We know you've been waiting for this....


A Reader's Respite was sooooo not taking chances with this one. Our dear mum (who is very good at choosing random numbers for some reason) chose a number and then got mad at us when she discovered exactly what book it was that we were giving away. Just goes to show, mumsy should have entered if she wanted to win.

But we're happy to announce that the winner is Fyrefly of Fyrefly's Book Blog. So zap us your email!

Review: First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria

First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria: How a Peace Corps Poster Boy Won My Heart and a Third World Adventure Changed My Life, by Eve Brown-Waite


Whew. That's a title and a half, isn't it?

Thankfully, the book isn't near as long-winded as the title. First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria is the lighthearted account of the author's overseas mis-adventures.

Eve, like many young women of her generation, loved the idea of overseas adventure with the Peace Corps. The reality, however, was far different from the recruitment posters.

After falling head over heels in love with her Peace Corps recruiter, Eve decides to nab her man by bravely leaving modern American conveniences (like running water) behind and heading off to Ecuador to save the world.

As much humor as Eve injects into her story, it is an illuminating glimpse into the chaos and isolation of the Peace Corps volunteers. Eve, in fact, does not make it through to the end of her two year volunteer contract. She medicals out at the end of a year after a fellow volunteer is raped in Ecuador and returned to the U.S. unable to complete her stint.

Eventually, she marries her Peace Corps recruiter, but her sense of failure won't go away. So when her new husband gets a job in Uganda, Eve puts on a brave face and heads for the wilds of Africa to prove that she can succeed in a third-world country. And succeed she does, but not in the ways she expected.

Her humorous stories of assimilation keep a smile on the reader's face and are a reminder to BE GRATEFUL FOR LIVING IN A DEVELOPED COUNTRY.

All in all, a charming book.

Now someone get me a double-mocha-no-fat-latte. With sprinkles.




So who amongst you is harboring an inner adventure? Tell A Reader's Respite about your wildest travel adventure and you'll be entered to win your own copy of First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria. A random winner (international peeps, too!) will be chosen on June 12th, so be sure to check back and see if you won!



Title: First Comes Love, Then Comes Malaria
Author: Eve Brown-Waite
ISBN-13: 978-0767929356
320 pages
Publisher: Broadway
Date: April 14, 2009



Other fabulous reviews you might be interested in reading

The Book Lady's Blog
Worducopia
Devourer of Books
Booking Mama
Vagablogging
S. Krishna's Books
The Debutante Ball
Shoshanapnw's Book Journal

Who won a book?



Congratulations to Tobi of By Hook or by Book (a fun new book blog!). Send us an email with your mailing address!

Review: Columbine


Review: Columbine, by Dave Cullen

A Reader's Respite is lately addicted to our Ipod. Actually, we have an entire laundry-list of neuroses and addictions, but that's not important right now. The one we are talking about here is our newest obsession with listening to non-fiction on audiobook.

To be completely honest, A Reader's Respite doesn't really have any music on our Ipod anymore. We have audiobooks instead. And the newest neurosis to manifest itself around here is that we simply cannot fall asleep at night without a good non-fiction audiobook. That's not to say that non-fiction is so boring as to put us to sleep. Rather, it has become a ritual as comfortable as a favorite blanket.

Audiobooks have a lot of pressure on them: not only does the writing have to be good, but the narration does as well. There's been more than one excellent book out there that has been ruined by perfectly horrid narration. But when you find a good book told by a good narrator, well that, my friends, is priceless.



So it is to the non-fiction review blog Letters on Pages that A Reader's Respite owes our heartfelt thanks for recommending Dave Cullen's new book, Columbine, fabulously narrated by Don Leslie. (If you haven't checked out Adam's non-fiction reviews, you're missing out!)

For those who need a quick refresher: in 1999, Colorado teens Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold opened fire in Columbine High School, killing 13 students and faculty before turning the guns on themselves. The tragedy dominated the national news for months and the public was fed an enormous amount of mis-information, thanks to a botched investigation, gag-orders and grossly eroneous media reports.

Harris and Klebold, the little shits

Ten years later, Dave Cullen finally gives us the definitive story of the Columbine massacre, brilliantly written and illuminating. It was gratifying to finally learn the real story behind the tragedy: the victims, the motives, the history that led up to this horrific event. Don Leslie's narration is so compelling as to be almost addictive....you will not want to stop listening to his voice!

