Cupcake Anniversary!

by Malena Lott
I secretly hate that expression, “Time flies,” likely because it’s cliche, and the nickname phrase of “time flies when you’re having fun,” which is even more cliche (but true!) and is probably a good thing versus, “life is slow when it sucks,” which doesn’t have the same ring to it at all. My new magic trick is getting time to slow down by staying in the present moment. I know, right? Get me a show in Vegas already.

So, yeah, time flying? UFO speed, baby. Or, you know, busy bee fast. Buzz Books USA is one year old on Valentine’s Day! I know it’s a little birthday, but it means we’ve cut our teeth in birthing stories into this world. (Forgive me I’ve been in cradleville re-birthing The Stork Reality: Secrets from the Underbelly, out March 1st) so everything in my life is a metaphor for birth these days.

Time flew not just because it was “fun” experimenting with publishing last year with Fixer Upper and then my first novella, Life’s a Beach and then the multi-author project Sleigh Ride. It flew despite the many curse words and fits and frustrations that came along with the whole process. And I’ll likely continue to do those things, but this time I have company! With a Buzz Books team and new lifeblood on Book End Babes, we really are living the motto of Buzz Books to celebrate stories.

A couple of ways you can celebrate with us:
1. Enter our birthday giveaway of a Kindle by liking the Buzz Books Facebook page
2. Enjoy 10% off creative services if you’ve been needing a bit of an undo to your image (through our parent company Athena).
3. Share stories of pregnancy and motherhood by signing up to blog once for the StorkRealityBook ode to motherhood blog (The good, the bad, the smelly.) E-mail malenalott (at) me (dot) com for the skinny.
4. Pitch Buzz Books for publishing consideration.
5. Send interesting authors our way for FIVE IN THE HIVE Q&As here on Book End Babes and possible guests on our The Hive with Buzz Books weekly story podcast – now available on iTunes, blogtalkradio and malenalott.com.

And my story rec of the week? THE FAULT IN OUR STARS by John Greene, which was a BEB top pick in January and turned me into a puddle of tears over the weekend. Sweet Jesus that man can write. I’m all for story craft books, but if you need to learn more about characters and dialogue, by all means, read and study that book. The storytelling is so vivid I felt like a watched a movie.

Saturday Special: The Frugal e-Reader

I love the show of entrepreneurial spirit on the Internet and the book world is no different. According to site founder Elizabeth, The Frugal e-Reader is “A place for Kindle and book lovers to read more, read often, and read frugally!

You can search for eBooks by genre or by price. Traditionally published as well as indie authors are featured here. Frugal Finds Under Nine are discovered and featured multiple times a day. Look for special weekly posts on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, as well as author interviews and giveaways!”

As the ebook world grows bigger and bigger, I expect more “deal” sites will arise. Kudos to Elizabeth for helping curate finds for the KIndle and showcase new books and authors. She offers several types of promotion to authors and readers can subcribe to the RSS feed as well as follow The Frugal eReader on social media.

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How To Create (Great) Cover Art

by Malena Lott

I’m a sucker for a great cover. As a creative director for years, I worked with graphic designers to create award-winning ads, brochures, billboards and more. Now as an author, it’s come in handy to have understanding of color, design and marketing.

Just because you are self-pubbing a book doesn’t mean your cover should look like it. But what does the “right” photo, font, composition and style mean?

First, a lot of self-pubbed books use the fonts that come standard on the PC. Instead, check out a font library to express the right message with your title. Typically it’s best to stick with only two fonts: one for the title and the other for your name and tagline. Yes, it takes time (hours!) but it’s worth it to keep revising until the right font comes along.

The right image and colors means it conveys the appropriate message about the book. Light, dark, mysterious, funny, etc. It could also convey setting like my books below. I use istockphoto.com almost exclusively for purchasing photos. Don’t steal photos from the Internet. They are copyrighted, even if you don’t see it. If you’re e-pubbing, you only need to purchase the lo-res image (72 or 150 dpi) so you’ll save money that way. If you think you’ll get it printed in the future, go ahead and buy the large image.

I use In Design to design the 6×9 covers, and sometimes Photoshop to put several images together (such as Fixer Upper). If I need Photoshop, I employ (ask kindly) my husband to finish the design as he did for Fixer Upper. Otherwise, you might find a single photo or illustration that accomplishes what you want, such as I did with Life’s A Beach and Sleigh Ride (see below). For my Buzz Books client, the title of the book lent itself to the mare illustration. But of the hundreds of horse photos, I had

to select the best one- something that showed power and leadership. There were two cover options I liked better because of the title font, but when you are designing for someone else, they get final say. She selected this font because it’s the one she uses in her corporate identity. It’s okay, just not my pick.

Using a professional design program gives you the ability to change the sizes of every element on the page as well as the kerning and leaders of the words and letters themselves. Often you can tell that someone has just hit “return” and it makes for awkward alignment on the page.

The cool thing about cover art is though you are working with only a few elements, there are so many ways you can express your story on the cover and playing around with type placement and different images can give off entirely different vibes about your book. Hiring a designer is worth it because people really do judge a book by its cover, for good or ill. Good luck to you!

