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Well, I did it.

I featured 31 days of fabulous author mamas, including myself a few times. 🙂

And later today I will randomly choose the winner of the three kick-ass Karen Karbo books. Good luck!

And now I am asking you to help me say thank you to our generous giveaway authors by purchasing their books.

If you saw a book that sparked your interest but you didn’t win, please purchase the book right here or at the bookseller of your choice.

I always enjoy hosting this giveaway. Thank you for coming. Thank you for all of your sharing, tweeting, and posting about it.

But most of all, thank you for participating! I hope you learned some new things about yourself and your creative process.

Here’s the final list of all of our participating authors:

May 1st: Claire Cook is giving away a copy of Wallflower in Bloom (fiction, advance copy!) More Info

May 2nd: Kelly James-Enger is giving away Writer For Hire (nonfiction, how-to) and an extra bonus The Honesty Index (fiction, ebook) More Info

May 3rd: Katie Davis is giving away Little Chicken’s Big Day (children’s) and an extra bonus: How To Promote Your Children’s Book (nonfiction, how-to, ebook) More Info

May 4th: Kate Hopper is giving away a copy of Use Your Words: A Writing Guide for Mothers (nonfiction, how-to) More Info

May 5th: Erica Bauermeister is giving away Joy For Beginners (fiction) More Info

May 6th: Judy M. Miller is giving away What To Expect From Your Adopted Tween (nonfiction, ebook) More Info

May 7th: KC Klein is giving away Dark Future (fiction, dark, futuristic) More Info

May 8th: Pamela Smith Hill is giving away a copy of Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Writer’s Life (biography) More Info

May 9th: Ericka Lutz is giving away The Edge of Maybe (novel) More Info

May 10th: Malia Jacobson is giving away Ready, Set, Sleep: 50 Ways To Help Your Child Sleep So You Can Sleep Too (e-book) on Kindle or in PDF

May 11th: Jessica Paige Morrell is giving away a copy of Thanks, But This Isn’t for Us: A (Sort of) Compassionate Guide to Why Your Writing is Being Rejected (nonfiction, how-to) More Info

May 12th: Cindy Hudson is giving away Mother-Daughter Book Club Meeting Planner Guides: Collection One and Book By Book: The Complete Guide to Creating Mother-Daughter Book Clubs More Info here and here

May 13th: Christina Katz is giving away a copy of Writer Mama with a bonus e-book Author Mama More Info here and here

May 14th: Heather Vogel Frederick is giving away Once Upon A Toad (children’s middle grade novel) More Info

May 15th: Krysty Krywko is giving away a copy of Late-onset Hearing Loss: A Parent’s Perspective (nonfiction, e-book) More info

May 16th: Heather Snow is giving away Sweet Enemy, A Veiled Seduction Novel (fiction, romance) More info

May 17th: Janet Boyer is giving away Tarot In Reverse (nonfiction) More info

May 18th: Hope Clark is giving away a copy of Lowcountry Bribe (fiction, mystery) More info

May 19th: Laura Laing is giving away Math for Grownups (nonfiction) More info

May 20th: Christina Katz is giving away a copy of Get Known Before the Book Deal (nonfiction, how-to) More info

May 21st: Nina Amir is giving away How To Blog A Book with a foreword from Christina Katz (nonfiction, how-to) More info

May 22nd: Natalie Serber is giving away a copy of Shout Her Lovely Name (fiction, short stories) More info

May 23rd: Christina Katz is giving away a copy of Build Your Author Platform e-workbook (nonfiction, how-to) More info

May 24th: Kristina Riggle is giving away Keepsake (fiction, novel) More info

May 25th: Abigail Green is giving away Mama Insider: Laughing (And Sometimes Crying) All The Way Through Pregnancy, Birth and the First Three Months (e-book, humorous nonfiction) in PDF or in Kindle

May 26th: Anthology Day! Cara Holman, Lorraine Wilde, and Lela Davidson are participating writers.

