Showing posts with label Andi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andi. Show all posts

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Letter From the Editor - February 2009



The candy is on the shelves, the card companies are dancing over their marketing reports, and people are ready to celebrate love. There was no better choice of theme than "desire" this time around.

Whether you suffer from a wicked case of book lust, are looking for a new literary couple through which to live vicariously, or you need new books to add to your stacks, you can find it all in this issue.

Table of Contents

Door Prize Book Giveaway

Interviews:

Features:

Columns:

Reviews:

For the Love of Picture Books

Written by Andi


Picture books are one of life's great pleasures. As a child I remember my grandmother reading a picture book or two for me every day when I stretched out for a nap. In those days I wanted her to read books about She-Ra or the Thundercats or whatever superhero or heroine was hot at the time. It's funny that I read better quality picture books now, as an adult, than I did when I was little! Of course, it wasn't for lack of trying. I entertained myself in front of Reading Rainbow on the local PBS station each day and enjoyed those very quality picture books a great deal. Sadly, my library never seemed to have them in stock.

As an adult, when I found myself studying children's and adolescent literature in my Masters program, I was immediately drawn to picture books for the joy they brought back from my childhood and the complexity I began to recognize. Shel Silverstein's The Giving Tree, Marcus Pfister's Rainbow Fish, and David Wiesner's Tuesday quickly caught my attention as a scholar and a lover of beautiful images for their creativity and dueling ideologies. While I spent my days picking them apart and writing scholarly essays over them, I never lost the feeling of wonder in losing myself in the pages of a stunningly crafted picture book. Now, whenever a picture book arrives in my mailbox or I hear about one from a trusted blogger friend, it floats straight to the top of my stacks.

Here are some of the picture books I've read lately, and fittingly for February, they all hinge on love and desire.



The House in the Night, by Susan Marie Swanson
Illustrated by Beth Krommes
Houghton Mifflin
May 2008

Congratulations to Beth Krommes! The House in the Night was awarded the Caldecott Medal on January 26, 2009. I ran out and grabbed it just as soon as I heard, and I was truly charmed by this simple little book. The illustrations--gorgeous black, white, and gold woodcarvings--are the centerpiece of the book, and they compliment the text perfectly. Like traditional poems and nursery rhymes "This is the House That Jack Built" or "Hush, Little Baby," the poem accumulates over the course of the book. The story is like a guided tour into a house at night and the love and family that live therein.



How to Talk to Girls, by Alec Greven
Illustrated by Kei Acedera
Collins
December 2008

How to Talk to Girls is one of the funniest picture books I've read a in a long time. Alec Greven is a precocious 9 year old from Castle Rock, Colorado, and he just happens to be a published author. In this hilarious and heartwarming picture book, Greven leads his reader through various steps in the process of talking to and winning over one's girl of choice. The introduction says:

Are you shy? Do you have a crush on a girl?
Is the girl you like just too pretty for your eyes?
Do you know what to say to a girl to make her like you?

What are you waiting for?
If you are a boy who needs help getting girls,
this book has all the answers!

By the way, all statistics in this book are based on
my observations at Soaring Hawk Elementary School.
They aren't worldwide.
I would have to do a lot more research for that.


At least he's honest! Broken into short chapters on "The Facts of Life," "Crushes," "Compliments, Flowers, and Other Things," among others, this book is just too cute and kept me laughing out loud and reading passages to anyone who would stop long enough to listen. If your child is just discovering the opposite sex, your significant other needs a little basic coaching in the dating game, or you just want a laugh, How to Talk to Girls is a winner. See the video interview with Greven below.
















Do You Love Me?, by Joost Elffers and Curious Pictures
The Bowen Press
December 2008

Do You Love Me? is a picture book for the youngest of readers. Each page is a simple phrase, only a few words long, engulfed in an ocean of color. The curious little bubble creatures that grace the pages look like bath toys or squeeze toys, and while they're simple and largely unremarkable, they make sense for this brief little book. Do You Love Me? is a worthwhile purchase for your just-ready-t0-sit-and-listen crowd, but they will quickly grow out of it.



Queen of Hearts, written and illustrated by Mary Engelbreit
HarperTrophy
December 2008

Another addition to Mary Engelbreit's Ann Estelle series, Queen of Hearts could be my favorite. In this lovely little book Ann Estelle is inspired to decorate the best Valentine box in her class. It just so happens she forgets to make the Valentines. Illustrated in Engelbreit's traditional style, the pages overflow with drawings of hearts, cupcakes, ribbons, feathers and every other wonderful Valentine thing you might imagine. The colors are vibrant, the story is charming, and it's a sweet holiday treat for any child. If you can wrangle your boys long enough, they might even like it!

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Letter From the Editor - January 2009


What better way to start 2009 than with an issue themed, "Firsts"? For myself, and for most of the readers I know, the beginning of a new year means the beginning of new adventures in reading. For many of us 2009 will be peppered with new favorites, new reading friends, and challenges. We hope the stinkers will be few and far between, and while we're not above buying books for the most part, it would be nice if truckloads of freebies would appear magically at our respective doors.

While we will achieve some of our goals, we will fail at others, but the joy of a new reading year is the promise of possibility...all those books that might delight and touch us. Here at Estella's Revenge 2009 promises to be a year of writing, reading, and fellowship in both endeavors. Thank you for coming along for the ride!

Andi

Table of Contents

Door Prize Book Giveaway: This One is Mine, by Maria Semple

Feature Articles:
Columns:
Reviews:

Monday, December 1, 2008

Letter From the Editor - December 2008


Happy holidays, Estella's Revenge readers! This month's theme is "fantasy," and though it's a short issue, the pieces are most definitely fantastic!

