Girfriend Tour: Joanne Rendell

DSC_0091_edited-1smallCROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE By Joanne Rendell

We welcome Babe Joanne to BEbabes today to help her celebrate the launch of her second novel into the world. So raise your mimosas this morning and let’s give an atta-babe to Joanne!

Thanks for stopping in to our circle of friends. Kick off your platforms and give us the skinny:

If Oprah invited you on her show to talk about your book, what would the theme of that show be? 

Women are the biggest readers. Women are the biggest selling authors (think Nora Roberts and J.K.Rowling). Yet why are books written by women and for women so often demeaned?

You go, girl! Because, really, when’s the last time Ms. W did a feature on pop fiction? 

Speaking of Oprah, she’s in your book! Tell us about your two protagonists. 

Crossing Washington Square is a story of two very different women and their very different love of books. Rachel Grey and Diana Monroe are both literature professors in the old boys club of Manhattan University. While this should create a kinship between them, they are very much at odds. Rachel is young, emotional, and impulsive. She wrote a book about women’s book groups which got her a slot on Oprah and she uses “chick lit” in her classes. Diana is aloof, icy, and controlled. She’s also a scholar of Sylvia Plath who thinks “beach” fiction is an easy ride for students. But as is often the case, it’s a man that truly divides the two women. Smooth-talking Carson McEvoy, a visiting Harvard professor, has his sights on both Rachel and Diana and gets sparks truly flying. 

Do you have a muse, good luck charm, writing vice? 

I don’t really have a muse or a charm. And my vice? Picking the M&Ms out of trail mix while I write!

Ha. Don’t we all do that? Don’t raisins cause wrinkles. No?

What do you write on (type of computer, or notebook, etc.) and where do you write?

I write on a laptop PC at my desk at the front of our apartment. We live on a very busy street in Manhattan so my writing is “lulled” by taxis honking, firetrucks hooting, and jackhammers pounding. With all this practice, I could probably keep writing through a asteroid shower!

Have you had a “rock star” moment regarding your writing career? If so, what was it?

My first novel was The Professors’ Wives’ Club. A couple of months after its release, a woman contacted me and said she’d read and enjoyed the book. She told me she was a professor’s wife and after a few emails, she revealed that she was the wife of a very distinguished professor of cultural studies whose work I’d read, who I’d seen giving keynotes talks at conferences, and whose work greatly influenced the writing of Crossing Washington Square. Not really a “rock star” moment, but still exciting to know the wives of influential professors (professors I really dig!) read my book.

What do you do to celebrate your writing successes?

Drink margaritas and eat burritos.

A babe after our own heart. 

Describe your personality with five adjectives that would make your 5th grade English teacher proud.

Procrastinatory. Determined. Postmodern. Pragmatic. Feminist. 

Well, we knew we loved you for a reason. Let’s rally BEbabes & buy Crossing Washington Square, stat!

 

crossing wash sq.inddAcross Washington Square live two very different women …with their very different love of books.

 

Some women follow their hearts; others follow their minds. In this “charming, witty, and cerebral” second novel from the acclaimed author of The Professors’ Wives’ Club, we return to Manhattan University, where two strong-willed women are compelled to unite their senses and sensibilities.

Professor Diana Monroe is a highly respected scholar of Sylvia Plath. Serious and aloof, she steadfastly keeps her mind on track. Professor Rachel Grey is young and impulsive, with a penchant for teaching popular women’s fiction like Bridget Jones’ Diary and The Devil Wears Prada, and for wearing her heart on her sleeve.

The two conflicting personalities meet head to heart when Carson McEvoy, a handsome and brilliant professor visiting from Harvard, sets his eyes on both women and creates even more tension between them. Now Diana and Rachel are slated to accompany an undergraduate trip to London, where an almost life-threatening experience with a student celebrity will force them to change their minds and heal their hearts…together.

 

Advance Praise for CROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE

“As readers spend time with these bright and engaging women, Rendell offers an interesting debate about the merits of studying popular fiction in an academic setting.” The Romantic Times

“Rendell’s second novel is thoughtful and open, with plenty of interesting academic debate for truly bookish readers.” Booklist

Order it already! 

GCC Tour: Carleen Brice

No, I haven’t met fellow Girlfriend Carleen Brice in person, but like a lot of readers, I feel like I’ve gotten to know her through her writing; her glorious debut last year, ORANGE MINT & HONEY and I can’t wait to dive in to CHILDREN OF THE WATERS, her second release. Plus, we are friends on Facebook, and somedays it’s like we’re sitting right across from each other drinking Chai Tea as we share life’s little joys (and annoyances.) Welcome, Carleen!

carleenbriceauthorphoto1. If Oprah invited you on her show to talk about your book, what would the theme of that show be? Oh, it could be a few things: race relations in the 21st century; family secrets revealed; adoption and reconciliation.

