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And the three winners of Writer Mama, How To Raise A Writing Career Alongside Your Kids by Christina Katz are…

Amy!

Carol J. Alexander!

Mar Junge!

Congrats to all three! (That’s two times for Mar!)

If you missed the drawing, you can read all about Writer Mama 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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Therese Walsh pointed me in the direction of Rae Meadows and her recently released second book, Mother’s and Daughters. It seemed like a perfect fit for this giveaway, so I eagerly invited her to participate and I’m so glad she could join us. Thanks for helping me welcome, Rae.

Rae Meadows is the author of Mothers and Daughters (April 2011), which the Minneapolis Star Tribune called “wonderful…the perfect book club pick.” Her first novel, Calling Out, received the 2006 Utah Book Award for fiction and was named one of the Best Books of 2006 by the Chicago Tribune. No One Tells Everything, her second novel, was chosen as a Poets & Writers Notable Novel. She lives with her husband and two daughters in Minneapolis, MN. Learn more about Rae at http://raemeadows.com.

Mothers & Daughters is a rich and luminous novel about three generations of women in one family: the love they share, the dreams they refuse to surrender, and the secrets they hold.

Samantha is lost in the joys of new motherhood—the softness of her eight-month-old daughter’s skin, the lovely weight of her child in her arms—but in trading her artistic dreams to care for her child, Sam worries she’s lost something of herself. And she is still mourning another loss: her mother, Iris, died just one year ago.

When a box of Iris’s belongings arrives on Sam’s doorstep, she discovers links to pieces of her family history but is puzzled by much of the information the box contains. She learns that her grandmother Violet left New York City as an eleven-year-old girl, traveling by herself to the Midwest in search of a better life. But what was Violet’s real reason for leaving? And how could she have made that trip alone at such a tender age?

In confronting secrets from her family’s past, Sam comes to terms with deep secrets from her own. Moving back and forth in time between the stories of Sam, Violet, and Iris, Mothers and Daughters is the spellbinding tale of three remarkable women connected across a century by the complex wonder of motherhood.

Q&A:

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

Being a writer—knowing I found the thing I want to do—has made me more secure in who I am. Despite those moments of doubt that plague most writers from time to time, I feel confident that I have found my voice and the stories I tell are worth telling.

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

challenging, fraught, rewarding

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

I hope the book is a conversation starter about the choices we make as mothers and daughters, about the secrets we keep from those closest to us. The book might change your mind or it might make you feel less alone. Either way, I hope readers are moved by spending time with these three characters.

• • •

Yesterday was Mother’s Day! Share something with us about you and your mother or you and your daughter. It can be a memory, a moment, an object that is meaningful to your relationship, or whatever else you can come up with. Show or tell, it’s up to you.

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! Please bring your writing group next time you come. :)

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And the winner of The Crying Tree by Naseem Rakha is…

Judy M. Miller!

I swear. She won again. It’s not rigged!

Way to be consistent, Judy!

Congratulations!

If you missed the drawing, you can read more about Naseem’s awesome book 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.”

Onward!

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Happy Mother’s Day!

Thank you for helping me celebrate Writer Mama. I am giving away THREE copies to three folks who respond to today’s prompt. (And sure, if you already have a copy, I’m happy to send the copy to a friend so long as that works with Da Rules.) Here we go…

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. 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.

About the book:

As a mom, you want to spend as much time with your children as possible. But you’d also like to make some money doing something you enjoy. How do you get the best of both worlds? Writer Mama by experienced freelancer Christina Katz tells you how. You can start a stay-at-home freelance writing career tailored to fit your family and lifestyle.

Writer Mama will answer all your questions about how to get started, in realistic, easy-to-follow steps. While conversational and easy-to-read, this book also does a lot of hard work for you. It gives you practical advice and exercises that help you get started in a matter of weeks. You’ll get tips on how to: begin with the easiest routes to publication for moms, network with other writer mamas, editors, and agents, write cover letters and queries, choose your own writing specialty, create a web presence, set up a home office, and make time for yourself, your kids, and your writing.

