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And the winner of Fixing Freddie: A True story about a Boy, a Single Mom, and the Very Bad Beagle Who Saved Them By Paula Munier is…

JudyB!

And the winner of When You Say Thank You, Mean It by Mary O’Donohue is…

Pam Maynard!

And the winner of The Whole Family Cookbook by Michelle Stern is…

Kristine Elizabeth Moore!

Congrats to all three winners!

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about it here.

As always, I need each book winner 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 send your address in an e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net.”

Thanks for participating. Onward!

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This is the grand finalé…the last day of our 31-day book giveaway! I hope you have all enjoyed it. 🙂

If I am remembering correctly, I connected with Allison Winn Scotch after Get Known came out when was kind enough to offer to host an interview with me in her blog. Today, she is as gracious as ever, giving away copies of her three books so  one lucky commenter can win big. Please help me welcome Allison.

Allison Winn Scotch is the New York Times bestselling author of three books, most recently, The One That I Want, out in paperback this June. Her new book, The Song Remains the Same, will be released in winter 2012 by Putnam. She lives in New York City with her family.

• • •

The One That I Want

Tilly Farmer is thirty-two years old and has the perfect life she always dreamed of: married to her high school sweetheart, working as a guidance counselor in her hometown, trying for a baby. Perfect.

In fact, on the surface you might never know how tough things used to be. At seventeen, Tilly lost her mother to cancer, her father drowned his grief in alcohol, and she played parent to her two younger sisters more often than being a kid herself. Still Tilly never let tragedy overtake her belief that hard work and good cheer could solve any problem. Of course she’s also spent a lifetime plastering a smile on her face and putting everyone else’s problems ahead of her own.

But that relentless happiness has served her well—her sisters are grown and content, her dad is ten years sober, and she’s helping her students achieve all their dreams while she and her husband, Tyler, start a family. A perfect life indeed.

Then one sweltering afternoon at the local fair, everything changes. Tilly wanders into the fortune teller’s tent and is greeted by an old childhood friend, now a psychic, who offers her more than just a reading. “I’m giving you the gift of clarity,” her friend says. “It’s what I always thought you needed.” And soon enough, Tilly starts seeing things: her father relapsing, staggering out of a bar with his car keys in hand; Tyler uprooting their happy, stable life, a packed U-Haul in their driveway; and even more disturbing, these visions start coming true. Suddenly Tilly’s perfect life, so meticulously mapped out, seems to be crumbling around her. And she’s not sure what’s more frightening: that she’s begun to see the future or what the future holds . . .

As Tilly furiously races to keep up with—and hopefully change—her destiny, she faces the question: Which is the life she wants? The one she’s carefully nursed for decades, or the one she never considered possible?

• • •

Time of My Life

From the outside view, Jillian Westfield has a pitch-perfect life. Her cherubic 18-month old daughter, her wildly successful investment banker husband, a four-bedroom, five-bath, lemon-scented home with landscaping and neighbors to match. But that doesn’t stop her from mulling over the past, from pushing away the “what ifs” that haunt her when she allows them to seep into her consciousness. What if she hadn’t married Henry? What if she hadn’t abandoned her job at the first sign of pregnancy? What if she’d never broken up with Jackson ? What if she answered her mother’s letter? Because underneath the shiny veneer of her life, Jill waddles around in a faltering marriage, brewing resentment, and an air of discontentedness. But after an ethereal massage in which her therapist releases her blocked chi, she wakes up to discover that she’s been whisked seven years back, back to her old life, her old self, back to the moments in which she made decisions that charted her future course. And now that she’s back, she’s faced with the same roadblocks and obstacles, only this time, armed with hindsight, she can choose a different path and finally lay to rest all of her “what ifs.”

• • •

The Department of Lost & Found
It didn’t start out as the worst day of Natalie Miller’s life. At thirty, she is moving up the political ladder, driven by raw ambition and ruthless determination. As the top aide to New York’s powerful female senator, she works hard, stays late, and enjoys every bit of it, even if the bills she’s pushing through do little to improve the lives of the senator’s constituents. And if her boyfriend isn’t the sexiest guy alive, at least he’s a warm body to come home to.Then he announces he’s leaving. But that news is barely a blip compared to what Natalie’s doctor tells her: She has breast cancer. And she can’t cure it by merely being headstrong. Now the life Natalie must change is her own.