May 27th: Mariam Kobras is giving away a copy of her award-winning The Distant Shore: Book One of the Stone Trilogy (fiction, romance) More info

May 28th: Allison Winn Scotch is giving away a copy of The Song Remains The Same (fiction, novel) More info

May 29th: Lisa Schroeder is giving away It’s Raining Cupcakes More info and Sprinkles and Secrets More info (middle grade fiction novels)

May 30th: Christina Katz is giving away one set of her three books by Writer’s Digest: Writer Mama More info , Get Known Before the Book Deal More info, and The Writer’s Workout More info (all nonfiction, how-to)

May 31st: Karen Karbo is giving away a set of her three kick-as women books: How To Hepburn More info, The Gospel According to Coco Chanel More info, and How Georgia Became O’Keeffe More info (nonfiction)

Books are still shipping to book winners (some authors have not even been notified yet so please give me about a week to wrap it all up).

Happy summer, mamas! Hope to see you back again next year.

{ 3 comments }

And the winner of all of my books:

The Writer’s Workout

Get Known Before the Book Deal

Writer Mama

Build Your Author Platform, an e-workbook

&

Author Mama, an e-book

is…

Chris Blake

Chris was chosen by Random Number Generator.

Chris Blake’s response was:

OK here goes. Six characters from two different families. They are close friends who meet on vacation each year. Each character tells a scene from his/her POV and a character in that scene picks up the narrative, repeats the last part of the scene from his/her POV, which launches into a new scene. It’s sort of like what Jennifer Egan did in A Visit from the Goon Squad, only she would introduce a character in a prior chapter and start a new scene, sometimes further along in time, with the new character. This is the best I can do off the top of my head.

Congratulations, Chris!

If you missed the drawing for all of my books, you can read all about it here.

Important, winners: I need you to send me an e-mail with your mailing address so that I can send it on to the author and she can send you your signed book! Please include a phone number, as well.

Please send your address in an e-mail to “christina at christina katz dot com.”

Please put “Book Winner” in the subject line.

And thank you for supporting the giveaway and my work!

Thanks for participating. This is day 30 of The Writer Mama Every Day In May Book Giveaway. We have 1 more day and winner to go!

Thank you for participating!

{ 0 comments }

Shout out to Karen Karbo for being willing to give away three of her kick-ass women books for our grand finalé this year!

Years ago I picked up a copy of Karen’s memoir, The Stuff of Life, and blazed through it.

Despite how much time has passed there are passages and images from the book that have stayed with me for years.

How often can you say that about a book you’ve read?

Fast forward, now Karen is working on the fourth release in her kick-ass women series.

Coming soon, a witty nonfiction look at none other than Julia Child. Yahoo!

And while we are all waiting for the release of Julia Child Rules, we can enjoy the first three books in the series…please help me welcome Karen!

About Karen Karbo

Karen Karbo’s first novel, Trespassers Welcome Here, was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, and a Village Voice Top Ten Book of the Year.  Her other two adult novels, The Diamond Lane and Motherhood Made a Man Out of Me, were also named New York Times Notable Books.  Her 2004 memoir, The Stuff of Life, about the last year she spent with her father before his death, was an NYT Notable Book, a People Magazine Critics’ Choice, a Books for a Better Life Award finalist, and a winner of the Oregon Book Award for Creative Non-fiction.  Her short stories, essays, articles and reviews have appeared in Elle, Vogue, Esquire, Outside, the New York Times, salon.com and other magazines. She is a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Fiction, and a winner of the General Electric Younger Writer Award.

She is most well known for her best-selling Kick Ass Women series, the most recent of which is How Georgia Became O’Keeffe, published in 2011. How to Hepburn, published in 2007, was hailed by the Philadelphia Inquirer as “an exuberant celebration of a great original.” The Gospel According to Coco Chanel appeared in 2009.  Next up: Julia Child Rules, which will appear in May 2013.

Karen grew up in Los Angeles California and lives in Portland, Oregon where she continues to kick ass.

