Me and Max

My December 2011 hardcover release, WHERE SHE BELONGS, is now available for pre-order from Barnes and Noble as well as Amazon and Amazon Canada (and Amazon has a price guarantee—you order the book now and if it shows up for a lower price before the December 16th release date, Amazon will match that lower price). Amazon Canada has the same guarantee.

Don’t forget that you can also ask your librarian to order a copy. Visit the Five Star/Cengage website to print out the book information—or just send your librarian to my website. Make sure, when writing down the web address, that you spell Procter-King with a hyphen and an E!

The cover isn’t up on the Barnes and Noble site yet. Not sure when that will happen. I’m just glad BN and Amazon are no longer saying that Western author Max Brand and I are co-authors for the book! We both have Five Star releases on December 16th, and somehow a glitch got in the works. Next thing I knew, not only was Max Brand a co-author for WHERE SHE BELONGS, but I was a co-author for the December 16th Max Brand release.

A very weird glitch! Especially considering Mr. Brand is no longer alive. How could he co-author my book? Oh, the Internet!

Don’t worry, Max Brand fans, I won’t be taking advantage of his name and/or sales. I reported the mistake to Amazon, and it was quickly fixed. The same mistake appeared on Barnes and Noble’s website, but I was busy doing something else and while I was doing that something else, it got fixed without me having to report it.

Now if only I could figure out how to upload the cover to the Barnes and Noble website. I provided the cover for Amazon, because I didn’t want to wait for it to get picked up. Anyone know how to do the same on the Barnes and Noble website?

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WHERE SHE BELONGS Available for Pre-Order!

My December 2011 contemporary romance (and Golden Heart finalist in 2007), WHERE SHE BELONGS, is now available for pre-order from Amazon and Amazon Canada. Woot! You know the wonderful thing about pre-ordering, don’t you? It helps build buzz for the author, as in it makes her look good to her publisher. The more pre-orders, the more books that get shipped from the publisher’s warehouse on or around December 16th (my book’s release date), and then the greater likelihood that the print run will sell decently, or even (in my dreams) sell out, and then the publisher might be in a position to think, “Hey, we’d better do a second print run.”

Also, if you pre-order and then the price goes down, Amazon will honor the lower price between now and the shipping date. Plus, if you’re looking for Christmas and/or your-holiday-of-choice prezzies that you’d like delivered before, say, December 25th, considering the release date is December 16th, pre-ordering heightens your chances of receiving your copy in time. In fact, I’ve pre-ordered books that arrive before the official release date, so there’s another bonus in pre-ordering.

WHERE SHE BELONGS is releasing in library-edition hardcover, and I know it’s not the cheapest format in the world. There’s a chance that large print and/or trade paperback editions might release within the next year or two, but that’s not up to me. It’s up to the publisher. And the publisher most likely decides these things depending on how the first print run sells (hint, hint). I’d love to say a digital edition of the book will be available within the next six months, but, in this particular case, that won’t happen. The digital edition won’t release until December 2012. Yes, that’s a year. So if you love digital, you’ll just have to be patient. (Well, that’s taking for granted that you like my writing, or are willing to take a chance on a contemporary drama rather my usual romantic comedy fare).

But let’s just say there’s no way in Hootenany that you’re pre-ordering or buying or even pretending to buy a hardcover copy of my book. All is not lost. Because Five Star Expressions publishes library-edition hardcovers. If you look real close, you’ll notice the word “library.” That’s because the books are targeted primarily to the library market. But whether or not a librarian decides to order a copy of my book for her collection CAN depend largely on her clientele. The readers who frequent her library. She’s more likely to order a copy of my book (that you can then check out and read for free) if, say, a reader goes to the library and asks her to order it (hint, hint). Information about the publisher, Five Star/Cengage, and ordering for libraries can be found here. As a reader, you could print out the page of information and take it your librarian.

Your library might routinely order Five Star Expressions romances and women’s fiction novels from Five Star/Cengage (as in the library has a standing order) or they might not. However, the Five Star Expressions line is ending in December with the publication of my book and another by Western romance author Stacey Coverstone. You know what this means, don’t you? WHERE SHE BELONGS is a collector’s edition! Yesiree, you heard it here first.

Visit my WHERE SHE BELONGS book page to read an excerpt and check out reviews as they come in.

Blog post brought to you by Shameless Self-Promotion, which, after all, is the reason to have a website, so don’t give me any grief. 
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I’m Big in Japan!

Well, maybe not “big.” But I’m in Japan! Rather, my books are. Rather, HEAD OVER HEELS is.

