Sunday, March 30, 2014

The Saturday Spotlight with Anna Hess and Giveaway of Watermelon Summer

Welcome to the Saturday Spotlight, a weekly feature that shines the light on Indie and Debut authors. This week I have the pleasure introducing readers to:

ANNA HESS
~Author of Watermelon Summer~


Should authors give away their books?
by Anna Hess-2014

In the world of indie publishing, there's a deep divide between those of us who utilize Amazon's KDP Select program's free days, and those who think we should never give away books. I've been using free days for years, finding that they provide a nice boost to my backlist, and free days also let me reward my long-time fans with a copy of new releases. However, I only recently realized the true potential of free periods --- helping a malingering new release take off.

CC-Watermelon
So why was Watermelon Summer malingering? The book is my first work of fiction, and I should have realized that my existing fan base was a little leery of putting down hard cash for something unlike my usual how-to guides. I'd been listing those how-to guides between 99 cents and $2.99, and I placed Watermelon Summer at the upper end of that spectrum since the novel is significantly longer than some of my other ebooks. But due to my fans' hesitance, the slightly high price, and a bad description (since updated), the book barely sold. For its first month of life, Watermelon Summer was only downloaded 25 times, even though I dropped the price to 99 cents a couple of weeks in. I'd lost the all-important launch momentum, and it looked like my novel might drift in the doldrums forever.

This was the perfect opportunity to test a no-holds-barred free period. I've reached the top-100-free list a few times through no effort of my own, and I often even forget to tell my fans when I've set an ebook free. However, I knew Watermelon Summer needed a real boost, so I did some research and followed other authors' advice to treat the free period like a book launch with lots of promotion. Luckily, there are dozens of free sites that will consider placing your book in front of thousands of eyes during its giveaway period, especially if you have a good cover and have put in the effort of acquiring at least ten good reviews. I submitted Watermelon Summer to about a dozen sites and it was listed by bargainebookhunter, ebookshabit, and freebooksy. Meanwhile, I also emailed my fan list and posted on my blog, my facebook page, and google plus, begging my loyal readers to download a free copy and to tell all their friends about the opportunity.

It took two days for Watermelon Summer to reach the top 100 free books on Amazon, which was the length of the initially planned giveaway period, but I had two more free days in the bank that I quickly tacked on the end. My book spent those last two days in the lower top 100 (mostly around 70 - 80), and by the end of the free period, 7,693 people had downloaded Watermelon Summer.

This is where the free-period naysayers will tell you that you've just thrown away $2,693. But what they don't tell you is that most of these downloads would never have happened if the book hadn't been free, and you do receive instant positive results from those free downloads. I went into my free period with 11 reviews and came out with 18, one of which was for four stars and the rest of which were for five. And I started showing up in the "Customers who bought this also bought" category on others' page at the same time. That meant that I sold 13 copies the day after my book went back to the paid store, and the novel immediately jumped up into the top 100 paid in its category. Watermelon Summer had found its way out of the doldrums!

Of course, if you give away thousands of copies of the first book in a series, chances are you'll see an even greater sales boost from the free period since happy customers will go on to buy the later books in the series. But even if you only have a standalone book, my experience suggests that a well-promoted free period will net significant rewards. Plus, you can treat it as a pro bono round of market research --- are your title, cover, and description catchy enough to draw in the masses? If not, it's time to put some work into the public appearance of your book so that it can reach as many people as possible.

I dreamed about moving back to the land ever since my parents dragged me off the family farm at the age of eight. I worked as a field biologist and nonprofit organizer before acquiring fifty-eight acres and a husband, then quit my job to homestead full time.


I admit that real farm life involves a lot more hard work than my childhood memories entailed, but the reality is much more fulfilling and I love pigging out on sun-warmed strawberries and experimenting with no-till gardening, mushroom propagation, and chicken pasturing.


