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Posts Tagged ‘Authors’

Melissa Huray

Melissa Huray has dedicated the past twenty years to helping people with addictions find freedom through the power of Jesus Christ.  Radically freed in 2003, she is a masters level addiction counselor with degrees in communications and exercise physiology.  Melissa’s writing has been featured in Katy Christian magazine and in Steve Bannon’s War Room news. She has two books set for release—her memoir, Blackout to Blessing by Beaufort Books, and a devotional for addicts called Radical Freedom by BroadStreet Publishing.

She is currently the Executive Director of the Lindell Recovery Network and hosts an internet television show called the Hope Report which streams live five days each week.  Melissa has an extensive background in broadcasting and worked as an on-air radio personality and Emmy award winning news reporter and anchor before entering the field of addiction. 

She currently lives in the Twin Cities suburb of Lakeville, MN with her husband Mike and has three daughters. Melissa enjoys writing, running, wordsmithing and singing—both old-school karaoke and with the City of Lakes—a nationally recognized women’s Barbershop chorus.

Blackout to Blessing

Jeffrey Blount

Jeffrey is the award-winning author of three novels. His most recent book, The Emancipation of Evan Walls was the winner of the 2020 National Indie Excellence Award for African American fiction.

He is also an Emmy award-winning television director and a 2016 inductee to the Virginia Communications Hall of Fame.  During a 34-year career at NBC News, Jeffrey directed a decade of Meet The Press, The Today Show, NBC Nightly News, and major special events.  He is the first African- American to direct the Today Show.

He is also an award-winning documentary scriptwriter for films and interactives that are now on display in the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture.  America I AM: The African American Imprint at the National Constitution Center, and others. 

In 2017 and 2018, Jeffrey served as Journalist in Residence and Shapiro Fellow at the School of Media and Public Affairs at The George Washington University.

A Virginia native, he graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University with a degree in Communications/Broadcast Journalism.

Born and raised in Smithfield, Virginia, he now lives in Washington, DC.

Mr. Jimmy from Around the Way (Coming Soon!)

Susannah Marren

Susannah Marren is the author of Between the Tides, A Palm Beach Wife and A Palm Beach Scandal, and the pseudonym for Susan Shapiro Barash, who has written over a dozen nonfiction books, including Tripping the Prom Queen, Toxic Friends, You’re Grounded Forever, But First Let’s Go Shopping, and A Passion for More. For her nonfiction, she has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, The Chicago Tribune, Elle, and Marie Claire.

She has appeared on national television including the Today Show, Good Morning America, CBS, CNN, and MSNBC. Barash has been a guest on national radio including NPR and Sirius Radio.

For over twenty years she has taught gender studies at Marymount Manhattan College and has guest taught creative nonfiction at the Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence College. Presently she is teaching at the Westport Writers Workshop.

Maribelle’s Shadow

Peter Boal

Peter Boal was raised in Bedford, New York. At the age of nine, he began studying ballet at the School of American Ballet, the official school of New York City Ballet. Mr. Boal became a member of New York City Ballet’s corps de ballet in 1983 and became a principal dancer in 1989. In 2005, he retired from New York City Ballet after a 22-year career with the company. Mr. Boal was also a full-time faculty member at the School of American Ballet from 1997 to 2005. In 2003, he founded Peter Boal and Company, a critically acclaimed chamber ensemble.

Illusions of Camelot

What Makes Author Events So Appealing?

Thursday, October 6th, 2022

Dear Readers,

One of my favorite pastimes is to attend author events. I have gone to more events this year than ever before. The last time I attended a bookish event was when I attended the Boston Book Festival back in 2019. It was the first time I ever covered an event for my university’s newspaper and my first experience with journalism. 

When COVID hit, bookstores had to figure something out. If these events could not continue in-person, what were the alternatives? I am sure that many of the questions asked were in line with how to bring together many people in one setting in order to hear an author speak. Then, online events came in full swing. It allowed for people with busy schedules or long commute times to be able to see an author from the comfort of wherever they were. 

At the beginning of 2022, author events began to return to in-person, with an added bonus of hybrid events. Being able to meet authors face-to-face again and hear them discuss their works that they have spent time on, often in the hopes of giving an audience something to love or learn from, is utterly inspiring to me. 

It has made me wonder what makes author events so appealing? On the one hand, author events are like celebrity meet-and-greets for readers. If one loves an author’s book, one may hope that they can meet the author in-person and pick their brains. On the other hand, readers just love to hear about books, but this is a step above a simple recommendation.

Another thing that I personally love about author discussions is that they are super inspiring and motivating. I never leave an author event without immediately yearning for my laptop to continue writing my own manuscript. 

For introverts, author events can either be a completely solo experience or it can be a great opportunity to make bookish friends that may be hard to come by in a different environment. 

For go-getters, these events are great ways to branch out and connect with people in various industries related to books. Sometimes author’s friends, publicists, editors, and/or agents tag along. If you can find a way to put yourself out there, author events are a great avenue for your career. 

I love the excitement that author discussions bring. It feels so amazing to know that an author is just a regular person who found the time to put their imagination on a page and sought out the right people in order to give people a story to love. Since the majority of events I go to feature Young Adult writers, it reminds me that no matter how old I get, I was a teenager once who fell in love with reading, and I want nothing more than to share that same feeling with teens in the future. 

What do you love about author events?

Sincerely,

Kaliisha of Woods BEAUyond

An Interview With Author Anne Gross

Monday, August 24th, 2015
  • How much emphasis do you put on strong voice/character?