While 2008 winds down, 2009 certainly holds a great deal of new opportunities and developments here at Estella's Revenge. Some things to think about:

Would you like to join the 2009 Year of Reading Dangerously Challenge? We hope you will! This year it'll be even easier. There won't be any required reads, though you may refer to our "suggested titles" list to get some ideas. All you have to do is read 12 books you deem "dangerous" in 2009 and post your links on the Year of Reading Dangerously blog. Watch for the new Mr. Linky to appear in January. In the meantime keep an eye out for new graphics and new posts.

Interested in writing for Estella's Revenge? If you have an idea for a column, feature article, or any other goodies you'd like to contribute please contact us! You can reach Heather, Andi, and Melissa at estellabooks(at)gmail(dot)com. We would love to work with you!

And if you haven't already, be sure to check out Estella on Twitter, MySpace, and Facebook! See the sidebar for links.

Happy holidays, and cheers to a new year just around the corner!

Table of Contents

Author Interview:

Features and Columns:

Reviews:

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Author Interview: Jennie Shortridge

Interviewed by Andi

Estella's Revenge has the great pleasure of hosting the first stop on Jennie Shortridge's blog tour to promote her latest novel, Love and Biology at the Center of the Universe. She is the author of two other novels, Eating Heaven and Riding with the Queen.


Andi Miller: For the Estella's Revenge readers that might not be familiar with your novel, could you sum it up briefly? It's often more interesting to hear a synopsis from the author herself than the interviewer.


Jennie Shortridge: It's about a woman's journey from "perfect" to better. Mira is a middle-aged, perimenopausal perfectionist whose goal in life has been to live perfectly. When one small piece of that life is toppled, the rest falls around it, and she finds herself in a car headed north from her idyllic Oregon Coast small town and family, dressed only in a thong and bathrobe, and accompanied by a small singing dog named Patsy Cline. Her car breaks down in Seattle, in a funky old neighborhood known to locals as "The Center of the Universe," and this becomes her Oz, where she can discover who she really is and what really matters.

AM: I really enjoyed reading about Mira Serafino's plight in light of her husband's indiscretion. I found it interesting that Mira took off without really knowing the extent to which her husband "slipped" with another woman. Were you ever concerned about keeping Mira believable or staying true to a seemingly "straight laced" character in this regard?


JS: I think that's what novelists worry about constantly, but I also realize that every human is unique. We each receive so many different inputs and experiences and have such varying emotions and reactions, you know? Mira freaked out, completely. Everything she did was against her character, partly because the persona she'd built for herself was a false one. And I think to some women, it doesn't matter if their husbands shared a bed or an intimate conversation--it feels like betrayal.

AM: One of my favorite parts of the book was learning about Mira's work days in the Coffee Shop at the Center of the Universe. All the details about food, coffee, and the preparation involved in a shift were wonderfully mouth watering. Are you a coffee addict yourself and have you had any experience working or lounging in a similar setting?

JS: Oh my God, yes! I live for coffee. I live in Seattle where it's dark all winter long and the only way to wake up is head for the local coffee shop and have a triple tall nonfat latte. I wrote a lot about cooking and food in my second novel, even more so than this one, and it does come from my background cooking in cafes, but also just as a person who loves to cook and to eat.

AM: You said in the Q&A included in the book that you've "never had children, or been a biology teacher, or lived in a small town, or gone through a separation from my husband…" Given the differences between you and Mira, do you have any tricks or advice on how to inhabit a character and begin to flesh them out in writing?

JS: I have an infinite capacity for empathy, too much sometimes. I find writing is a great outlet for that. I've always loved to imagine things, and make up things. I've always written and read about other kinds of people, and I have friends who I've lived vicariously through. When they're going through a break-up, or having trouble with a teenager, I'm a good listening ear and shoulder to cry on. I'm also a superb aunt, so I've hung out a lot with my nieces.

AM: Love and Biology at the Center of the Universe is full of quirky characters. Who was your favorite to write aside from Mira?

JS: I loved writing Thea. And Nonna's letters were fun.

AM: Would you categorize your novel as "women's fiction?" Why or why not? And what might set it apart from other books that deal with similar issues?

JS: Inasmuch as my novels are about women for the most part, and appeal to female readers, yes. Elizabeth Berg said something like "I like women, so I'm happy if they want to call my books women's fiction." I don't really care what they call it, but I'd hate to have my books minimized by being included in a category that precludes other readers. What's funny is that about half of the Amazon reviews for Love and Biology are written by men!

AM: Since you're working on a blog tour, obviously you're receptive to the idea of bloggers dipping into the role of book reviewer. How would you forecast the importance of book bloggers in the publishing industry, and your career specifically, in the future?

JS: I think book bloggers, and customer reviews, are incredibly important to books these days. I think readers trust other readers WAY more than they trust reviewers, just as we trust friends' reviews of movies other those we read in the paper. I welcome it. I love hearing all of the voices out there talking about books!

AM: What type of books do you enjoy reading in your dwindling free time, and could you suggest some of your favorites for our readers?


JS: I enjoy lots of different kinds of books. It's harder to read fiction now that I write it. I'm always in a story, so can't get immersed in another one, or I don't want to. So, when I'm drafting, I'll read nonfiction. Lately I've loved Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex, Michael Pollan books, and books about teaching writing.

As for fiction, I have managed to consume a few lately, and I've loved The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein, The Little Book by Selden Edwards (a new classic, I'm pretty sure), and some old classics that I never got to the first time around.

