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Author Profile: Mary McNamara

Author Name: Mary McNamara

Website: http://www.regal-literary.com/client_sites/marymcnamara/index.html
Bio: Mary was born in the suburbs of Baltimore, but spent most of her childhood growing up in the rural town of Westminster. Knowing she always wanted to write, Mary attended the University of Missouri, majoring in journalism with a minor in women’s studies. She worked for Ms. Magazine for a few years before moving to Knoxville, Tennessee and working for a communications company, then moved to Los Angeles to write for the LA Times.
Currently: Mary currently works as a television critic for the LA Times, along with working on her fiction novels.
Titles: Oscar Season and The Starlet.

Interview with Jenny Nelson

Q: Why do you love writing?

I love creating characters and worlds that don’t exist in my real life. Writing allows me to explore and develop someone else’s motivation, emotions, moods, hang ups, quirks – there’s something almost voyeuristic about peeking into a character’s life and then deciding what she’ll do, how she’ll act, what she’ll find funny, sad, frightening. It’s also liberating to turn off my own hang ups and quirks, if only briefly; to get outside of myself and my own life for the time that I’m building someone else’s.

And those aha moments – many of which happen when I’m running – when you figure out a critical plot or character development are just incredible. For those few seconds, I feel like I hold the keys to the universe. Then I get home, sweaty and sticky from my run, and try to translate the moment to the page and sometimes it works and sometimes, well, not so much. But the times that it does sustain me through the (many more) times that it doesn’t!

Q: Your debut novel, Georgia’s Kitchen, is about a talented chef that escapes to Italy brokenhearted. Where did the inspiration for the plot and characters come from?

I’m a restaurant junkie. Or at least I was pre-kids, when I lived in Manhattan full-time. Having logged serious hours in all sorts of New York restaurants, I knew there was a story brewing back in those steamy, cramped kitchens that were off limits to us mere civilians. As my ideas about Georgia began to crystallize, I realized she had to be a chef and a head chef at that, but one who’s arrived at her destination after some struggle. Sending her to Italy made sense because it’s a foodie’s paradise and it’s also one of the most beautiful spots on earth. It was the perfect place for her to become reacquainted with her inner beliefs and her passion for cooking, and the option of throwing in a gorgeous Italian boyfriend didn’t hurt either!

Q: Since your novel revolves heavily around food, I have to wonder if you are talented in the kitchen? What is your favorite dish to make?

I’m not sure talent has anything to do with it, but I do like to cook. I love to read recipes and certain combos stick in my head, which makes it easy to improvise. I also have fairly simple taste and am all about letting fresh ingredients speak for themselves. I’m not a big meat eater and most of my dishes are vegetarian or fish. My favorite dish to make – and eat – is risotto. My husband swears my shrimp and asparagus risotto is the best he’s ever had!

Q: How important do you think writing classes or writing workshops are for aspiring writers?

I love writing classes! I think they’re terrific for connecting with other writers, for learning craft, for imposing deadlines. I’ve learned so much from every class I’ve ever taken. For any aspiring writers out there, find yourself a class at an extension university, a library, a community center, your local coffee shop, anywhere. You will not regret it, I promise!

Q: How long did it take you to find an agent?

A month or so. I’m not sure I’d recommend going this route, but I decided to send out lots and lots of query letters without waiting to hear back. For a while my inbox was very, very quiet and then I started getting tons of responses. In the end, I had to choose between several agents.

Q: Are you working on another novel?

Yes! In a nutshell, it’s about a thirtysomething woman who trades in her cosmopolitan city life for country living on a goat farm. Like Georgia’s Kitchen, it’s got a food motif running through it and it explores themes of love and family and renewal.

Q: How were you able to land editing jobs at Vogue.com and Style.com?

I’d been working at iVillage.com for several years so I had solid web editing and producing experience. A friend who worked at Conde Nast told me about an opening at Vogue.com, and I interviewed and got the job fairly quickly. A year or so later, Vogue.com grew into the much larger Style.com and I grew along with it.

Q: What is the best part about having twin daughters?

There are many amazing things about having twin daughters, but my favorite is how they interact with each other. They’re terrific pals and, as they’ll tell you, know each other better than anyone else. Though they’re similar in many respects, they have their own distinct personalities and it’s been fascinating watching them grow into the wonderful little people they are. Fortunately, they’re both happy, enthusiastic kids who love to laugh and love to learn. I feel so lucky to have them.

Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers?