The unabridged version (and we'll just tell you right now, if A Reader's Respite ever catches you listening to anything abridged, we'll break your kneecap) runs a glorious 43 hours and 34 minutes. It is available on CD, but we highly recommend downloading it from Audible.com if you have an MP3 player ($15 a month gets you one free audiobook download each month...a steal!).

This is a highly recommended book in whatever format you prefer...read it.


Diversifying My Bookshelves


Come on Shore and We Will Kill and Eat You All, by Christina Thompson


Well this is an uplifting message to start your day. Breakfast, anyone?





Review: The Ten Year Nap

The Ten Year Nap, by Meg Wolitzer





In her novel The Ten Year Nap, author Meg Wolitzer examines the lives of a handful of women living in New York who left promising careers to be full time mothers. Self-doubt and regret permeate their lives as they find their children half-grown and their own potential in limbo.

A Reader's Respite really should have loved this novel. Everyone else did....from Publisher's Weekly to the Washington Post, rave reviews abound for Wolitzer's sharp insights and contemporary sharp wit.

The subject matter alone should have grabbed us. A Reader's Respite grappled with this very dilemma after the arrival of Big Kid in 2006. We wanted more than anything to be a full time mom, but commercial airlines aren't too forgiving of moms who want to take ten years off. We worked darned hard to earn our Captain's stripes and didn't want to give those up, either.

So we should have loved this book.....right?

You have probably guessed what happened. We didn't love the book. What other reviewers praised as insightful, we read as whiny. Yes, you read that correctly: whiny.

As we were reading the character's agonizing lamentations over choices they had made, we couldn't help but think, "There are tragedies in this world and this is just not one of them." Really. There are wars being waged, famines, natural disasters striking. So women worried that other women might be judging their career decisions just isn't ranking up there for us.

Petty of us? Probably. The subject matter is probably still worthy, it's just the whiny-ness we could do without.




Now remember: as my grandma used to say, there's a butt for every saddle. Just because A Reader's Respite didn't love this book doesn't mean you won't.

So if you want to give it a shot, leave us a comment and we'll draw a random winner on June 8th (international peeps welcome!). Please, enter! Then you can come back here and tell A Reader's Respite that we wouldn't know good literature if it bit us in the ass. We're okay with that.



Title: The Ten Year Nap
Author: Meg Wolitzer
ISBN-10: 1594489785
351 pages
Publisher: Riverhead
Date: March 27, 2008


For pete's sake, don't take our word for it! Read some more reviews!

A Novel Read
The Curious Reader
Confessions of a Literary Persuasion
Library Girl Reads
Live and Let Di
Booking Mama
Kristina's Book Blog
Nomadreader
Cindy's Love of Books
A Blog of Books for You!
A Novel Menagerie

Review: Night Navigation

Night Navigation, by Ginnah Howard




Somewhere along the way, on the book highway, A Reader's Respite took a fairly dark turn and ended up reading Ginnah Howard's debut novel, Night Navigation.

This is a story of the pain and despair of drug addiction. This is the story of a mother's worst nightmare: caught between the love for your child and the knowledge that you cannot fix them.

Meet Del, a middle-aged widow, and her grown son Mark. Mark is an addict. Del wants nothing more than to save her son. The odds are against them both. Suicide, mental illness and family dysfunction are all an important part of this story that takes you into the depths of a family's anguish.

There can be no doubt that author Ginnah Howard has personally experienced the journey described in this novel. No one could possibly write this painful and poignant tale without living it first. Her sparse, yet somehow still lyrical style draw you into her world, into her characters, until you find yourself a de facto member of this dysfunctional and desperate family.

There is a price to being drawn into a tale such as this. It leaves the reader with the emptiness, no --- make that the hollowness, that comes from living with continually dashed hope. Eventually, only numbness remains.

Yet if you've ever wondered what it's like to be a parent of an addict, this novel is the closest you'll ever want to come to finding out. Despair? It abounds in this novel, but so does understanding and the depths of a mother's love.

Does we recommend the novel? That depends. If you have the fortitude to delve into dark subject matter out of a genuine desire to understand, then yes. Otherwise, you'd best skip it.

A Reader's Respite made it through to the end. And now, please pass the Zoloft. And a happy book.