AM: What advice would you give to new writers trying to break into the publishing industry?

JS: Write. Write something really wonderful that only you can write. Don't think about marketing until you have written it. Then go out and educate yourself about marketing at conferences, through books and organizations, etc. But first, write.

AM: I always have to ask, because it's my very favorite question—do you have any writing "rituals" or practices that you stick to?

JS: I write every weekday morning until I feel finished. And I try to set a timer to get up every 45 minutes so that my back will continue to let me write well into old age.

Thanks so much to Jennie Shortridge for her delightful answers and her captivating novel.


Visit Jennie Shortridge's blog.


Visit TLC Book Tours to visit other stops on Ms. Shortridge's tour.

Evernight


By Claudia Gray
HarperTeen
Reviewed by Andi

A treat from HarperCollins, Evernight was a huge surprise. When I first heard of the book on various blogs I thought, "Oh, look, more vampire fiction. Helloooo Stephenie Meyer wannabes!" However, I'm woman enough to admit when I'm incredibly wrong. I owe Claudia Gray an apology and I'll even throw in my first born if HarperCollins will send an ARC of the next book in the series, Stargazer.



Before I gush any more, here's a brief synopsis of the plot:

Bianca Olivier is uprooted and plunked down in the middle of an odd boarding school, Evernight, when her parents get jobs teaching there. They feel it is to Bianca's advantage to branch out, meet new people, and generally step outside of herself a bit. However, the students at Evernight are an otherworldly sort of beautiful, stuck up, and more than a little strange. Soon enough, Bianca begins to feel at home as she falls in love with the far more down to earth, but similarly enigmatic, Lucas Ross. Admittedly, this review will be somewhat vague because there's a big twist about 150 pages in. I'm sure if you read other reviews they will certainly give it away, but this twist actually shocked me and left me with my mouth hanging open. Maybe I'm off my game, or maybe I'm just slow, but I really didn't see it coming. What a wild ride!

I realize, readers, you're probably wondering what sets it apart from other vampire fiction--especially the most visible of them all, Stephenie Meyer's Twilight saga. I venture to say the writing is much better. I never cringed at the dialogue or the plot. Gray has a gift for using true-to-life teenage lingo in a way that doesn't make the reader overly aware of the fact that an adult is writing the story. I felt that the teens were sincere without annoyance. What an idea! There's also far less angst in this book than much of the other teen fiction on the market. Well, I take that back, there must be hormones and angst in some regard or there would be a striking lack of conflict, but on the whole I felt like these characters possessed a pronounced ability to pick themselves up and just get on with life rather than sitting around whining.

Bianca and Lucas were both very likable and conflicted, and I just fell in love with both of them. You've heard me yammer on endlessly here about my favorite vampire series of all time: The Vampire Diaries, by L.J. Smith, and this series is certainly good enough to take up space on the "keeper" shelf right next to them. In fact, L.J. Smith provided a blurb for the back of the book!

If you're in the mood for original vampire fiction amidst a swirl of knock-offs, this is the right series to try.

Visit Claudia Gray's website.

Tell the World: Teen Poems from WritersCorp

By the students of WritersCorps
Foreward by Sherman Alexie
HarperTeen
Reviewed by Andi

WritersCorps was founded in 1944 in three urban centers: San Francisco, Washington, D.C., and the Bronx, NY. To date, WritersCorps has worked with over 40,000 at-risk youth to help improve their writing and provide an outlet for creative expression. Tell the World is the second poetry collection published as a result of the WritersCorps efforts. The first is titled, Paint Me Like I Am.

Tell the World is split into thematic sections titled: Tell the World Who We Are, Tell the World Where We're From, Tell the World What We Love, Tell the World What We Think, Tell the World How It Feels, and Tell the World Why We Hope. Each chapter starts with a meaty prompt, and the poems are the result. I especially enjoyed the poems in the "Tell the World Where We're From" section. The prompt read:

Where is your home? Is it the village you come from, or the city streets you walk every day? Is home where you smell your mother's chicken paprikash stewing on the stove, or where you hear your grandfather's laugh? Is home the feel of your favorite blanket, or the sight of your best friend smiling at you? Write a poem filled with the sensations --sight, sound, taste, touch, and smell--that mean home to you.
Students of all ages--from 12 to 19--provided their thoughts and dreams for this book, and the results are amazing. I was especially interested in the range of poems included in this volume. Some are very serious, full of high flown language and obscure images, while others are securely tethered to the everyday, employing slang and a tangible sense of fun. Whether the poems were serious or silly, I found them all equally charming. I'm consistently impressed and surprised by the students in my own classroom--their depth, thoughtful observations, and drive--and the students in Tell the World are no different. Universally, students have much to teach. The students included in Tell the World are diverse, spirited, and fantastic writers.

"Where We Live"
--Liana Castro, 17, Washington, D.C.

where we live there are people with
loose lips that speak black words
found on street corners and gutters
their pale eyes stare directly at the
clasped hands that belong to you and me
the whispering begins before we've gotten
the chance to leave as their words
float before us in our faces causing
our skin to sweat.
let's run away from pairs
of pale eyes that disapprove
the sweet sensation
that flows from your fingertips
to mine, the love that embraces
the faults that we carry.
let's leave behind the heated
words that burn our skin
let's go to where our age is indifferent
to where judgment happens only
in the afterlife

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Letter from the Editor, June/July 2008

Whether it's summer reading programs or beach books, it seems that everyone is searching for the perfect summer tome. Summer reading is apparently different from reading for the rest of the year. For some of us. Those of us in education or those of us who are still students can enjoy lazy summers of endless reading. However, for most people endless days of summer reading are just myths perpetuated by publishing companies.

