Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award

Submissions for the 2009 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award are running right now, February 2 – 8, 2009. Only three more days to enter, if you’re up for it. Entry details found here.

Entry requirements include:

  • The full/complete version of your manuscript (the “Manuscript”), which must be between 50,000 and 150,000 words;
  • Up to the first 5,000 words, but no less than 3,000 words, of text of that manuscript, excluding any table of contents, foreword, and acknowledgments (the “Excerpt”);
  • A pitch statement (cover letter/summary) of up to 300 word (the “Pitch”)
  • Other registration information as asked for on the entry page (such as name, contact information, book title), and
  • An author photo (if desired), which must be in .jpg format (at least 72 dpi and 500×468 pixels)

That’s from the site. I don’t make this stuff up!

You have to register before you can enter, so if this is the first you’ve heard of the contest, get at ‘er.

Also from the site:

We’re excited to announce that mega-bestselling authors Sue Monk Kidd and Sue Grafton will lead this year’s expert panel, kicking off the Breakthrough Novel Award finalist round with their reviews of the top three manuscripts. A-list literary agent Barney Karpfinger and Penguin Press Editor-in-Chief Eamon Dolan will also join them to provide careful critiques of the finalists’ novels.

Last year my buddy, Maureen McGowan, made it into the quarter finals (or was it further, Maureen? I looked for a search box on your blog, but couldn’t find one). (By the way, thanks for doing away with that um, particular widget we spoke about).

Welcome Karen Tintori & Jill Gregory

VERY SUPERSTITIOUS…jill_gregorykaren_tintori

It’s great to be here visiting with you today, but it’s also a bit of a challenge.  A good one.  While we write thrillers together seamlessly, we were a bit flummoxed about how to go about writing a blog in one voice. 

The two of us have been best friends since we were young mothers.  Our kids met in a mother-toddler class, hit it off immediately, and so did we.  We thought we’d end up in-laws one day, but that didn’t happen.  Instead, we’re writing partners with five books written together and lots more written separately.  Karen is outgoing, Jill is private, but other than that, we two are a lot alike, devoted to our families and to our writing.  We finish each other’s sentences, we think with one brain, writing our books line by line together.

the_illuminationIn THE ILLUMINATION, our new release, we explored the ancient belief in the Evil Eye, a protective symbol that plays a prominent role in the book.  Before we started our research, Karen—being superstitious—already knew a lot about it, Jill not so much. 

Karen:  I’m obsessively superstitious.  I come by it naturally, being raised in a Sicilian-Italian family where horseshoes wrapped in red ribbons hung over our doorways for protection and St. Christopher rode on the dashboard of our family car.

From as far back as I can remember, my mother and grandmother warned me about the evil eye—mal occhio—and how to protect myself if I thought someone was shooting the evil eye at me.  More times than I can count, I watched my grandmother or one of my older female relatives perform the incantations to remove the curse from some hapless victim in our family.

Jill: I’ve never been particularly superstitious, though I’ll admit to avoiding stepping on cracks or walking under ladders.  Because…why take chances?  Those two are so ingrained, even my practical side won’t risk ignoring them.

Karen: And you always say, “bread and butter,” when we’re walking somewhere and have to go around opposite sides of a pole or bench or some other obstacle. 

Jill: Okay, that’s another one.  I learned to say, “bread and butter” as a little girl.  It’s a way of saying “may nothing ever come between us” to avoid breaking a relationship.  Has anyone else ever heard about this superstition, or is it a regional Midwest deal? 

Karen: I’m into all of it.  “Bread and butter.”  “You owe me a Coke.”  Throwing salt over my left shoulder if I spill some accidentally, avoiding black cats—about the only thing I don’t ascribe to is aversion to the number 13.  It’s one of my lucky ones, in fact.

Jill: What I’ve never understood is why you think that if you cry on your birthday, you’ll cry all year long.  Every time you say that, it cracks me up.  Is that a genuine Italian superstition, or did your mother make it up?

Karen: Who knows?  I don’t.  But I try my damnedest not to ever cry on my birthday—even over sentimental cards.  My sister, raised in that same Sicilian-Italian family, thinks I’m nuts.  Still, when we started our research for THE ILLUMINATION, I learned there was more to the Evil Eye than I thought.  The research was…well, eye-opening.

Jill and Karen: We had a blast learning about the incredible mythology surrounding this ancient symbol—one of the oldest and most wide-spread of all human superstitions.   

The eye symbol appeared in Egyptian hieroglyphics and on the cuneiform tablets of the Babylonians and Sumerians.  It was also mentioned in the Old Testament (Deuteronomy and Proverbs), and in writings by classical Greek and Roman writers such as Plutarch and Cicero.  Even Socrates had a connection to the Evil Eye—he was rumored to have possessed it, holding his followers and admirers under the spell of his magnetic gaze.  Who knew? 