All her energy, what little of it she has left, must go into saving herself from a merciless disease. So when she’s not lying on the sofa recovering from her treatments and indulging in a curious addiction to The Price Is Right, she realizes it’s time to take a hard look at her choices. She begins by tracking down the five loves-of-her-life to assess what went wrong. Along the way, she questions her relationships with her friends, her parents, her colleagues, the one who got away, and, most important, with herself: Why is she so busy moving through life that she never stops to embrace it?

As Natalie sleuths out the answers to these questions, her journey of self-discovery takes her down new paths and to unexplored places. And she learns that sometimes when life is at its most unexpected, it’s not what you lose that makes you who you are … it’s what you find.

• • •

1. How has writing impacted your self-confidence?

Writing affects my mental health and confidence in all sorts of ways, all good ones. For one, there are few things more fulfilling than creating something from nothing, from turning a blank page into 300 pages. For two, it’s incredibly gratifying to hear from readers that something you put down on the page resonated with them and maybe changed something about their perception of the world. And three, the creative process itself is truly wonderful: being able to use my brain in such a way has certainly bolstered my confidence in everything I do.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

Diligent, liberating, whimsical.

3. What good has your book created in the world?

Well, that feels a little self-serving! But since you asked, I have gotten hundreds of emails from readers who have said that my books affected their lives, most often their marriages, and always for the better. Last year, with The One That I Want, I got a note from a 57-year old reader who was inspired to go back and finish college. I mean – that sort of feedback is unquantifiable – to know that something you wrote really changed someone’s life. Humbling. Makes me so grateful.

• • •

Today is the last day of the giveaway, so let’s a big question. What would it take for you to become a best selling author? Where are you now? What are the steps you would need to take to get there? Do you want to get there? Why or why not?

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! Today is our final giveaway, please come back tomorrow to see who wins and for a complete list of giveaway books and authors.

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And the winner of Fix, Freeze, Feast by Kati Neville and Lindsay Tkacsik is…

Sarah Lindsey!

Congratulations Sarah!

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about it here.

As always, I need each book winner 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 send your address in an e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net.”

Thanks for participating. Onward!

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Today we are featuring three authors from Adams Media courtesy of senior publicist, Adri Cowan. Comment for a chance to win one of these books.

Fixing Freddie: A True story about a Boy, a Single Mom, and the Very Bad Beagle Who Saved Them By Paula Munier

Paula Munier has been a dog person her whole life. Raised by a father with a penchant for Weimaraners, Vizslas, and Great Danes, she got her first dog of her own on her tenth birthday—a black miniature poodle named Rogue. Since then she has shared her life with numerous dogs, cats, fish, and a bearded lizard, all of which together caused far less trouble than just one small beagle named Freddie.

There are bad dogs—and then there are bad beagles.

In this hilarious and heartwarming memoir, single mother Paula Munier takes on the world’s worst beagle—and loses every time. She tries everything to fix Freddie—but nothing really works. As her youngest son grows up and prepares to leave her soon-to-be empty nest, Paula’s worst fear is that after more than thirty years of raising kids, she’ll be left all alone—with Freddie.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or both) impacted your self-confidence?

Writing any memoir—even one that is supposed to be about a dog—forces you to examine your life with a critical eye. In taking such a hard look at myself and my choices, I realized that I’d made even more mistakes than I thought I had—as a mom, as a wife, and as a person. But I also learned that I have been blessed with forgiving friends and family, which allowed me to forgive myself.  Everyone—including my ex-husband—has been very supportive of the book. So in the end writing the book has given me a kind of self-confidence I never had before, one colored by my experience  but not defined by it. I feel a greater sense of possibility now, having made peace with the past.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

Play, work, resignation—in that order!

3. What good has your book created in the world?

Just  like Freddie, the book brought my family closer together—and helped us close a painful chapter in our lives with grace and gratitude. This has resonated with readers, who write to me from all over the country to tell me about their own struggles with raising teenagers and training dogs. What comes through loud and clear is how much comfort our pets bring us—even when they eat our shoes!

• • •

Mary O’Donohue developed a unique month-by-month program that she and her husband use to successfully educate their children about the twelve values her family holds most dear. The family of four lives and learns together in suburban Chicago.

Everyone wants their children to be happy, responsible, and well adjusted, but there’s no rulebook to teach parents how to do so—until now.