And now, as is our custom around this joint, this is where we offer our brave readers a chance to win this novel. Leave us a comment and we'll draw a random winner (international peeps welcome!) on June 5th. Be sure to check back and see who won!



Title: Night Navigation
Author: Ginnah Howard
ISBN-13: 978-0151014323
304 pages
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Date: April 14, 2009


Need more reviews? Look no further than:

Shelf Life
The Drug & Alcohol Scene
Curled Up with a Good Book
The Reviewer

Review: Twilight of Avalon

Twilight of Avalon: A Novel of Trystan & Isolde, by Anna Elliot



For centuries past the Arthurian legend has been passed down from generation to generation. Thankfully, the myriad of variations of the tale have been keeping modern day authors as busy in the retelling as the ancients bards were.

The latest version to hit bookstores is Anna Elliott's Twilight of Avalon, the first of what will eventually be a full trilogy recounting one of the earliest known versions of Arthurian legend, that of Trystan and Isolde.

For those aficionados of the genre, it seems only fair that we give you a brief sketch of Elliott's take on the Arthurian soap opera:

King Arthur is not the chivalrous ideal of courtly love here. In a fit of passion, he allegedly rapes his sister Morgan, a woman steeped in the old religion in a time when the encroaching Christian priests are quick to brand any non-converting woman a witch. The accusation usually sticks. Morgan gives birth to Arthur's son, Mordred who later, as heir to Arthur's throne, betrays his father, steals Arthur's wife Gwynefar and begets a girl-child with his step-mother. The child is named Isolde. Arthur and Mordred meet in one last epic battle for the High Kingship of Britain and end up killing each other off, leaving Britain in chaos and ripe pickings for the encroaching Saxons, while Isolde is married off to the next High King of Britain, Constantine.

And this is where Elliott's story begins. King Constantine is betrayed and murdered, leaving Isolde alone to battle charges of witchcraft, political intrigue, and a mythical past. To do so and save Britain from destruction from within, Isolde turns to a former Saxon slave, Trystan. The unlikely pair develop a tenuous friendship in a time when trust and loyalty are rare commodities in the world.

And A Reader's Respite loved every single word.

Isolde is one of the most real and heroic characters we've encountered in a long time, a woman fighting for what she believes in within the confines of her gender and time. This is not, we repeat, NOT a love story. At this point in time, there is no room for romance or love in Trystan and Isolde's world. This is a world overflowing in violence, plague and survival. Trystan and Isolde's bond is, at this point in the story, a thread of friendship and mutual respect.

And yet this is not a story of despair, it is a story of hope. A rich cast of supporting characters is the icing on the cake here, providing touches of humor just when you least expect it and sharp insights into the psyche of the time period.

"Yes, the plague year. The sign of God's wrath at the great traitor-king." Grim amusement flickered briefly about the corners of Coel's eyes. "Though I confess I've my doubts when anyone - priest or commoner - starts putting words in the Almighty's mouth. I don't know whether God made man in His image, but it's certain man has returned the favor."
Twilight of Avalon, by Anne Elliott

Whether you are a fan of the Arthurian lit or looking for a good introduction to the genre, A Reader's Respite wholeheartedly recommends Twilight of Avalon!






Now A Reader's Respite knows there must be someone out there dying to get their grubby little hands on this book. If you're interested, you know the drill: leave me a comment saying so and we'll draw a random winner to be announced next Thursday, May 28th. International peeps welcome!



Title: Twilight of Avalon: A Novel of Trystan & Isolde
Author: Anna Elliott
ISBN-13: 978-1416589891
448 pages
Publisher: Touchstone
Date: May 5, 2009



Other cool peeps who've read this book:

Devourer of Books
All Booked Up




Historical Tapestry has a great interview with author Anna Elliott
All

Original Content and the Book Blogger

A Reader's Respite is supposed to be posting a book review right now. We spent the entire afternoon blending the perfect combination of wit and literary criticism, expending considerable brain power (not to scoffed at around here), and was just about ready to hit the POST button when....

....we discovered that this very same book has been reviewed on no less than a dozen or so other book blogs in the past week.



Now we all know that when an author or publicist wants to generate a little buzz for their book, all they have to do is send out a bazillion copies to the book blogging world.