Here are some other tidbits we learned:

  • Admiration, a compliment, or an envious, overlong glance, are all thought to impart the Evil Eye.
  • In Scotland the Evil Eye is called droch shuil. 
  • The belief that a person can purposely cast an Evil Eye on others is held only in Southern Italy and Sicily.
  • Protective talismans have been used to protect against the Evil Eye since antiquity.  Blue beads depicting an eye are thought to deflect the evil back upon the person casting the Evil Eye, thereby protecting the intended recipient.
  • In Turkey, a protective blue eye is painted on the national airliners.
  • Animals and children were considered particularly susceptible to the Evil Eye.
  • Spitting was thought to protect against the Evil Rye. 
  • Protective Evil Eye jewelry, worn for centuries, is still prevalent today, becoming increasingly popular in mainstream culture.

In fact, the two of us occasionally wear Evil Eye bracelets or hamsa charms (open-palmed hands) for good luck and protection.  We’re wondering if anyone out there wears any sort of protective talisman to ward off the Evil Eye or to bring good luck.  Most everyone buys into some kind of superstition or other—knock on wood, offer a  “God Bless You,” or “gezundheit,” when somebody sneezes, and keep your fingers crossed, to mention a few. 

Now it’s your turn.  We’d love to know about your superstitions. What little rituals, charms or sayings keep you feeling safe?

***

Please leave a comment to enter to win a copy of THE ILLUMINATION. Entries accepted until midnight, PST.

To learn about Karen and Jill, please visit their websites.

Karen Tintori & Jill Gregory Blogging!

That’s tomorrow, February 4th!

I couldn’t put “Tomorrow” in the blog title like I usually do, because it’s a long title and I don’t know how to format it to left justify. If my blog titles are too long, they full justify, which annoys me to no end. Sooner or later, I’ll get into my style sheet and permanently change the full title justifying to left, but Elle won’t let me play with the blog style sheet until I finish my WIP.

Enough about me! I’m here to introduce my first-ever co-author guest bloggers, Karen Tintori and Jill Gregory. Authors of the international bestseller, THE BOOK OF NAMES, Karen and Jill are blogging about superstitions and the research behind their new thriller, THE ILLUMINATION. It’s a great blog, too. They wrote it just like they write their books—together. The format reminds me a lot of my old Girl Talk columns with Jamie Sobrato, so of course I think it’s spectacular and very effective.

Here’s the back cover copy for THE ILLUMINATION:

It gleamed up at her like a small golden egg encrusted with jewels of lapis lazuli, carnelian, and jasper. The classic eye, one of the most ancient symbols of protection.

Natalie Landau, a museum curator with an expertise in Mesopotamian protective amulets and magical beliefs, has received a puzzling gift from her sister Dana—a necklace with a blue evil eye pendant on it. The Evil Eye is a symbol of protection common throughout the world, with a history connecting it to many religions.

When Natalie learns Dana was murdered only hours after sending the gift, she begins to think her evil eye amulet had something to do with her sister’s death. As she races to discover the origin of the pendant, Natalie is sucked into an international battle between powerful religious factions, each battling for the eye, which turns out to be far more valuable?and far more powerful—than she could ever imagine.

Tomorrow, ask a question or leave a comment for Karen and Jill to enter for your chance to win a copy of THE ILLUMINATION. Entries will be accepted until midnight, February 4th, Pacific Standard Time.

ABOUT KAREN & JILL:jill_gregorykaren_tintori

Karen Tintori and Jill Gregory are writing partners and long-time best friends who’ve collaborated together on five books and are also multi-published separately. Their recent thriller, THE BOOK OF NAMES, became an international bestseller published in 22 countries. They return this month with THE ILLUMINATION, another page-turning thriller based on the quest for a little known biblical artifact that has the power to transform—or destroy—the world.

To learn more about Karen and Jill, please visit their websites by clicking their names.

See you tomorrow!

A Week of Secrets

My buddy, my friend, my life-long pal (not to mention writer extraordinaire), Kate St. James, is participating in A Week of Secrets at Jennifer’s Random Musings. Starting…yesterday! Yes, yesterday, Sunday February 1st, the Week of Secrets began. No stressing, though. No yelling at me that I didn’t post yesterday. Who do you think I am? Kate’s promo person?

There’s plenty of time—all week, in fact—to pop over and say hello to Kate, meet four other wonderful Red Sage authors, and leave comments to enter a drawing at the end of the week for a coupon toward a print or ebook from Red Sage Publishing.