Write! Sit down at your computer and start getting down words. The greatest impediment to writing is not writing. And don’t think you need a huge chunk of time, either. If all you have is 30 minutes, grab it! You’ll be amazed at what you can crank out in half an hour when you really put your mind to it!

Q: Italy is number 1 on my list of places to visit. What are some of the must see sites you would recommend?

Oh, boy. The list is large. I’d start with Florence, because it’s my favorite city in all of Italy. The Ponte Vecchio, of course, because you’ve likely seen many photos of it and seeing it in real life is amazing, the Uffizi is an incredible museum and I also love the Pitti Palace, which offers sheer opulence on a grand scale. After, stroll through the Boboli Gardens, where I always imagine the aristocratic Medici family doing the same. Santa Maria Novella is a must for amazing beauty products based on ancient recipes, and the shop itself is gorgeous. They’re famous for their almond hand cream, but my husband loves their shaving cream and nothing beats their calendula cream for dry, sensitive skin. Moving on, I’d go to Rome where the Vatican never fails to impress, the Spanish Steps are a nice spot to take a rest, and the Piazza Navona offers great people watching. Trastevere is a really fun area to walk around. Walking is my favorite thing to do in Rome, in all of Italy, really, so bring good sneaks! And don’t forget the Colesseum, where you can imagine man versus lion duking it out. Venice is so mind-blowingly beautiful and romantic you’ve got to get there too, and though lots of tourists seem to skip Milan, I had a great trip there. The Museo Poldi Pezzoli is a wonderful house museum that allows you a glimpse into the life of a 19th-century aristocratic Milanese family, and Leonardo Da Vinci’s The Last Supper really is magnificent. If you’re tempted to go further afield, check out Sicily (Agrigento and Notto are incredible), Ravello and the Emiglia Romana region, home to some of the best food in the country.

GIVEAWAY:Muffins & Mayhem by Suzanne Beecher

“While it’s well known that food and stories make for a great combination, Muffins & Mayhem takes their relationship to a whole new level. Brimming over with the stuff of life, this is a book to curl up with and devour.” JOEL BEN IZZY, storyteller and author of The Beggar King and The Secret of Happiness. Suzanne Beecher’s happy, loving voice has brought more than 350,000 people to her online book club at DearReader.com, where her daily column offers her candid, thought-provoking reflections on life, inspiring countless readers to look at their “ordinary” lives in a new way. By turns funny and poignant, Suzanne is the reassuring friend across the kitchen table with a refreshing, jaunty attitude about life, even in the face of whatever difficulties it may bring. Suzanne has had her own share of troubles to overcome. Left home alone at an early age, she struggled with difficult and distant parents, dealt with heartbreak, became a hard-working single mom, and overcame two substance addictions and a physical impairment. But along the way, she found comfort in baking and sharing food with her friends and family. She learned to take the good with the bad, and her life is now inspiring proof that faith and persistence are the keys to success. This beautifully written celebration of food, friends, and family will nourish Suzanne’s numerous fans and those who have yet to discover her simple, homespun magic.

I have one copy to giveaway of Muffins and Mayhem by Suzanne Beecher. Please comment on this post (include your email address), RT on Twitter, or comment on Facebook to be entered. The winner will be announced Thursday, August 5th.
Click here to see my review of Muffins and Mayhem!

My Strawberry Banana Smoothie Recipe

I recently posted an article on McDonald’s new fruit smoothies, and after checking out their nutritional information, decided that making my own would be the healthiest choice. So I got myself a blender, bought some fruit, and searched for a healthy recipe online. Putting in the words ‘strawberry banana smoothie’ got me pages and pages of link and ideas. And while I of course couldn’t read through them all, I got ideas and suggestions from many of the sites to put my own spin on my smoothie. Here is the recipe I came up with, and that I have been drinking faithfully for the past few days.
6 large strawberries
1 banana (any size)
1 cup low-fat yogurt (I used plain yogurt)
1 cup orange juice
1 tbsp sugar

I blended all the ingredients on low until they were well mixed, then added in two handfuls of ice and used the ice crush mode on my blender. This recipe made me four glasses, and taste yummy. I love the fact that I am using real fruits to make this, instead of a sugared up pureed blend as opposed to McDonalds. I have seen that people use different types of yogurt, strawberry was a popular one, so I might try out some of those in the future. Hope you enjoy!