And it's a great system. Really, we love generating buzz. We're just not so crazy about seeing the same book reviewed on twenty different blogs all within a few days of each other.

But we don't live in a bubble, either. Like it or not, we are a part of that larger book blogging community.
the only kind of bubble A Reader's Respite wants to be in


So we were pondering stuff. Like how to avoid this problem in the future. After all, when a book blogger is contacted about reviewing a book, we seldom (if ever) ask how many other book bloggers are receiving that very same book at the very same time?


In short, A Reader's Respite is starting to feel the weight of responsibility to our readers. The responsibility to provide reviews of books you may not have known about, rather than the latest hit coming down the pike.

Now this doesn't mean that we won't occasionally accept a review copy. A Reader's Respite reserves the right to participate in a blog tour if we feel the book is especially deserving (like the Daphne du Maurier hype right now ---- reprinting her old books is just too cool to ignore!).
And over the next month or so, readers will see reviews of newer books as we wrap up the review commitments we have made.

But beginning around July, you won't be reading about the newest "in" book around this joint. Hopefully, you'll stick around to read reviews of books you might not otherwise have noticed!

What think you?


Giveaways Make Me Hungry


Those of you who have been hanging out at A Reader's Respite for a while might remember this review of Erica Bauermeister's The School of Essential Ingredients that we posted some months back.

In a nutshell? We LOVED this book. Everyone LOVED this book. You can't not LOVE this book if you appreciate gorgeous writing.

Now Erica and A Reader's Respite both call the great Pacific Northwest home and that means we consume a lot of seafood. The difference between us is that Erica knows how to prepare culinary works of art, while A Reader's Respite knows microwavable popcorn.



So who would you rather get a sumptious seafood recipe from? Yeah, that's what we thought. Oh, and how about a giveaway of The School of Essential Ingredients while we're at it....

Interested? We thought you might be. Read what Erica has to say.....

*****




Some fifteen years ago now, my husband and I bought a slim bit of land on the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state. The property rose up some 250 feet, but technically it was waterfront and we bushwhacked our way through poison oak and clambered down ladders and ropes and stood, triumphant, on our beach. The view down the bay was endless; the seals poked their heads up from the water and looked at us with soft brown eyes. We fell in love.

Our beach is rocky and when the tide goes out it leaves behind a vast expanse of oysters. For some of our friends, the bounty is overwhelming and they sit on the rocks in a kind of stunned bliss for hours, oyster knife in hand. Alas, neither my husband nor I like oysters. We’ve tried. We’ve barbequed and baked, lemoned and hot sauced and stewed. Nothing doing.

We do, however, love crab, and there are crabs down in the deep, cold water just off our beach. So every summer we drag our canoe over the utterly offended mollusks and set out in search of crustaceans.

As a cautionary note, I’d like to say that crabbing by canoe is a highly questionable proposition. Still, my husband likes adventure, so we bought a lovely orange canoe that looked just like something you would put four little Girl Scouts in at summer camp. It lasted a few years until a big winter storm caved its side in while it lay tied up on the beach.

Now we have a new canoe - Tank Girl. Tank Girl is big and strong and so heavy that I truly do not understand how she floats. When the tide is out and the beach looks like a battleground littered with sharp-edged grenades... well, let’s just say you have to like crabs to drag Tank Girl across all that to the water.

Which we do. And wanting to learn how to prepare our catch well led me to take a cooking class, where we were taught how to kill them with our bare hands. Which led to The School of Essential Ingredients.

People have asked for the recipe for roasted crab from Claire’s chapter in the book, so here ‘tis. And Claire and Helen want you to know that if you can only find already cooked crabs (or you don’t relish the idea of killing them), you can also use this as a truly decadent dipping sauce.


Claire's Roasted Crabs

2 live crabs
3/4 cup butter
3/4 cup onion, chopped
2 T ginger, minced
2 T garlic, minced
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup dry white wine

Lay live crab belly side down and hold from the rear with one hand (avoiding the big claws!). With the other hand, grip the edge of the back shell with your fingers. Pull up sharply to remove the shell, then cut the crab into two halves with a large knife. Wash the body cavity, removing lungs and guts. With large knife, cut between each of the legs and crack the shells with the side of the knife, to allow openings for the roasting sauce to enter. (for more extended description, you can go to pages 46-47 of The School of Essential Ingredients).

