Friday, June 24, 2011

It's kind of mind-blowing all over again. . .



On June 10th, STAY turned one year old, and the paperback will be out on July 26th.  I thought that I'd (finally) pretty much gotten used to the whole I wrote a book and it's on bookshelves and people other than my writing group have read it thing.

And then I was on my way out the door yesterday when this showed up:


Even though I'd already seen the front cover art, I hadn't seen the whole beautifully designed package, (with the cutest little puppy backside ever on the book's backside).


And then there are review quotes, and a brand new blurb from one of my favorite writers smack dab on the front cover.  I can't play it cool about this.  It just felt so surreal, and I needed someone to pinch me all over again.  I sat in my car, but didn't start it, and flipped through the paperback and read all the quotes on the inside page and turned into a big weepy mess all over again.  If I'd known the book were coming, I would have totally worn waterproof mascara.

So, Happy (slightly be-lated) Birthday to Van & Joe, and a huge huge HUGE thank you to everyone who has read STAY, and come to events, and blogged and tweeted about STAY, and recommended it to friends and family, and e-mailed me to share their broken heart stories and friend stories and dog stories.  This year has been the most incredible adventure.  It's not something I think I'll ever quite get used it, in a good way.  And it's not something I ever take for granted. I am so honored to get to share stories with all of you.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Book Trailer Fridays - Stephanie Cowell and Claude & Camille: A Novel of Monet


Stephanie Cowell is author of Nicholas Cooke: Actor, Soldier, Physician, Priest, 1996 American Book Award winner, The Physician of London, The Players: A Novel of Young Shakespeare, Marrying Mozart, and the most recent, Claude & Camille: A Novel.  Her books blend facts with fiction to tell the fascinating stories of what could have happened in the lives of historical figures.

Claude & Camille: A Novel has gotten rave reviews from critics and readers, and is out in paperback now, just in time to tuck in your beach bag or take along on your summer vacation.

In her bio, Stephanie says:
"Looking back on my novels so far, I have found I return often to the passions and struggles as well as the intimate daily world of artists, writers and musicians of the past: Claude Monet half a century before he painted the water lilies, the unmarried Mozart choosing between four musical sisters (talk about sibling rivalry!), Shakespeare leaving his resentful family in Stratford to try make it as a playwright in London 1590 where he had never been in his life, and my latest intense love story about a much-loved writer from the nineteenth century...but more to come on that!"
Here's a description of Claude & Camille:
Journey back to the Bohemian streets of Paris 1865, a time of young love and the early beginnings of Impressionism. We are climbing five steep flights of dark steps to a small painters’ studio cluttered with art to meet the handsome young Claude Monet and his friends, his passion for painting, and the young woman who will haunt him all his life — the beautiful and mysterious Camille.
Here's what people are saying about Claude & Camille:
"Stephanie Cowell is nothing short of masterful in writing about Claude Monet’s life and love...Claude & Camille is both a historical novel and a romance, but Cowell’s graceful, moving treatment of Claude and Camille’s turbulent love defies categorization. It’s an enthralling story, beautifully told..." - Boston Globe
"...a diverting fictional representation of the Impressionist maverick Claude Monet and his first wife, who died at the age of 32...an account of his rocky ascent as he endures poverty, disappointment and disapproving parents, flanked by fellow artists Renoir, Pissarro, Cézanne, Manet and Degas." - New York Times
"Cowell presents a vivid portrait of Monet’s remarkable career. She writes with intelligence and reverence for her subject matter, providing a rich exploration of the points at which life and art converged for one of history’s greatest painters.” - Bookpage

"You'll never look at Monet's water lilies the same way after reading Stephanie Cowell's luminous [novel] of the artist and his muse. An ode to the Impressionists and the women...who inspired them." - Romantic Times

"The historical figures become as real to the reader as any contemporary character...one of the best and brightest writers of historical fiction..." - Washington Times

And here's the trailer:



You can learn more about Stephanie on her website, and follow her on Twitter and Facebook!

What are you reading right now?