GIVEAWAY

Today Anna is giving away one signed paperback of her book Watermelon Summer. To enter please fill in the copter. Everyone is welcome to enter this contest.

a Rafflecopter giveaway



Forsythia's bedtime stories as a child centered around the intentional community where she'd been conceived and which her mother had abandoned soon after her birth. So even though she was more familiar with subways than with milk cows, Forsythia knew she couldn't let the farm be sold sight unseen. She threw away her pre-college European adventure and resolved to be the catalyst bringing the ailing community back to life.

Getting from the airport in no-bus-service West Virginia to the Kentucky commune where her mother once lived turned out to be the easy part of Forsythia's adventure. Harder was searching for an elusive father who felt cryptic notes and a library card were sufficient stand-ins for his presence. The piercing blue eyes of a perfect boy further complicated matters, making it difficult to hold onto her own ambitious plans for the future.

Add in a rustic farmhouse, a flooded creek, and an unexpected betrayal, and the deck seemed to be stacked against Forsythia. But she couldn't give up because if the intentional community disintegrated, Forsythia would never really understand what she'd been missing.

And she'd never meet her bio-dad....

Thanks Anna for being on the spotlight today, to learn more about this author visit:

GOODREADS
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Sunday, March 23, 2014

The Saturday Spotlight with Kirsten Feldman and Giveaway of No Alligators in Sight

Welcome to the Saturday Spotlight, a weekly feature that shines the light on Indie and Debut authors. This week I have the pleasure introducing readers to:

KIRSTEN FELDMAN
~Author of No Alligators in Sight~



Hi Kirsten, welcome to the blog. Please tell us about yourself.

I grew up on Cape Cod and the Connecticut shoreline and now live outside of Boston, much too far from the ocean and the sand. Reading and writing have played a central part in my life both personally and professionally. I am rarely without a book in my hand. Brown University gave me my undergrad degree in comparative literature, and Tufts kindly did the same for my master's in English education. I have worked in a variety of school and museum education settings, including teaching 7th and 8th grade English.

My graduate advisor once told me that if teenagers don't make you laugh then consider another career. To me the adolescent voice has such vibrancy and depth to it, whether funny or not; many of my favorite books have this point of view, including: The Fault In Our Stars by John Green, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith, Bastard Out of Carolina by Dorothy Allison, To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, and Cat's Eye by Margaret Atwood. I write at least weekly on my blog, so readers can learn more about me and my projects there http://kirstenfeldmanbooks.blogspot.com/, and readers can subscribe to follow along by e-mail, too.

What inspired you to write No Alligators in Sight?


I felt I had a story to tell, and so I began. When I started writing the story, it was unequivocally Lettie's voice that told me the story. At first it was only one chapter, perhaps a short story, I thought, but then it grew and grew as Lettie had so much to share and became a novel. Both her character and the novel's settings, Provincetown and Key West, spoke very loudly in my head and demanded a venue of their own.

If you could pick a song to encapsulate your novel, what would it be and why?

Lettie is a classic rock fan, and the song that ran through my head frequently as I was writing was The Rolling Stones's "You Can't Always Get What You Want," especially the lines "But if you try sometimes well you might find/You get what you need." Without giving any spoilers, Lettie has wants and needs, as all of us do, but what she gets and what she wanted aren't always the same, as they often aren't in life. It is how she deals with this adversity that sets Lettie apart, I think, her resilience, her cutting wit, and her drive.



What authors or books have inspired you or get your recommendations?

To me NO ALLIGATORS IN SIGHT is reminiscent of books like Sarah Dessen's THAT SUMMER, Stephen Chbosky's THE PERKS OF BEING A WALLFLOWER, and Elizabeth Berg's DURABLE GOODS, where the teenage narrator voice shines through and guides the reader's experience in an intense, personal way. It's also a journey novel, with the journey happening literally and internally, so I often thought of Yann Martel's LIFE OF PI and Mark Haddon's THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHT-TIME. Readers can also see what other authors I like and what I am currently reading on Goodreads https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7351355.Kirsten_B_Feldman

What do you want readers to walk away with after reading your book?