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

I think most people who know my work either don’t know or forget that I am basically an introvert. So reaching out to the many moms who are featured in Writer Mama and hitting the road to make appearances at writing conferences where I didn’t know a soul did not come easily to me at first. These abilities are skills today because I made myself use them. So writing, and Writer Mama specifically, had a major impact on my self-confidence by encouraging me to stretch far beyond my comfort zone and start using necessary author skills.

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

For Writer Mama, my creative book-writing process was panic-driven, excitement-fueled, and very late in the process confidence-building. Since I did not follow my outline (which is typical for me), I was driving in the dark for the majority of the process. Ultimately that made a better book, but a pretty nerve-wracking writing process.

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

My book has helped thousands of moms learn more about writing nonfiction for publication and as part of a professional career. Because of the book, I have worked with hundreds of moms who go from wanting to write or wanting to write better or more to writing publishable articles. Many moms write to me to say that Writer Mama affirmed their desire to write, helped them get started, helped them get published, helped them feel like “I can do this,” or helped them get back in the game again. I’m so grateful that Writer Mama was my first book and that I got to work with all of the folks I got to work with to produce it.

• • •

What is your single proudest writing accomplishment in your career thus far? How might this writing success point you towards future success?

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! Please bring your writing group next time you come. :)

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And the winner of The Smart Girl’s Guide To Style by Sharon Cindrich is…

Judy M. Miller!

Congratulations!

If you missed the drawing, you can read more about Sharon’s awesome book 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.”

Onward!

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I cannot remember how I first met Naseem Rakha, but I remember that the first thing I thought when I heard of her book The Crying Tree was I wanted to invite her to The Northwest Author Series. She kicked off the third series with her book, which has gone on to enjoy wide critical and popular acclaim. Please help me welcome Naseem…

Naseem is an award-winning journalist whose stories have been heard on NPR’s All Things Considered, Morning Edition, Marketplace Radio, Christian Science Monitor, and Living on Earth. She lives in Oregon with her husband, son, and many animals. When Naseem isn’t writing, she’s reading, knitting, hiking, gardening, collecting rocks, or just watching the seasons roll in and out.

The Crying Tree, now available in paperback, reaches into the heart of a family nearly torn apart by a mother’s act of forgiveness. It is a story of things not being what they seem, family secrets, and how these furtive actions reverberate through many lives. Dramatic, wrenching, and ultimately uplifting, The Crying Tree is an unforgettable story of love and redemption, the unbreakable bonds of family, and the transformative power of forgiveness.

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

Writing a book was always the BIG thing I could NOT do. No one could. Only people born under the right stars, or who had the right connections, or possibly did obscenely crazy things, like hike across the Antarctic with nothing but a martini glass and a zoot suit (what is a zoot suit?) could get their books published. But, as it turns out, I was wrong. And in being wrong, I was simultaneously blessed. My dream came true. I wrote a book. It was picked up by Random House and publishers in ten other countries. It has won an award, and has become an international best seller. Did that boost my self-confidence? Hell yes. Now, when contemplating dreams, I no longer think it just has to do with stars aligning, but good old-fashioned hard work,  ambition, and plenty of alms to the goddess of your choice.

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

Write. Write. Write.

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

I always knew I wanted to write a book that made people think, and the feedback I receive in the mail and at book groups tells me I have done that. This is incredibly gratifying. People think about the characters, their trials, their faults and failures. They reconsider their opinions on topics of crime, punishment, the death penalty and forgiveness. Young adults and parents tell me they appreciate my addressing the issue of sexual identify and acceptance. Prisoners tell me how it has moved them to want to do more in their community. In all, the experience has been more than I could have dreamed, and is utterly humbling.

• • •

Thanks for participating, Naseem!

For today’s prompt, I’m going to riff off something that Naseem said in answering the questions. Ready?

What’s the ONE thing you are afraid to do in your writing career? And what if — gasp! — you did it? What’s the worst thing that could happen? What’s the best thing that might happen? Go ahead and dream. We do that around here sometimes. 😉

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!

Naseem is allowed to answer too, but not until tomorrow after her winner is drawn, because she can’t win her own book.