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Another list of things

So, here's a bunch of random things:

  • I am a writing machine right now.  I love it.  It's me in my element.  But it's also me at my most distracted.  Let's not talk about how on more than one occasion this week I've put laundry and detergent in the washing machine and walked away without starting it.  
  • Let's also not talk about how I've done the same thing with the dishwasher, or how many people I owe e-mails & phone calls to at the moment.
  • Remember those great summer reading programs from your childhood library days?  BookSparks PR is hosting a Summer Reading Challenge for grownups, and STAY is included in the line up!  Go check it out!  There are prizes.  So you get to read, and there's stuff to win.  
  • Vitamin D + sun time + drinking milk = less sleepy & much happier me.
  • New York Mag has a really great essay on profanity (via The Rumpus) - which, of course, contains profanity, so if you're sensitive to that, maybe that's not the link for you.  But it is a wonderful essay.
  • Judy Blume has an essay about censorship up on her site (it's the forward to an anthology of stories by banned authors), and it made me teary, in the same vein that the #YAsaves hashtag on Twitter really moves me.  The books I read as a kid changed who I am for the better, and I am so thankful for the brave writers who put themselves out on a limb to write stories young adults can connect with.
  • I finished Evan Dawson's book, Summer in a Glass, last week and now I totally want to go on a Finger Lakes wine tour.  Who's with me?
  • My garden is a mess this year, but I think we're going to have tons and tons and tons of raspberries, so I'm not complaining.  

Friday, June 10, 2011

Book Trailer Fridays - Claire Cook & Best Staged Plans


It is no secret that Claire Cook is one of my all time favorite writers.  I'm a huge fan, and I've been waiting impatiently for BEST STAGED PLANS to hit shelves for months now.  It came out on June 7th to rave reviews, and is a June Indie Next pick!

I know what my weekend plans are: Lawn chair, iced tea, and the latest Claire Cook book!  I feel like summer has officially started now!

Here's a description of BEST STAGED PLANS:
As a professional home stager, Sandy Sullivan is an expert at transforming cluttered rooms into attractive houses ready for sale. If only reinventing her life were as easy as choosing the perfect paint color. She's eager to put her family's suburban Boston home on the market, to downsize, and to simplify her own life. But she must first deal with her foot-dragging husband and her grown son, who has moved back home after college to inhabit the basement "bat cave."
After reading them the riot act, Sandy takes a job staging a boutique hotel in Atlanta recently acquired by her best friend's boyfriend. The good news is that she can spend time with her recently married daughter, Shannon, in Atlanta. The bad news is that Shannon finds herself heading to Boston for job training, leaving Sandy and her southern son-in-law, Chance, as reluctant roommates. If that's not complicated enough, Sandy begins to suspect that her best friend's boyfriend may be seeing another woman on the side.
Filled with characters who are fresh and original, yet recognizable enough to live in your neighborhood--plus plenty of great tips and tricks for fixing up houses, and lives--this is a wise and witty story of letting go and moving on. Best Staged Plans is Claire Cook at her most humorous and heartfelt.
Here's what people are staying about BEST STAGED PLANS:
*“Fans of HGTV and of Cook’s previous charming fiction (Seven Year Switch; Must Love Dogs) will adore this light, funny read.” -STARRED Library Journal review
“Cook’s likable heroine is charming without being silly, and her story is very well paced all the way to a genuinely delightful conclusion.” - Booklist
“Midlife craziness...crowd-pleaser for empty nesters...charmer...Cook knows the territory of secret longing and snappy dialog.” -Publishers Weekly
"Claire Cook has knocked it out of the park with BEST STAGED PLANS! Everything she has written previously has been entertaining, fun, and funny, but this novel made me cry as well, then laugh again. Every page of this story of an almost-empty nester "Home Stager" trying to sell her own home is filled with humor, warmth, insight and humanity. Plus great tips and tricks! ... And a homeless woman named Naomi will steal your heart. I loved it!" -Joan Lang, Front Street Book Shop, Scituate MA
“Claire Cook is back with another gift for beach readers and book clubs everywhere--BEST STAGED PLANS....you'll find fun, heart and hilarity from cover to cover. This is yet another winner for Cook, most certainly.” - Jackie Blem, Tattered Cover, Denver, CO
And here's the book trailer:



You can follow Claire on her website, Twitter, and Facebook.  And enter to win a beach bag full of all 8 of her books here!

Twitter Housekeeping

I've changed my Twitter handle from @AlliesAnswers to @AllieLarkin. If we were connected on Twitter before, we still are. If we're not, I'd love to connect on Twitter, too!

XO!
Allie

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Argo hates being left out.



Don't we all, though?

This is what happens when J goes outside to do yard work without Argo. We try to take him with us while we weed and garden as much as possible, but when it's too hot, or we have to rake or wheel anything (he's a tire biter and thinks rakes are really big dog toys), Argo stays in (and throws a little tantrum). Poor pup!