I hope that Lettie and her story will stay with readers as an affirmation of all that can be accomplished even when much seems bleak and sad. Lettie is a survivor and, I believe, an inspiration.

Can you share any future writing plans with us?

I am working on an as-yet-unnamed novel about a girl who lives at a prep school and longs to escape her life. If readers would like a glimpse in advance, I have a Pinterest page for the book (and one for No Alligators, too) at http://www.pinterest.com/kirstenfeldman/



Kirsten Feldman grew up on Cape Cod and the Connecticut shoreline and now lives outside of Boston.


Brown University gave Kirsten her undergrad degree in comparative literature and Tufts kindly did the same for her master's in English education. She's worked in a variety of school and museum education settings, including teaching 7th and 8th grade English.



GIVEAWAY

Today Kirsten is giving away one eBook copy of No Alligators in Sight. To enter please fill in the copter. 

a Rafflecopter giveaway



In this coming of age novel, Lettie and Bert squeak by in a tiny town on Cape Cod, one parent an alcoholic and the other absent. After a string of bad decisions on Lettie’s part, their father ships them to their barely remembered mother for the summer, where they will learn hard lessons about themselves, their family, and their future by way of the Florida swamp. Throughout Lettie keeps her biting humor flowing, her razor-sharp pen at the ready, and her eye on her quest for a “normal” life.

Thanks for being on the spotlight Kirsten. To learn more about this author check out:

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Saturday, March 15, 2014

The Saturday Spotlight with AJ Hartley and Giveaway of Act of Will


Welcome to the Saturday Spotlight, a weekly feature that shines the light on Indie and Debut authors. This week I have the pleasure introducing readers to:

AJ HARTLEY
~Author of Act of Will~

Finding Ordinary, or Fantasy Grows Some Snark…
by AJ Hartley- 2014

I fell in love with fantasy novels when I was a kid. They were the first books that really pulled me in and gave me an escape from the non-too-thrilling world I lived in—Northern, industrial, working class England. I could curl up with these books and they would let me hop through the wardrobe into Narnia or set out from Hobbiton on the quest to destroy the one ring. But there weren't a lot of people like me on those quests, or so it seemed, and as I got older I stated to get frustrated with the way that the books—so wonderful in so many ways—were populated largely by heroes who were always bent on Doing the Right Thing. They might not always know what that Right Thing was, and they might struggle with the difficulty of doing it, but they were driven by the need to find it and get it done. If they weren't, they were probably bad guys.


I by contrast was pretty ordinary, a bit bookish, not super confident, overly anxious, skeptical, and wary of sticking my neck out. More Holden Caulfield than Aragorn, and thus not what you’d call hero material.

No, don’t get me wrong. I like heroic go-getters as much as the next reader: take charge characters with stiff upper lips and noble profiles, men and women prepared to die for their beliefs, or their friends, and—you know—good things in general. Send out a brave warrior to slay the dragon or carve his way through the orc army to face the witch king and you’ll see me cheering him on, from the sidelines. Safely out of range…

That’s how I suspect most of us feel. We like the idea of being the conquering hero but last time I looked you can’t be that in a fantasy novel without spending a lot of time being pursued by people with fire and pointy things. Add in a little dark magic and the occasional fangy monster and the majority of readers would, in reality, be serious Out Of There.

But I found myself wondering what a story would be like that was set in one of those worlds of swords and magic and nobility, but was told from the perspective of someone who didn't believe in any of it.

And so was Will Hawthorne born.

Will is a teenaged actor in a world which looks a bit like late Medieval or early Renaissance England with one crucial difference. In this world, though most people don’t know about it, magic is real. Will, needless to say, doesn't believe in it, though he also doesn't believe in honor and nobility, self-sacrifice and the other staples of high fantasy, because Will is an ordinary guy, a normal guy: clever, funny, suspicious, and way more interested in comfort, money, and girls than he is in risking his life for other people. He doesn't know how to use a sword and isn't interested in learning. He is a card-carrying realist, and that point of view isn't going to alter unless his circumstances change radically… which, of course, they do the moment the story starts.