This special double issue of Estella's Revenge focuses largely on summer reading and its accompanying myths. Enjoy interviews, articles, columns and a slew of reviews to help you find that perfect book--summer or otherwise.

Andi

Table of Contents:

Author Interviews

Articles

Columns

Reviews

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Letter from the Editor, May 2008



The summer travel season is upon us, and if you're anything like me, gas prices could well keep you at home. The good news is, this month you can travel along with the Estella's Revenge writers through myriad topics bold and bookish. Whether you're out to create your own travel journal or just want to relax with a book to sweep you away, we hope you'll find something here that's to your liking.


We're currently accepting submission for our June issue--"Summer!"--so if you have any writing you'd like to share or book reviews to pass along, drop us an e-mail at estellabooks(at)gmail(dot)com. All submissions are due by the 25th of May.


Andi


Table of Contents

Door Prize Book Giveaway


Feature Articles

Columns

Reviews

Master

by Colette Gale
Signet Eclipse
Reviewed by Andi

Master, Colette Gale's follow-up erotic novel to 2007's Unmasqued, is a retelling of another great classic. This time around, Gale takes aim at Alexandre Dumas's timeless tale, The Count of Monte Cristo.

After years in prison for a crime he didn't commit, Edmond Dantes intends to exact revenge on those who put him in exile and the woman who broke his heart. He returns to Paris in the guise of the powerful Count of Monte Cristo seeking vengeance.

Mercedes Herrera was heartbroken when her Edmond disappeared, and she ends up in a loveless marriage to the slimy Fernand Morcerf. Upon Edmond's return as the Count of Monte Cristo, only Mercedes sees through his guise, and she soon realizes that his goals for revenge include her.

A blog reader recently commented at my site that she didn't know if she could handle "a sexed up version of The Count of Monte Cristo," so maybe I'm lucky that I haven't read Cristo before, and I'm not terribly familiar with the premise. In fact, I'm far less familiar with Dumas's work than I was with Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera when I reviewed Unmasqued.

While I don't like to brag that I haven't read these great classics (yet!), I do think it put me at an advantage as I read Master. I had no expectations, there was no prior story to "live up to," and I certainly couldn't get my feelings hurt because so-and-so slept with so-and-so. You get the picture. I enjoyed a rollicking and intense adventure about love and sex. And it was juicy! I might even venture to say that it was a heck of a ride. Pun most definitely intended.

While the book started out slowly--carefully laying the groundwork of what is undoubtedly a complicated original novel--it quickly built up speed and became an involving story. What I love about Gale's erotica is that it's literally what every woman I know wants out of the erotic--a well thought story that includes hot sex. It's so much more involving when one can care about the characters and what happens to them in and out of the sack.

I was certainly compelled not only by the smouldering Edmond Dantes, but also the heart wrenching life of Mercedes Herrera. Trapped in her icky marriage to Morcerf, she's given up the dream that Edmond might still be alive, and she focuses much of her attention on her beloved son, Albert. She really is very devoted to his well being and keeping him safe as he begins his journey through the world as an adult.

There are a variety of convincing, very human characters in this story. It's not just about the sex. So, if you're longing for a retelling, this might be a book you should consider. I'm off to secure the original novel.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Growing Pains


"Print On Demand" or "pod" is a well known term among publishing folk and describes the process by which many independent publishers do their business. Quite simply, when someone orders a book, a pod company like Amazon's BookSurge subsidiary, whip up a copy. For small presses and independent publishers this pod process is a lifesaver, as it saves the companies from having to take costly chances on big print runs of books that may never sell like the "biggies" that get scads of media attention.

I first learned of the pod process when two of my good friends and graduate school comrades started Black Bird Press. Like many other newbies to the independent and small press world, I immediately associated print on demand with vanity presses and all manner of self-publishing. Maybe I'm a snob, but while I love a good independently published book, I often shy away from books printed by their authors. I believe in editors and peer review. So kill me.

However, I was largely wrong in my assumptions, and I quickly came to realize how important pod is to small presses, new presses, indies--all those unsung champions of new, fresh, edgy, important literature the likes of which large houses often ignore.

It's recently come to light that Amazon.com, one of the biggest of the big online books-and-such retailers will now require that sellers of pod material use BookSurge if they want to sell their books on Amazon.

For a concise summary of Amazon's demand, consult Jim Milliot's piece in Publisher's Weekly.

While it might sound like a nebulous problem with little to no impact on the everyday reader, we at Estella's Revenge think it's a very big deal--an unfair demand on indies and small presses to bend to the corporate right of way. As a result, we will no longer route our readers to Amazon's pages to purchase the books mentioned between our virtual covers. We've long been an Amazon Associate, which means that when you click on one of our links you will be taken to an Amazon page for the book you're interested in. If you then continue to browse and buy the original book or another on your travels through our portal, we would receive a percentage of the purchase price to fund the ongoing efforts of Estella's Revenge.

After a little investigation, we've decided that instead of being an Amazon Associate, Estella's Revenge will be known from here on out as a Powell's Partner. If you're not already familiar with Powell's Books, it began as an independent bookstore in Portland, Oregon in 1971. From that first shop, Powell's grew to a chain of six independent bookstores and became a powerful online presence in 1994. For a complete history, click HERE.