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Best Kept Secret by Amy Hatvany


I had the pleasure of reading BEST KEPT SECRET by Amy Hatvany as an ARC last year and loved it so much that I wrote a blurb for it:
"Haunting, hopeful, and beautifully written. I couldn't put this book down, and I can't stop thinking about it." 
Here's a description of the book:
Cadence didn’t sit down one night and decide that downing two bottles of wine was a brilliant idea.
Her drinking snuck up on her - as a way to sleep, to help her relax after a long day, to relieve some of the stress of the painful divorce that’s left her struggling to make ends meet with her five-year old son, Charlie. 
It wasn’t always like this. Just a few years ago, Cadence seemed to have it all—a successful husband, an adorable son, and a promising career as a freelance journalist. But with the demise of her marriage, her carefully constructed life begins to spiral out of control. Suddenly she is all alone trying to juggle the demands of work and motherhood. 
Logically, Cadence knows that she is drinking too much, and every day begins with renewed promises to herself that she will stop. But within a few hours, driven by something she doesn’t understand, she is reaching for the bottle - even when it means not playing with her son because she is too tired, or dropping him off at preschool late, again. And even when one calamitous night it means leaving him alone to pick up more wine at the grocery store. It’s only when her ex-husband shows up at her door to take Charlie away that Cadence realizes her best kept secret has been discovered….
To be completely honest, when I agreed to read it, I worried that a book about an alcoholic mother might be either preachy, or a complete and total downer, but I was curious, and figured I'd give it a try.  I'm so glad I did.  BEST KEPT SECRET is now one of my all-time favorite books.  

Even though this subject matter is, of course, serious, BEST KEPT SECRET isn't a downer, it's inspiring. It's about the way love, friendship, human spirit, and sheer will, can inspire and empower us to change the hardest and darkest things about ourselves. It's unflinchingly honest without any hint of preachiness or agenda.

In other words: read it. Amy's writing is fearless, and what she has done with this book is nothing short of amazing.

BEST KEPT SECRET hit shelves yesterday, and Amy was so kind to answer some questions for me:

1. BEST KEPT SECRET is an incredible book, Amy. It's impossible to put down, because all the characters feel so authentic, and the honesty of Cadence, the main character, is absolutely stunning. It must have taken an immense amount of courage as a writer to go to those places with your characters. Where did you find your courage? 
You are very kind, Allie! Honestly, I didn’t feel very courageous as I wrote this story. I felt shaky and full of fear. But I believed the message I wanted to convey through Cadence’s experiences, the greater truth I hoped I could portray, was more important than any trepidation on my part. I revised the book more times than I care to admit, dancing around the really ugly places drinking drags a person into - both emotionally and behaviorally. I wanted to focus on the redemption, the solution to the problem, because in the end, that is what I hope readers will want for Cadence. Then, my very insightful editor encouraged me to show more moments portraying what it feels like to spiral into such dark behavior so the reader could root for Cadence to find that redemption. This was the best advice she could have given me, so from that point on, I dug deep, bled out as much emotional truth as I could manage, and ignored my fears.

2. What was the hardest part of writing this book? 

I think the most challenging aspect of the story was developing Cadence as an empathetic character, a woman who at her core, loves her child more than anything else, and yet slowly descends into the grips of this horrifying addiction. It was important for me to show her vulnerabilities, and for the reader to hopefully understand that her drinking was simply a behavior she used to soothe deeper inner turmoil, the same way a woman with an eating disorder uses food (either controlling or bingeing on it) to manage her emotional strife. She didn’t understand how easily she’d develop a physical tolerance to alcohol, and how emotionally dependent she’d become on the temporary “escape” alcohol gave her from her pain.

Don’t get me wrong. I didn’t want to absolve her of anything - she is accountable for her behavior - but I also I believe that there is a tendency in our culture to look at mothers who struggle with addiction with enormous judgment and disdain. I think it’s easy to see a woman like Cadence and be adamant that we would never be like her. So the other difficult task I faced was trying to show the reader that in many ways they are like Cadence, even if they never pick up a drink. So many women struggle with feelings of shame and inadequacy, and while we all cope with them in different ways, I wanted Cadence to embody our society’s typically accomplished, professional woman, trying to be and have it “all” in her life. I wanted to show what happens to her when she is blindsided by something she can’t fix or figure out on her own, and how difficult it is to ask for help when she was conditioned to be totally self-reliant. People wonder how a soccer mom ends up drunk, driving the wrong way on the freeway and kills herself and/or others, could have kept her problem hidden. BEST KEPT SECRET is my attempt to give them an honest answer.