In this book, you’ll learn how Mary O’Donohue, a proud mother of two, developed a practical program that allows parents to instill timeless values in their children over the course of one year. Focusing on one key value a month, the whole family can learn together through twelve fun and family-friendly activities, including:

  • Keeping a Gratitude Board
  • Creating Respect Tiles
  • Making a Compassion in Action Calendar
  • Hosting an Earning for Learning Gameshow
  • Starting a Life Map

By inspiring common values such as lifelong learning, a sense of joy, and respect for others, this unique guide offers purposeful advice for raising joyful, thoughtful children—who will make their world a better one to live in.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or
both) impacted your self-confidence?

Though I started out as a pretty self assured person, writing my book has widened the scope of my confidence. Because the funny thing is, I never set out to write a book. And I was positive I couldn’t do it. As a busy working mom with a husband and two children, my schedule was already jam-packed, and I was not in fact, a writer. I’ve worked freelance in TV production for years, and though that world can be competitive and demanding, at least it was a world I knew. But write a book? Me? That was a whole other story. But doors kept opening for me, and in order to walk through them I needed a significant amount of faith in myself. That’s when I realized that the confidence I’d felt for years was at least in part based on the fact that I stayed right smack in the middle of my comfort zone. So I had to push myself out into unfamiliar territory, and fast. I has a deadline.

Something else helped me walk through those open doors. It was a promise I had made to my dear friend George that the next time something came along in my life that I knew with certainty I could not do, I would do it anyway for him. I made that promise, out loud in my car, driving home from George’s funeral. He was exactly my age and he died suddenly. So when the opportunity came along to write my book, I knew I had to keep my promise. I had to believe in myself enough to be willing to fall on my face. And that was the extraordinary lesson for me. I had stayed in my proverbial comfort zone protecting myself from failure, when in fact I was also preventing any other kind of success from finding me. And essentially all I had to do was say “yes” to the unexpected opportunities that came into my life. So the experience of writing this book has had a huge impact on my confidence. I now say “yes” to all sorts of experiences, even ones (especially ones) that I  don’t think I’ll be good at, and it’s changed the way I live my life.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

1. Inspired
2. Disciplined
3. Receptive

3. What good has your book created in the world?

My goal is to change the world one family at a time. I’m helping parents go beyond surface messages like “Say thank you,” “Tell your sister you’re sorry” and “Say excuse me,”  because as a mom myself, I’ve learned these messages might get kids to “act” like they’re thankful, sorry, or respectful, but what’s the point if it’s not genuine? I believe parents want their kids to actually be truly grateful people, who apologize because they really feel remorse, and who say things like “excuse me” out of sincere respect.  It turns out my book has inspired many families and I’ve been blown away by the positive feedback I’ve received from parents. They tell me that my book has made it easier for them to instill gratitude, compassion, integrity, self respect, and other values in their children, and that the kids enjoy doing the exercises I created. My book is bringing families closer as they share the experiences of focusing on one value a month together. It’s gratifying to know that something that has been so significant to my own family has also impacted others in such a positive way.

• • •

The Whole Family Cookbook by Michelle Stern

Michelle Stern founded the children’s cooking school, What’s Cooking?, and teaches families about healthy, practical food. She received the 2010 Scholastic’s Parent & Child Green Parent Blogger Award for the What’s Cooking blog. Stern attended the White House’s Chefs Move to Schools conference, is the Director of Community Outreach for the children’s show DooF, and co-chairs the International Association of Culinary Professional’s Kids in the Kitchen committee.

There’s no better way to teach your children to eat fresh, healthy, organic food than with recipes you can cook and eat together! Written by the founder of San Francisco’s premier children’s cooking school and award-winning, green-parenting blogger Michelle Stern, this cookbook gives your family the resources you need to cook delicious, local food in any season, including:

  • Practical advice like how to pick the best of local and natural food without spending too much time or money.
  • Color-coded instructions that guide kids of all ages through age-appropriate steps in every recipe.
  • More than 75 organic, family-friendly recipes and beautiful 4-color photos that will get everyone excited about what’s for dinner!

Whether you’re cooking Summertime Kabobs on a balmy June evening or Sweet and Savory Turnovers for a toasty winter breakfast, your family will learn to love the wholesome food—and priceless memories—you can make together.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or both) impacted your self-confidence?