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway! Please bring a small crowd next time you come. :)

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And the winner of Bitsy’s Labyrinth by Mary Andonian is…

Kathleen Plucker!

Congratulations!

If you missed the drawing, you can read more about Mary and her wonderful book 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.”

Onward!

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Happy Mother’s Day Month (Take Two)!

Welcome to The Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway, where I will be highlighting the literary contributions of over thirty author mamas and giving away at least one book a day throughout May.

To become eligible for the drawing, all you have to do is participate. I’ll give a prompt every day at the end of each post. Each person who answers will be entered to win a drawing for that day’s book or one of that day’s books. Please read the complete rules here.

Here are our fabulous author mamas for week two:

Day 8. Christina Katz, Writer Mama

Day 9. Rae Meadows, Mothers and Daughters

Day 10. Jen Hallissy, The Write Start

Day 11. April Henry, Heart of Ice

Day 12. Liz Rusch, For The Love Of Music

Day 13. Christine Fonseca, 101 Success Secrets For Gifted Kids

Day 14. Lela Davidson, Blacklisted From The PTA

Go to our participant’s websites and check them out before they are featured here, if you like. I’m sure they won’t mind. :)

In the meantime, hope you are enjoying the giveaway. I know I am!

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After I got the book deal for Writer Mama, Kelly James-Enger introduced me to a friend of hers, who had also just gotten her first book deal. Sharon Cindrich and I have been phone buddies ever since, sharing the roller coaster of this crazy book-writing biz ride over the past five years. I owe a big debt of gratitude to Kelly (who I finally got to meet in person at the OWFI Conference in Oklahoma a year ago). I can’t wait for the day that Sharon and I finally get meet in person…hopefully in 2012. And p.s. my daughter loves her latest book.

Sharon Cindrich is a mother of two, journalist, columnist and and author of several books including “A Smart Girl’s Guide to Style.” Her family-tech column, “Plugged In Parent,” appears in newspapers and magazines across the country. Learn more at www.pluggedinparent.com.

“A Smart Girl’s Guide to Style: How to have fun with fashion, shop smart and let your personal style shine through” is produced by the awarding-winning American Girl Publishing. This book shares advice on clothes, accessories and fun fashion tips, with a focus on helping young girls let their personal style shine through. Girls can take quizzes to figure out which looks make them feel comfortable and confident, find tips for smart shopping and ideas on how to tackle fashion emergencies. Honest insights from other girls offer ideas on how to ignore fashion critics, explore creative interests, and stay true to themselves.

1. How has writing (either just the act of writing or writing this book or both) impacted your self-confidence?
The thing I love about writing is the ability to connect with others and provide some value or impact for their life. Each article or column or book that gets published reminds me that my words can make a difference, enlighten or entertain.

2. What are three words that describe your creative book-writing process?
Exciting, exhausting and purpose-driven

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

Girls have always grown up with an awareness of the social expectations surrounding image and looks. My hope is that this book helps girls cultivate a sense of confidence and curiosity in regards to self expression during the years in which they are learning about themselves, their own interests and their own personal style. I believe it offers an opportunity for girls to  creatively explore the type of expression that fashion is designed to afford in an unbiased way, while also addressing the real-life challenges of peer pressure and insecurities that every girl faces in daily situations.

• • •

Thanks for participating, Sharon!

What a great opportunity to talk about style. And if any of us grown-up girls need any assistance on this topic, we can always borrow Sharon’s book from our daughters. 🙂

What’s your style? I’m not even going to clarify what I mean by “style” — just answer the question in any way you like (within the word count). Have fun with it. Write as creatively or straightforwardly as 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!

Sharon is allowed to answer too, but not until tomorrow, after her winner is drawn, because she can’t win her own book.

Thanks for participating in the Writer Mama Every-Day-In-May Book Giveaway! Please bring some friends next time you come. 🙂

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And the winner of Gringa: A Contradictory Girlhood by Melissa Hart is…

Suzanne Kamata!

Congratulations!

If you missed the drawing, you can read more about Melissa and her wonderful book 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.”

Onward!

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