In the spirit of supporting independent bookstores and small presses everywhere, we feel that the move to a Powell's Partner reflects many of the goals and concerns of those who take part in making Estella's Revenge a reputable e-zine and one dedicated to all facets of the reading world...not just powerful corporate booksellers and dominant publishing houses.

While we've never tried to cram our monetary livelihood down our readers' throats, we feel that making this information known in a straightforward fashion can help raise awareness of corporate book selling practices and readers can make an informed decision about where they want to buy and who they support.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Letter from the Editor, March 2008

Everyone has a history, especially readers. Aside from one's own personal history, the history of a person's reading can be just as rich and varied as the everyday details of life.

Such is the case in my own life, I feel. From a childhood of fancy and a proclivity for all things paranormal, to my rebellious teen years reading postapocalyptic fiction, to my days as an art student reading biographies of enigmatic painters and sculptors, to my current life as a college English instructor and my penchant for literary fiction, classics, and comic books. Each step in my personal history reflects in my reading history. And what fun it is to look back and marvel at the changes.

One reader's history can encompass a universe of experience. Three cheers for the colorful past.

Andi


Table of Contents, March 2008

March "Door Prize" Giveaway: The New Yorkers, by Cathleen Schine (autographed)

Author Interviews:

Featured Articles:

Reviews:

Friday, February 1, 2008

Letter from the Editor, February 2008


This month's "changes" theme strikes close to the heart of my reading life. Since I finished my Master's degree in Summer '07 I've had a luxury I hadn't felt for several years prior to its end. Time to read whatever I want. Now, several months later and with a new full-time college teaching position and lots of writing to do, my uninterrupted reading time has taken a hit, but I still feel the rush of joy in picking up whatever strikes my fancy. Both my fancies and my reading habits seem to have shifted over the years, from the time I started graduate school in 2005 to now.

I suppose there are a number of factors at work including the few years of crunched reading higher education provided, the restrictions, and subsequently the new authors I was exposed to. Modernist writers I wouldn't have picked up otherwise. Young adult and children's books. Comics and graphic novels. While the deadlines loomed large, I certainly sampled an array of books I might never have picked up without the pressure of an education, and somewhere along the way it all seems to have changed me.

Now, after a lifetime of detesting short stories, I can't seem to get enough of them. I gobble up collections by classic authors, respected authors, new-t0-me authors and indies. They sneak into my stacks one after another without fail, and I see them piling up on my wishlist day after day. I buy literary journals, for heaven's sake. Publications like Tin House, The Kenyon Review, and Swink. Publications I never knew existed until I jumped headlong into the short story literary subculture.

Another obvious change is my affinity for audio books. For years I was convinced that audio books put me to sleep. One chance nap while listening to my first audio book attempt...The Picture of Dorian Gray...and I swore them off. A hasty decision on my part? Oh, sure. But one that stuck for a great many years, sadly. Now, faced with a 68-mile round-trip commute every day, I need something other than radio prattle to keep me going, and audio books seem to be just the ticket.

It's amazing to me the changes a reader goes through. While we may love and adore one genre this year, we might foresake it the next. While one author may live in our thoughts endlessly one day the next day he's tossed aside. Not only do the readers change, the genres, books, and technology change, too. I'm suffering from a serious case of "Kindle-lust" as we speak. Damn Amazon and their nifty inventions.

The readerly changes we all undergo are just another reason to celebrate this hobby, habit, way of life. As always, the writers have done a wonderful job interpreting the theme, and I invite you to explore your own "changes" here with us.


Table of Contents, February 2008


Author Interview: Colleen Gleason

Featured Articles:

Columns:
Book News: "Titlepage"

Reviews:

Monday, January 7, 2008

Letter from the Editor, January 2008

Pardon the cheesy graphic to my left. I absolutely could not contain myself.

Yes, yes, the theme for this month's issue is "possibilities." And what better theme to describe the first month and the first issue of 2008?

If you're anything like me--jaded, cynical, snarky--you might still be enamored with the coming of a new year. For me, the new year is about a number of possibilities. Since I teach college English, I get a new batch of students, and that's always exciting. No matter how long I teach (five years now) or how irked the Fall semester might leave me, I always look forward to a new bunch of students and a new opportunity to do my job a little better.

On the reading front, the new year is an exciting time, too. I enjoy making lists of what I've read throughout the year, tallying up my "Best of" recap to share with my bloggy friends, and starting a new year of reading means the hope of hunting literary gems.

I want to thank you all who are coming back to join Estella's Revenge for the second year. And a big welcome aboard to any new readers out there! Cheers to a year of possibilities!

Ciao for now,

Andi

January 2008 Issue

Letter from the Editor

Author Interview: Jennifer Donnelly
Author Interview: Sarah Bower
Author Interview: Susan Vaught

"Door Prize" Book Giveaway - An Infamous Army

"I Was Lost, But Now I'm Found"
"New Things from Old Favourites"
"Wonderful World of What If?"
"Discussable: The Amazon Kindle"
"Embracing the Possibilities"

From the Bookshop, January 2008

Review: Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow
Review: Finn: A Novel
Review: On Borrowed Wings
Review: Big Fat Manifesto

I Was Lost, But Now I'm Found

By Andi

I have a confession. I horrible, goofy, slap-ya-mama confession.

Despite my two degrees in English, I've always been afraid of the classics. In the past, when I contemplated picking up a book, a classic wouldn't even begin to tapdance through my head. Or, in truth, if it did attempt to dance...to put a toe toward the time step, I would quickly mentally squash the inkling into a sad western canon pancake.

