40 Things Blog Tour Wrap Up

Saturday, March 17th, 2012 - Blog, Books For Writers, Getting Published, Reading

book_40things(From The Savvy Reader:)

The 40 Things Blog Tour

Here’s an update on the 40 Things Reviews & Writing Tips Tour!

The Reviews…

1. “Dear Alice Kuipers, where have you been all my life?” – Wendy at A Cupcake and a Latte. Read her full review here.

2. “I was utterly impressed by this touching and remarkable story, and I honestly believe that it’s one of those rare ones that will really stick with you and leave a lasting impression.” – Brenna at Esther’s Ever After. Read her full review here.

3. “40 Things I Want to Tell You, is an captivating and hard hitting read, that contemporary fans are sure to enjoy.” – Christa at Christa’s Hooked on Books. Read her full review here.

4. “When I read a book that touches me, really touches me, I always finish it, close the cover, lay my hand over it, and just sit.  Sometimes I just re-immerse myself in the story, sometimes I weep, sometimes I wonder how the characters managed, sometimes I ponder the title and the cover.  With 40 Things I Want To Tell You by Alice Kuipers, I did it all.” – Helen at CanLit for LittleCanadians. Read her full review here.

… And the Writing Tips from Alice Kuipers!

1. Writing What You Know, at A Cupcake and a Latte

2. Reasons to Write, at Esther’s Ever After

3. Writing Character Names, at Christa’s Hooked on Books

4. Writer’s Block, at CanLit for LittleCanadians

5. Just Write, at Stuck in YA Books

Enjoy!

For more information on 40 Things I Want to Tell You, click here.

 

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Read Jennifer Castle

Tuesday, March 6th, 2012 - Blog, Books For Writers

At Jennifer Castle’s blog she writes six lessons on her book’s six month anniversary. Her advice is thoughtful and heartfelt – good to keep in mind for those of us with a book out! I’ve copied her last two points here, but check out her website for the full post because its great – and her novel is absolutely terrific too. http://blog.jennifercastle.com/

Jennifer Castle:

5) There are many different measures of “success.” Way, way more than sales reports, or awards, or average user ratings. It’s so much simpler than that. There’s the one where you finally get to hold your finished book in your hand, and the one where you first see it on a bookstore shelf. There’s having someone tell you in person how much they loved the read, and the bookseller placing the thing front and center because they believe in it so passionately. Then, of course, there are the e-mails from readers telling you your book helped them deal with something tough in their lives, and then the other ones simply thanking you for writing it. (And now here I go choking up again.) When it all shakes down, the ultimate measure of success, I’ve learned, is that I’m able to continue doing what I love most. It feeds my soul and keeps my fingers on the keyboard.

6) In the end, it’s still about the writing. Yeah, as an author there’s a whole lot of other stuff I need to do, and it’s all fun and good and scary-addictive. But then I have to remind myself that no amount of Twitter followers or bookstore events or promotional brilliance is going to matter if I write crappy books. When all of the above has been lived through and learned from, it comes down to the place where I started: the work itself. This is the single most important thing I can give…and I plan to give good.

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Great Review

Thursday, February 23rd, 2012 - Blog, Getting Published, Thinking

This review from http://canlitforlittlecanadians.blogspot.com/ is so great that I had to share it. Wow!

When I read a book that touches me, really touches me, I always finish it, close the cover, lay my hand over it, and just sit. Sometimes I just re-immerse myself in the story, sometimes I weep, sometimes I wonder how the characters managed, sometimes I ponder the title and the cover. With 40 Things I Want To Tell You by Alice Kuipers, I did it all.

Amy, a.k.a. Bird to her family and best friends, is the queen of lists and the princess of planning. She knows that she and her good friend, now boyfriend, Griffin, will have sex for the first time on her seventeenth birthday. She knows what she needs to do and how hard to work to get to Oxford when she finishes school. Bird is so in control that she sets herself up as “Miss Take-Control-of-Your-Life” on a website offering advice to teens.

Unfortunately, there’s a lot of stuff she needs to tell others but she doesn’t. She doesn’t tell her best friend, Cleo, about the website until it’s been up for months. She doesn’t tell Griffin that she is anxious about their first time, and then when she can’t “do it” the night of her birthday, she doesn’t tell him why. She doesn’t tell anyone that she’s attracted to a new boy at school, Pete Loewen, not even him when he approaches her. Cleo asks Pete out and he declines, and still Bird tells her nothing about her encounters with Pete which now include mind-blowing kisses.

Of course, Bird isn’t the only one who needs to share things. Since the death of Griffin’s dad several years ago, his mom’s mental health has been rocky and getting worse. Offers of help are declined and her condition minimized when he speaks to Bird. Then, there’s Bird’s mom who denies anything is wrong, though her mood is off and her organizational expertise (passed down to Bird) is showing weakness. But, when Bird’s dad, an entrepreneur currently focusing on solar bricks, goes to the bank, unbeknownst to this wife, to get a mortgage on the house, which Bird’s grandmother left her mom, Bird just can’t face the fighting. Bird just runs away from it, going to the park where she often sits. A chance meeting with Pete leads Amy (as he calls her) to pitch her self-control and have sex with him.

So, although she continues to offer free advice online, even listing “Top Tips” (e.g., Top Tip 18: When you make a decision, say it out loud; pg. 156), Bird has even more that she should be telling: to Griffin, to Cleo, to Pete, to her parents, and even to herself. Self-denial is a big issue for Bird. And, in her not-telling, all their interconnected lives are shattered and transformed. She would have been wise to heed her own advice, as her own Top Tips continue to jibe accurately with the circumstances of her own life.

I wish I could reveal the moving conclusion to Alice Kuipers’ story of Bird, but I fear that I will spoil it for the reader. Suffice it to say that Bird’s reactions and resignations and decisions are poignant, heartbreaking and honest, as well as justifiable to her, whether you agree with them or not. Alice Kuipers’ skill at weaving an emotionally engaging story with remarkable characters, likeable or not, like those in our own lives, will disarm you effortlessly until you realize you have been invariably touched forever.

Here are 5 things I want to tell you:
1. If you’re a teen, female or male, read 40 Things I Want To Tell You.
2. If you’re a parent of a teen, read 40 Things I Want To Tell You.
3. If you are a teacher or counsellor, read 40 Things I Want To Tell You.
4. If you appreciate great literature, read 40 Things I Want To Tell You.
5. Read 40 Things I Want To Tell You.
Posted by HelenK

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