Last week, I received a pleasant surprise. A registered letter containing a royalty check for the first Manga (Japanese comic book) print run of HEAD OVER HEELS. This was on top of the advance I received nearly two years ago. Which means the first print run earned out the advance—and then some. You could have knocked me over with a toothpick.

A day later, I received a registered package containing my author copies. And I love them! I only have a handful, and they’re going to immediate family and moi. I must keep track of myself for posterity, you know. People have been asking me where they can buy the Manga version of HEAD OVER HEELS. The only place I know of is Amazon Japan. Yep, check it out, I’m there all official-like. And, well, I’m pretty sure the comic is also available in bookstores in Japan.

If I ever find out the Manga version of my first book is available in North America, have no fear, I shall scream it from my blog. In the meantime, enjoy these photos (if you look real close, you can see my name on the back cover—the second photo).

 

It was such a rush “reading” my book back to front, seeing the Japanese characters and the wonderful illustrations. If I had more than 3 copies left to my name (after giving away the others to aforesaid family members), I’d crack the spine of one and scan a couple of inside pages. But I don’t have more than 3 copies left to my name, so I’m not going to destroy ANY of them for the sake of the blog. You’ll just have to take my word that the illustrations match up to the story. I have no idea if the text does, though, because I can’t read Japanese.

This is such a thrill for me, because this sale to Ozhora is another testament that HEAD OVER HEELS is The Little Book that Could.

Chicklit Bestseller at Audible!

I’ve enjoyed two back-to-back long weekends (interspersed with the sad event of my uncle’s funeral), and now it’s time to knuckle down because I have two deadlines to reach for Penny this week. I hope to post some photos of our family trip to Whistler later this week. We had great fun, and the trip was impromptu, because E.S. is leaving soon to live and work in the Middle East for a year.

Anyhoopers, my audio publisher, AudioLark, contacted me before I left (but I didn’t find out until now) that the audiobook of HEAD OVER HEELS was sitting at the #2 spot for ChickLit Bestsellers on Audible! This morning it’s sitting at #3, but I’m in great company with Susan Elizabeth Phillips right behind me. 🙂

Bestseller lists are fickle. HEAD OVER HEELS could drop off any second. So go take a gander and join in my excitement. I would love to see it at #2 again – or #1! O’course, sales will make that happen (hint, hint).

The Audible rating is currently sitting at 4.43 stars. Extra whoop!

Oh, now that I think about it, HEAD OVER HEELS is set in Whistler, where I just spent the weekend. I didn’t go mountain biking this time around. Too many horrific memories from last time (the mountain biking experiences in the story pretty much mirror my first experience mountain-biking at Whistler and also the experience of a friend). The town has changed and grown a lot, but it’s still a blast to visit.

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Playing With ARCs

Among other things, I’ve been busy sending out review requests for the multitude of trade paperback ARCs I received for WHERE SHE BELONGS. Five Star/Cengage sends the ARCs to big review sites like Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, etc. They also send to a couple of romance sites and a couple of independent reviewers, but with 20 ARCs at my disposal, I wasn’t about to let them go to waste. Several have gone out for review, and I need to save one for the Romantic Times co-op ad I’ll be participating in (the February 2012 issue). The February issue of RT, I’m told, is on newstands and in subscribers’ mailboxes in January, which is when my book will most likely appear in libraries and bookstores despite the December 2011 release date (the shipping date is December 16th, for those who want to mark their calendars and order from Amazon) and the in-store date is January 6th, but the likelihood is you’ll need to special order from stores or order on-line, considering Five Star/Cengage is primarily a library press. I’ll probably give the remaining ARCs to family and friends.

As I was packaging another ARC for mailing today, it occurred to me that I hadn’t yet shared the back cover copy for the story. I now have it, because it’s on the back of the ARCs! WHERE SHE BELONGS finaled in the Long Contemporary category of the Golden Heart contest in 2007 under the title, Her Hometown Man. The final product is much tighter and leaner. As I read the ARC to proof for errors, again I was struck by how much I love this book. Am I ever glad I didn’t let it sit under the bed gathering dustballs. Am I ever glad I decided to take it out again and work on it, because that Golden Heart entry led me, in a roundabout way, to submitting to Five Star.

Here’s the blurb:

She never wants to go home again.

For Jess Morgan, Destiny Falls holds too many painful memories. Nine years ago, a logging accident near the remote timber town killed her dad and her high school sweetheart. Despite Jess’s broken heart, her mother immediately sought comfort with another man. That choice tore Jess apart and drove her to seek a life far away. But now fate steps in, and family obligations force her return home. Before long, she’s convinced that persuading her mom to live with her in Toronto will repair their bond and Jess’s own sense of belonging. However, she doesn’t count on a long-ago friend re-entering her life and challenging those same convictions.