2. What was the most fun scene in your book to write? The most difficult? There were several scenes that were very fun to write-involving pot-smoking & purchasing a vibrator (based on a story 2 friends told me–really!). I have a senior-citizen drug dealer in my book who amuses me very much.

The most difficult scene to write involves something that I experienced personally and was very painful so I cried a lot when I wrote it. I don’t want to reveal it here though.

3. Do you have a muse, good luck charm, writing vice? I don’t really have one ritual or one thing that helps. Whatever works at the time. I might listen to a little music or read a bit from a favorite book to get in the mood to write. Coffee and chocolate always help. But it varies by day and with the material I’m working with that day. I do believe in writing walks. If I’m stuck, going for a walk (with pen & notebook) can be really helpful. And even if I’m not stuck, as I walk, I tell myself the story over and over and it helps me get at what’s going on.

4. What do you write on (type of computer, or notebook, etc.) and where do you write? I have a desktop Mac now, but I’ve been a PC girl my whole life, and still have a PC netbook, so I’m bilingual. I also keep a notebook/journal for every novel I’m writing, but I inevitably also end up writing on scraps of paper and sticky notes! Couldn’t write a book without sticky notes!

5. Have you had a “rock star” moment regarding your writing career? If so, what was it? I’ve been lucky to have a few of them. I’ve been recognized in public before (at a restaurant, in the grocery store, on a walk in my neighborhood), which is hysterical. A recent rock star moment was going to visit a local book club and hearing the room full of women scream when I rang the doorbell. I really thought maybe they were expecting a stripper or something! But no, just me.

6. What do you do to celebrate your writing successes? I usually buy myself a little sumthin sumthin or take myself out for a meal (which may be McDonald’s if I’m in need of junk food, which I don’t often eat).

7. Describe your personality with five adjectives that would make your 5th grade English teacher proud. Inquisitive, steadfast, generous, fretful and quick.

Author bio
Carleen Brice’s debut novel, Orange Mint and Honey, was an Essence “Recommended Read” and a Target “Bookmarked Breakout Book.” For this book, she won the 2009 First Novelist Award from the Black Caucus of the American Library Association and the 2008 Break Out Author Award at the African American Literary Awards Show. Orange Mint and Honey was optioned by Lifetime Movie Network.

final book coverHer second novel, Children of the Waters (One World/Ballantine), a book about race, love and family, just came out at the end of June. Booklist Online called it “a compelling read, difficult to put down.” Essence says, “Brice has a new hit.” You can read an excerpt at her website www.carleenbrice.com.

She is at work on her third novel, Calling Every Good Wish Home, and she maintains the blog “White Readers Meet Black Authors” www.welcomewhitefolks.blogspot.com.

Publicity Contact: Lisa Barnes
212/572-2014; lbarnes@randomhouse.com
Trade
Paperback
Original

From Bestselling author Carleen Brice
Children of the Waters

CHILDREN OF THE WATERS (A One World Trade Paperback Original; On Sale: June 23, 2009) by Carleen Brice—author of the #1 Denver Post bestseller and Essence Book Club Pick Orange Mint and Honey—explores the connection between love and race, and what it really means to be family.

Brice’s compelling, eagerly anticipated new novel CHILDREN OF THE WATERS strikes deep emotional chords and poses the intriguing question: Can two strangers become sisters?

Trish Taylor’s white ancestry never got in the way of her love for her black ex-husband, or their mixed race son, Will. But when Trish’s marriage ends, she returns to her family’s Denver, Colorado home to find a sense of identity and connect to her past.

What she finds there shocks her to the very core: her mother and newborn sister were not killed in a car crash as she was told. In fact, her baby sister, Billie Cousins, is now a grown woman; her grandparents had put her up for adoption, unwilling to raise the child of a black man. Billie, who had no idea she was adopted, wants nothing to do with Trish until a tragedy in Billie’s own family forces her to lean on her surprisingly supportive and sympathetic sister. Together they unravel the age-old layers of secrets and resentments and navigate a path toward love, healing, and true reconciliation..

Essence wrote that Orange Mint and Honey “will have you hooked from page one”—and so will Brice’s latest.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Carleen Brice is author of the novel Orange Mint and Honey and Lead Me Home: An African American’s Guide Through the Grief Journey. She is also editor of the anthology Age Ain’t Nothing but a Number: Black Women Explore Midlife. Her book Walk Tall: Affirmations for People of Color sold over 100,000 copies. She lives in Denver with her husband and two cats where she writes, gardens, and blogs about writing and gardening. Please visit her through her website, www.carleenbrice.com.