About Karbo‘s Three Kick-Ass Women Books

How Georgia Became O’Keeffe, Lessons on the Art of Living

Most people associate Georgia O’Keeffe with New Mexico, painted cow skulls, and her flower paintings. She was revered for so long—born in 1887, died at age ninety-eight in 1986—that we forget how young, restless, passionate, searching, striking, even fearful she once was—a dazzling, mysterious female force in bohemian New York City during its heyday.

In this distinctive book, Karen Karbo cracks open the O’Keeffe icon in her characteristic style, making one of the greatest women painters in American history vital and relevant for yet another generation. She chronicles O’Keeffe’s early life, her desire to be an artist, and the key moment when art became her form of self-expression. She also explores O’Keeffe’s passionate love affair with master photographer Alfred Stieglitz, who took a series of 500 black-and-white photographs of O’Keeffe during the early years of their marriage.

How Georgia Became O’Keeffe: Lessons on the Art of Living delves into the long, extraordinary life of the renowned American painter, exploring a range of universal themes—from how to discover and nurture your individuality to what it means to be in a committed relationship while maintaining your independence, from finding your own style to developing the ability to take risks. Each chapter is built around an aspect of living that concerns women today of all ages: how to find your own path; work with passion and conviction; express yourself; be in a relationship without sacrificing your sense of self; and do it all with an effortless, unique style.

As with Karbo’s previous books, How Georgia Became O’Keeffe: Lessons on the Art of Living is not a traditional biography, but rather a compelling, contemporary reassessment of the life of O’Keeffe with an eye toward understanding what we can learn from her way of being in the world.

The Gospel According To Coco Chanel, Life Lessons From The World’s Most Elegant Woman

Delving into the long, extraordinary life of renowned French fashion designer Coco Chanel, Karen Karbo has written a new kind of book, exploring Chanel’s philosophy on a range of universal themes—from style to passion, from money and success to femininity and living life on your own terms.

Born in 1883 in a poorhouse in southern France to unmarried parents, Chanel was raised in a convent after her mother died when she was six and her father abandoned her. The nuns taught her to sew, and while working as a café singer in the early 1900s she began designing hats for fun. Her lovers included a wealthy English industrialist, who helped her set up her own millinery shop and steered his society friends her way.

Chanel grew up to be the woman who not only gave us the little black dress and boxy jackets, but also popularized pants for women and easy, practical clothes that allowed women a chic freedom they’d never known before. In her strong-headed, elegant, opinionated, passionate, entirely French way, Coco Chanel helped bring women into the modern era. She was the only fashion icon to be named one of TIME magazine’s 100 Most Influential People of the 20th Century.

The Gospel According to Coco Chanel is a captivating, offbeat look at style, celebrity, and self-invention—all held together with Karbo’s droll Chanel-style commentary and culled from an examination of Chanel’s difficult childhood and triumphant adulthood, passionate love affairs, career choices, habits, eccentricities, and personal philosophies. Weaving Chanel’s life story into chapter themes that subtly convey life lessons, and with Chesley McLaren’s charming illustrations, it will leave the reader utterly entranced with, and inspired by, Chanel’s amazing individuality, confidence, and determination.

How To Hepburn, Lessons on Living From Kate The Great

How to Hepburn, Karen Karbo’s sleek, contemporary reassessment of one of America’s greatest icons, takes us on a spin through the great Kate’s long, eventful life, with an aim toward seeing what we can glean from the First Lady of Cinema. One part How Proust Can Change Your Life and one part Why Sinatra Matters, How to Hepburn teases some unexpected lessons from the life of a woman whose freewheeling, pants-wearing determination redefined the image of the independent woman while eventually endearing her to the world.

This witty, provocative gem is full of no-nonsense Hepburn-style commentary on subjects such as: making denial work for you; the importance of being brash, facing fear, and always having an aviator in your life; learning why and how to lie; the benefits of discretion; making the most of a dysfunctional relationship; and the power of forgiving your parents. Thrilling fans of the notoriously independent actress, award-winner Karen Karbo presents a gusty guidebook to harnessing your inner Hepburn, and living life on your own terms.

The Very Short Interview

When did you know for sure that you were a writer and that writing would be a major energy focus in your life?