Rugged forester Adam Wright believes in family, roots, and not running from heartache. Now, all he wants is to help Jess break down the walls of the lonely sanctuary she’s built for herself and heal her past hurts. But it’s not until she rejects his proposal that Adam realizes his dogged persistence has pushed her even further away—not at all what he intended. Has he lost his chance? Or can he convince Jess that where she truly belongs is with him…forever?

Set amidst British Columbia’s lush forests, WHERE SHE BELONGS delivers an engaging romance with complex characters, honest emotion, and heart.

Yes, this book is a far cry from BORROWING ALEX and HEAD OVER HEELS, which are both comedies. I never fail to cry when I read certain scenes from WHERE SHE BELONGS, and I hope the story touches readers’ hearts as much as it has this writer’s heart.

I was once told by an industry professional that I didn’t know when to give up on a story. You’re damn right I don’t. I refuse to give up on a publishable book just because it doesn’t suit the one editor at the one house who could consider it at the time (the book was originally targeted to a category romance publisher). I believed in myself, and I believed in my story. I reworked and reworked it until it was ready to share with my readers. And am I ever glad I did. I love this book!

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Where She Belongs ARCs!

Between Penny and, well, myself, I’ve published with several different publishers and have never received a box of print ARCs before (Advanced Reading Copies, for those not in the know). The “proofing” of the manuscript (the last chance an author has to catch errors in the typesetting before the “real” book is printed), for me, has always arrived by email in PDF form. So here I am, a good little writer, patiently waiting for the proofs for WHERE SHE BELONGS, my December release from Five Star/Cengage, to arrive in PDF form in my in-box, when a knock comes at the door.

I was expecting a delivery for My Liege, so wasn’t surprised to see a UPS van in the driveway. But the box the UPS woman delivered was much smaller than the package we’ve been expecting. Then she told me who had sent it—one of my publishers. I quickly scribbled in the little electronic window, raced to my office (already late for a doctor’s appointment), and tore open the box, wondering how my author’s copies could have arrived already when I hadn’t proofed the book yet,

Twit.

WHERE SHE BELONGS is being published in library-edition hardcover, but the box contained several trade paperback copies and a list of where Five Star/Cengage has sent the book for review. Now I need to read one of the copies for errors and report them to the publisher, if I do find any. Then, what do I do with these babies? First thing is to make a media kit and then mail kit and book samples to other review outlets (like Romantic Times). Seeing as I’m Canadian, I’ll also try a home-grown publication or two. It can hurt. The worst thing that can happen is a reviewer tries to sell my ARCs on eBay, which is a no-no.

Okay, I know you really want to see the ARCs, so here’s the box. Then I’ll blab some more:

Ain’t they a thing of beauty? Notice how Procter is spelled with an E? Henceforth, always spell Procter with an E! It’s time to tick off the Proctors of the world. We “ers” have had enough.

Now, see that little white sticker on each book? It says NOT FOR SALE. That’s because these are Advance Reading Copies and are only supposed to be used for review purposes. So if you’re a reader and have never seen a book with “Advance Reading Copy—Not For Sale” on it for sale at your favorite used book store, that’s very good. If you have ever bought an Advance Reading Copy thinking it’s something special and you’re supporting the author, well, you aren’t supporting the author and buying the ARC is…not very good. In fact it’s kinda bad. Authors really disprove of it. And so do publishers. These copies might have typesetting errors and are not for public consumption, so to speak. But if you don’t send ARCs to review sites and magazines months ahead of the book’s release, then the book won’t get reviewed in time. If the reviewer for wherever it’s sent chooses to review it.

Authors don’t make a penny–nay, not even a ha’penny—off the sale of ARCs. The only person making money off the sale of an ARC is the person selling it. Which is unlike buying your favorite author’s novels at your favorite used bookstore. You know, when they don’t say ARC on them. When someone has bought them new, hopefully read them, then taken them to the USB. USB book sales don’t earn authors any money, either. Authors only earn money (in the form of royalties—a tiny percentage of the cover price) on print books when that first initial sale is made, in the bookstore, drug store, or grocery store. OR from on-line bookstores selling the book NEW (as opposed to used). Every time a book is sold after that initial sale, at garage sales or used book stores or library “these books are worn out” sales, or EBay and similar sites, the author doesn’t make a dime. But generally we’re okay with that. Used book stores and the like can subject our work to a wider audience, and hopefully that audience will someday buy new (or ask for a copy of the book to come into their local library). But buying ARCs? Try to restrain yourself, I beg you.

That’s my lecture for the day. I didn’t intend to give one. It just somehow happened.

Now, let’s all clap for ARCs!!!