Showing posts with label PR by the Book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PR by the Book. Show all posts

Thursday, May 24, 2018

How I Came to Write Saving Each Other by Stacy Mitchell + Giveaway (US only)

Saving Each Other
Stacy Mitchell
PR by the Book

Two hearts, two souls. Devastated by loss, united through destiny.

The rules: Communicate only through text messages and never reveal our real names or other personal details.

My name is Ean Montgomery. After the drunk driving accident that killed my wife, son, and unborn daughter, I was forced to see a grief counselor. In an unconventional move, she gave me a private cell phone and the first initial of the name of a woman who had been widowed by the same accident. I had no intention of ever texting her but with all hope and the will to live gone, I found myself quickly slipping down the rabbit hole. Desperate, lonely, and unbelievably sad, I reached out to her and she became my everything.

My name is Dani Adams. I was married to my college sweetheart, the love of my life. Together we were raising our four-year-old daughter and running a successful business. Then the accident happened and life as I knew it ended in the blink of an eye. I didn’t want to answer his text but I was barely hanging on by a thread and he was in tremendous pain, so I replied. And once again, my world was forever changed.

Over the course of a year, through texting alone, we bond. Friendship blossoms into something deeper. We were never supposed to meet, but fate had other plans, and in this world of loss and despair, something amazing began to grow… But can the passion we’ve found sustain itself with the deep, soul-twisting pain that never seems to fade?

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

Interview with McCall Hoyle, Author of The Thing with Feathers + Giveaway (US only)

It is my utmost pleasure to introduce McCall Hoyle to the blog today to celebrate the exciting release of her debut novel, The Thing with Feathers from Blink, HarperCollins's YA imprint!

Welcome to Books à la Mode, McCall! Let's get this interview started.

Will you please share a brief bio with us?

McCall Hoyle writes honest YA novels about friendship, first love, and girls finding the strength to overcome great challenges. She is a high school English teacher. Her own less-than-perfect teenage experiences and those of the girls she teaches inspire many of the struggles in her books.

When she’s not reading or writing, she’s spending time with her family and their odd assortment of pets—a food-obsessed beagle, a grumpy rescue cat, and a three-and-a-half-legged kitten.

She has an English degree from Columbia College and a master’s degree from Georgia State University. She lives in a cottage in the woods in North Georgia where she reads and writes every day.


It's amazing to get to feature you today! Readers, here's a bit about the book, which hit shelves in September:

Emilie Day believes in playing it safe: she’s homeschooled, her best friend is her seizure dog, and she’s probably the only girl on the Outer Banks of North Carolina who can’t swim.

Then Emilie’s mom enrolls her in public school, and Emilie goes from studying at home in her pj’s to halls full of strangers. To make matters worse, Emilie is paired with starting point guard Chatham York for a major research project on Emily Dickinson. She should be ecstatic when Chatham shows interest, but she has a problem. She hasn’t told anyone about her epilepsy.

Emilie lives in fear her recently adjusted meds will fail and she’ll seize at school. Eventually, the worst happens, and she must decide whether to withdraw to safety or follow a dead poet’s advice and “dwell in possibility.”

From Golden Heart award-winning author McCall Hoyle comes The Thing with Feathers, a story of overcoming fears, forging new friendships, and finding a first love, perfect for fans of Jennifer Niven, Robyn Schneider, and Sharon M. Draper.

What inspired you to write The Thing with Feathers?

As a teacher and mom, I observe so many teenage girls hiding their true selves from their peers. So I wanted to write a hopeful story about a girl learning to a accept herself for who she was. I taught a student whose family was greatly impacted by her sister’s epilepsy and learned about the unique challenges of living with a covert disability that isn’t immediately visible to strangers and acquaintances.

I also love dogs. By chance, my family inherited a golden retriever who was bred to do service work. The dog was more human than many humans. I began working with this amazing dog training him for agility and obedience. I became fascinated by golden retrievers and assistant dogs and did a tremendous amount of research and reading about service dogs and the people they love. I was especially intrigued by seizure alert dogs as seizure alerting cannot truly be taught and is greatly affected by the bond between the owner and dog.

I knew I had to write a story about a girl with epilepsy learning to love herself unconditionally the way her golden retriever did.

What's behind the title?

The title is a line from a well-known Emily Dickinson poem. She writes: “'Hope' is the thing with feathers; that perches in the soul." When the title came to me, I knew it was perfect. Everything about this book and about Emilie, the main character, is about learning to find hope even in the most difficult circumstances. And reading poetry and studying Emily Dickinson have a major impact on Emilie’s emotional arc in this story.