I've always had good memories of classics. Those books that were force-fed to me during my high school and college years. If asked to recall a list of all-time favorites, I would likely include such worthy works as A Tale of Two Cities, The Scarlet Letter, The Professor's House, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and The Great Gatsby. You see, having been hog-tied and beaten into the submission of reading classics I've always liked them.

One of my biggest fears as I finished up my Master's degree during the summer of 2007 was the "English major curse"--that seemingly inevitable cooling off period that always seems to follow a degree involving literature. To my supreme surprise, I never encountered the slump, and in fact I began reading more voraciously than ever before. And my main course has been classics.

Thanks to a wonderful Yahoo! discussion group, Thematic Classic Challenge, I have finally--after 6 years of intensive literary study--demystified the classics. It's about damn time. You see, the basic premise of the Thematic Classic Challenge is to read one classic per month that adheres to a theme. No real hard and fast deadlines, no pressure to discuss at length, but the opportunity to share and rejoice in the classics is available and tantalizing.

I suppose the difference between then is evident in a number of ways. My aversion to classic literature probably had something to do with a) deadlines b) anal retentive analysis c) my having the attention span of a salmon. With a grand thing called "free time" at my disposal, I'm no longer intimidated by flowery language, esoteric plots, and generally hefty tomes. In fact, I think I've read more classics in the last six months than I read during the entirety of my graduate school career; partially a testament to my degree in Children's Literature and its lack of western canon classics, and partially a testament to my keen ability to skirt around and half-ass my assignments.

I suppose you could say that now that I've finished my degree, my education is finally beginning. I find myself diving into classics with vigor and an insatiable need to figure out how they did that. I'm studying the classics in a way I've never done before--as a writer interested in the process and for the sake of reading in general. No assignments, no deadlines, just a wide-open opportunity to explore, enjoy, and analyze if I want to and what I want to.

It feels good.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Letter from the Editor, November 2007



Fall is finally here (for some of us), and with the changing seasons comes a desire to relax, snuggle down with a book, and take comfort in cooler weather and falling leaves.

Whether your idea of a supremely comfortable book is a shocking thriller, a Regency romance or a children's book, I hope you can take comfort in this newest issue of Estella's Revenge to warm you on those chilly evenings.

We have a treasure trove of goodies for you this month, including the announcement of the 2008 "My Year of Reading Dangerously" Challenge hosted by the editors of Estella's Revenge.

I hope you enjoy this month's installment. Pull up a chair and make yourself comfortable.

Andi

Table of Contents:

My Year of Reading Dangerously Announcement

November 2007 Door Prize - The Call of the Weird, by Louis Theroux

Interview: Anthony Barilla

Interview: Audrey Niffenegger

Interview: Dewey and the 24-Hour Read-A-Thon

Feature: A Case for Georgette Heyer

Feature: Comics from the Crypt

Feature: The Comfort Zone

Feature: Comfort Food - Cookies!

Snazzy Stuff - Bibliochaise

Column: Judging a Book, November 2007

Column: Sure, I Know the Queen, November 2007

Review: Lottery

Review: Lost Souls

Review: April and the Dragon Lady

Review: An Infamous Army

Review: Ophelia

Interview: Audrey Niffenegger

Interviewed by Andi



Audrey Niffenegger is the author of the best-selling novel, The Time Traveler's Wife. She has also written two visual books: The Three Incestuous Sisters and The Adventuress.


AM: You captured many a fan with your whirlwind first novel, The Time Traveler's Wife. Why do you think the book struck such a nerve with readers all over the world?

AN: Apparently the combination of time travel and a love story is particularly potent. Also, I think people are attracted to the fact that Henry, the time traveler, can't change anything, and can't avoid time traveling. Also, lots of people, men mostly, seem to be very taken with the notion of visiting their wives as children.

AM: Some readers may not realize that you're an accomplished artist, and that it's sort of your "first career" as you wrote The Time Traveler's Wife on weekends and late into the night (as mentioned on your website). Your website lists your art-centered books as "visual books." Since I'm personally interested in graphic novels, what separates your work from graphic novels?

AN: The term "graphic novel" has come to mean long-form comics. Since these books are not comics I thought we should call them something else. Some people have accused me of being snobby about comics, but I adore them and am in the middle of making an actual graphic novel. I was trying to be correct and wound up perplexing people.

AM: What advice would you give to authors who are thinking of stepping outside of their comfort zone (or the comfort zone of those who devotedly read or view their work) and into a new genre or medium?

AN: If everyone would experiment more we would get some terrifc things. Why should our work be limited by other people's expectations? I love artists like John Wesley Harding, the musician who writes lovely novels under his real name, Wesley Stace. His first novel, Misfortune, has a soundtrack and the plot is intricately woven around ballads which are printed in the book and sung on the CD. If more people would cross back and forth between disciplines, new art forms would appear. So my advice would be that artists should experiment; that's what artists are for.

AM: When it comes to books and art I've always had some sort of epic battle raging inside me over which one is better, which one wins my heart, so to speak. So, for you, which one wins?

AN: Neither; I don't have to choose, so I don't. I love both, and love them best when they mix.

AM: Do you have any unbreakable habits or rituals that you stick to when you're creating a written piece? A work of art?

AN: Not really. I try to work under any circumstances. I don't have a schedule or a ritual. I have little things that sit on my desk and keep me company, but I can work without them. Coffee is always helpful.

AM: What is your favorite written narrative of all time? What is your favorite narrative image of all time?

AN: That changes from day to day. Today the written thing is Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass. The narrative image thing is Andrzej Klimowski's wordless novel The Depository.

