Results tagged “Books” from Alan's Skew

My friend LeAnn Neal Reilly is an aspiring writer who has been working on her first novel for the past 10 years. I believe she is a very talented writer and as such have supported her efforts by providing feedback on early drafts and encouraging her to keep at it. Her hard work has finally paid off and her novel, The Mermaid's Pendant, was released on Amazon.com earlier this month!

LeAnn started promoting the novel through her web site and was featured in an article in the Metro West Daily News last week. Today she held the novel's official launch party at Annie's Book Stop in Framingham, MA, which Melissa and I attended. I'm happy to report that there was a good turnout and, although LeAnn was a little nervous, she did a great job delivering her first public reading.

   

Here's a photo of LeAnn with her book at today's event. I got my autographed copy and look forward to reading the final version.

If you'd like to learn more about the novel, check out LeAnn's web site, where she has a plot summary and video of her reading a chapter.

Although I haven't read the final version, I will recommend it based on what I read of one of the near-final drafts. You can buy the book from Amazon.com in paperback or a downloadable version if you have a Kindle e-book reader.

I'm a regular follower of Mur Lafferty's I Should Be Writing blog and podcast. Recently she posted this YouTube video from the Digital Marketing team at MacMillan Publishing. Based on my years of professional experience, I can attest that it accurately captures the entire process for how books are made. Enjoy!



As the video states, non-fiction books take far less time to produce than fiction, often because we are only allowed a few weeks to write them (versus decades) and also because we only have time and the staff to copyedit one out of every 18 books, rather than each book 18 times.

Where The Wild Things Are: The Movie!

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Hollywood hasn't impressed me much this year, however there are two movies coming out that have me excited: the new Harry Potter movie in July and the long overdue, live-action version of one of my childhood favorites, Maurice Sendak's classic, Where The Wild Things Are.

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This movie is being directed by Spike Jonz. For those of you who aren't familiar with the name, Jonz directed Being John Malkovich, the wonderfully dark and surreal movie which starred John Cusack as a puppeteer who discovers a portal into the brain of John Malkovich. Jonz also directed Adaptation, another brilliant, but more neurotic movie with Nicholas Cage, Meryl Streep, and Chris Cooper (who won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor). I thoroughly enjoyed both of these films. One down side of Jonz was his involvement in MTV's Jackass movies, to which I readily acknowledge (and am proud) that I am not part of their target demographic. My hope is that Jonz did those for the money so he could continue making high caliber artsy films.


Speaking of demographics, any movie of this classic Sendack work will automatically have a large family demographic. I read in interviews that, like me, Jonz read the book as a kid, and will want to share it with his own kids. Now given his track record with the dark, artsy films and hoping that he has the sense not to incorporate any elements from the Jackass series, I'm still a bit anxious about the final product. That said, another potential positive factor for this film is that the screenplay was written by Dave Eggers, the creative mind behind McSweeney's Internet Tendency. Eggers is co-founder of a program called 826 National, which promotes writing skills in kids ages 6-18 at seven centers across the U.S. Given that level of interaction with kids, I think there's very good reason to be hopeful that the script Jonz started with was in tune with younger audiences.

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