Thursday, July 30, 2015

Blog Tour: Interview with Jennifer Echols+Giveaway


Hi everyone! I know it's been long since we've posted here in our blog and we kind of neglected it  for weeks but no need to fret because we are back! I have with me today Jennifer Echols, author of Major Crush and Going Too Far, which we are a huge fan since we even started blogging. I had the opportunity to ask her a few questions for the blog tour of her upcoming book Most Likely To Succeed, so don't forget to check that out below and a giveaway!


Hi Jennifer! Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

I write novels for a couple of hours a day, and the rest of my time is taken up copy editing other authors’ novels, which is lots of fun! As far as I’m concerned, I have the best and the second-best jobs in the world. I love the Alabama heat, and I get to do a lot of my work outside on my screened porch. Some people say there’s no such thing as luck—you make your own luck—and I did work very hard to snag these jobs. But I still feel very lucky.
 
We here at Teen Readers' Diary are a huge fan of yours even before we started blogging and your books have been one of our YA foundations. Can you tell us what sets this story apart from the other books you've written?

Hey, that is very kind of you—thanks so much! I’ve never written a YA series before featuring a different couple in every book. This has been a dream of mine and something I’ve been working toward and fighting for for a while. Most Likely to Succeed is the third book in the Superlatives series, starting and ending with Sawyer and Kaye’s romance but also ending Sawyer’s character growth from the beginning of the series to the end. I think readers who have enjoyed the first two books in the series will find the last one really satisfying.
 
What are the most surprising things about publishing and being an author since your first book deal?

Self-publishing has been the huge change I did not foresee when I first sold a book to Simon & Schuster in 2005. I’d tried to get a book published for 15 years before that. It was a really slow and soul-crushing process. Self-publishing has leveled the playing field, taking a lot of power away from literary agents and publishers and giving it to authors for the first time. I’m not sure where things are going to stabilize, but I do know authors who can’t adapt to this changing publishing world are going to be left by the side of the road, no matter how long and hard they struggled before. The publishing industry has no memory.
 
Can you share some random things about you that people may be surprised to know?

I have a very pronounced Southern accent and regularly get made fun of for the way I talk at writers’ conferences. People who have made fun of me include my own former editor at Simon & Schuster and a literary agent from ATLANTA. If you sound really Southern to someone from Atlanta you start to second-guess yourself...

But I recently took a trip where nobody made fun of my accent because nobody knew what I was saying anyway. My husband was born in Thailand, but he left when he was two years old. In June we went back to meet his many relatives who still live there. I could fill a book with the crazy experiences we had, but the coolest thing for me was talking to his cousins in English, and listening to them in Thai (which I don’t speak at all), and realizing that we understood each other a lot better than I’d thought we would.
 
What's the best piece of advice can you give to aspiring authors?

Write the book you want to read!



Most Likely to Succeed (Superlatives #3)
by Jennifer Echols
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Release Date: August 4th 2015
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary, Romance, Realistic Fiction
Blurb:
In this sexy conclusion to The Superlatives trilogy from Endless Summer author Jennifer Echols, Sawyer and Kaye might just be perfect for each other—if only they could admit it.

As vice president of Student Council, Kaye knows the importance of keeping order. Not only in school, but in her personal life. Which is why she and her boyfriend, Aidan, already have their lives mapped out: attend Columbia University together, pursue banking careers, and eventually get married. Everything Kaye has accomplished in high school—student government, cheerleading, stellar grades—has been in preparation for that future.

To his entire class, Sawyer is an irreverent bad boy. His antics on the field as school mascot and his love of partying have earned him total slacker status. But while he and Kaye appear to be opposites on every level, fate—and their friends—keep conspiring to throw them together. Perhaps the seniors see the simmering attraction Kaye and Sawyer are unwilling to acknowledge to themselves…


As the year unfolds, Kaye begins to realize her ideal life is not what she thought. And Sawyer decides it’s finally time to let down the facade and show everyone who he really is. Is a relationship between them most likely to succeed—or will it be their favorite mistake?


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Follow the Most Likely to Succeed by Jennifer Echols Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.



Jennifer Echols was born in Atlanta and grew up in a small town on a beautiful lake in Alabama—a setting that has inspired many of her books. She has written nine romantic novels for young adults, including the comedy MAJOR CRUSH, which won the National Readers’ Choice Award, and the drama GOING TOO FAR, which was a finalist in the RITA, the National Readers’ Choice Award, and the Book Buyer’s Best, and was nominated by the American Library Association as a Best Book for Young Adults. Simon & Schuster will debut her adult romance novels in 2013, with many more teen novels scheduled for the next few years. She lives in Birmingham with her husband and her son.








