Posts Tagged ‘joanne rendell’

BEbabes Wine & Book Chat TODAY!

October 29th, 2009

Are you on Twitter? If so, then you may know that Book End Babes has a Twitter account where we tweet about the latest news and events and share atta-babes and lit love. If you’d like to start an account to get in on the action, go to www.twitter.com. It’s free to sign up. You just pick a username and password and you can start tweetin’.

To participate in the Tweet Chat, the easiest way to participate is to go to www.tweetchat.com and sign in, then add the hashtag #bebabes. It’s a way for people to follow one stream of conversation. It automatically adds that hashtag behind every post you do so it saves time. Simply ask questions and you can respond to @replies. You’ll get the hang of it after a bit.

Each month we do a Wine & Book Tweetchat to honor one or more of our Top Pick authors of the month. In October we were fortunate to have two agree to join us for our wine & book chat so we’ve got a DOUBLE FEATURE on our hands!

journalAt 7 p.m. EST, THE RED LEATHER DIARY author Lily Koppel will be in our guest throne. Get to know more about her and her book on her web site so you’ll have good questions to ask her. At the end of the hour, one lucky tweeter will receive this pretty journal!

inviteAt 8 p.m. EST, CROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE author Joanne Rendell will be wearing the tiara. Check out her web site & go to our Top Picks page or click on the books in our right sidebar to find out more about them. Our prize for one lucky participant for this chat will be a set of sparkly Girls Night Out invites for your next gathering!

cabIt so happens that both of these authors are New Yorkers and the setting of their books are in NYC, so at the recommendation of BEbabe Bonnie Kerr, from Chapter 1, our official wine for the chat is BIG YELLOW CAB Cabernet Sauvignon. It’s BYOB (bring your own bottle), so if you don’t have time to explore BIG YELLOW CAB with us, tell us what you’re drinking. (We just hate to drink alone. Sort of.)

We’ll Tweet you later, babes!

Side Dish with Joanne Rendell

October 13th, 2009

Side Dish by October Top Pick author Joanne Rendell

For my Book End Babes side dish, I’d like to offer what could be considered a “literary side dish”! In other words, I would like to offer a short passage which didn’t make it into my new novel, Crossing Washington Square. Although it ended up on the cutting room floor, I still love the passage and I think it gets at why women and book groups, novels and friendship are so important – and thus why Book End Babes rocks!

Here’s the set up: Rachel Grey and Diana Monroe are both literature professors in the old boys club of Manhattan University. Stuck in a male-dominated and crusty English department should create a kinship between them. However, 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 and thinks “beach” fiction is an easy ride for students.

Throughout the novel, the women have a number of run-ins where they argue about their very different views of literature. In one exchange (an exchange which got cut in the final version), Diana is being pretty rude about book groups implying that they are just an excuse for “bored suburban housewives” to get together and gossip. This is Rachel’s passionate response:

“Have you ever been to a book group, Diana?” Rachel blurted out, an angry flush rising on her cheeks. She didn’t wait for an answer. “If you ever go to one, you will see how wrong and short-sighted you are.” Rachel ignored Diana’s bored, slightly amused gaze and continued. “Book groups offer women so much. They offer an escape from families, demanding kids, the laundry, and the drone of a ball game. They offer a place to nurture and sustain friendships. Also, when women go to book groups, they are free to talk about books and ideas, stories and fantasies. In other words, once a week or once a month or whenever they meet, women can discuss something other than their kids, their husbands, the demands of their jobs. Book groups offer them a time to talk about what they love: books.”
Diana’s lips tightened a little and then she said simply, “I see you feel very passionately about this, Professor Grey.”

You can order CROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE by clicking on the title cover in our side bar. Don’t forget to put October 29th on your calendar for our October Wine & Book Chat with Joanne!

photoTell us what book you are PASSIONATE about and you’ll be entered to win an 8-pack 3 Musketeers Mint with Dark Chocolate (highly addictive), which is a great pick considering Diana & Rachel would definitely not be musketeers together at the beginning of the book. You’ll also be entered to win our Impulse Prize of the Week.

New Impulse Prize Each Week!

October 12th, 2009

I love to win things. Who doesn’t? Yet for most of us, we’ve never won anything, period. Thanks to the Internet, it’s easier to know about way to win prizes both big and small, and I’ve even recently had friends win prizes worth $1,000 or more. Well, you won’t find the big ticket items here on BEbabes yet, but we would like to reward you for reading both the blog and books and being a part of our growing community and spreading lit love.

I named our lil prizes “Impulse Prizes” because they are the type of things you buy on an impulse when you go into a boutique or grocery store. Fun, frilly and feel-good. I’ve bought them with my own $$, impulsively, myself. At least it lasts longer than a Starbucks Pumpkin Spice latte. However, if you’d like some free promo and have a fun prize you’d like to give away – promoting your Etsy store or other busines – I’d be happy to include you.