AM: In addition to your artwork and writing, you're also a teacher! What about teaching appeals to you? How would students characterize your teaching style?

AN: I teach graduate students, so they are already accomplished artists who are trying to become better at what they do. The program I teach in, the Interdisciplinary MFA in Book and Paper Arts at Columbia College in Chicago, is devoted to exactly the things I like, books and narrative, printing and paper. So for me the situation is ideal, lots of people all interested in the things I love, who want to be in a classroom thinking and talking and making things, letting me poke them and prod them into doing it a little better.

I tend to think I am a very laidback sort of professor, but I was told recently by a student whose thesis I was guiding that she'd chosen me as her advisor because I was always tough on her and made her work harder. So perhaps I am not as lax as I think.

AM: Would you mind telling the Estella's Revenge readers about your newest project? When can we expect to get our grubby little paws on it?

AN: I am working on my second novel, Her Fearful Symmetry. It is a ghost story, set in London in and around Highgate Cemetery, in the present. Because I do work on several things at once (I am about to have a solo exhibit of my artwork in Chicago) it goes rather slowly. I hope to finish it in the next year or so, but really, it is hard to predict. I would prefer to do it well, rather than to get it over with. The great pleasure of writing is having the thing well underway, and eventually it wants to be done, and then you finish it. HFS is at the fun stage where I know what I'm doing but it can still surprise me.

AM: Do you often have time to read for pleasure? Do you have any new-to-you authors that you would recommend?

AN: I was completely enthralled by The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters, by G.W. Dalhquist. The copy I had was the British galley, issued as ten thin books, a serial. And the thing is perfect as a serial, just like a weird Victorian movie you might dream just as you are waking up, with compelling villians and a heroine who is too curious for her own good and these blue glass books that capture people's memories. . . anyway, it's hard to explain, but I did adore it.



Thanks so much to Audrey Niffenegger for taking time out of her busy schedule to answer questions for Estella's Revenge. You can visit her website HERE.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Letter from the Editor, October 2007


October is the favorite month of many a devoted reader for the frighteningly wonderful book choices it offers. Whether you're celebrating the coming of Halloween or the stirrings of autumn, October is a perfect time to snuggle down with a book and lose yourself.

This month's "unknown" theme afforded the Estella's Revenge writers a wide array of topics from which to choose, and they certainly delivered in a big way.

Enjoy your journey with us into the unknown.
*The beautiful poppet image above is copyright to the artist Lisa Snellings-Clark. Visit her website and view her gallery HERE.

Interview: Colette Gale

Interviewed by Andi

Colette Gale is an erotica novelist busy turning the classics on their heads. I reviewed her novel Unmasqued, here at Estella's Revenge recently, so I couldn't turn down the opportunity to review her for this month's issue. I hope you enjoy her answers as much as I did.

AM: What led you to reinvent and eroticize one of your favorite classics, The Phantom of the Opera in your erotic novel, Unmasqued?

CG: I fell in love with Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical version of Phantom when I first saw it 18 years ago. The music, the atmosphere, the lyrics, the set, the costumes...everything was so lush and sensual...and to me, its overt eroticism begged to be revealed in more detail. But I wanted it to end differently!

Webber takes credit for romanticizing and subtly eroticizing the story by bringing his version to the stage (and film), but Gaston Leroux was the original creator of the work, of course. Even in his version, the sense of the untold, the unspoken, is there. The obssessive phantom who brings the beautiful young girl to his lair...you've got to wonder exactly what happened down there, ya know?

So after watching the Webber version on both stage and screen enough times that I wanted to know more--about what happened in the Phantom's lair when Christine was down there for a week, and why she left the Phantom to go with Raoul--I decided to write my version of what happened, in all of the erotic details that were, of necessity, not part of the story.

Plus, I wanted a different ending! Webber had made me believe Christine belonged with Erik, the Phantom...and so I wanted to write it that way.

AM: Your next book is an erotic novel based on The Count of Monte Cristo, which begs the question, what about the classics lends to good material for erotic writing?

CG: I really loved The Count of Monte Cristo, and when I wrote this erotic version, I stayed much truer to the original story than I did with the Phantom. I just gave it a happier ending (at least, happier to me).

I think what makes the classics--certain classics, mind you; there are others I wouldn't touch with a ten foot pole--good material for "seduction" is that many of those stories were written with a lot unsaid; perhaps even unconceived (though I doubt it).

In other words, the medium of the novel, at the time, didn't allow for explicitness in sexuality--at least, in popularly published works; there were plenty of erotic and pornographic books and pictures, of course. Certain classics have an underlying sexual feel to them, and some people enjoy imagining what exactly might have been going on behind closed doors, or inside minds, during those stories. Phantom is one, The Count of Monte Cristo is another, and there are more.

AM: What other classics would you like to put your erotic pen to?

CG: I have a whole list! I'm just kidding....there are a few that I think would lend themselves well to having the doors opened, and different scenes and endings imagined--but there are a whole list of ones I wouldn't touch even at gunpoint. Jane Austen is one, Louisa May Alcott, Dickens, and others.

What I'd really like to do is an erotic version of Tarzan or Zorro, but the names are under copyright, so I don't think that's going to happen, much to my dismay.

I'm currently discussing with my publisher exactly what the best choice is for my next book--but we haven't decided on the "perfect" one. Do you and your readers have any suggestions?

AM: Colette Gale is a pen name, so do you mind sharing with our readers why you chose to use a pen name? How closely to you guard your true identity?