US Only
If the winner has one of the Superlatives book, he/she can choose another book instead written by Jennifer Echols.



Saturday, July 11, 2015

Blog Tour: Official Playlist of Don't Ever Change by M. Beth Bloom+Giveaway(INT)




Hi guys! Today I have with me the Official Playlist for Don't Ever Change by M.Beth Bloom. Follow the tour for more guest post, interview and reviews from other bloggers and don't forget to join on the giveaway below!


Don't Ever Change
Publisher: HarperTeen
Release Date: July 7th 2015
Blurb:
Eva has always wanted to write a modern classic—one that actually appeals to her generation. The only problem is that she has realized she can't "write what she knows" because she hasn't yet begun to live. So before heading off to college, Eva is determined to get a life worth writing about.

Soon Eva's life encounters a few unexpected plot twists. She becomes a counselor at a nearby summer camp—a job she is completely unqualified for. She starts growing apart from her best friends before they've even left for school. And most surprising of all, she begins to fall for the last guy she would have ever imagined. But no matter the roadblocks, or writer's blocks, it is all up to Eva to figure out how she wants this chapter in her story to end.

Perfect for fans of E. Lockhart, David Levithan, and Rainbow Rowell,Don't Ever Change is a witty, snarky, and thought-provoking coming-of-age young adult novel about a teen who sets out to write better fiction and, ultimately, discovers the truth about herself.

Center of gravity - yo la tengo
You’re the good things - modest mouse
Hello rain - the softies
Here’s where the story ends - the sundays
Kid in candy - the spinanes
Cybele’s reverie - stereolab
The book lovers - broadcast
Coffee and tv - blur
Hypocrite - lush
Breathe your name - sixpence none the richer


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Follow the Don't Ever Change by M. Beth Bloom Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.





M. Beth Bloom is a novelist and a screenwriter. Her fiction has appeared in StoryQuarterly and Dave Eggers's Best American Nonrequired Reading series. She is also the author of Drain You. M. Beth lives in Los Angeles.





INTERNATIONAL





Thursday, July 9, 2015

Blog Tour:YOU AND ME AND HIM by Kris Dinnison (Author Interview)


Hiya everyone!  It's been a rainy week here in the Philippines and what's the best way to do when you're lock up at your house? Well, of course reading and a cup of coffee! I am starting to read the Psy-changeling series by Nalini Singh and guys it was so good and SEXAAY *wink* though I am reading I still multitask and search for my next read and one of the books that caught my attention is You and Me and Him by Kris Dinnison. I got lucky to be a part of the blog tour for the book and had a chance to interview Kris, read the author interview below and join the giveaway guys!


Congratulations on your book! Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

Thanks! I used to be a teacher and librarian, but I always wanted to be a writer. I love books and stories almost as much as my family. I have a husband, a daughter, a geriatric cat named Moonie, and I just got a new kitten named Raymond. I love raspberries. I hate licorice. My favorite color is green. I speak French, but poorly.

What can readers expect from YOU and ME and HIM?

Well, I think they can expect a story of friendship, and what happens when we screw up a friendship over something less important. The tagline of the book “What if getting the guy means losing your soulmate?’ really brings that home. A soulmate is somebody, not necessarily a romantic somebody, who gets you at the most basic level. In the story, Maggie risks losing that person, her friend Nash, over a guy they’re both interested in. Readers can also expect some humor, some great music, and some good fights.

If you don't mind, would you like to share with us the one event that turned your world upside down?

There have been a lot of significant moments in my life of course. A lot of them joyful, thankfully only a few of them sad. One that really changed my life and my understanding of myself was moving from Eastern Washington to The Bay Area when I was 16. I was halfway through my junior year in High School, and the culture shock was stunning. Plus I was moving from the people I’d gone to school with since third grade. They would all graduate together and I would be alone. I was not happy, and I was not optimistic. But I did my best to get involved and meet people and it wasn’t so bad. In fact I was actually grateful afterward that I’d had that experience. It taught me to be more independent and more confident about who I was, especially in new situations. It felt huge at the time, and in retrospect it was, but not in a bad way.

When and how did you decide to become a YA writer?

I don’t know if I actually decided as much as fell into it. I’ve read YA for awhile because I was a High School teacher and a school librarian and because there are just some amazing YA  books out there. Anyway, when I left teaching, I wanted to write, and I tried a few things, but nothing felt quite right. And I was scared because I didn’t really know what I was doing. Then I read a piece of writing advice from Neil Gaiman. He said “Finish something.” So I decided I would write a complete first draft of this novel about a girl who works in a record store. That became You and Me and Him. It was still really rough when my agent saw it at a conference. I wasn’t really looking for an agent yet. I thought I was a long way from that. But she loved it and was willing to help me get it into shape and try to sell it. It took awhile, but when it did sell, it was to an amazing editor, the perfect editor for this book.  Now I realize that the book worked because I have a lot to say, and maybe a lot of my own stuff to work out, about that moment between childhood and full adulthood. So I’m excited to write more stories about that time in life.