In My Mailbox: Week of July 25th

In My Mailbox: Week of July 25, 2010

Title: Dating Mr. December
Author: Phillipa Ashley
Received: Danielle Jackson @ Sourcebooks
Synopsis: Emma Tremayne leaves her high-powered PR job and moves to the Lake District looking for peace, quiet-and celibacy. So perhaps it’s not the best idea when, in the spirit of “community-mindedness,” she agrees to help the local mountain rescue team fund raise by putting together a “tasteful” nude calendar. Especially since quite a lot of the community seems to mind what she’s up to-including the tall, dark and handsome Mr. December, Will Tennant, who appears to have gotten the wrong impression about Emma’s intentions. So how does she convince him that he’s more than just the flavor of the month?

Title: A Desirable Residence
Author: Madeleine Wickham
Received: From Sallie Madden @ St. Martin’s Press for review and giveaway
Synopsis: The asking price for this house includes a stunning renovation of hearts and dreams….Liz and Jonathan Chambers were stuck with two mortgages, mounting debts, and a miserable adolescent daughter. Then realtor Marcus Witherstone came into their lives—and it seemed he would solve all their problems. He knew the perfect tenants from London who would rent their old house: a glamorous PR girl, Ginny, and her almost-famous husband, Piers.
But soon Liz is lost in blissful dreams of Marcus, Jonathan is left to run their business, and neither of them has time to notice that their teenage daughter is developing an unhealthy passion for the tenants, Piers and Ginny. Everyone is tangled up with everyone else, and in the most awkward possible way. As events close in, they all begin to realize that some deceptions are just a bit too close to home.
Title: Fragile
Author: Lisa Unger
Received: From Amanda Parker @ BookSparks PR
Synopsis: Everybody knows everybody in The Hollows, a quaint, charming town outside of New York City. It’s a place where neighbors keep an eye on one another’s kids, where people say hello in the grocery store, and where high school cliques and antics are never quite forgotten. As a child, Maggie found living under the microscope of small-town life stifling. But as a wife and mother, she has happily returned to The Hollows’s insular embrace. As a psychologist, her knowledge of family histories provides powerful insights into her patients’ lives. So when the girlfriend of her teenage son, Rick, disappears, Maggie’s intuitive gift proves useful to the case—and also dangerous. Eerie parallels soon emerge between Charlene’s disappearance and the abduction of another local girl that shook the community years ago when Maggie was a teenager. The investigation has her husband, Jones, the lead detective on the case, acting strangely. Rick, already a brooding teenager, becomes even more withdrawn. In a town where the past is always present, nobody is above suspicion, not even a son in the eyes of his father. “I know how a moment can spiral out of control,” Jones says to a shocked Maggie as he searches Rick’s room for incriminating evidence. “How the consequences of one careless action can cost you everything.” As she tries to reassure him that Rick embodies his father in all of the important ways, Maggie realizes this might be exactly what Jones fears most. Determined to uncover the truth, Maggie pursues her own leads into Charlene’s disappearance and exposes a long-buried town secret—one that could destroy everything she holds dear. This thrilling novel about one community’s intricate yet fragile bonds will leave readers asking, How well do I know the people I love? and How far would I go to protect them?

Title: Waxed
Author: Robert Rave
Received: From Matt Walker @ Period Media
Synopsis: 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. . . .

Title: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Her Brother’s Shotgun Wedding
Author: Noreen Riley
Received: From Noreen Riley
Synopsis: “A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To Her Brother’s Shotgun Wedding” is the story of Evelyn Dunleavy, her close knit circle of family and city-dwelling friends, and the chaos that ensues when her oldest sibling, Michael, announces that he is getting married. In London, where he now lives, to the girlfriend no one really knows. And by the way…she’s pregnant. The rest of the story follows Evie over to London for a few months as the official family delegate charged with getting to know her soon to be sister-in-law. It certainly doesn’t hurt that because of his cramped living quarters her brother has lined up a room for her in the apartment of one of his groomsmen, Nate, that Evie feels an instant attraction to…despite his love of the music group ABBA, or the fact that he chooses curries over pizza. It doesn’t help that Michael still considers his sister to be off-limits from the advances of his friends. She comes to the quick conclusion that wedding planning can be stressful no matter which side of the Pond you hail from, and it’s always more fun to have your best friends around you for a bachelorette party, especially when the bride-to-be is seven months pregnant.

Title: Life, Love, and a Polar Bear Tattoo
Author: Heather Wardell
Received: From Heather Wardell
Synopsis: When Candice’s in-laws died in a car accident eight months ago, she lost her husband Ian too. After only two years of marriage their guilt and pain have left them living together but apart. During Ian’s month-long trip overseas, Candice plans to decide if her marriage can be saved, but when the first man she ever loved is the new client at work, she wonders what she truly wants from life and love.