CHILDREN OF THE WATERS
By Carleen Brice
A One World Trade Paperback Original; On Sale: June 23, 2009
978-0-345-49907-3; $14.00; 224 pp

Get it on Amazon or at your favorite book retailer.

GCC Tour: Sheila Curran

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Author Sheila Curran, of the cool Girlfriends Cyber Circuit, is swinging by A/B, where the temp is always a perfect 72 degrees with no humidity! Join me in welcoming Sheila and congratulating her on her new novel EVERYONE SHE LOVED, which is in stores now! Find out more about Sheila and her novel at www.sheilacurran.com.

1. If Oprah invited you on her show to talk about your book, what would the theme of that show be?   Who would you pick to take care of your children if you were to die, and what sort of issues might you fear most about another mother raising your kids.

2. Perfect women’s topic for O’s audience! What was the most fun scene in your book to write? A really good sex scene. The most difficult?  Whenever the characters I love are in danger of being hurt, even just emotionally.

3. Do you have a muse, good luck charm, writing vice?  Does coffee count?  Also, I sit in a nice comfy armchair and put my feet on an ottoman, computer on my lap, and repeat to myself “seat of the pants to seat of the chair.” 

4. I say nothing like “kicking back” while writing. I’m sure more blood flows to the brain that way. What do you write on (type of computer, or notebook, etc.) and where do you write?  I write on my laptop and I have a bedroom set aside as my study, where I inhabit the aforesaid armchair.

5. Have you had a “rock star” moment regarding your writing career?  Alas!  The closest I came was walking on the beach and seeing someone reading my book.  And she looked pretty involved in the story.

6. Lordie, I would’ve snapped a picture. Very cool stumbling upon a scene like that. What do you do to celebrate your writing successes? Champagne with my husband and any friend I can get to come over and bask with me.

7. Bubbly is always good. And I’m all for basking!!! Describe your personality with five adjectives that would make your 5th grade English teacher proud.  Imaginative, shy, persistent, intuitive, histrionic.

Then here’s to “histrionic” success to you Ms. Curran. We’re cyber-toasting your launch and best of luck with EVERYONE SHE LOVED.

GCC Tour: Sam Wilde

thislilmommyI love, love, love the title of Samantha Wilde’s debut novel, THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME. Women looking for a funny, sharp-witted read will adore Wilde’s book about motherhood. We’re thrilled she’d made the time to answer some A/B questions. -ML

1. If Oprah invited you on her show to talk about your book, what would the theme of that show be? Boy, if I got on Oprah, I hope the theme would be ME! And motherhood, too. That would be interesting. Motherhood in America. Oh, and ME. Did I say that? Does Oprah read your blog?

2. What was the most fun scene in your book to write? The most difficult? I delighted in writing all about the awful stuff that happens post partum. What was the hardest? Maybe the middle. It’s hard to be in the middle.

3. Do you have a muse, good luck charm, writing vice? I do tend to eat chocolate while writing, which is very museful. I also work well under pressure, so it helps that my real job is being with my kids around the clock. My writing is squeezed in. Very motivational.

4. What do you write on (type of computer, or notebook, etc.) and where do you write? When I wrote THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME I was lying in my bed using a laptop. I now write and revise in our family office/guest room. Sitting on a big blue ball.

Sam, I sit on a big white wall. But I like the sound of “big blue ball” better. 

5. Have you had a “rock star” moment regarding your writing career? If so, what was it? I think I’m too new to feel like a rock star. I’m waiting for Oprah to call. Or, actually, the other day, after a Borders book signing, a woman came over and picked up my novel and looked at it. She read the back. Flipped through the pages. Stared at the cover. I was by the bathrooms with my mother. Then she put it down and walked away. Isn’t that what happens with real books?

Sam, it’s even worse when they do that right in front of you. As if you’re not sitting there. Oy.

6. What do you do to celebrate your writing successes? I am still waiting on being a success. But I celebrate the little achievements by spending more time with my family.

7. Describe your personality with five adjectives that would make your 5th grade English teacher proud. Energetic, enthusiastic, helpful, driven and persistent.

This summer, Samantha Wilde makes her literary debut with THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME, a fresh and funny novel about a new mother who discovers the wonders and terrors of motherhood—one hilarious crisis at a time. The book will be published as a Bantam Trade Paperback Original on June 23, 2009.