Melt butter in sauce pan over medium heat. Add onion and saute until translucent. Add ginger, garlic, salt, & red pepper flakes and saute about a minute until garlic becomes translucent but not browned.

Put crabs in a roasting pan & coat well with sauce. Roast for 15-20 minutes in 375 degree oven. Stir 2-3 times.

Warm lemon juice & white wine. Add to crab before serving.

Supply your guests with many, many napkins, baskets of crunchy french bread and a fresh green salad. Utensils for getting the meat from the shells are handy as well....

*****

Now, for the giveaway! If you'd like to win a copy of The School of Essential Ingredients (and if that doesn't get you in the mood for some serious cooking, we don't know what will!), leave us a comment telling us the best meal you ever ate.

That's it. Easy peasy, right?

Contest will remain open until June 3rd at which time a completely random winner will be drawn and announced right here so be sure to check back to see if you won! Unfortunately we have to limit this one to U.S. and Canadian entrants only, please. (A Reader's Respite will make up for that soon, I promise!)

Fashion for Book Lovers

A Reader's Respite recently discovered Whimsical Watches, a company that makes adorable, specialized watches and we were feeling just generous enough today to share our find.

Check out their watches for book lovers:









A Reader's Respite ordered one (alas, not one of the bookish ones....the pilot watch won out) and they are indeed very cute watches. Beware that they are rather large, though. In fact, it covers our entire wrist, which has the added advantage of making us look rather small boned.

I love it when people comment at what appears to be my little petite wrist.






PS....Blogger can (again) SUCK IT for messing with my font sizes today.

Review: Let the Shadows Fall Behind You

Let the Shadows Fall Behind You, by Kathy-Diane Leveille



A Reader's Respite would like you to note the cover of Kathy-Diane Leveille's newest thriller. What do you see? More importantly, what do you NOT see?

That's right, my friends. Not a headless woman nor a obnoxious blurb to be found. Not on the front, not on the back, nowhere.

Needless to say, this garnered Let the Shadows Fall Behind You a bunch of extra bonus points before we even opened the book.

So when the rest of this character-driven thriller turned out to be fabulous, we knew we found a winner. Let the Shadows Fall Behind You is a taut psychological thriller with more than enough mystery and rich characterization to keep us mesmerized.

A short synopsis? Well in this case, the author provides are a far more interesting one than A Reader's Respite could awkwardly peck out on the keyboard:

On a grey morning in Northern Ontario in 1978, when the first fat snowflakes drifted down erasing all the familiar landmarks, Nikolai Mirsky headed out the door of the haunted cabin he shared with his lover, Brannagh Maloney. And disappeared…

Brannagh, a Natural Science Illustrator, struggled to collate the data from their bird count through the long winter. By the time the icicles began to melt, she was filled with a growing dread that the infamous wilderness preservationist wasn’t returning.

When Brannagh left New Brunswick, ten years ago, she swore it was for good. But now her best friend, Annie, won’t stop worrying about her, and won’t stop hounding her to come back for a reunion of their childhood all-girls club The Tuatha-de-Dannans. Brannagh finally relents, but she refuses to go to her childhood home and face her irascible Grandfather. Instead, she hides out at her Grandmother’s summer cottage, even though it is far too close to the woods where her mother was murdered. As Brannagh struggles to put to rest the questions surrounding Nikki’s disappearance, she finds it impossible to ignore the family secrets circling the most tragic disappearance of all. Brannagh learns that nothing magical will ever change her past, but the fierce love of friends holds the power to transform the future.


Now, if you happened to catch the author's guest post, you'll remember Kathy saying that this novel was actually rejected by publishers due to the multiple time lines that flit around in the book. Our verdict? It works. It really, really works. No confusion here whatsoever since the protagonist Brannagh appears in each time period. Think of each frame as a piece of the puzzle and as the taut plotline crescendos, each frame gets shorter and tenser, drawing the reader in until putting the book down seems an impossible task.

Now recall that we mentioned this is a character-driven thriller...you won't find shoot 'em up, car-chase, exploding buildings here, folks. It is the characters themselves and the secrets they keep that provides more than enough action.

This is a highly recommended novel and A Reader's Respite isn't the only one who thinks so: Let the Shadows Fall Behind You made Booklist's Top Ten Crime Books list.


