Latest Youtube Videos

India’s Summer by Therese

I received a copy of India’s Summer in exchange for an honest review. I was fairly curious about this book, mainly for two reasons – one, the author only goes by one name, and two, a slew of celebrities were endorsing it. I was also interested in trying to get a better feel for Therese, as her bio only said she is best friends with people with connections, so put this all together and I wanted to read the book! The MC is India Butler, who lives in London but takes a trip to the US to visit her twin sister, Annie. While a teacher in London, India is soon rubbing elbows with some of LA’s elite, and decides to invent a better life for herself. Soon, she gets wrapped up in her own hype – only to have the fall from grace hurt that much worse. Shuffling home to London with her tail between her legs, India still can’t quite believe the unforgettable summer she had in LA – and she wonders if she had finally found the place where she truly belonged.
I found myself interested in the novel throughout. It got a bit wordy in a few places, but I liked the story and thought the plot was a lot of fun. It was definitely a different perspective than books usually give on Hollywood and the people that fill the town – these characters were friendly, helpful, seemed to have real feelings, and many were good people. I really liked the dynamic between India and Annie especially. I think if you are interested in celebrities and that world, you would enjoy this book. Like I said – a different take than most “Hollywood” books, and I think I started to understand the author’s bio a bit more as well after reading. An enjoyable book though, and one I would recommend!
[Rating: 4]

Emmerson Grace Guest Post On Ungrateful Bliss

Ungrateful Bliss
is a fiction blog-book, recently unveiled to the reader through posts that are written by a handful of friends. This blog has been likened to a band, but instead of each person having an instrument to play, each person has a character to write.

It didn’t’ start out that way though. The Ungrateful Bliss journey/adventure began only a few weeks ago with my desire to give the main character, Odette, a voice. It was my experiment in literature to figure out how to present a sympathetic female character who but for one enormous, unforgiving flaw, is otherwise a moral person. I was curious to see what the feedback would be. I have since realized that people don’t often post comments that can only be answered by a fictional character! Even so, viewership has more than doubled this second month, which is exciting for us.

Over the first few days of posting I found that the most liberating part about writing Ungrateful Bliss is that Odette doesn’t get to just tell her story through words. Blogging gives her character the freedom to post her photographs, drawings and her poetry. This gives the reader a totally unique insight in to the character. My husband and I are currently writing a song by “one of the characters” in the blog. We have another talented musician friend lined up to make a dance remix of the song. Because of the “electronic freedom” of blogging, we wil be able to eventually, simply link the finished song to the relevant post.

A little further along into publishing Ungrateful Bliss, and after drawing, what have been described as,”quirky” iPad pictures of my characters, I realized that I could introduce each main character to the world by giving them their own voice. The best way to do this would be (like starting a band) to ask my uber-talented writer friends to contribute to Ungrateful Bliss by choosing a character to write posts for. When considering if this was the right direction for my blog, I thought about how TV shows have a team of writers. So I figured that their contribution would be a good way to add incredible dimension to the story. It was the right decision. “My” blog is now, “our” blog.

Ungrateful Bliss posts are unveiled to the reader mostly in “real time”. For example, one day Odette can write about how she thinks her little daughter might have autism, and the next day she may not mention her daughter. She may instead post raw details about the cute neighbor down the street…just like talking to a close friend on the phone. But if the posts need to be tied together to become more lucid, I can simply add links to refer to past relevant posts. Sometimes though, if an important event happens on say, a Saturday, it may take a few days of posting to describe the events of that one day. If the reader wants to start Ungrateful Bliss from the beginning, there is a “read from the beginning” tab at the top of the blog.

On July 21st, Odette’s younger sister, Astrid debuted her first post…by whispering to the reader, a dreamy secret. Look out for posts by “Chris” coming over the next few days.

Ungrateful Bliss is definitely a Chick Lit Blog. The writers even get the added bonus of posting pics and links of super-cute outfits that our characters “wore out to the club” and cool items we love, like a Darth Vadar alarm clock (something that Odette notices in a bedroom she shouldn’t be in). The creative freedom of this blog is staggering, may I say, blissfully staggering. But since Ungrateful Bliss is based on a book, it will have pre-designed and planned twists, turns, major drama, and an ending…with a cliffhanger.

-Emmerson Grace has a BA in English Literature with a minor in Creative Writing. She lives with her amazing husband and 3 beautiful children and owns her own small business. She also writes daily posts for her fiction blog, Ungrateful Bliss.