I wrote my first “novel” in kindergarten (it was 7 pages long). It was called “What’s Up?” and was about five people who didn’t like each other, stuck in an elevator. In second grade, I made my non-fiction debut with “The Praying Mantis.” (With illustrations.) Writing has always been part of my life, but I resisted thinking I could make a living as a writer for a very long time. In college I was a biology major; I thought I would be a physical therapist and would write on the side. An excellent idea, and twelve books later, I’m still thinking it’s a good game plan.

Who has always been behind your writing career and who helped pull you up the ladder of success?

Can I say “no one,” and not sound like an ungrateful shrew? There have been wonderful advocates along the way: my agents (the first, Sally Wofford-Girand, and the current, Kim Witherspoon and David Forrer), editors (Stacy Creamer, who “discovered” me, Karen Rinaldi, Lara Asher) and certain loyal, stout-hearted friends, but it’s the word “always” that trips me up. As a mother and writing teacher I must caution against using absolutes! But if I’m pressed to choose someone who has “always” been behind my writing career, it’s the voice of my Dad, who always believed that if I was willing to work hard and be persistent, I could do anything I wanted to do.

What is the most frequent comment you hear about your book (or books) from readers? Tell us a little story about the response to your work.

People say they feel as if I’m just talking to them. The inimitable Rhonda Hughes, publisher extraordinaire of Hawthorne Books, once praised the effortlessness with which I write. Of course, because she isn’t your run-of-the-mill book person, she knows that making it look easy is hard work.

And Now, Your Turn

Now it’s your turn. You remember how this works right?

I ask you a question. You answer in the comments for your chance to win a book each day.

Please just respond once, even if you make a typo. ;)

Answer in the comments in 50-200 words (no less and no more to qualify to win one of today’s books). Please read the complete rules at least once!

Karen writes books about kick-ass women. What do you write about? You can answer broadly, narrowly, poetically, with a list (which you know I will love), coquettishly, even vaguely…however you like!

At the end of your life, what will folks say you were writing about or exploring in the body of work you leave behind?

Ready, set, comment!

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway!

This is it. Last day, last chance to comment to win awesome books by author mamas.

{ 29 comments }

And the winner of It’s Raining Cupcakes and Sprinkles and Secrets by Lisa Schroeder is…

C.L!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

C.L’s response was:

I would write for young adults. For me, that is the time when people are really starting to realize who they are. On the one hand, they still cling to hope and magic of being a child, but are also starting to see that the world is much muddier than it appeared before. Also, because there are so many firsts in that time of life and everything feels so important. I would probably do a ghost story of sorts. Some connection to the past. Young adults are on the vanguard of new and putting that opposite the depth of the past is interesting to me. For themes, I would look at the fine line between autonomy and dependence. And some of the old plantations in the South seem like a perfect spooky locale.

Congratulations, C.L.!

If you missed the drawing for It’s Raining Cupcakes and Sprinkles and Secrets by Lisa Schroeder, you can read all about it here.

Important, winners: I need you to send me an e-mail with your mailing address so that I can send it on to the author and she can send you your signed book! Please include a phone number, as well.

Please send your address in an e-mail to “christina at christina katz dot com.”

Please put “Book Winner” in the subject line.

And thank you for supporting the giveaway and my work!

Thanks for participating. This is just day 29 of The Writer Mama Every Day In May Book Giveaway. We have 2 more days and winners to go! I hope you will spread the word. :)

{ 0 comments }

Christina with author and mom-daughter book club expert, Cindy Hudson

Me again!

Only this time I am giving away a complete set of my traditionally published books and self-published e-books, including the brand-spanking new, The Writer’s Workout.

I decided, what the heck? Why not give away the whole she-bang to one lucky winner.

So, here we go!

About Christina Katz

Christina Katz, The Writer Mama, is the author of three books from Writer’s Digest: The Writer’s Workout, Get Known Before the Book Deal, and Writer Mama. Her writing career tips and parenting advice appear regularly in national, regional, and online publications. A “gentle taskmaster” over the past decade to hundreds of writers, Christina’s students go from unpublished to published, build professional writing career skills, and increase their creative confidence over time.