Now yesterday, we mentioned a giveaway with a twist. Yes, A Reader's Respite is going to give a copy of this novel to a random winner. But the winner must agree to read, review and hold their own giveaway of this copy of Let the Shadows Fall Behind You.

So if you have a blog, that's great. If you don't have a blog, that's okay, too - just submit your review to A Reader's Respite and we'll provide the venue for your review and giveaway. All you have to do is mail the book to the new winner.

So leave a comment if you'd like a chance to read and review this fantastic new novel. International entrants are encouraged, as always! Our random drawing will be held on Wednesday, May 27th, so get your entries in!


Title: Let the Shadows Fall Behind You
Author: Kathy-Diane Leveille
ISBN-13: 978-1601641670
288 pages
Publisher: Kunati Inc.
Date: April 1, 2009


More Reviews:

Booking Mama
The Thrill Begins
Cheryl's Book Nook

How an author becomes, well, an author

Today A Reader's Respite is honored to welcome Kathy-Diane Leveille, author of the fantastic, newly-released thriller, Let the Shadows Fall Behind You.

A Reader's Respite just loves guest posts. Not only does it take the heat off us, but we learn an awful lot from the talented writers who show up around here.

The best part? Not only is Kathy-Diane a talented writer, but she is a genuinely nice person. Her journey is an inspiring one!

Be sure to tune in tomorrow for a review of Let the Shadows Fall Behind You and a giveaway with a twist!

But for now, grab a cup of coffee and enjoy....



******

Hi. Thanks for inviting me to be a guest. Let me tell you a bit about my journey to publication. Like most, it’s been long, tough, yet extremely rewarding. I’m a former broadcast journalist with CBC radio. Seventeen years ago, when I was home on maternity leave with my youngest son, I dug out an old file of story ideas and started scribbling. By the time the date arrived when I was supposed to return to work, I had already decided that I didn’t want to keep putting my dream of writing fiction on the back burner. Since then I’ve done different jobs, including being a janitor and typing medical transcription, to give me the time and energy to pursue my passion. It was ten years before my first book Roads Unravelling, a collection of short stories was published. It took another five before a publisher accepted my debut novel Let the Shadows Fall Behind You.



Northumberland Straight Jacket my first attempt at a suspense novel was a disaster. I had no idea how to plot period, so I kept going off on tangents and ended up nowhere. The good news is that while writing that novel I learned a lot about character development and setting, so when I tackled my second novel, I could focus my energy on plot alone and finally begin to dissect its mechanics. I had to write three or four in order to learn the many elements involved, and I’m still learning. I can remember that feeling of breaking through, however, with Let the Shadows Fall Behind You when I knew that I was finally juggling all the balls of character, setting, plot, theme, pacing and not dropping any. It was, and is, tremendously satisfying. It made me grateful that I didn’t give up and miss the reward.


The most difficult thing about writing a novel is returning to the page when the initial excitement over a story idea has worn off. It always hits though. I’m riddled with doubts about my ability to translate the vision to the reader. I’ve learned through the years that I must keep going back. Eventually something sparks, and I love my characters all over again. It’s that moment, ironically, that becomes the most uplifting.

I believe writers block comes with the territory. At first, I despair, convinced whatever I’m working on should be tossed. But usually on reflection, I realize I need a break from the writing. For me writer’s block comes because the well is dry. I need to get out and enjoy life. It usually takes 1-2 days before suddenly a window opens in the block (when I’m doing something totally mundane like having my tooth drilled).


Did I get a lot of rejection letters for Let the Shadows Fall Behind You? You bet. Rejection of the work you’ve spent so much time on is a blow. The only cure for my disappointment has always been writing. Before you know it, I’m caught up in the characters and the mystery of their journey again. Sometimes it helps to work on a completely different project. If anything, I figure I must have learned something by now to make this one come closer to the mark. With Let the Shadows Find behind You, I found editor’s comments taking on deeper insight, and my attitude toward rejection started to shift. I still don’t like it, but I try to dwell on what I can learn to make the manuscript shine.