Thankfully, my agent, editor, and publisher also agreed the title was perfect. I don’t personally think a title is going to make or break a book, but I love a nice title—especially one that’s somehow connected to the theme of the book and that readers have to uncover the meaning of for themselves. And I think this title does just that.


As a writer, was it difficult to combine romantic elements with the exploration of Emilie’s condition?

This is an excellent question. First, I wanted this to be Emilie’s story. I wanted it to be a story of strength and resilience and hope. I did not want the romance to overshadow Emilie’s emotional growth. But in my experience, relationships are a central part of who we are. We’re constantly starting, developing, and ending relationships. Emilie’s story is about opening up, taking risks, and learning to hope. Taking a risk on friendship and first love were a natural part of her growth as a human being. I feel like it worked. Epilepsy is a big part of Emilie’s life, but it’s not her entire life. She’s a perfectly average teenage girl. Yes, she has epilepsy, but she’s also dealing with all the things teenage girls deal with including boys.


Do you feel like your book depicts a pretty realistic view of what life is like for a teen with an illness or a disability?

I’ve taught middle school and high school for twelve years. I’ve raised a teenage daughter, and I was a teenage girl. On an average day, I spend more time with teenagers than with adults. Also, I experienced some of the greatest trials of my life during my teenage years. It’s actually frighteningly easy for me to put myself in the mindset of teenage girls. So I feel really confident about the teenage girl part.

As far as living with epilepsy is concerned, I interviewed several students who either have epilepsy or love someone with epilepsy. I also did lots and lots of research and had several parents of children with epilepsy read the book. Because there are so many types of epilepsy and types of seizures, almost everyone who has epilepsy has a unique story.

Emilie struggles with managing the challenges of her epilepsy and her seizures, but in my experience, most teenage girls are struggling. When I write, whether it’s about a girl with epilepsy, or a girl struggling with grief, or a girl struggling with body image issues, I try to tap into the emotions I’ve experienced in similar situations and write from those emotions. And above all, I aim for honesty. I want teenage girls to know that no matter how flawed they feel, there is a place for all of us. And there is always room to hope.

Blog babes, click "Read more" to find out what research went into the book and McCall's best advice for aspiring writers. We're also hosting a giveaway for a finished copy of The Thing with Feathers, so you don't want to miss that either!

Tuesday, August 22, 2017

Interview with Jamie Beck, Author of Before I Knew + Giveaway (US only)

I'd like to welcome Jamie Beck to the blog today to celebrate the exciting release of Before I Knew, the first of her exciting new Cabot series, from Montlake Romance (Amazon Publishing)!

Welcome to Books à la Mode, Jamie! Let's get this interview started.

Will you please share a brief introduction with us?

My childhood writing dreams featured a Hollywood career in the television or film industries. I'd finish watching a dramatic family saga or love story and think, "I want to write something like this!" But a creative writing career seemed like a pipedream, so I went to Tulane University assuming I'd figure out what to do with the rest of my life by graduation day. I fell in love with psychology coursework, but psychiatrists go to medical school, and subjects such as biology and chemistry weren't my forte. Alas, another career eliminated.

Ultimately, I earned a joint law/M.B.A. degree and practiced commercial real estate and lending law for a decade in my hometown of Pittsburgh (Go Steelers!). I learned so much during that decade, but was never passionate about the work. When my husband's career took us to Connecticut, I opted to stay at home to raise our two young children. That decision presented a second chance to revisit the idea of writing.

These days I dream up stories about love, family, self-discovery, and redemption. Sometimes they're spicy (my Sterling Canyon books), and sometimes more poignant (the St. James and Cabot novels), but I strive to make each of them realistic and heartwarming. Recently, I earned a spot on the Romance Writers of America's Honor Roll, and I'm so grateful to each and every reader who has given wings to this new chapter in my life.

When I'm not writing, you can find me dancing around my kitchen while cooking, and hitting the slopes in Vermont and Utah.


It's amazing to get to feature you today! Readers, here's a bit about the book, which hits shelves today:

Author Jamie Beck returns with an engrossing series about family, friendship, and starting over. In this first Cabot novel, a legacy of secrets tests old friends seeking a second chance at life and love.