After a receiving a plethora of (sometimes comical) rejection letters about my book proposal from a variety of publishers, it was a relief to have a publishing house interested in me and my work.  Upon hearing that I was writing a book, the most common reaction I got from people was, “you  must be so proud—do you know how many people try to write a book and never get anywhere?”  It made me feel proud that my work is something worth paying attention to.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

Breathe
Authentic
Dedication

3. What good has your book created in the world?

My book encourages families to spend quality time together in the kitchen, building better eating habits (for our bodies and our planet!) and encouraging people to help the less fortunate with food. Not too shabby 🙂

• • •

The giveaway is almost over, so let’s as a big question. Look at these three books that we are giving away today to three winners. Notice that each features a passion from each author’s perspective. What’s a passion from your life that might be big enough to grow into a book some day? Even if you usually write fiction, try to come up with a nonfiction idea…just for kicks.

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! We’ve only got one day left. Come back for the finalé!

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And the winner of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide by Becky Levine is…

Ann Goldberg!

Congratulations Ann!

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about it here.

As always, I need each book winner 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 send your address in an e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net.”

Thanks for participating. Onward!

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And the winner of The Writer’s Workout by Christina Katz is…

Lara Krupicka!

Congratulations Lara!

Please keep in mind that this book ships in December 2011.

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about it here.

If you would like to support the launch of The Writer’s Workout and enter for a chance to win one of three one-hour long phone consults, you can pre-order The Writer’s Workout now on Amazon, send a copy of your receipt via e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net,” and I’ll select the winners once I have received fifty. I’ll hold these phone conferences over the summer, rather than later as originally announced.

As always, I need each book winner 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 send your address in an e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net.”

Thanks for participating. Onward!

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I think it was Mary Andonian who first introduced me to Kati Neville and I’m so glad she did. Kati and I share two big passions: food and books. I have been a taste-tester for Kati’s recipes and I can tell you that she definitely knows her way around a kitchen. Please help me welcome Kati!

Kati Neville co-authored the best selling cookbook, Fix, Freeze, Feast. She has written for food publications, such EveryDay with Rachael Ray magazine and Costco Connection. Kati’s money stretching tips have been featured in nationally syndicated newspapers, newsletters, and magazines. Currently she is working on recipes for her third book and regularly speaks about “Taming Your Food Budget.” She lives south of Portland, Oregon with two of the pickiest eaters on the planet and her husband.

Fix, Freeze, Feast features 125 delicious, healthful recipes that save families time, work, money, and stress. Learn how to shop for groceries in bulk, prepare easy dishes, and stock your freezer with homemade meals your family will love. Visit online at www.FixFreezeFeast.com.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or both) impacted your self-confidence?

Writing has helped me slow down, evaluate and productively respond to criticism. It has freed me to be more confident in myself and my decisions, both professional and personal.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

What’s the hurry?

3. What good has your book created in the world?

I enjoy hearing from readers who are eating nutritious, homemade meals with their families again. Their husbands and kids are happy, plus they’re saving money. It’s been extremely gratifying.

• • •

We’ve done the physical, mental, emotional, spiritual…now let’s talk about the gastronomic. What role does food play in your writing life? Say anything you like!

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!

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I first heard of Becky Levine’s book from Jane Friedman when she was working at Writer’s Digest. I used to regularly ask Jane what books were coming out that I should be getting excited about. Becky’s was one she highly recommended. I liked the idea of Becky’s book so much that I invited a writing group to the Northwest Author Series to share about their process and we gave away a copy of Becky’s book and it was great fun. Please help me welcome, Becky Levine!

Becky Levine is the author of The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide (Writer’s Digest, 2010), a freelance editor, and a speaker, living in California’s Santa Cruz mountains. She has almost 20 years of experience with critique groups and knows both the challenges and benefits of making the critique process work. Becky also writes fiction and nonfiction for children and teens. You can read more about Becky at her blog & website, www.beckylevine.com.

Have you hesitated to join a critique group? Are you unsure whether you want to share your work with other writers, or nervous about giving feedback on someone else’s manuscript? The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide gives you the encouragement you need to join a group and provides you with tools to run that group smoothly. The book teaches how to set up a group, develop constructive critiques, and revise from feedback. With The Writing and Critique Group Survival Guide, you can get past your worries and reap the benefits of a strong, supportive group.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or both) impacted your self-confidence?