We’ll still be giving away books on the site, especially for bigger prize packages and when guests and publishers host contests, but every week you can find an Impulse Prize up for grabs here. Real-life BEbabes chapter members automatically get an EXTRA entry in every contest they participate in. We’re giving our next four new queenBs who set up photoa BEbabes chapter a fun trendy momma tote with a book from our book closet to kick off their chapter.

How to Win Our Weekly Impulse Prize:
1. You get one entry per comment per post.
2. EXTRA: If you’re also a chapter member, you get one extra entry.
3. EXTRA: Tweet about us – by retweeting or doing an original tweet.

At the end of the week – at 5 p.m. CST on Fridays, we’ll gather up the entries and use the random number generator to find our winner. Please check the site in the comments on FRIDAY or over the weekend to see if you’ve won. I’d love to be a detective and track you down, but, no, that’s a lie. I don’t want to track you down, but I DO want you to win your prize because I get to feel like Santa Claus giving them a fun gift. I’ll need your physical address to mail it to you, obviously.

Remember to check the Contest Closet page for the latest contests. We’ll be doing an EXTRA prize for one commenter on author Joanne Rendell’s SIDE DISH post on Tuesday – chocolate.

Thanks for supporting BEbabes! Here’s our first Impulse Prize of the Week, picked from our prize closet by my darlin’ 9- year-old Prize Princess: PhiloSophie’s magnet set
Sponsored by: Malena Lott
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L’Ananas et Fromage

October 7th, 2009

Recipe: L’Ananas et Fromage by BEbabes Top Pick author Joanne Rendell

benny-and-jo-paper-220x330I’m generally very unenthusiastic when it comes to cooking and I like to channel my creative energies anywhere but the kitchen! However, I do have one recipe. It’s probably the easiest recipe that will ever appear on this site, but I promise you it’s yummy and will make great little hors d’oeuvres for a Book End Babes get together. I’ve even given it a French name so you can impress your guests! Most of all, these little morsels capture the spirit of my new novel, Crossing Washington Square, which tells the tale of two women who are as different as cheese and pineapple! (their tastes in literature are as different as cheese and pineapple too)

Ingredients: Sharp Cheddar Cheese, One Pineapple, a box of cocktail sticks

1. Cube the cheese
2. Cube the pineapple
3. Take a cocktail stick and spear a piece of pineapple. Then using the same cocktail stick, spear a piece of cheese. Place on big place and serve to eagerly awaiting guests!

Thanks, Joanne. I’ll definitely make it for my next BEbabes chapter party! – ML

Girfriend Tour: Joanne Rendell

September 2nd, 2009

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! 

How Author Malena Lott Gets La Dolce Vita

November 6th, 2008

First off, a hearty Midwestern thank you to authors Joanne Rendell, Jenny Gardiner and Jess Riley for taking the time to share their personal insights into “the sweet life” with our readers. These three authors are a big part of the reason I wanted to start Athena’s Bookshelf – to bring light to great books by great emerging authors. We’ll be back to more  book reviews next week, including reviews for The Amend Sisters, Where Am I Wearing, And Never Stop Dancing and more historical romance.

And now, for my route to the sweet life, la dolce vita

This is going to sound strange for an author to say, since stories live in our heads all the time, but the best way for me to experience the sweet life is to get out of my head once in awhile. I’ve always prided myself on being a thinker and my creative outlet is not only escape for me, but therapy. But what I realized last year, while reading The New Earth by Eckhart Tolle, is that my brain was pretty much controlling my life, and not in a good way. 

Do you ever have too many thoughts going on at once? Catch yourself worrying about the past and fretting about the future? Conjuring up drastic scenarios that may never come to fruition? Yeah…I pretty much rock at that. And it’s all well and good if you’re creating those things for conflict for your characters, but something else entirely if it’s about your own life. The stress pool is a cesspool. 

By practicing keeping myself in the present moment as much as possible, the past and the future melt away (unless the present is purposely planning for a future moment.) What’s left is the glorious present – whatever I happen to be doing at the moment. Making bacon for my 8 year old’s farmer’s breakfast this morning. Concentrating on the bacon and visiting with her, and not thinking about the dozen other things I need to do this morning. Getting ready for my launch party yesterday, I listened to Oprah’s Soul series, instead of worrying if anyone would show up at the launch party. (Thankfully many did!)

We’ve all heard the saying, “don’t worry, be happy,” yet it’s much harder to live it. But I’ve found when I do, then everything in life is sweeter. I really get to savor the small stuff and simply be present. Now I have to rush. Can’t take the kids to school in PJ’s, now can I? 

Be sure and check out my web site to enter two great contests ending in November, for an Italian Cafe CD perfect for your next dinner party or a Sephora Makeup Kit for yourself or as a Christmas gift for a girlie girl on your list. Need some holiday baking and recipe ideas? You’ll find my favorites on the site, as well. Thanks for supporting Dating da Vinci, and I wish you the sweet life this holiday season and beyond!