Author Profile: Robert Rave

Getting his start as a New York publicist working at one of the city’s most renowned firms, Robert Rave takes his behind-the-scenes view of the world of high-society and celebrity elite to set the stage for his light-hearted, witty literary adventures.

In his first novel, Spin, Rave chronicled the life of Taylor Green – a young corn fed publicist trying to make a name for himself in the cut-throat world of high-stakes PR. As Taylor finds himself in increasingly bizarre yet hilarious situations for the sake of his job, he is forced to weigh the fame and fortune he seeks against his own character and moral code. Dubbed “a Devil Wear’s Prada for straight guys” by Entertainment Weekly, Spin was acclaimed by critics as a must-have summer beach read, and established Rave as one-to-watch on the “chick-lit” scene.

On August 3rd Rave will release Waxed, an equally titillating novel which follows the Impresario sisters who run New York’s hottest waxing salon. Against the backdrop of this sexy yet taboo vocation, Rave tells a textured story of the three women as they struggle with relationships and strive for personal fulfillment. With equal parts wit, wisdom and humor, Rave layers in charming cameos by the many women (and men) who visit the salon, to deliver a thoroughly enjoyable read. Rave also launched www.youvebeenwaxed.com, a companion website to the novel. The site serves as a meeting place for women and men to share their often funny, and sometimes painful anecdotes of personal grooming.

Rave, recently named a Forty Under Forty by The Advocate, is also a regular contributor to the The Huffington Post. Rave currently resides in Los Angeles with his two French Bulldogs, Stanley and Freddy.

Skin Cancer Annual Checks

I went to the dermatologist today to get my first full body check. I have frequented tanning beds in the past, and do occasionally go outside without slathering on the SPF, and read in my Shape magazine that annual derm checks are a smart idea. I had also found a spot under my right eyelid that was causing me concern. Again while reading Shape, I came across a story a young woman had wrote in about her experience with skin cancer. She had a found a spot on her eyelid that looked like a pimple, but couldn’t pop it and it never went away. Months later when she finally had it checked out, it ended up being skin cancer. The spot under my eyelid looks like a pimple but I can’t pop it, and has been there for about six months now. After reading that article, I called my dermatologist the very next to schedule my appointment.
The first thing my doctor did was check out that spot. Luckily, I had good news- no skin cancer. He said it was simply a small cyst that could come from a clogged pore. Popped it with a needle, and it was done. Relief. Next came the full body check. I wasn’t even really sure what this was, or what I was going to have to do, but it was really simple. The nurse gave me a gown that I put on, and the doctor checked out my whole body- my feet, scalp, armpits, etc. He asked if I had any moles or freckles that I had noticed that were changing, to which I answered no. I actually don’t have a whole lot of moles or freckles, probably only five that I can see on my body, so I really wasn’t too worried about the check. But, with the UV tanning I have done in the past, I would much rather be safe than sorry. The body check took less than three minutes and the doc gave me the all clear. Good for another year, unless I should notice any spots changing. It’s important for everyone to keep tabs on their skin, that way you can tell if a mole is changing in size or color. Thanks to Shape for consistently bringing up the topic of skin cancer and the importance of getting body checks!

Sip or Skip: McDonalds Fruit Smoothies

I was pressed for time this morning, rushing to get off to a doctor’s appointment after letting myself sleep in for a few minutes, so I wasn’t able to make myself a nice blended drink at home like I had anticipated the night before. When I left my doctors office, the first place I saw was, of course, McDonalds. They are everywhere. I had recently seen their commercials for their new fruit smoothies, and I thought that would be perfect for breakfast. So I swung through and grabbed a small, 12 oz. cup for $2.79 of the strawberry/banana smoothie. My first impression on the taste: YUM! I thought it was delicious, so good in fact I had to immediately check out if this drink truly was healthy. My taste buds enjoy foods that are not good for me: junk food, fast food, etc. so I thought there could be no way I was actually drinking something healthy. Turns out, I was sort of right. The McDonalds fruit smoothies are not quite as healthy as the ones I can make for myself at home, mainly because of the sugar content. The smoothie consists of a banana/strawberry puree blend, low-fat yogurt, and ice. Both the fruit blend and yogurt contain sugar, 44 grams total. The total calories for the drink were 210, but you do get about 70% of your daily value of Vitamin C from the drink. So it may be better to stick with the real fruit smoothies I make home, with my fresh strawberries, banana, and yogurt, without all that added sugar to it. The McDonalds version could be a good choice on some occasions, but probably best to stick to my at home blend!

Author Profile: Susan McBride

http://susanmcbride.com/index.shtml