The novel introduces Joy McGuire who has gone from being skinny and able to speak in complete sentences to someone who hasn’t changed her sweatpants in weeks. But now with a new baby to care for, she feels like a woman on the brink and as she scrambles to recapture the person she used to be she takes another look at the woman she is: a stay-at-home mom in love with her son, if a bit addled about everything else. As a new mom herself, Wilde, a graduate of Yale Divinity School, wrote THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME after the birth of her son when she was experiencing the ups and downs of new motherhood. According to Wilde, “I wrote the book because I couldn’t not write it. I took my lap top to my bed during my son’s naps and wrote and wrote. I wrote the book I wanted to readThe book takes a hard look at the effects of new motherhood on a woman and on a marriage through the eyes of one stressed but insightful woman. It’s a story that will keep mothers going when they think they can’t go any further.”

With THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME, Samantha Wilde brings a candid and hilarious light to the universal story of new motherhood.

 

samwildeABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Samantha Wilde is the mother of two born in under two years. A graduate of Concord Academy, Smith College, Yale Divinity School and The New Seminary, she lives in Western Massachusetts with her husband and children. She is the daughter of novelist Nancy Thayer. When she’s not mothering her toddler and baby, she writes, teaches yoga, and moonlights as a minister. Although she never sleeps, she’s never once been tempted to give her children away to the highest bidder (well, almost never). She’s currently using nap times to write her second novel for Bantam Dell. You can visit her at wildemama.blogspot.com

Get it at Amazon or at your favorite bookseller.

 

THIS LITTLE MOMMY STAYED HOME

by Samantha Wilde

A Bantam Trade Paperback Original

June 23, 2009/ 978-0-385-34266-7/ $12.00

GCC Tour: Judi Fennell

A/B is pleased to welcome the witty and wonderful Judi Fennell, author of a new Mer trilogy, with book 1, In Over Her Head, on the shelves this week! 

1. If Oprah invited you on her show to talk about your book, what would the theme of that show be? If Oprah ever decided to have Romance on her show, I’d love the theme of that show to be about the industry. How it has changed from those covers of the 70s to empowered women rescuing heroes and the characters growing together, as well as the modern take we have on them. That we’re not stuck in the bodice-ripper image and that they’re written by smart, intelligent, funny, talented people – male and female. And then I have a bridge to sell her in Brooklyn because I have about as much chance of doing that as appearing on her show. :)

2. What was the most fun scene in your book to write? Oh, I really had a blast writing the scene where Erica wakes up under the sea. I just let my imagination go with that one and tried to imagine what I would be thinking if that happened to me. The most difficult? The black moment. It’s sad for the heroine and I felt her pain. But as for a hard scene to craft, none really in that story.

3. Do you have a muse, good luck charm, writing vice? A disembodied muse who likes to chat at 5 am. I’ve had to start keeping a notebook next to my bed otherwise there’s no way she’ll let me get back to sleep.

4. What do you write on (type of computer, or notebook, etc.) and where do you write? I recently bought one of those adjustable television trays you see advertised on television for $39.99. It’s PERFECT for writing in one of the chairs in my office, or if I want to sit outside. Portable, lightweight; it’s not particularly stylish to go in any room, but it’s collapsible. I write on my laptop most of the time and have discovered the joys of OneNote. My husband bought me a massage chair for Christmas and I’m waiting anxiously for it to be delivered. You may never see me outside of my office ever again.

5. Have you had a “rock star” moment regarding your writing career? When Jill Barnett said she’d give me a quote, I was fan girl squeeing. She wrote my favorite book, Bewitching. Rock star in my direction? I was amazed to find a wonderful woman who found my blog and has helped get the word out. She’s interviewed me and posted the cover for In Over Her Head on her blog. I can’t thank her enough and was so humbled and flattered that a stranger found me. And now she’s no longer a stranger. 

6. What do you do to celebrate your writing successes? Champagne is always good :) When I sold my books, I laughed, cried, etc. then sat on the sofa and read a book. Seriously. I know that sounds kind of anti-climactic, but if you think about it – I’m in this business to write my stories and see them brought to publication, so reading someone else’s is way of “joining in” that world.

7. Describe your personality with five adjectives that would make your 5th grade English teacher proud. Confident, eloquent, dedicated, considerate, thoughtful. Okay, those came from my family. And here are the rest they’re throwing out: braniac, shakespearian, bitchy, blonde, farfegnugan. Yes, my family has an odd sense of humor. Guess there’s no question where mine came from.

 

Thanks, Judi and much success – an ocean full of it! – ML

Contest!

To celebrate the release of each of her books, Judi Fennell and the Atlantis Inn (www.AtlantisInn.com) and the Hibiscus House (www.HibiscusHouse.com) bed and breakfasts are raffling off three romantic beach getaway weekends. All information is on Judi’s website, www.JudiFennell.com