If you’re with a publishing house, you get little (to no) say in how your cover looks, though you will probably have filled out a worksheet that will help the designer in terms of characteristics, setting, and key events in the book to assist. In both of my first two novels with publishers, I got ZERO input after the design came out. I’m not whining, I’m just saying that when I voiced a concern or question, it didn’t result in changing much. I think perhaps on my second novel my name was made a bit larger. Authors should go into a contract knowing the publisher is in charge of the look and feel of the art. In the case of Dating da Vinci, though I LOVED the art, I was concerned readers would get the wrong impression that it was completely a feel-good chick lit book, when in fact it had a lot of grief in it. I also wasn’t sure about the boy-man in the background or the Tuscan-style architecture (it’s in Austin, Texas). If I had been the creative director on the project, I would have made “dating” and “da vinci” the same font. Typically, titles have one font for easier readability. I realize da vinci jumps out at you, but, again, not bad, just not my call.

What do you think? What are some covers out there today that you love?


Black Friday Specials

On behalf of all the Book End Babes, I’d like to thank you for being an avid reader, book lover and supporter of our blog and book club. Thanks for being a great girlfriend to your friends and for all that you do to make the world a bit shinier.

Our sister site, Bookgasm, put together a handy Black Friday specials list, so we’re reposting here. Good luck in finding that special something-somethin’ for the loved ones on your list. I LOVE a good deal and it’s all the sweeter to see that look of joy on the recipients’ faces as they open their gifts.

This weekend we’ll have our second annual HoLITday gift guide ready to share for your book shoppin’ pleasure.

Gobble-gobble,
Malena

Current great entertainment sales on Amazon for the holidays:

GENERAL
Black Friday deals, starting Nov. 22
Cyber Monday deals, Nov. 28-29
Top holiday deals, Nov. 30-Dec. 23

KINDLE
Wi-Fi Wireless Kindle for just $139
Free 3G+Wi-Fi Wireless Kindle for just $189

ELECTRONICS
HDTVs, Blu-ray players heavily discounted
3D TVs from top brands heavily discounted

TOYS
Holiday Toy List items at 25% off or more

BOOKS
Top 100 books of the year heavily discounted

MOVIES
More than 3,000 DVDs and Blu-rays at Black Friday prices, from Nov. 22-29
77 DVD and Blu-ray Lightning Deals at up to 70% off, from Nov. 22-29

MUSIC
Hundreds of deluxe-edition CD and DVDs starting at $8.99
Hundreds of CD box sets starting at $12.99
Greatest-hits CDs starting at $6.49

Support BOOKGASM and buy it at Amazon.

Oprah + Franzen, Take 2

by Malena Lott

Are you on board with Oprah's book club pick?

As a book club (and a book club that promotes reading whatever strikes your fancy), Book End Babes is thrilled that Oprah has a book club, period. She has a big voice, a world-wide audience, and she gets people to bookstores. I’d heard mid-last week that Oprah selected another Jonathon Franzen book (her 2001 choice, Franzen’s The Corrections never made it onto her show because he didn’t want her logo on his book. She disinvited him.) This time around, she told her audience on Friday’s show that the author sent her a galley with a personal note, so I’m guessing that was his way of apologizing. I mean, not everyone that sends a galley to Oprah gets it into her hands. He’s a big literary deal, and I really want to be on board and love his books, but I gave up on The Corrections after a page that was one looooong sentence. My daughter talks like that, but she’s a kid and I don’t know what she’s saying half the time. Oprah said of his new book, and her fresh pick, Freedom, that it would be one of our favorite reads of all time. Somebody tell me when it gets to the good stuff, because I’m not feeling anything differently reading it as I did reading the last one. Does it take away his brilliance? Absolutely not. Whoever among us claims to the scion of good literary taste should be drug around back for Tony Soprano to take a whack at you. I’ll let the New York Times drool over Franzen, while I keep my pom-poms high in the air for the stories that do for me what Oprah’s picks do for her.

I don’t even think it’s an issue about literary versus commercial fiction. To me, fiction is fiction, a story a story, and if it works, it works. I suppose Oprah is looking for BIG stories, but I’d just as soon have her select a steampunk novel. How cool if everyone was reading Gail Carriger’s books at the same time. Or, insert some book you thought was fresh and cool that not enough people know about. That’s about 99% of all books out there! The ones who get the big ad budgets and get the attention of the big media (and big voices like O’s) get the sales.

One person’s BEST THING EVER is another’s MEH. As the editor at Book End Babes, I get a lot of books in the mail, though only a tiny fraction compared to my husband’s mail call each day for his site Bookgasm. Combined, I get to peruse at least twenty new titles a week. I give new authors a chance all the time. I love to discover new voices, which is, I suppose, what rubs me a little wrong about Oprah’s choice. She could’ve made someone’s career with her selection, yet she chose a book that’s already had huge buzz, huge best-seller status and I was really hoping for her to help me find someone new to love. Yet, does one actor deserve to win the Academy Award twice? Sure, why not? If she wants to give the same author her coveted seal of approval, it’s her show. I often recommend sophomore and junior efforts here on BEB of authors I think are hitting home runs again and again.

And this is your book club. Sure, we want to be your resource to find out about great books. We list four good reads all month long in the sidebar, and they aren’t all women’s fiction, either. Our Bookettes, our featured bloggers, also introduce our readers to books they have loved. What I care most about is that you find something you connect with and then share that with people in your life. Each of us can light a spark. As always, we welcome authors to discuss their lives here. We genuinely want to get to know readers and authors and share the stories of our lives. Our real estate is yours.

Thank you for reading whatever you choose, as often as you can. If you’re reading FREEDOM, we’d love to hear your thoughts on it. If you were Oprah and could get millions to read a book of your choosing, what would that book be?