Could you describe the mundane details of writing: How many hours a day to you devote to writing? Do you write a draft on paper or at a keyboard?

This is always a shifting landscape for me because we own two retail businesses, Atticus Coffee and Boo Radley’s Gifts, so I have been working there while trying to write and fit in all the other stuff life throws at you. But recently I’m working at our stores less often, so my writing days have a more predictable structure. I write in the morning, usually for anywhere from three to five hours depending on how much other stuff I have to do that day. I have a writing room that I use, but if I’m doing research or need the internet I have to work somewhere else because the internet is terrible in that room. I take a lot of notes in a writing notebook, but I draft on a keyboard.

So far, what has been the most surprising part of the publishing and writing industry for you?

I think the most wonderful surprise has been what an incredibly supportive community the YA writing and publishing community is. I feel so supported by other writers, and other agents and editors have also been really kind and helpful to me. And of course there are all the amazing book bloggers who love YA as much as I do. It’s great to see how everyone is a fan of everyone else. And every time I’ve reached out with a question or needed help with something, someone comes through. It’s been amazing.

We here at Teen Readers' Diary are huge YA Contemporary readers. What sets this story apart from the other books in the genre?

There are two things that set the book apart in my mind. The first is the unconventional love triangle. The two best friends who like the same guy isn’t new. The fact that one of those best friends is a gay guy gives it an unusual twist. The other thing is that Maggie, my main character, is overweight. But she doesn’t spend the book trying to change that. It causes her some problems, and she sometimes wishes she was thinner, but the book is about her discovering that she’s more than just her weight, that she has a lot to offer no matter what size she is.

What is the best piece of advice you've ever received? the worst?

The best piece of advice I ever received was that quote from Eleanor Roosevelt, “No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” Whatever relationship I’m in, whether in my family, or with friends, or a work relationship, or even now with relationships in publishing, I try to remember that if I’m feeling bad about myself, or feeling less than, that’s about me, not about that other person. And I’m the only one who can change it.

The worst piece of advice I ever got was probably from a teacher’s assistant who told me I was a decent writer but I didn’t really have any original ideas, so maybe I shouldn’t try to write stories. I was in second grade. I wasted thirty years because I took that advice. That was thirty years I could have been writing stories. Now I know it’s rubbish.

Are you working on something right now?

Of course! I’m working on the first draft of another novel, and I have one done that still needs some revision. And I have another one I’m dying to start. When you stuff your creativity in a dark hole for too long, it comes gushing out. All I want to do is write these days!



YOU AND ME AND HIM
Author: Kris Dinnison
Pub. Date: July 7, 2015
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
Pages: 288
Formats: Hardcover, eBook
Blurb:
“Do not ignore a call from me when you know I am feeling neurotic about a boy. That is Best Friend 101.” —Nash

Maggie and Nash are outsiders. 

She’s overweight. 
He’s out of the closet. 

The best of friends, they have seen each other through thick and thin, but when Tom moves to town at the start of the school year, they have something unexpected in common: feelings for the same guy. This warm, witty novel—with a clear, true voice and a clever soundtrack of musical references—sings a song of love and forgiveness.


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Kris Dinnison learned to read when she was five years old. She grew up reading books nobody else had read and listening to music nobody else had heard of and thinking she was weird, which she kind of was. She spent nearly two decades as a teacher and librarian working with students from kindergarten to graduate school. The bulk of that time she spent teaching High School English while dreaming of becoming a writer. Nowadays, when she’s not writing, she helps run her family’s retail and café businesses.  She lives and writes in Spokane, Washington.


Where you can fine Kris:
3 winners will receive a finished copy of YOU AND ME AND HIM. US Only.

Tour Schedule:
Week One:
6/29/2015- Paperback PrincessInterview
6/30/2015- StuckInBooksReview
7/1/2015- Novel NoviceGuest Post
7/2/2015- Book BriefsReview
7/3/2015- Fictitious DeliciousInterview

Week Two:
7/6/2015- YA Book MadnessReview
7/7/2015- Me, My Shelf and IGuest Post
7/8/2015- Swoony Boys PodcastReview
7/9/2015- Teen Readers' DiaryInterview
7/10/2015- Downright DystopianReview



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