Christina holds an MFA in creative writing from Columbia College Chicago and a BA in English from Dartmouth College. A popular speaker on creative career growth, Christina keynotes for writing conferences, literary events, MFA writing programs, and libraries. She lives just across the Willamette River from Wilsonville, Oregon in an old farmhouse with her husband, Jason, her daughter, Samantha, and far too many pets.

Learn more about upcoming classes and training groups with Christina this fall. Scholarships will be available for each session of Writing & Publishing the Short Stuff. The application period is one month prior to the start date of each class right here in this blog.

[Please note: my mailing address is the same as always: Christina Katz, PO Box 1354, Wilsonville, Oregon  97070]

About The Writer’s Workout

The Writer’s Workout is like having a personal trainer for your brain every day of the year.

In the age of information overload, writers need the ability to focus and feel satisfied at the keyboard on a daily basis. The Writer’s Workout greets you each day of the year with fresh advice that helps writers coach themselves to produce an impressive body of published work, whether in print or online.

You’ll learn manageable, no-nonsense techniques for every aspect of your writing career from getting organized to connecting with your audience to relationship building.

The Writer’s Workout contains 366 tips for writers in every genre on how to:

  • Make your writing as strong and powerful as possible.
  • Pitch and sell your work at every opportunity.
  • Overcome rejection to come back better than ever.
  • Promote your work and build an audience.
  • Learn how to balance your creative life with your daily life.

Veteran writing coach Christina Katz draws on her knowledge from more than a decade in the business.

With her no-more-excuses wisdom, you’ll find your stride and motivate yourself to career-long publishing success.

The Writer’s Workout gives you substantial suggestions every day to help you build a robust, unique writing career.

Read an excerpt on WritersDigest.com

Read another excerpt on Scribd.com

Bonus online exclusive: Download a free motivational poster to keep you moving as your build your writing career at writersdigest.com/writers-workout.

This giveaway also includes:

Writer Mama + Author Mama learn more

and

Get Known Before the Book Deal learn more

and

Build Your Author Platform learn more

And Now, Your Turn

Now it’s your turn. You remember how this works right?

I ask you a question. You answer in the comments for your chance to win a book each day.

Please just respond once, even if you make a typo. ;)

Answer in the comments in 50-200 words (no less and no more to qualify to win one of today’s books). Please read the complete rules at least once!

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway! I hope to see you here every day this month. Bring your friends!

The structure of The Writer’s Workout echoes the seasons: the movement of time over the year, the full cycle of creativity, and/or the seasons of a writer’s career. Come up with a creative structure for a book right now. It could be the movement of a day. The same time every year for many years. It could be anything! Lay it on us. If you don’t have an idea already, come up with one right now.

Ready, set, comment!

{ 26 comments }

And the winner of The Song Remains The Same by Allison Winn Scotch is…

Judy M. Miller!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

Judy’s response was:

I am deathly afraid of heights and clowns. I fear heights so badly that I feel the same sensation when one of my kids is up high. I sway and get a massive headache, and become light-headed. Clowns make me crazy, and I’ve yet to take me or my kiddos to a circus or carnival. Never will. I never thought to write about either, as just the thought generates panic. Okay, ’nuff. I feel the panic coming… 😉

Congratulations, Judy!

If you missed the drawing for The Song Remains the Same by Allison Winn Scotch, you can read all about it here.

Important, winners: I need you to send me an e-mail with your mailing address so that I can send it on to the author and she can send you your signed book! Please include a phone number, as well.

Please send your address in an e-mail to “christina at christina katz dot com.”

Please put “Book Winner” in the subject line.

And thank you for supporting the giveaway and my work!

Thanks for participating. This is just day 28 of The Writer Mama Every Day In May Book Giveaway. We have 3 more days and winners to go! I hope you will spread the word. :)

{ 1 comment }

Have you ever been surprised by an author?

And I don’t mean surprised by an author’s writing. I mean have you ever been surprised by the author herself…as in at the front door!