This book has been huge for me. I’ve written for years and have a decent sense of my own abilities, but turning out The Writing & Critique Group Survival Guide was an incredible bit of validation, especially having Writer’s Digest want it. Plus, I’ve been thinking and talking about critique groups for years, and getting to put all those ideas down on paper and watch the words flow, reminded me that writing is something I love and that I have to do.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?

Structure, Write, Revise.

3. What good has your book created in the world?

I’ve had people come up to me and thank me for writing this book. I’ve had authors tell me that they revamped their existing critique groups, based on the suggestions in the book, and that everybody in the group ended up with something that worked better for them. I think that many writers want to be in a critique group, want to share their manuscripts and their ideas, but they’re worried about having a bad experience, afraid to take that first step. I think (hope!) my book is helping people get started.

• • •

So much of writing success has to do with a willingness on each writer’s part to receive, sort, and process feedback and criticism.

Are you experienced at this? Can you separate yourself from each piece of writing and see each piece you write as a work-in-progress that stands on its own, even as you continue to work on it?

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!

{ 32 comments }

And the winner of Hot (Sweaty) Mamas by Kara Douglass Thom & Laurie Lethert Kocanda is…

Carol J. Alexander!

Congratulations again, Carol!

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about it here.

I need each winner 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 send your address in an e-mail to “katz christina at comcast dot net.”

Thanks for participating. Onward!

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This is the very first book giveaway for The Writer’s Workout. 🙂

Advanced warning to the winner: you will receive this signed book in December 2011. I should have copies by the launch party on December 6th. I’ll send yours as soon as I get my giveaway copies in.

If you don’t win and you can’t stand the idea of not being among the first to get a signed copy, you can actually already pre-order The Writer’s Workout, at a deeper than usual discount, if you like. I’ll draw three winners from the first fifty who send me their receipts and those winners will receive a free one-hour phone consultation with a value of $150. (Forward your receipt to katz christina at comcast dot net to enter.)

Christina Katz is the author of the forthcoming Writer’s Digest book, The Writer’s Workout, 366 Tips, Tasks & Techniques From Your Writing Career Coach (now available for pre-order!). She also wrote Get Known Before the Book Deal, Use Your Personal Strengths to Grow an Author Platform and Writer Mama, How to Raise a Writing Career Alongside Your Kids. A  “gentle taskmaster” over the past decade to hundreds of writers, Christina’s students go from unpublished to published, build professional writing career skills, increase their creative confidence, and succeed over time. Christina hosts the Northwest Author Series in Wilsonville, Oregon, where she lives with her husband, daughter, and far too many pets.

Need help growing and nurturing your writing career?

How about tending your career over time in a world driven by distraction, stress, and superficiality?

Available December 2011!

The Writer’s Workout contains 366 ideas for expanding your craft, sales, self-promotion, and professional development process, without repeating all the same old advice.

Here’s a few fun things you don’t know about The Writer’s Workout:

  • The book is written with a distinctively balanced, measured, natural approach to growing a writing career over time.
  • The message of this book is to stop pushing your writing, to give rushing a break, and let your creative efforts flow in a more natural, authentic way instead.
  • The format of the book is divided into seasons. The book begins with spring because it is a natural time to start growing things, and then proceeds from there through summer, fall, and winter.
  • The book is THICK. There is a ton of value crammed into this book because of the format: 366 distinct topics all in one book!
  • This book is not full of sport analogies. In fact, it goes very light on the sport analogies. Yes, it’s sporty looking on the outside, but the tone of the book definitely strikes a balance between the yin and the yang of the writing life.
  • This book is not just me in your face shouting, “Go, go, go!” This is a book that aims to help YOU become your own best writing coach.
  • The book includes 366 timeless insights from other writers. Their combined wisdom alone is worth the cover price.

None of this is the official jacket copy because the jacket copy is not finished yet. I’m waiting to see it right along with you. But I hope this provides a bit of a preview into what’s coming soon.

I can’t wait to share it with you!

• • •

Yesterday, you discussed getting hot and sweaty, so today let’s get a little more esoteric.

How has your writing impacted your emotional and spiritual life, if at all? If it hasn’t, would you like it to? If it has, please tell us how. Share anything about how writing has had a profound impact on your life. Got any stories about this?

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!

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