, Bob Green: her ex-boyfriend (who also happens to be married). She is thousands of miles away from home and her job appears to be in jeopardy – safe to say, Josie’s going through a wobbly patch. So when the rather handsome Callum Doherty, (just picture blue eyes and Irish good looks) begins flirting with Josie, she is thrilled…until she realizes she’s not the only girl at work with her eye on the office heart-throb. How can she compete against her pert-bottomed rival from the accounts department? Josie’s love-life takes another complicated and unexpected turn when out of the blue Josie receives a mysterious Facebook friend request from her high-school sweetheart, Tom Barker. Tom is keeping something from her, drawing her in and causing her to question if it’s time to reconnect the past with the present. It’s time for some soul searching. Will Josie take the emotional trip back to the UK or try her luck with the handsome Mr. Doherty? Is there heartbreak ahead in Josie’s future?

Title: Three Daves
Author: Nicki Elson
Received: From Nicki Elson
Synopsis: Jennifer Whitney was the last American virgin. At least that s what she felt like in 1986 as she began her sophomore year at Central Illinois University. She was proud of her decision to wait for the right guy, and yet she was getting restless. It seemed like everyone around her was doing it… and having fun doing it, too. She didn t want to become the campus slut or anything, but surely there was a difference between a trashy skank and a nice girl with a little experience. Perhaps it was time to stop relying on fate to guide her and instead take matters into her own hands. And with that realization, Jen decided to find the one and lose her virginity, although not necessarily in that order…
Nicki Elson has created a heroine that everyone will cheer for as she comes of age in the mid-1980s. Whether you lived through the decade and survived the bad hair and acid-wash jeans, or just heard the wild stories, readers of all ages will identify with Jen Whitney as she searches for the one, enjoying her romantic ups and downs, made even more entertaining by Nicki Elson s amusingly wry sense of humor.

Title: The Kingdom of Childhood
Author: Rebecca Coleman
Received: From Meryl L Moss Media Relations
Synopsis: THE KINGDOM OF CHILDHOOD is the story of a boy and a woman: sixteen-year-old Zach Patterson, uprooted and struggling to reconcile his knowledge of his mother’s extramarital affair, and Judy McFarland, a kindergarten teacher watching her family unravel before her eyes. Thrown together to organize a fundraiser for their failing private school and bonded by loneliness, they begin an affair that at first thrills, then corrupts, each of them. Judy sees in Zach the elements of a young man she loved when she was only a child. But what Zach does not realize is that– for Judy– their relationship is only the latest in a lifetime of disturbing secrets.

Debut Authors and Titles- October 2011

Debut Author and Titles- October 2011

Title: Miracle on Regent Street
Author: Ali Harris
Available: October 13
Synopsis: Dreams can come true – it could happen to you…For the past two years, Evie Taylor has lived an invisible existence in London, a city she hoped would bring sparkle to her life. But all that is about to change. For winter has brought a flurry of snow and unexpected possibilities. Hidden away in the basement of Hardy’s – once London’s most elegant department store – Evie manages the stockroom of a shop whose glory days have long since passed. When Evie overhears that Hardy’s is at risk of being sold, she secretly hatches a plan. If she can reverse the store’s fortunes by December 26th – three weeks away – and transform it into a magical destination once again, she might just be able to save it. But she’s going to need every ounce of talent and determination she has. In fact, she’s going to need a miracle.

Title: The Camera Never Lies
Author: Tess Daly
Available: October 13
Synopsis: Britt Baxter is unaware of the effect she has on people. A big-hearted, no-nonsense northern girl, she naturally looks for the best in everyone she meets, but in her attempts to make it as model she finds she struggles against being pinned down on the casting couch by the most unlikely people…
So when a happy accident lands her a career as a presenter on breakfast television, it looks as if she has made it out of the modelling world of close-ups and cattle calls and into the big time – or at least daytime TV.
But scarcely has Britt had time to wonder at how far she has come, when backstage machinations propel her with ever increasing speed through a series of trapdoors and she soon realises that the drama backstage far eclipses anything that happens in front of the camera.
Tess Daly has written a fast-paced novel with perfect comic timing and as many twists and turns in the plot as her heroine has costume changes. With language that fizzes on the page, enough romance to make the Sex and the City girls blush and a cast of characters that includes American-smoothie heartthrob Hollywood reporter Josh Bailey, Rise and Shine’s co-hosts Cherry Smith – known for her tinkling laugh and penchant for toyboys – and lecherous family man Ken Chudleigh who always has a hand in the cake tin. The Camera Never Lies is both hilarious and hair-raising, a glamorous and revealing tale of love behind the scenes from the popular Strictly Come Dancing presenter.

Title: The Night Before Christmas
Author: Scarlett Bailey
Available: October 27
Synopsis: All Lydia’s ever wanted is a perfect Christmas…
So when her oldest friends invite her to spend the holidays with them, it seems like a dream come true. She’s been promised log fires, roasted chestnuts, her own weight in mince pies – all in a setting that looks like something out of a Christmas card.
But her winter wonderland is ruined when she finds herself snowed in with her current boyfriend, her old flame and a hunky stranger. Well, three (wise) men is traditional at this time of year…