I was surprised by Lisa Schroeder at the front door of a friend’s house a few weeks ago at the monthly gathering of Samantha’s Mother-Daughter book club.

Here’s the whole story about how I met author Lisa Schroeder just a few weeks ago.

Did you read it? Cool, right?

I hope this story inspires more moms to start Mother-Daughter Book Clubs, as well as inspiring more readers of Lisa’s books, and inspiring more moms to write middle grade fiction.

Of course, I’m not going to try and inspire any authors to show up at anyone’s door. You’d have to be pretty brave and spontaneous to do that. And speaking of both qualities, please help me welcome Lisa Schroeder.

About Lisa Schroeder

Lisa Schroeder is the author of the teen verse novels The Day Before; I Heart You, You Haunt Me and its companion novel, Chasing Brooklyn; and Far from You. She is also the author of two middle-grade prose novels, It’s Raining Cupcakes and Sprinkles and Secrets. She lives in Beaverton, Oregon. Find out more about Lisa and her books at LisaSchroederBooks.com or on Twitter at @Lisa_Schroeder.

About It’s Raining Cupcakes and Sprinkles and Secrets

It’s Raining Cupcakes

Twelve year old Isabel is dying to get out of Willow, Oregon (population 39, 257) and experience something other than her small town. It seems that everyone gets to travel except Isabel–even her best friend, Sophie. When Isabel’s mother decides to open up a cupcake shop across town, Isabel is once again stuck in Willow for the summer as she tries to help her mom get the shop up and running. But when Isabel learns of a baking contest where the finalists get an all-expense paid trip to New York City, she realizes this is her chance to finally get out of Willow. Except there are two major roadblocks to this plan: Sophie, who also is entering the contest and is always the best at everything, and her own mom, who wants her to enter the contest on her terms.Can Isabel manage to finally do something for herself, without losing her best friend and further straining her already tenuous relationship with her mother? In this sweet coming-of-age story from popular teen author Lisa Schroeder, Isabel discovers that it’s not about where you go in life as much as it is about enjoying the view wherever you are.

Sprinkles and Secrets

Twelve-year-old Sophie has always dreamed of being an actress and being in front of the camera. When that dream comes true and she’s offered a T.V. commercial spot, she’s over-the-moon happy. But then she finds out what exactly she’ll be advertising: the delectable, ever-popular brownies from BEATRICE’S BROWNIES, which just so happns to be the number one competitor to IT’S RAINING CUPCAKES–owned by her best friend, Isabel’s, family.

Sophie has a tough choice to make: Follow her dreams or crush her best friend.

What’s a girl to do?

The Very Short Interview

When did you know for sure that you were a writer and that writing would be a major energy focus in your life?

Probably about ten years ago when I got my first rejection letter from an editor. It suddenly felt so real, that I was really going after my dream. I knew the odds were stacked against me, and yet, I loved writing stories and felt like I’d finally found what I was meant to do with my life. The first rejection letters didn’t upset me, instead they spurred me on. I told myself I would just keep writing until I finally wrote something they couldn’t say no to.

Who has always been behind your writing career and who helped pull you up the ladder of success?

My friend, Lindsey Leavitt (author of the PRINCESS FOR HIRE series), has been cheering me on and letting me cry on her shoulder for a number of years now. We met when we were both unpublished, because we were both looking for critique partners. I loved her sense of humor and down-to-earth quality, and we became fast friends. I feel so blessed to have her in my life and to call her my friend. I love her bunches, and I don’t know what I’d do without her.

What is the most frequent comment you hear about your book (or books) from readers? Tell us a little story about the response to your work.

For the CUPCAKE books, it’s usually the question – are there going to be more books about Sophie and Isabel? I’m glad that for now, I can say yes, there will be one more in 2013.

I also have four novels for teens published, and the most frequent comment I get is, “I usually hate to read, but I love your books.” One mother wrote to me and told me her daughter struggles with a learning disability, so she rarely reads for fun because she has to work so hard in school. My novel, I HEART YOU, YOU HAUNT ME was the first novel she’d read for fun, and enjoyed it so much she was reading lines out loud to her mom. She ended the e-mail by telling me, “I just wanted you to know about the miracle that occurred in my living room tonight. Thank you.”