Yesterday featured an introductory post. Now, each day from today until Friday, a Red Sage author will post a blog, Kate will pop in to comment even when it isn’t her day—because that’s the sort of supportive writer-friend she is, she tells me—then next Saturday, February 7th, a winner’s name will be drawn for the print book/ebook coupon.

You can comment as often as you like, however, every day that you comment counts as an entry into the contest, up to a maximum of 5 entries per commenter. So if you comment once per day from Monday to Friday, you’re entered for 5 chances to win. If you comment 5 times on Monday and no other day, you’re entered for 1 chance to win. Make sense? In other words, visit and comment every day to maximum your chances.

Here’s the line-up for the week:

Monday  Not So Secret Secrets of One Romance Writer by Ellie Marvel

Tuesday – Two Secrets of Bold, Bad Girls by Natasha Moore

Wednesday – Secrets of Successful Threesomes by Kate St. James

Thursday – Four Secrets of A French Courtesan by Juliet Burns

Friday – Five Secrets of the SuperFlirt by Carly Carson

Saturday – Jennifer announces the winner of the give-away

Now, I’ll be busy here Wednesday hosting co-guest bloggers Karen Tintori and Jill Gregory, so I won’t have a chance to heckle you to go say hello to Kate. I might heckle you belatedly on Thursday if you don’t go say hello to her, however. I’m just trying to earn my keep here. She’ll cut me loose if I don’t do my job properly. She’s evil that way.

How Do You Read?

A topic of discussion on one of my writers’ listservs got me thinking about the different ways people read, so I thought I’d do a survey. When you read a book for pleasure, do you read it lying down? I do. I read lying down on my bed. Reading sitting up bothers me. I only read sitting up when forced, like on an airplane, or when I’m in public and I know full well that laying on the doctor office floor to read might get me carted off to the Looney Bin.

(Okay, now I’m suffering paranoia about the whole lay/lie thing—should I be writing laying or lying?—gah!) (That’s my excuse for writing it different ways in the above paragraph).

Well, reading sitting up doesn’t bother me, per se. I’m perfectly capable of doing it. But to me it’s not relaxing. And I want to feel relaxed when I read.

I also watch TV lying down. In fact, I’m quite the couch hog, because I take up the whole thing!

What about you? Do you lie down to read? How about when watching TV?

TBR Pile Gems, Featuring Alesia Holliday

You know how it is. You win a free book at a conference drawing, think, “Cool, I have to read this.” Then it goes into your To Be Read pile for months…or sometimes years. You really want to read the author, but you’re not too sure the story line appeals to you. You feel guilty because she signed the book for you and you know her on-line. She’s great. Surely, her books will be great. But for some reason the book you won keeps stagnating in your TBR pile. You notice the author has a new release, so you buy that one. Now you have two of her books in your TBR pile. You read the purchased one first. You love it. You adore it. You wish there was a sequel.

Months pass. You finally decide to read the book you won. You’re on the fence, because you’re still not certain the story line appeals. You start reading it. You realize you’re an idiot. You love it. You adore it. You wish she was still writing under the same name and the same style of books—fun chick lit and quirky mysteries—because you enjoy them so much. But she’s moved on to greener pastures and now publishes action-adventure romances as Alyssa Day.

I’m talking about Alesia Holliday, a talented author I wish I’d discovered sooner. Or, um, released from my TBR pile sooner.

Which books am I pimping? Blondes Have More Felons and American Idle. holliday_idleThe latter I won during an RWA conference workshop drawing presented by Alicia, other authors, and an agent (or two, I can’t recall). That’s the book that unfortunately sat in my TBR pile for years. Sorry, Alesia. I didn’t think the reality TV singing show setting would appeal to me. Boy, was I wrong.

If you like, or even if you abhor, American Idol, you’ll appreciate this fun look into the behind-the-scenes life of production assistant Jules Vernon. Alesia employs a lot of laugh-out-loud humor—the kind of writing I love. Humor is very tricky to write. What works for me might not work for you, and vice versa. But Alesia’s humor works for me. I’m just sorry she didn’t get a chance to write more Alesia Holliday books.

holliday_felonsBlondes Have More Felons is her foray into funny mysteries, featuring former corporate attorney, December Vaughn. I wish I could include the back cover copy from the books, but Alesia no longer maintains a website for her Holliday books and I’m too lazy busy with my own writing to type out the descriptions from my copies. But check out all the great reviews for both books on Amazon. If they sound like your thing, give them a chance. And don’t let them waste their funny lives away in your TBR pile, too.

Discovered any gems in your TBR pile lately? Let me know. If it’s in my pile, it’ll inspire me to dig it out. Or buy a copy to add to the ever-growing pile.