A plot-driven story is fun to read and to write because it’s easy to lose yourself in the rhythm. However, if the characters involved aren’t well developed, I tend to roll my eyes with the more dramatic plot twists. My ability to suspend disbelief is damaged by a character that feels flat. So I place a lot of emphasis, or at least try to, on voice.

Here’s my favorite writing spot in my house. My own teensy forest grove in the city.

Here’s my favorite writing spot in my house. My own teensy forest grove in the city.

When my characters are developed enough, I can anticipate what they might do in each nutty situation I throw at them. I know if they will react on instinct or pause to think while digging the dirt out of their ears, throw a punch or run. And if they run, I know if they’re the type to sneak back to loosen the saddle straps or wet down the gunpowder. That being said, Elise and Adelaide still surprise me all the time. I’m pretty gullible like that.

  • What is one message you want your readers to take away from reading The Quiet Woman?

People don’t usually think about the limitations of the past, and I think that’s too bad because in all social classes, women struggled. In the lower classes, women often faltered. Any time I read historical fiction, I feel a bit nostalgic for the past—the clothes, the conversations, the endless knitting and needlework. I imagine long walks on expansive estate lawns with my hand on a gentleman’s elbow, rooms lit with candles and a warm fireplace, dinners that last long into the night, maybe a ballroom with a string quintet in the corner. I get caught up in the romance, and that annoys me, later, when I pop back from the book into real life and consider how those women must have smelled.

Instead of a picturesque Austen landscape, I wrote my heroine into a tavern with no running water, no closet full of gowns, and a front lawn that’s nothing more than a wet, reeking, manure filled alley. My message is to enjoy the present, because nostalgia places unrealistic veils of gold over the past.

I tend to write in a variety of spaces. I took this photo in a cafe in San Francisco where I wrote a lot of The Quiet Woman.

I tend to write in a variety of spaces. I took this photo in a cafe in San Francisco where I wrote a lot of The Quiet Woman.

Despite the grim landscape I created (or maybe because of it) I laughed a lot while I was writing. I hope my reader is as entertained reading The Quiet Woman as I was writing it.

  • Is there any advice you want to impart to aspiring authors?

Advice is something I look for too. I always keep Stephen King’s book On Writing and Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life within reach at all times. I also read blogs that dole out tips for writers.

Here’s my bookshelf. I’ll spare you the photograph of the books piled next to my bed with all the wine glasses, dirty dishes and unmentionables.

Here’s my bookshelf. I’ll spare you the photograph of the books piled next to my bed with all the wine glasses, dirty dishes and unmentionables.

One thing I’ve read in a couple of different places is the caution not to tell anyone about your novel in progress. It’s a conversation killer at a party, they say. You’ll be as dull as someone who starts a conversation with, “I had this weird dream last night…” Furthermore, people will have their own ideas about the path of your novel and will veer you off course. Don’t tell anyone because you’ll end up writing a book by committee and will lose your own voice.

I think this is bad advice for aspiring authors. Even if you live a dull life, as a person who enjoys stringing words together you’re probably a great conversationalist, so it’s doubtful you’d bore people with details about your novel. Also, most artists aren’t easily steered from their vision by Committees with Other Ideas. If they were, they wouldn’t be artists. It’s why artists are interesting (stubborn).

Go ahead and give yourself permission to be obnoxious. Tell everyone. Talk about your novel constantly. Be enthusiastic and excited. Imposter syndrome is real, and when you’re just starting out it can make you want to give up. Talking about your novel undercuts self-doubt because you’re practicing saying the words, “I’m writing.” It’s positive reinforcement.

From a business perspective, the more people you tell, the more anticipation you build for the product you’re developing. Not only are you creating a market, but you’re also networking. You never know if a friend of a friend of a friend has the name of an agent in their address book.

Authors in the Driver’s Seat: Nielsen for Authors

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

I just got an email earlier today from an author talking about a huge jump in her Amazon ranking. This is a common scenario, and always a cause for celebration. However, I cautioned her that a major spike in Amazon sales rank (from, say, 1,000,000 to 100,000) does not necessarily indicate huge numbers of books sold. I understand this can be hard for an author to hear, and also hard to believe–such a big change in numbers must mean something! But the relative ranking system means that to go from #100 to #1,  you need to sell a LOT of books, but to go from 1,000,000 to 100,000, the sales don’t have to be that extreme.

I love it when my authors are involved in the marketing and sales process. What sells books is not Beaufort putting them out there, but our fantastic authors tirelessly introducing their books to people at speaking engagements, on their blogs, on television, even on the subway. Having an enthusiastic and involved author makes my job easier and more rewarding. I’ve tried to provide feedback to authors about sales, but I have dozens of authors, and they don’t stop being interested in their books when I take on new books.  It’s overwhelming to try to keep everyone posted about what their book is doing more frequently than they get royalty statements. So most authors turn to the most responsive real-time reflection of sales that they have access to–Amazon’s sales rankings. (I admit that I do it, too, when I’m trying to see immediately how effective an author’s appearance on a particular show was.)

Which is why I’m so thrilled that Amazon is going to start providing authors access to Nielsen sales figures through the Author Central program.

The LA Times goes into detail here.

I’d encourage every author to go sign up for Author Central. It enables you to fill in your author profile on Amazon, link your blog to your books, etc. And now, it’ll give you access (for free!) to the same tools publishers have to gauge sales. Every week, authors will be able to see their updated Nielsen sales figures. Those don’t represent all sales (special sales, library sales, the author’s own sales at events, and some other channels are not reflected in Nielsen’s numbers), but it’s a much more useful way to gauge success than Amazon’s sales ranking.

I think this is a great step forward, and will give authors more tools to help sell and promote their books. Kudos, Amazon.

Margot