I think if I had had access to seasoned professionals in the industry sooner, I might have learned a lot faster about what it takes to survive and thrive in today’s publishing world. Living on the Canadian east coast, it’s pretty isolated from the hub of the industry. You absolutely have to know the business, how it works and its current needs to give yourself a leg up. I think I was too naïve in believing that all I needed to do was write well and the work would find a home on its own. In some instances this can happen, but the greater reality is that selling books is a business, and one that is constantly changing. I romanticized the industry when I needed to view myself as a business woman. There are tons of professional writing organizations on-line now with list services and great opportunities to keep up-to-date. My book sold when I started using Writer’s Market on-line publishers list, and accessed published authors via list serves for their advice and on-line workshops.




One tool that anyone can access anywhere is books. Read, read, read. Study the kind of book you want to write and dissect it. Read for pure pleasure and soak up the brilliance between the pages. I am one of those strange creatures who read 5 books at once. I need at least one literary novel (to admire the poetry), one mystery/suspense (pure entertainment), one self-help (new goals), one autobiography (inspiration) and lots of non-fiction (to keep the grey-cells firing). A really good suspense novel always creates a craving in me to get back to the page.




Never give up. Never give up. And, also, never give up.



Roads Unravelling was rejected by a few dozen publishers. Editors kept telling me I was wasting my time because short story publications aren’t worth publishing any more as no one wants to read them. Then I had two offers, and chose the publisher who carried the manuscript around in her briefcase for weeks, because she wanted to dig the stories out and read them every spare minute she had.


Let the Shadows Fall Behind You was rejected by a few dozen publishers. Editors kept telling me that I was wasting my time because readers weren’t sophisticated enough to follow three time lines. Then Kunati Books called, and said it was a fine novel, and could they publish it, please?

Thank you so much for inviting me to be your guest and meeting all your readers. Please let me know what you think of Let the Shadows Fall Behind You at shadowsfall@kathy-dianeleveille.com. I’d love to hear from you. I’ve met many generous writers on my road to publication and every Thursday I chat with one of them on Shadows Fall N Friends. Join us at http://lettheshadowsfallbehindyou.blogspot.com . For a schedule of who is appearing when subscribe to my E-muse letter at shadowsfall@kathy-dianeleveille.com.. Along with the latest news and writing tips, it announces the winner of the monthly draw for a 50.00 gift certificate on Amazon.

Happy Reading!

Kathy-Diane

http://kathy-dianeleveille.com



Review: Galway Bay

Galway Bay, by Mary Pat Kelly









There's something about historical family sagas that makes A Reader's Respite sigh with contentment. There's nothing like turning the last page of an sweeping epic story that spans the generations and catches the reader up in the turmoil of another family, if for no other reason than to escape our own.



Galway Bay is author Mary Pat Kelly's story of the Irish-American experience. Well-researched and engaging, Kelly is a darned good story-teller and draws off of her own ancestor's experiences to drive the plot, a story chronicling one family's migration from Ireland to America in the 1800's. If you don't know much about Irish emigration, this novel is a wonderful place to get your feet wet.



Not your average veggie


Kelly doesn't bog down the reader in detailed politics of the time, but instead focuses on the impact of anti-Catholic sentiment on one family. The politics of the day, coupled with the Great Irish Potato Famine, killed over a million people and drove another million to leave Ireland forever, many of whom chose America as their surrogate home.

But America wasn't the Promised Land for most of these immigrants. Most arrived between the years of 1840-1860 and if you know your American history, well then....




Those Irish who survived famine, the abhorrent tenant farming of the day, and a treacherous Atlantic crossing found themselves in a foreign land, swept up into a war not of their making.

If you're looking for angst, this novel certainly has it. Love, war, loss and hope fairly leap out of the pages at you.

While Galway Bay didn't sweep us completely off our feet like that first reading of Gone With the Wind or The Thorn Birds, it is a novel deserving of your attention.




Title: Galway Bay
Author: Mary Pat Kelly
ISBN-13: 978-0446579001
576 pages
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Date: February 9, 2009


Okay, nosey-rosey....here are some more reviews to help you make up your mind:

Gather Books Essential
Savvy Verse & Wit
Lynne's Little Corner of the World
A Bookworm's World
The Tome Traveller
Wendi's Book Corner
Peeking Between the Pages
So Many Precious Books, So Little Time
Grace's Book Blog
Library Girl Reads
Diary of an Eccentric
Historical Tapestry
Cafe of Dreams
Linus's Blanket
Jenn's Bookshelf
Books by TJBaff






Shame On You!