CG: I use a pen name for two reasons: first, because I write historical urban fantasy under another name, and it's to keep the two different genres separate. The people who read my Gale books may not like my other stories, and vice versa--and that keeps them from buying a book and getting something they didn't expect.

I also chose to write under a pen name for both of my identities for privacy's sake, and because my real name is hard to spell. :-) I'm not terribly tight about guarding the connection between these two names, but I don't go around advertising it. The Gale books are extremely explicit, and there are people who read my other books who would probably be shocked to find out that I write hardcore erotica.

AM: You've created a memorable cast of characters in Unmasqued . Which characters are your favorite?

I love Erik. He's sexy and brilliant and tortured and really good in bed. :-)

I also really love Madame Giry. She was a hoot to write--probably the most fun of all the characters. I just let loose with her, and let her be as wanton as she wanted. She got to do all the things my heroine couldn't do.

Christine wasn't one of my favorite characters, believe it or not, because she is so different from the kind of female character I'm used to writing. Because of how Leroux created her, I had to keep her fairly submissive (in more ways than one) and weaker than the kind of woman I like to write. She shows strength, but she's manipulated and managed more than I would prefer.

Mercedes Herrera, the heroine in MASTER: An Erotic Novel of the Count of Monte Cristo, on the other hand, is quite the match for Edmond Dantes. She's much stronger and sure of herself, and I had a great time writing her.

AM: Amazon reviews are always an interesting place to look at people's reactions to books, and it seems Unmasqued's erotic bent has upset some readers for various reasons. I'm of the belief that a little controversy is never a bad thing, which leads me to two questions:

· First, what advice would you give to readers new to the erotica genre?
· Second, what is your response to people who get their panties in a twist over your version of the Phantom story?


CG: Ahhh...Amazon. Yes, the reviews are pretty much split: either one star or five stars. People either loved it or hated the book. Let me take your second question first: what's my response to people who get their panties in a twist (love that image) over my book?

First, I want to politely say: did you read the title? It says "An Erotic novel of The Phantom of the Opera." Erotic usually means lots of sex. Hardcore sex. Inventive, explicit sex. The title is a clear warning: that's why we did it that way.

Then I want to add, to the Phantom purists, "I have certain classics favorites that I would hate to see manipulated--so I would choose not to read them if I didn't like the storyline. I can understand you feeling that way about Leroux's book, and if you feel that way, you probably don't want to read it." It's as simple as that.

I knew the book wasn't going to be for everyone. Anytime you write explicit sex you run that risk, and when you mix it in with a well-known story line, you're going to get angry reactions. I expected it, and I don't mind it at all.

The things that I do mind, though, are people who skip/skim the sex scenes, and then criticize the story for not having plot or character development when it's there. It's there, but it's in the sex scenes--that's what an erotic novel is. The sex scenes show the plot and character development. If you skim them or skip them, you're going to miss it!

As far as your first part to the question: what advice would I give to those new to the genre? I'd say, write the book as if everyone you know is dead--ie, don't hold back on your writing because you're afraid of people you know reading it. And I'd also say, be prepared for controversy. It's going to be there. Be prepared, and accept it, and you'll be fine.

AM: Do you have any unbreakable writing habits or rules that you follow?

CG: Not really, except that I don't plot out my books very thoroughly before I write them. I only have a vague idea of what is going to happen when I'm writing, and sometimes I just let things flow the way they want to. That makes it more entertaining for me--I'm just along for the ride sometimes.

AM: What advice would you give to a writer who wishes to step outside his or her regular genre?

CG: Just try it. Just sit down and write.

When I stepped out of the kinds of books I'd been writing (and unsuccessfully trying to get published), I just started writing something new and different. I didn't read much in the new genres I was moving into, which, for me, gave me the ability to write something fresh--because I wasn't coming to the table with expectations for the book.

For example, I read only a few classic erotic novels before I started my own. I hadn't read any contemporary or modern (meaning published within the last ten years or so)--except for one--erotic novels when I began to write UNMASQUED. So there was no influence on me as far as trends, tactics, etc. I just wrote what I wanted to read.

AM: What is your favorite genre for pleasure reading and what are you reading now?

CG: I read a lot of mystery and suspense. I also read historical fiction and historical romance, along with romantic suspense. Right now I'm rereading the Barbara Michaels contemporary gothic romances that I read twenty (gulp!) years ago, and am loving them.

I also recently have read THE DEATHLY HALLOWS, HIGH NOON by Nora Roberts, BENEATH A MARBLE SKY by John Shors, and am always a book or two behind in the JD Robb IN DEATH series (because I have to hoard them). I recently enjoyed RULES OF GENTILITY by my friend Janet Mullany, and VIRGIN RIVER by Robyn Carr.

AM: Who are some of the erotica writers you admire and how has their work affected your own?

CG: I haven't read a lot of erotica, as I mentioned earlier, but some of the authors who I have read and enjoyed are Pauline Reage (The Story of O), Anne Rice (Sleeping Beauty and Exit to Eden) and Bertrice Small (the Skye O'Malley books). Jane Lockwood, another new erotic novelist, is also fabulous, as well as Pam Rosenthal, who writes rich, lush historical erotica.

Thank you so much for having me here on Estella's Revenge!

I'd like to invite your readers who are in the NYC area to attend the In The Flesh Erotic Reading series this month. On October 18th, I, along with several other erotic writers, will read aloud from our works at the Happy Endings Lounge (how appropriately named!) in the city. My publisher is providing free copies of UNMASQUED for up to fifty attendees, so if there are Estella's Revenge readers in NYC, I hope they'll come (har!) out and join us!

For more info, go here.