When it works, fantasy fiction offers a kind of “what if?” to the reader, draws them into a world quite different from their own and tells stories which grow out of that world. As such we’re invited to picture ourselves in them, wonder how we might respond to being charged by a massive troll with a war hammer, or pinned down by the spell of a wicked enchanter. I like stories where the characters meet those challenges unflinchingly, bravely risking everything for a cause or an ideal. But I love the idea that for some of the characters in these worlds, facing down that enchanter—even believing in it—is incredibly hard and goes against all their most familiar instincts. 

I love characters who want to run screaming from that troll because I think that that is what most of us would actually do, and if I can convincingly sketch a character who really wants to run but somehow forces himself to stand and fight, then I think I might have something special. After all, who in our lives always makes the right choice, the honorable choice? I like characters who struggle, who get it wrong, who wrestle with demons inside themselves as well as those storming across the battle field towards them, not because they are tortured and angst-ridden but because they are, simply, ordinary. Maybe I feel this way because I think that doing good is hard and we shouldn't pretend otherwise even in fantasy fiction, but mostly it’s because I just like the idea that regular guys, despite what everyone else thinks, despite what they think themselves, can be heroes.


Andrew James Hartley is the Robinson Professor of Shakespeare Studies, specializing in performance theory, theatre history and dramaturgy. His academic books include The Shakespearean Dramaturg (Palgrave 2006), Julius Caesar (Shakespeare in Performance series, Manchester UP 2013), Shakespeare and Political Theatre (Palgrave 2013) and Shakespeare on the University Stage (Cambridge UP 2014). He was the editor of the performance journal Shakespeare Bulletin (Johns Hopkins UP) from 2003-2013 and is an Associate Artist at Georgia Shakespeare where he was resident dramaturg.

He teaches Renaissance theatre history and Shakespeare, blending literary and historical critical practices with a material sense of contemporary theatre. He also works as a dramaturg and occasional director for campus productions of early modern drama.

As A.J. Hartley he is also the bestselling author of a dozen mystery, thriller and fantasy novels for children and adults, including the Darwen Arkwright series for middle grades readers, the first of which won best young adult novel of 2012 by SIBA. With David Hewson he has written adaptations of Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Hamlet.


GIVEAWAY

Today AJ Hartley is giving away one eBook copy of his book Act of Will in the format of your choice. To enter please fill in the copter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway



Act of Will is a boisterous fantasy adventure that introduces us to Will Hawthorne, a medieval actor and playwright who flees the authorities only to find himself inextricably bound to a group of high-minded adventurers on a deadly mission. Will travels with them to a distant land where they are charged with the investigation and defeat of a ruthless army of mystical horsemen, who appear out of the mist leaving death and devastation in their wake.

In the course of Will’s uneasy alliance with his new protectors, he has to get his pragmatic mind to accept selfless heroism (which he thinks is absurd) and magic (which he doesn't believe in). Will must eventually decide where his loyalties really lie and how much he is prepared to do--and believe--to stand up for them.

Thanks AJ for being on the spotlight! To find out more about this author visit his website.

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Saturday, March 8, 2014

The Saturday Spotlight with Kaitlin Bevis and Giveaway of Persephone

Welcome to the Saturday Spotlight, a weekly feature that shines the light on Indie and Debut authors. This week I have the pleasure introducing readers to:

KAITLIN BEVIS
~Author of Persephone~


Persephone Myth: 
by Kaitlin Bevis 2014

In the original Persephone myth, Kore, the goddess of Spring, was a beautiful goddess and would have had many suitors had her mother, Demeter, goddess of agriculture, not kept her hidden away from the other gods. One day Kore went to a meadow to pick narcissus flowers, lilacs, poppies, or some other flower depending on the source with some nymphs when Hades, God of the Underworld spotted her and decided he wanted her for his wife. He burst through the earth (in some versions, Gaia, goddess of Earth assists him) in his creepy black chariot of death, and dragged Kore into the Underworld. After her rape/marriage, Kore became known as Persephone, the Queen of the Underworld.