This post is for those of you who woke up this morning, brewed some coffee, and are just now sitting down at the computer to realize.....IT'S MOTHER'S DAY!

I know, you're busy dialing 1-800-FLOWERS as you read. Hang up the phone. I have the solution.

Go down to your local bookstore and buy the Deanna Raybourn Lady Julia Grey Mystery trilogy:





Silent in the Grave












Silent in the Sanctuary











Silent on the Moor

(Yes, we know the cover sucks on this one. The book is still fabulous.)






Yes, that's right, buy all three of them (suck it up, cheapskate, she's your MOTHER). Trust me, she'll love them.

And if you're smart, you'll ask her if you can borrow them when she's done.

Go. Now.

And tell her A Reader's Respite says, "Happy Mother's Day, Mom!".

Blurbs....(and a winner)



A Reader's Respite has been getting a bit fed-up with blurbs lately. We recently picked up a book (yes, a real paper and binding book - the Amazonian Devil Device hasn't dragged us completely over to the dark side yet) that was plastered with no less than 6 blurbs on the cover. We could barely discern the title of the book underneath all of the gushing fountains of allocades.

Intrigued, we flipped the book open to read a few paragraphs.

Major suckage.

We flipped ahead a few chapters. More suckage.

Disgusted, we plopped the book back on the shelf and pondered the blurbs.

Being fairly well-read people, I would imagine that most of us recognize the authors who blurb on covers. Is blurbing merely a way to promote their own work?

Publisher's Weekly recently addressed this very subject. If you missed it, read here.

So what do you think? Have you ever purchased a book solely due to a blurb? Do you ignore blurbs? Inquiring minds want to know.




Oh, and we do have a winner of Eileen Goudge's book, The Diary!



Zap us an email with your mailing address!

Review: The Diary (and a tie-in)

The Diary, by Eileen Goudge



Mother's Day is rapidy approaching and the timing for Eileen Goudge's new novel couldn't have been better.

The Diary tells the story of two sisters, grown well into adulthood, who come across a diary....their mother's diary as a young woman.

Author Eileen Goudge has hit upon a timeless question: how well do any of us really know our mothers? Mothers are part of the fabric of our being. They feed us, care for us, fix us when we're broken and all too often, we take this in stride with nary a thought as to who they are as a person. Simply put, they are just mom.

Rarely, if ever, do we give thought to who our mother's really are: their hopes, their dreams, their aspirations and disappointments. Perhaps this is a natural phenomenon. After all, what if the part we - their children - played in their lives isn't what we thought it would be?

The Diary tries to answer some of these questions with a tender, heart-warming flavor. At only 224 pages, the story is too short to develop characters to their full potential, but this doesn't detract from the novel by any means.

Told in a series of flashbacks introduced by a diary entry, the reader is taken back for a look at a young woman's series of choices that may, or may not, have cost her her one true love. While the story certainly is engaging enough, it is A Reader's Respite's opinion (read: take it with a grain of salt) that the brief present-day scenes between the sisters as they read their mother's diary could have been left out entirely with no harm done.

Which brings us to our recent informal poll and many thanks to those who participated. It would seem that the use of the word "Sis" in conversation with one's sister finds somewhat common usage in the Southern U.S. For those readers who are familiar with the vernacular down South, the dialogue in The Diary won't phase you a bit. For the rest of us, however, it has moments where the use of words like "sis" creates awkward, stilted dialogue that detracts from the story.

In short, it kind of bugged us.

Still, the novel had more good points than not and would make a lovely Mother's Day read or gift. The idea of our mothers before they were mothers is intriguing indeed.



Want to read this book? Leave a comment and on Friday, May 8th, A Reader's Respite will pick a random winner!



Title: The Diary
Author: Eileen Goudge
ISBN-13: 978-1593155438
224 pages
Publisher: Vanguard Press
Date: April 7, 2009


Some more reviews for your perusal:

Stephanie's Written Word
Lesa's Book Critiques
Single Titles
Wendy's Minding Spot
Fresh Fiction
Writings of a Loud Librarian
Ramya's Bookshelf

An Informal Poll

Okay, I would like to know how many of you out there, if you are a sister or have a sister, use the word "sis" in your normal, every-day vocabulary.

Just wonderin'.

And yes, there is a book related reason, thankyouverymuch.