On the second anniversary of her husband's suicide, Colby Cabot-Baxter is ready to let go of her grief and the mistakes made during her turbulent marriage. Her fresh start comes in the form of A CertainTea, the restaurant she's set to open along Lake Sandy, Oregon, with help from her family. But when her executive chef quits just weeks before the grand opening, Colby is pressured to hire old family friend Alec Morgan. His award-winning reputation could generate buzz, but their friendship has withered since her husband's reckless dare cost Alec's brother his life.

Distracted by guilty secrets concerning the tragedy that changed his and Colby's lives, Alec self-destructed and lost his famed restaurant. With his career in tatters, he's determined to use this opportunity to redeem his reputation and to help the woman he's loved from afar find happiness again.

But secrets have a way of coming out. When Alec's do, they might destroy the new life he and Colby have rebuilt together.

Describe Before I Knew in six words.

Second chances at life and love.

How did you arrive at writing romance?

When I was young, I loved TV and movies, particularly love stories. I’ve always been drawn to the sort of “yearning” that runs through most romantic stories, and so when I decided to try my hand at writing, there was no question about what type of story I would write. However, I am not a huge fan of trope-driven romances, preferring something more realistic, which is why the majority of my books also contain some realistic and heavy real-life struggles.

I do have some women’s fiction ideas rolling around in my head. Perhaps one day I’ll have the time to try to write those. I would never, ever try to write suspense. I don’t like being anxious, and I don’t think I have the kind of skill set needed to plot one well.


What was your inspiration for the book?

There has been a lot of talk in recent years about mental illness and stigma, and how that stigma prevents people from receiving proper treatment and support. Because I have some personal experience with this topic, it is very relevant to me. I’ve seen that struggle, and how it affects others who are close to the afflicted. That gave me the seed of an idea, but I did not want to write a story featuring someone with the illness. I worried that I couldn’t do that justice, so I focused on the one left behind, and how the mistakes they made together (largely because of the fear of stigma) lingered long after he was gone.


As a huge fan of first lines, I'd love to hear the first line of Before I Knew. Can you give us a brief commentary on it?
Of all the dilemmas Colby Cabot-Baxter had faced in her twenty-nine years, none had tortured her like this one.
Before I Knew begins with a five-page prologue that sets up the complicated history between the hero and heroine. It is two years prior to the opening of the book. Colby and her then-husband, Mark (who suffers from Bipolar Disorder) are in the car outside the church of her lifelong friend, Joe’s, funeral. Joe died because he took Mark up on a dare. Joe’s older brother, Alec, is the ultimate hero in this story. Colby is torn about attending the funeral because Joe’s family blames her husband (and to some extent, her) for Joe’s death.

Tell us about your road to publication.

My road was a bit circuitous. I wrote my first manuscript in about nine months, only to send it out into the world and then discover how much I had to learn! I joined Romance Writers of America (and my local chapter), began taking workshops and such, and wrote a second manuscript. That got a little more interest from agents, but ultimately no one agreed to represent me. My third manuscript (Worth the Wait) got me my agent, but at the time, no publisher wanted it (romance editors thought it too much women’s fiction, and women’s fiction editors thought it too much romance). Then that second manuscript that no agent wanted got plucked out of the slush pile at Montlake (I’d forgotten I’d submitted it, back when Montlake still took unsolicited submissions). Montlake bought that book, and then, we convinced them to give Worth the Wait a chance, too.

For those looking for querying advice, I think a few things helped me get my wonderful agent (Jill Marsal) that third time around. First, I’d done the work to write a pretty good story (workshops, critique partners, contest feedback). Second, that book did final in a contest, which gave me something to put in the query that signaled a certain level of quality. Third, I queried smarter. I did my homework on the agents, their client list, and so on. I read interviews they’d given to Writer’s Digest and so on. Armed with this information, I specifically mentioned something about why I thought they might like my book and be a good fit for what I wanted in an agent. The personalized touch helped!


Are the characters from your book based off anyone you know in real life? How much else of your actual life gets written into your fiction?

No single character is ever based entirely on anyone I know, but bits and pieces of the people in my life do make their way into most characters. I think it’d be almost impossible for that not to happen. We (our thoughts and ideas) are shaped, in part, by the people in our lives, and those values and perceptions come through in our writing voice and imaginations. People who know me very well usually spot a few “observations” that they recognize as being something I might do or say. On the flip side, in real life, I love a good debate and very often take a view that opposes my own, just because I find it fascinating to look at things from multiple perspectives. Therefore, you will tend to see that in my books as well (characters coming at something from totally different yet valid positions).

Which character from Before I Knew was most difficult to write?