Demeter, goddess of Agriculture and Persephone’s mother, searched frantically for her daughter, neglecting her duties as a goddess and plunging the earth into famine. Helios, god of the sun, or in some versions Persephone’s nymph friends, tell Demeter what happened and Demeter begged Zeus to rescue their daughter.

At first Zeus told Demeter she should be pleased to have such a high ranking son-in-law, but eventually he relented since too many people were starving to worship him properly, and sent Hermes to liberate Persephone so long as she had not consumed food or drink in he Underworld.

Meanwhile, Persephone was tricked into eating 3-7(depending on the version) pomegranate seeds by the god Ascalapus, Hades’ gardener. Ascalapus got turned into a screech owl in retribution for his crime, and Persephone was forced to return to the Underworld for a month every year for each seed she ate. While she is home with her mother, plants grow, but during her time in the Underworld every year they die. This myth is considered an explanation for winter.

Why did her name change?

Changing a gods name to reflect a change in their divine role was not uncommon. In Persephone’s case she doesn't even get a name until she’s important. Kore translated to girl, or maiden.Persephone has a variety of other names and titles within her cult the Eleusinian Mysteries.

Why a pomegranate?

The pomegranate is known as the fruit of the dead as well as a symbol for fertility, and thanks to the little crown on the top of a pomegranate is a symbol of royalty. So it’s easy to see why it was chosen as symbol in the Persephone myth. You've got royalty for the new Queen of Spring/fertility of the dead. When you cut it open is naturally divided into three to six sections depending on the fruit. It is full of tiny little seeds covered in a blood red juice. While the Persephone myth is the most well known example of using a Pomegranate for symbolism, way back when, this weird little fruit found its way into a variety of stories across cultures.

Why does it matter what flower Persephone was picking?

The flower chosen in the myth kind of sets the tone for the whole story. The narcissus flower for instance is commonly seen as a phallic symbol, and a symbol of unrequited love, and as a portent for death, so you’ve got some foreshadowing, and loss of innocence going there. Other flowers symbolize different things that the story teller may be trying to get across.

What did I change?

I tried to stay true to the spirit of the original myth in my version of the story. Several of the key elements remained, but framed differently. My version is set in modern day. Persephone believes she’s a normal, somewhat sheltered, girl. She discovers she’s a goddess after catching the attention of a sadistic deity named Boreas, the God of Winter (winter winds, technically). Hades rescues her by taking her to the Underworld.

The idea that Hades may not have been the bad guy has been toyed with in popular culture throughout my entire life (Beauty and the Beast anyone?) so it’s logical, and certainly not original, to consider that Hades may have just been misunderstood. Choosing Boreas as the antagonist made sense because there is a very similar story in Greek mythology involving Boreas abducting a Greek princess. In my mind, it fit really well. Boreas is a repeat offender, AND he’s strongest during the winter. It made complete sense for Persephone to have to hide during those months.

I made other changes as well, the Underworld is a pretty nice place, and Persephone is free to come and go as she pleases. Orpheus is a rock star. Small things to add layers to a world where many of the myths we know so well haven’t happened yet.

Why rewrite the Persephone myth?

That myth has never really vanished or fallen out of fashion. It resonates with us for some reason. If you studied any mythology at all in school, you learned the Persephone myth. I think part of it is, if you take the myth at face value, it’s unspeakable. We want to fix this poor girl’s fate. Another draw is that the Persephone myth seems incomplete. In other myths you get a bit of characterization for the key players. Zeus’s personality and wants and needs come across crystal clear in every single myth he’s a part of. But Hades and Persephone both are ambiguous in this myth. We learn a lot about Demeter, and her devotion as a mother, but not so much about Persephone. I wanted to know what happened down there. So I wrote my own version.