I’m so thankful for all of my readers – they’re the best!

And Now, Your Turn

Now it’s your turn. You remember how this works right?

I ask you a question. You answer in the comments for your chance to win a book each day.

Please just respond once, even if you make a typo. ;)

Answer in the comments in 50-200 words (no less and no more to qualify to win one of today’s books). Please read the complete rules at least once!

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway! I hope to see you here every day this month. Bring your friends!

Lisa Schroeder writes books for middle grade kids and also for young adults. If you were going to write a children’s book what age would you write for and why? What would the book be about? Any themes or settings you know you would include?

Ready, set, comment!

{ 17 comments }

And the winner of The Distant Shore by Mariam Korbas is…

Mar!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

Mar’s response was:

My something more would be more time, more money, more freedom, more support. I would love for someone to take over the financial responsibilities and say . . . “Honey, don’t worry. I’ll take care of the bills. You hire someone to run the agency and do whatever you need to do to finish your novel.” If I had that . . . just for a year, maybe less, I could find out if my novel is marketable and publishable. Perhaps it’s better not knowing because it keeps the dream alive.

Congratulations, Mar!

If you missed the drawing for The Distant Shore by Mariam Korbas, you can read all about it here.

Important, winners: I need you to send me an e-mail with your mailing address so that I can send it on to the author and she can send you your signed book! Please include a phone number, as well.

Please send your address in an e-mail to “christina at christina katz dot com.”

Please put “Book Winner” in the subject line.

And thank you for supporting the giveaway and my work!

Thanks for participating. This is just day 25 of The Writer Mama Every Day In May Book Giveaway. We have 6 more days and winners to go! I hope you will spread the word. :)

{ 1 comment }

I am so glad that Allison Winn Scotch could join us for our final week with her brand new book, The Song Remains the Same.

This is Allison’s fourth novel since her first novel, The Department of Lost and Found came out in 2008. Prior to then, she freelanced for seven years.

I always appreciate Allison’s sense of humor, honesty, and how much she gives back to other writers who are coming up the ranks. Please help me welcome her!

About Allison Winn Scotch

Allison Winn Scotch is the bestselling author of The One That I Want, Time of My Life , and The Department of Lost and Found. Prior to delving into fiction, she was a frequent contributor to numerous magazines and websites including Cooking Light, Men’s Health, Fitness, Glamour, and Redbook. She lives in New York with her family and their dog. For more, go to allisonwinn.com or follow her on Twitter at @aswinn.

About The Song Remains The Same

From the New York Times-bestselling author comes a novel that asks the question, who are we without our memories?  And how much of our future is defined by our past?

One of only two survivors of a plane crash, Nell Slattery wakes in the hospital with no memory of the crash – or who she is, or was. Now she must piece together both body and mind — with the help of family and friends who have their own agendas.  She filters through photos, art, music and stories, hoping something will jog her memory, and soon – in tiny bits and pieces – Nell starts remembering…

It isn’t long before she learns to question the stories presented by her mother, her sister and business partner, and her husband.  In the end she will learn that forgiving betrayals small and large will be the only true path to healing herself — and to finding happiness.

The Very Short Interview

When did you know for sure that you were a writer and that writing would be a major energy focus in your life?

If we’re talking strictly professionally, then I’d say when I was 28. I’d putzed around in a bunch of other careers, all of which eventually led me to magazine writing. Through a long-series of fortuitous events and coincidences (and hard work), I landed a gig to ghost-write a book at 28. The pay was awful (and the experience wasn’t much better), but it did help me sort of sink in and plant my roots and say, “Hey, maybe there is something here.” From there, I sold my first major magazine piece, and I guess that solidified it. I still worked my tush off for many years (I still do work my tush off, actually) to establish myself and my reputation in the magazine world, but I suppose that the book and that feature were the pivotal moments. Eventually, I wanted to stretch myself, and I started writing fiction. I definitely never believed that fiction would be the crux of my career until, probably, my second book sold.