Blog Tour Sign Up: To Catch a Bad Guy by …

Janet Maple is convinced that her life could not get any worse: her stellar career at the DA’s office ended with a lay off and her boyfriend of five years told her that he wants to be just friends. When she lands a job at one of New York’s premier boutique investment firms, Janet begins to hope that her luck is finally turning for the better. Not only is she happy with her new paycheck, but things also seem to be looking up on the personal front, as the company’s handsome attorney expresses keen interest in Janet. However, her euphoria is short-lived, as Janet soon discovers alarming facts about her new employer’s business tactics. When her boss dismisses her suspicions as groundless, Janet finds herself confiding to a cute IT engineer, Dean Snider. The closer she gets to Dean, the more Janet is tempted to break her rule of not dating co-workers, but what she doesn’t realize is that everything she knows about Dean, including his occupation and even his name, is a lie.

Dennis Walker is a top-notch white collar crime investigator who will stop at nothing to put culprits away. When an opportunity for an undercover assignment at one of New York’s premier boutique broker dealers comes up, Dennis jumps at the chance, adopting a persona of geeky IT engineer, Dean Snider. While he may be an ace at his job, years of experience fail him when Dennis meets Janet Maple and finds himself torn between his professional obligations and his personal desires. Will he have to choose between his feelings and duty, or will he find a way to satisfy both?

Talking Cover with Authors and Bloggers

Thanks to Michele Gorman for dropping by CLP yesterday with a fab article on cover design! Her thoughts sparked an interest in me to get…

Play Him Again by Jeffrey Stone

Play Him Again by Jeffrey Stone takes us back to the Roaring Twenties, a time when the world is growing by leaps and bounds, yet the film industry keeps things quiet and without sound. Movie moguls say that it is too expensive and only two studios have sound equipment, and up until now, there has only been one picture with sound. But, that all changes when Matt Hudson, a movie industry bootlegger, decides that he wants to produce a talking picture. He has the will and the desire, but does he have what it really takes to get it done? Things go wrong quickly when he brings in his long time pal and regular mob gangster, Danny, who ends up mysteriously dead. Without any leads, Hudson is on the verge to find out who the killer was, but will he find himself in trouble too?

I was a little hesitant to agree to read this book when I first received the request because I thought it would be crowded with gangsters and blood and shootings. But, I was pleasantly surprised with what the story held. I loved the back story and history regarding the film industry and bootlegging and found that it added a very nice touch of appeal to the overall story. I found all of the characters very well developed and authentic and I loved the “lingo” that they all seem to use so well. I absolutely loved the narrative and all of the suspense. I read this book in a day … and that is saying a lot considering I was apprehensive about reading it in the first place.

[Rating: 4.5/5]

Michele Gorman Talks Covers

I’ll be the first to admit that I’m an indecisive glutton. In bookshops I stand paralyzed before the walls and tables of delightful tomes. When I see a tray full of cupcakes, I want one of each, please. I risk meltdowns at sample sales, my head spinning at the sight of so many lovely clothes to choose from. In short, I suffer from too-many-optionsitis.

So I’m in big trouble when it comes to designing book covers.

It was lucky for me that when Single in the City (my debut) was published, Penguin UK took care of all the details. My editor asked me for ideas, and I bombarded her with them. Then I waited and wondered and waited some more, until the day I received the cover draft from the designers. The decision was out of my hands. I could love or hate the end result, but I couldn’t influence it. Luckily I loved it.

The process was very different for Single in the City’s sequel, Misfortune Cookie. I was in the driving seat. When I thought about all the decisions I’d have to make, I really wanted to hand the keys over to a designated driver. But there were no volunteers. I was behind the wheel.

For me, publishing independently doesn’t mean doing it on my own. I surround myself with the finest professionals I can. My agent does the content edits. I use a copy editor for line-edits. So it made sense to hire a superb designer for the cover. Nellie Ryan was the genius who illustrated Single in the City’s cover, and she accepted the commission for Misfortune Cookie. Rather than terrify her with a rambling mind dump when she asked for the brief, I enlisted the help of my agent, Caroline to discuss some ideas. We knew that a few things would be critical: setting, subject and tone. This was the brief.

Setting: Hong Kong, including something iconic
Subject: A girl’s figure that reflects the story
Tone: Chick lit/women’s fiction

We gave Nellie our ideas and after several rough sketches and tweaks, this was the result. It was my idea, the Hong Kong cityscape, the table, the cookie and the thoughtful girl.

(This is Figure 1)

It ticked the boxes, and was elegant and beautiful, but a little thought niggled. Misfortune Cookie is a fun book, the kind you take on holiday or read on your commute to take your mind off the real world. It’s a fish-out-of-water adventure in high heels, with a sassy heroine, light and funny.

The cover just didn’t reflect that. So we started to change it. We pinkified it. We shaved down the mountain to highlight the title more clearly (apologies to Hong Kongers for making a molehill out of your mountain).

(This is Figure 2)

It was better, but something still bothered me. It hit me as I scanned the “Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought” list of books that sits on every book’s Amazon page. I’d forgotten the cardinal rule when selling on Amazon. Book covers have to be clear and eye-catching when very very small. And those covers are teeny. This teeny.