Kaitlin Bevis spent her childhood curled up with a book, and a pen. If the ending didn't agree with her, she rewrote it. She's always wanted to be a writer, and spent high school and college learning everything she could so that one day she could achieve that goal. She graduated college with my BFA in English with a concentration in Creative Writing, and is pursuing her masters at the University of Georgia.

Her young adult series "Daughters of Zeus" is available wherever ebooks are sold. She also writes for truuconfessions.com and Athens Parent Magazine.


GIVEAWAY

Today Kaitlin Bevis is giving away one eBook (version of choice) to a lucky reader!! To enter just fill in the Rafflecopter.

a Rafflecopter giveaway


There are worse things than death, worse people too

The “talk” was bad enough, but how many teens get told that they’re a goddess? When her mom tells her, Persephone is sure her mother has lost her mind. It isn’t until Boreas, the god of winter, tries to abduct her that she realizes her mother was telling the truth. Hades rescues her, and in order to safely bring Persephone to the Underworld he marks her as his bride. But Boreas will stop at nothing to get Persephone. Despite her growing feelings for Hades, Persephone wants to return to the living realm. Persephone must find a way to defeat Boreas and reclaim her life.

Thanks Kaitlin for being on the spotlight. To learn more about this author visit:

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Friday, March 7, 2014

Book Review~Be With Me by J.Lynn

Be With Me by J. Lynn
February 4, 2014 by William Morrow
Paperback: 384 pages
New Adult- Contemporary Romance
Review Copy/ TLC Book Tours
Warnings: Language, sexual content
3/5 Stars (18+)

Teresa Hamilton is having a rough year—she’s in love with her big brother’s best friend, but he hasn't spoken to her since they shared a truly amazing, mind-blowing, change-your-life kiss. She got out of a terrible relationship. And now an injury is threatening to end her dance career for good. It’s time for Plan B – college. And maybe a chance to convince Jase that what they have together is real.

Jase Winstead has a huge secret that he’s not telling anyone. Especially not his best friend’s incredibly beautiful sister. Even though he and Teresa shared the hottest kiss of his life, he knows that his responsibilities must take priority. He certainly doesn't have time for a relationship. But it doesn't help that all he can think about kissing the one girl who could ruin everything for him.

As they’re thrown together more and more, Jase and Tess can’t keep denying their feelings for each other. But a familiar danger looms and tragedy strikes. As the campus recovers, the star-crossed couple must decide what they’re willing to risk to be together, and what they’re willing to lose if they’re not.

Thoughts

Cute, fun and everything you would expect from a J.Lynn novel......I so much adored the first book in this series, Cam and Avery melted their way into my heart and most of this authors books really do make me happy. Jase and Tess's story was just as good when it came to the overall story arc  of dynamics in their relationship, however what worked in book one, really didn't go over as well in book two. By this I mean the delivery of the story and having too serious of an issue mixed with too much fluff and sugar coated with too much sexy time.

While Be With Me was an entertaining read and certainly fun at times, it lacked depth and some major maturity from 20-something characters. Yes the romance was all tension filled and dramatic and the book had a great side plot with the room-mate in an abusive relationship but the dialog was was too giddy and Teresa's inner thoughts when she evaluated Jase's abs, arms, hair, eyes, lips, teeth, rippling muscles, man smell (barf), sexy voice, water dripping from his arms, his swag walk, his sensitive side, his tongue, the tilt of his head....(please somebody kill me now) was just a little overboard.

I know fans of this author and lovers of NA will likely enjoy this quick read, take it for a fun beach read or a lazy day full of brain candy.


New York Times and USA Today bestselling author J. Lynn lives in Martinsburg, West Virginia. When she’s not hard at work writing, she spends her time reading, working out, watching really bad zombie movies, pretending to write, and hanging out with her husband and her Jack Russell terrier, Loki.

Find out more about Jennifer at her website and follow her on Facebook and Twitter.


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Thanks to TLC Book Tours and William Morrow for Review Copy

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