Get the book on Amazon here. 

How Author Joanne Rendell Gets La Dolce Vita

November 3rd, 2008

To celebrate launch week of Dating da Vinci by Malena Lott, we’ve asked some of our favorite women’s fiction authors to stop by and share their own idea of “the sweet life.” 

Burnt Marshmallows: A Writer’s Dolce Vita

by guest author Joanne Rendell, The Professors’ Wives’ Club

“I wish I could get this novel finished….”

“I wish I could get an agent….”

“I wish my agent could find an editor who will buy my book…”

“I wish my book would get great reviews…”

“I wish it would be put on the front tables at Barnes and Noble…”

“I wish it would sell lots…”

“I wish I could get on the New York Times Bestsellers list…”

“I wish Oprah would call…”

Many people live by their dreams and aspirations and writers, like me, are no different. From the moment I started writing fiction, I dreamed. I dreamed of being able to finish a paragraph, a chapter, then a book. When my first manuscript was done, I dreamed of securing an agent and finding a publisher. I was lucky, although there were hiccups and rejected manuscripts along the way, these dreams came true. I found an agent and a publisher and now have a book out on the tables of Barnes and Noble and another book in the publishing world’s pipeline.

But even when our dreams come true, we still keep coming up with new dreams. As soon as my first novel The Professors’ Wives’ Club was launched this Fall, I cooked up a whole new set of dreams: seeing a review in O magazine; a mention in The New York Times; my name on the bestseller’s list; a call from the Today show. I couldn’t help it. I just kept dreaming.

Indeed, because of these new set of dreams, I spent a few weeks after my book’s launch worrying: worrying about sales, worrying whether I was doing enough to help publicize my book. In an attempt to get my name out there, I ended up writing a number of articles for publications and websites, including an essay about homeschooling for Babble.com which whipped up a storm of controversy. The piece was picked up by a number of media outlets and resulted in my family and I being featured in an article for The New York Times

Yet, what I realized through the whole rollercoaster adventure in the world of “big media” was that, in spite of being exciting and dream-fulfilling, it wasn’t where I found the most happiness.

The day after seeing my article in the newspaper (and after fielding all the phonecalls and emails it prompted), my husband, five year old son and I took off for our little ramshackle cabin in upstate New York. In the evening, the temperature dropped and we built a fire and roasted marshmallows. The moon was bright and a few wispy clouds scudded across the otherwise clear sky. I wasn’t thinking about the Times piece, or the sales of my books, or the fact that, out in the country, Oprah wouldn’t be able to reach me! Instead, I simply enjoyed the sweetness of the marshmallows and my small family who were smiling and laughing in the glow of the dancing orange flames.

Dreams are vital, I realized as I tucked myself into my sleeping bag that night. Without dreams we might not dare to strike out, take adventures, or pursue those things we’d really love to do. However, it is the simple pleasures – and sticky burnt marshmallows – that make our lives truly sweet.

Thanks, Joanne! I could use a smore right about now. Continued success on your writing and making those dreams come true. 

 www.joannerendell.com

Get The Professors’ Wives’ Club on Amazon here. 

  

 

The Professors' Wives' Club

September 8th, 2008

The Professors’ Wives’ Club by Joanne Rendell

First line: “Even though the sky was heavy with rain clouds and an eerie morning gloom hung over the city, Mary didn’t take off her dark glasses.”

Rendell, the wife of an NYU professor who lives in faculty housing, turns out a thoughtful debut about very different women connected by their ties to the fictional Manhatten U. The theme of the book could well be described as “fighting for what you really want” as the wives not only fight to keep the university garden from being demolished for a parking garage, but fight to come into their own in their relationships and careers. The two wives who get the most attention are Mary, a professor herself, who is married to the evil dean who not only wants to destroy the garden for monetary gain, but hits his wife. Then there’s Sophie, mother of three, including newborn twins, who never let a thing like breastfeeding keep her from digging up secrets about the dean and the mystery of the garden, and acting as the glue that holds these women, and the story, all » Read more: The Professors' Wives' Club

The Professor's Wives' Club Release Day!

September 2nd, 2008

From the publisher:

A debut novel about the intertwining lives of college faculty wives.

Nestled among Manhattan University’s faculty housing, there is a garden where four women will meet—each with a scandalous secret that could upset their lives, destroy their families, and rock the prestigious university to its very core.

With its maple trees, iron gate, and fence laced with honeysuckle, Manhattan U’s garden offers faculty wives Mary, Sofia, Ashleigh, and Hannah much needed refuge from their problems. But as Mary’s husband, the power-hungry dean, plans to demolish their beloved garden, these four women will discover a surprising secret about a lost Edgar Allan Poe manuscript—and realize they must find the courage to stand up for their passions, dreams, and desires. 

A/B Says: Expect an A/B review next week on this novel.

Visit the author’s web site: www.joannerendell.com

Buy it at Amazon.