Who has always been behind your writing career and who helped pull you up the ladder of success?

Well, obviously my husband has always been supportive, and my parents raised me to have the type of confidence that you need to succeed among a lot of rejection. Also, my agent is my true advocate and friend: we’ve worked together since my very first book, and she has lobbied on my behalf more times than I can count. But honestly, I rely a lot on myself, which isn’t meant to sound narcissistic, only to say that when the going gets tough in this career – and it will inevitably get tough – you have to be able to dig deep and figure out how to not let yourself down.

What is the most frequent comment you hear about your book (or books) from readers? Tell us a little story about the response to your work.

Oh gosh. That’s a hard question. I guess I do get a lot of emails from women who thank me for writing books that reflect their own lives or that resonate with their own feelings. And that truly is the most gratifying part of being a writer: to know that you put something down on paper, and that it’s helping someone make her own way in the world. With Time of My Life, for example, I got/get a lot of emails from women who always wondered about their “what ifs,” such that it took emphasis away from their marriages or their current happiness. A lot of them wrote to say that the book helped shift their perspective. And that, well, that’s just humbling and amazing. But I get it too: I’m a reader as well, and there’s nothing better than learning about yourself when you’re deep into the pages of a book.

And Now, Your Turn

Now it’s your turn. You remember how this works right?

I ask you a question. You answer in the comments for your chance to win a book each day.

Please just respond once, even if you make a typo. ;)

Answer in the comments in 50-200 words (no less and no more to qualify to win one of today’s books). Please read the complete rules at least once!

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway! I hope to see you here every day this month. Bring your friends!

In a recent interview about her new book with Emily Griffin, Allison Winn Scotch says that she is “deathly afraid of plane crashes.”

What are you deathly afraid of and could you write about it?

Have you ever tried? Why or why not?

After thinking it over and writing this comment, what do you think? Do you dare write about it?

Ready, set, comment!

{ 19 comments }

And the winner of Women Writing on Family with an essay by Lela Davidson is…

MLTCG!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

MLTCG’s response was:

I love writing when I’m actually doing it, though I’m not as in love with editing. Writing about my family makes it more challenging in some ways and easier in others. This is subject matter I know well.  I feel caught at times between what will create a better book and what could hurt one of my family members if they rightly or mistakenly read themselves into a character. I try to be creative in these areas and still get the point across. I have to be cautious that I don’t let this bog me down.

Congratulations, MLTCG!

And the winner of Easy to Love but Hard to Raise with an essay by Lorraine Wilde is…

Poppyherrin!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

Poppyherrin’s response was:

I love writing, but often neglect it, and I know I shouldn’t. Writing about my family is easy, but sharing that writing is difficult because the truth can hurt.  For example, I could write pages upon pages about my divorce, but I’m not willing to share this just yet in order to protect my young daughter.  So, I write to my heart’s content, but keep the potentially harmful work to myself (for now anyway).

Congratulations, Poppyherrin!

And the winner of Chicken Soup for the Soul for New Moms with an essay by Cara Holman is…

Lisa S!

She was chosen by Random Number Generator.

Lisa S’s response was:

Yes, I often feel like my writing career is just beginning to form and is in its infancy. It is really easy to love, everything about it is easy to love but raising it is difficult and will continue to be a challenge. But I’m up for the challenge because of the love. I haven’t really written about my family so it doesn’t really make it any more or less challenging. But maybe that’s why I haven’t written about my family yet, because I know it will be difficult and I’m not quite ready for that challenge just yet.

Congratulations, Lisa S!

If you missed the drawing for these three anthologies, you can read all about them here.

Important, winners: I need you to send me an e-mail with your mailing address so that I can send it on to the author and she can send you your signed book! Please include a phone number, as well.

Please send your address in an e-mail to “christina at christina katz dot com.”

Please put “Book Winner” in the subject line.

And thank you for supporting the giveaway and my work!

Thanks for participating. This is just day 26 of The Writer Mama Every Day In May Book Giveaway. We have 5 more days and winners to go! I hope you will spread the word. :)

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