Looking at the books listed with Misfortune Cookie in this section, dear reader, I was struck with envy. Cover envy. Mine didn’t look like all the others. It didn’t sing, “I’m a fun book. Go on, give me a chance.” And it didn’t look anything like it’s sister, Single in the City.

{Insert SITC US cover here} {Insert SITC UK cover here}

So we went back to the drawing board.

I’d made a very common cover design mistake. The cover was too busy. It drew the eye to several parts of the illustration without highlighting any of them clearly. “Don’t be afraid of white space”, someone way cleverer than me once said. “Less is more”, my mother always admonished (usually when assessing my teenage makeup attempts, but the advice applied here too). So I started with white space, and carefully layered in setting and subject. I toyed with three design options: just the girl, girl with cityscape, or girl with cityscape and Star Ferry (an icon in Hong Kong).

I also played with fonts, hundreds of fonts, which nearly killed me (considering my affliction).

(This is Figure 3) (This is Figure 4) (This is Figure 5)

The first font looked a big wonky, and dark because of its bevelled effect. The second was a bit too magic-marker-y, and the third was too skinny, but I liked the flow of that one best. I figured I could probably fatten it up.

The boat was too domineering but I liked the idea, and I also liked the idea of including a tag line (i.e. a snappy one-liner). We just needed to figure out how to get both in there without cluttering things up. We also changed the font on my name to soften it.

(This is Figure 6)

Almost, but still not quite fun enough. So I asked for readers’ opinions, and a few suggested making the cover look more Chinese. Hand-held fans or chopsticks-in-the-hair were out, because they couldn’t be seen clearly in the little thumbnail image. So I tried this.

(This is Figure 7)

And by George, I think we finally got it! I loved the sweep of the tag line that draws your eye in, and the umbrella that caps the figure, making it work really well in the foreground. The cityscape is light enough not to clutter up the middle of the page, and it’s easy to see in a small thumbnail. I fattened up the title font, and the cover perfectly fulfils our brief: Hong Kong-y, girly, chick lit-y fun. I love it. I hope you do too.

It was a long process but it taught me a few very important lessons. First, the cover has to reflect the tone of the book as much as its content. That’s as true of the fonts (which I still have nightmares about) as it is of the illustrations. Second, clutter is as unhealthy for your book cover as it is for your closets. Mom was right: less is more. And third, each cover competes with thousands of others for readers’ attention. It has to say, with a cheeky nod and a wink, “Come on over and have a look”. That’s its purpose, it’s raison d’etre, to give the book a chance to be read. If the cover doesn’t engage and excite curiosity, readers won’t even click on it to see what it’s about, or read the first few chapters for free.

I’d love to know what you think of the cover. Does it make you want to know more, and click Look Inside on the Amazon page to start reading? And how do you sift through the thousands of options out there to choose your next book?

A Year to Remember by Shelly Bell

Shelly Bell is currently on tour with CLP Blog Tours and A Year to Remember. Sara Friedman is tired of being single, and something inside her snaps at her younger brother’s wedding. His big day also happens to be her twenty-ninth birthday, and Sara drunkenly announces to 300 wedding guests that she will be married by her thirtieth. When someone so kindly records her “speech” and puts in on YouTube, Sara goes viral. With a national morning show offering to help her one year journey of finding a husband and her best friend Missy backing her up, Sara dives in head first into the dating game. She accepts blind dates, tries her hand at internet dating, and finds the meaning of soul mate where she least expects it. Sara also happens to be a food addict, and has struggled with her weight throughout her life. She is determined to shed the pounds while she searches for her Mr. Right – but will thin equal happiness?
I loved the beginning of this book, and was immediately hooked by Sara’s story. Even though I have never struggled with weight or had an unhealthy relationship with food, I still felt like Sara was very relatable, which makes for a great MC in my eyes. The ending of the book took a different turn. While I knew Sara was struggling with food and that was clearly part of the plot, the ending seemed to only focus on that, and I found my interest waning a bit. But I still highly enjoyed this book, and I would recommend!
[Rating: 4]

On Tour: This Tangled Thing Called Love by Marie Astor

Marie will be on tour August 13-27 with her novel This Tangled Thing Called Love Claire Chatfield has everything a girl could possibly wish for:…

Jennifer Aniston Engaged!

Great news for my one of favorite actresses, Jennifer Aniston – she’s getting married! People.com received confirmation from Justin Theroux’s rep, announcing: “Justin Theroux had an amazing birthday on Friday, receiving an extraordinary gift when his girlfriend, Jennifer Aniston, accepted his proposal of marriage.” Aniston, 43, and Theroux, 41, an actor-screenwriter, have been dating for over a year, and co-starred in the movie Wanderlust together. Congrats to Jennifer and Justin! Maybe we could exchange wedding planning tips?