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Published Authors Answer Your Questions
January 19, 2010 in Book Promotion, Events, Success Stories | Tags: Getting Published, Publishing, Self-Publishing | Leave a comment
Join Women Who Write on Saturday, February 27th for a roundtable with published authors. Anyone interested in learning how to become published, either via a traditional publisher or a self-publisher, is invited. This event is free and open to the public.
The author-panelists will field questions from the audience on various topics concerning the publishing industry, such as:
- Submitting a polished manuscript
- Finding an agent
- Finding an editor
- Working with a publisher
- Marketing and promotion
Our panelists include the following authors:
- Joanne Flynn Black, journalist
- Michelle Cameron, author of the historical novel The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz
- Elaine Denholz, award-winning O’Neill playwright and author of the non-fiction title Having it Both Ways
- Ann M. DeVenezia, poet & author of Riding my Tricycle and Grave Rubbings
- Marcia Ivans, poet & author of Over Easy
- Alice Mendelsohn, poet
- Corey Rosen-Schwartz, children’s picture book author of Hop! Plop! and forthcoming Three Ninja Pigs
If you’re a writer, or just interested in the art and business of writing, please join us!
Saturday, Feburary 27th, 2009
2 to 4PM
Morris County Public Library
First floor conference room
Free and Open to the Public
How “The Fruit of Her Hands” Almost Didn’t Happen
September 29, 2009 in Historical Novels, Success Stories | Tags: Michelle Cameron, The Fruit of Her Hands | 3 comments
Today Michelle Cameron, a Women Who Write member, shares the amazing story of how her debut novel almost didn’t get picked up by her agent.
After my first New York reading for my recently published historical novel, The Fruit of Her Hands, my agent, Judith, invited me out for a cup of tea. As we walked, I told her about my son’s summer internship with a publishing company.
“By the end of the summer, they were letting him write editorial letters,” I said, my mother’s pride evident in my voice. “At 19! Can you imagine?”
“That doesn’t scare you a little?” Judith probed.
“It scares me a lot,” I nodded. “Or it would if I didn’t know how talented he really is.”
Judith hesitated a little, looking over at me. “Did I ever tell you how I almost didn’t accept your work?” she asked.
I stopped short, staring at her. “No,” I gulped. “You didn’t.”
“Your query letter was in my intern’s out basket–waiting for her to add the rejection letter. It was on the top of the pile, otherwise I would never have seen it. I glanced at it–and then picked it up and read it. And I was horrified that she’d almost turned you down.”
“Why…?” I whispered, aghast.
Judith shrugged. “She’s young, she didn’t understand that yours was exactly the type of letter I hope for. I had to explain it to her–how you were writing for a niche market, how you’d identified that and demonstrated other writers who had successfully written for it. And further how–because of your family connection to the hero of your novel, you had a unique hook for publishers. And your initial chapters were well-written. So of course this was a book I wanted to see.”
We resumed walking. I was finding it a little hard to breathe. Everything that had happened to me over the past 18 months–my novel’s acceptance by Pocket Books, the wonderful work they had done in helping me shape the novel and present it so beautifully, the incredible high I had just experienced walking into a major New York bookstore and seeing my books displayed next to a poster announcing my reading–all could have been dissolved into nothing if Judith had not looked over at her intern’s out basket at that critical moment.
It was a sobering thought and it reminded me, once again, just how much luck plays a role in the capricious world of publishing.
Michelle Cameron’s debut historical novel, The Fruit of Her Hands: The Story of Shira of Ashkenaz, was released by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, in September 2009. It has been praised by Publisher’s Weekly for its “powerful immediacy,” for its “rich details” by Library Journal, as a “meticulously researched and immensely readable saga” by Jewish Woman Magazine, and as a book “rich with wonderful characters, vivid settings, and an absolutely lush and wonderful depiction of the strengths of the medieval Jewish home and community” by the San Diego Jewish World, among others. It is available in most local bookstores, as well as online. Learn more at Michelle-Cameron.com.
Would You Invite a Skunk to Your Wedding?
September 21, 2009 in Children's Books, Picture Books, Success Stories | 1 comment
Writing for Kids III group member Ginger Pate’s first picture book, Would You Invite a Skunk to Your Wedding?, was recently released by Greene Bark Press. Congratulations, Ginger!
Louie Phewie is a young skunk who has a problem controlling his spray. Sometimes, when he becomes nervous, his spraying becomes uncontrollable. Despite his problem, friends invite him to be the ring bearer at their wedding. Unfortunately when a number of things go wrong at the wedding, Louie makes it a wedding to be remembered, for all the wrong reasons.
Ginger’s story is for 3-8 year-olds and was inspired by real-life events.
“At my sister’s wedding years ago, my brother borrowed my car to go to the wedding. What he didn’t realize is that a skunk had sprayed my car the night before the wedding. He had opened the window while driving and wiped his arm on the car.
“When he came into the church and reception, he literally stunk! Everyone wondered where the stink was coming from… He couldn’t wait to take his jacket off to get away from the wonderful aroma.”
Ginger says she wrote the story for her daughter’s wedding, to show her daughter that no matter what happened, she would have a beautiful day.
Would You Invite a Skunk to Your Wedding? is available now from Greene Bark and has already garnered four five-star reviews on Amazon. Congratulations, Ginger!
The Amistad Mutiny: From the Court Case to the Movie
September 20, 2009 in Children's Books, Educational Books, Success Stories | Tags: Melissa Eisen Azarian, The Amistad Mutiny | Leave a comment
Congratulations to Women Who Write member Melissa Eisen Azarian, whose first book was published this July. Melissa is a member of the Writing for Kids III group.
The Amistad Mutiny: From the Court Case to the Movie is part of an educational series for 9-12 year-olds from Enslow Publishers.
In 1839, a group of enslaved Africans bound for Cuba mutinied on their ship, the Amistad. They attempted to sail back to Africa, but ended up in the waters off New York, where they were recaptured and put on trial. Author Melissa Eisen Azarian explores the history behind the case, the trial, and the movie, Amistad, based on their fight for freedom. Illustrated with paintings from the period and stills from the movie.
The series received a favorable endorsement from School Library Journal:
“Books about notable court cases are nothing new, but the inclusion of movies inspired by them is an alluring twist. These authors explain complex issues in an easy-to-follow manner… Sources are well-documented, making this series a promising staple for reports.”
Congratulations, Melissa!
More Women Who Write success stories to come.