Colby. She is grieving the loss of so much (her friend, then her husband, her confidence, her innocence). She is smart and introverted, which is also hard to write because those types can come across as colder and less sympathetic. I hope I did her justice. She has a good heart and desire to heal and be a stronger, more compassionate person.


What do you consider your biggest strengths and weaknesses as an author?

I think my strengths are that I write pretty good prose and can evoke reader emotion. My weakness? Dialogue is hard for me. It takes a lot of rewriting to get it to sound natural and to have the characters’ speech sound distinct.


Name the top five novels that have made the biggest impact on your life or on your writing.

On my life (or, books I devoured and remembered long after reading): Native Son, Atlas Shrugged, The Color Purple, The Nightingale, and All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten.

On my writing: For craft, The First Five Pages, Writing 21st Century Fiction. For goals to reach for? Authors Jojo Moyes, Susan Wiggs, Robyn Carr, and Kristin Hannah.

What’s the greatest thing you ever learned?

Oh, that’s hard. I’ve learned a lot of good things in my 50 years. I think one of the most important is that integrity matters. Doing the right thing, even when it’s hard and hurts—and even when no one will give you credit—is important. It allows you to always look in the mirror and like what you see.

How do you react to a negative or harsh review to your books?

It’s never easy. Of course we want readers to love our characters and story. We want them to “get” what we were trying to say. When they don’t, the rejection stings. That said, Before I Knew is my eighth book. At this point, I have learned to keep a better perspective. I do not love every book that some of my favorite authors write, and it is unreasonable to expect every reader (even one’s own fans) to love every single book we create. So, now I don’t actually read every review. Occasionally I’ll peek at the overall “grade” it might have on Amazon or Goodreads, but I don’t dig for the pain of a bad review!

Blog babes, click "Read more" to find out Jamie's random favorites, her best personal and professional advice, and what makes Before I Knew stand out as a book from all the rest. We're also hosting a giveaway for a finished copy of Before I Knew, so you don't want to miss that either!

Wednesday, June 14, 2017

Unexpectedly Hers by Jamie Beck Giveaway (US only)

Unexpectedly Hers (Sterling Canyon #3)
Jamie Beck
from Montlake Romance // Amazon Publishing

By day, bashful wallflower Emma Duffy works at her family's bed-and-breakfast. By night, she secretly pens erotic romance hot enough to melt the snow in their cozy Rockies town.

But Emma's real life is about to heat up when her mother books the entire inn to a professional snowboarder, hoping the publicity will put them on the map. In a karmic twist of fate, that guest is Wyatt Lawson, the man with whom Emma had shared the secret one-night stand that became the inspiration for her novel and its dreamy hero. Worse, a film crew is documenting his comeback just as her debut is about to hit the shelves. Emma's only saving grace is that Wyatt doesn't remember her—and hopefully he never will.

When Wyatt arrives in Sterling Canyon for several weeks of intense training, the last tumble he expects to take is falling for a girl, especially one as shy as Emma. Unlike groupies with their hidden agendas, she isn't using him—or so he believes... until the film crew uncovers Emma's pen name and steamy novel.

Wyatt's comeback run can withstand a fall or two, but can his heart recover from this crash and burn?

Giveaway!


Books à la Mode is giving away one print copy of Unexpectedly Hers—yay!!

To enter, all you have to do is tell me in the comments below:
What is a hobby or activity you participate in that most people would not expect?
Please make your comment MEANINGFUL. Comments solely consisting of stock responses or irrelevant fluff like "Thanks for the giveaway!" will not be considered for entry. Jamie and I really want to hear from you guys! :)

Most people I know in-person don't really know I blog or review books (unless they find out themselves by Googling me LOL). More generally, I guess another unexpected hobby of mine is design/craft projects! I love calligraphy, watercolors, graphite sketching, etc. but I don't really have an "artsy" personality.

Don't forget the entry eligibility terms and conditions!
Sponsored wholly by the publicist—a huge thank you to the lovely folks over at PR by the Book!
Giveaway ends June 28th at 11.59 PM (your time).
Open to US residents only—sorry, everyone else! Please check my sidebar for a list of currently running giveaways that are open worldwide. There are plenty to choose from!
Void where prohibited.
Winners have 48 hours to claim their prize once they are chosen, or else their winnings will be forfeited.
Although I do randomly select winners, I am in no way responsible for prizes, nor for shipping and handling.
As a reminder, you do not have to follow my blog to enter, though it is always very much appreciated ❤
Good luck!