3. You've been very open about your own past struggles with alcohol. How did you come to the decision to talk publicly about this?

I wasn’t always so open! In the beginning, I was too filled with shame and self-disgust to talk about it, even with people who understood. It took time for me to work up the courage to speak the truth about my experiences, and now, I have chosen to be forthright because I believe that the only way to erase the painful stigma assigned to women who are mothers and are in recovery is to hold my head high and be honest about what I went through to become the woman I am today.

4. What do you hope readers take away from BEST KEPT SECRET? 


Overall, I hope that women, especially, are able to see the similarities they share with Cadence, rather than the differences. I hope that the story widens the readers’ understanding and compassion, and perhaps makes them re-evaluate any preconceptions they might hold about women who suffer from alcoholism. I also hope that any woman in the throes of active addiction sees herself in Cadence’s story and finds the courage it takes to reach out for help. For me, that’s the inherent beauty of books – each person will walk away with something different from a story. My hope as an author is that readers will find a need met, perhaps one they weren’t aware they had to fill.


5. What is your writing process like? 

Mostly, I sit at the computer, cross my fingers, and hope for the best! Seriously, though, I tend to get an idea of a challenge a character is facing - either literally or figuratively. Then, I start thinking about where I’d like the character to end up after working through different channels to overcome that challenge. I’m not really an outliner - I have Point “A” and Point “Z” figured out - beginning and end - but what’s going to take place to get the characters where I need them to be is always a surprise. I like to sit down and ask them, “Okay, folks, what are we going to do today?” I do that until I have a cruddy first draft and then I revise. And revise some more. And a few more times after that, just for kicks!

6. What's next for you? 

Well, I’m very happy to say that my next novel, OUTSIDE THE LINES, is already complete, and will be published by Atria in February, 2012. It is the story of a woman searching for her homeless and mentally ill father, whom she has been estranged from for twenty years. I wrote it in alternating viewpoints of both the daughter and father, past and present - which was a new approach for me as a writer. Now, I’m hard at work on my fifth novel. After that, who knows?!? I try to live in the moment as much as possible, and right now, in this particular moment, I’m an incredibly happy, grateful girl. 

If you want to learn more about Amy and BEST KEPT SECRET, you can check out her website, and follow her on Twitter and Facebook.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

"Baby's in Reno with the Vitamin D..."

The funny thing about being exhausted all the time is that it creeps up on you.  Since I'm not a good sleeper, feeling awake and alert and energized seemed to be just over the horizon.  One more night.  One more chance to sleep soundly and wake rested.

Then I started sleeping soundly, because I was purely exhausted.  I still didn't feel better, even after weeks of getting a good night's sleep.

I was completely engrossed in a project, writing like a fiend all day.  Surely, that was mentally exhausting.  That would explain it.  Then I finished a draft and took a break.  Still tired.

Then I tried to cut down on coffee, so of course that would explain why I felt like I was wading upstream through my day.  Everyone said it would get better after a week or so.  It didn't.

It was subtle enough for me to find excuses for the way I was feeling:  I'm being lazy.  I'm just stressed.  My brain is busy.  I have too many tasks I don't want to do, and I'm avoiding them.  I'm just feeling quiet right now.  Maybe this is just what being 34 feels like.

Finally, I mentioned the way I was feeling to my doctor.  She did blood work and discovered that my Vitamin D levels were low.  She put me on prescription Vitamin D, and suggested that I spend some time every day out in the sun, or even just sitting by a window when I'm working.

I'm one of those people who never leaves the house without sunscreen and sunglasses.  I keep the blinds drawn while I'm working so I don't get distracted by whatever might be going on outside.  I sit in the shade when I am outside.  We live in Rochester.  We don't get enough sunlight in the winter, and we've had a dark spring this year.  My doctor said she's been seeing a lot of Vitamin D deficiency this year.

A simple blood test, a simple fix and I feel like my life is in Technicolor again.  It's amazing.  On Sunday, we did yard work in the sun and I remembered what it felt like to have energy, and I felt the joy of being tired at the end of the day because I'd done a hard day's work, not because I'd been dragging myself along.

So, now I'm making an effort to get some sunlight in my day.  What a lovely fix it is!   Sitting outside to soak up the sun in short, responsible intervals is the perfect time to read (I set a timer and put sunscreen & sunglasses on when my recommended sun time is over).

Of course, I can't get this song out of my head.  Yo.  Cut it.