Thanks to all who entered the contest to win my copy of Julie Buxbaum’s “After You.” The winner is Debra Schubert with her 5-word entry describing home as “The place where I’m complete.” Debra, email me to get your copy!
Published August 31st, 2009 at 9:18 pm in Uncategorized with no comments
Tagged with after you, Debra Schubert, Julie Buxbaum
I believe in passing books along, letting others share in the reading pleasure. So with that in mind, I’m pleased to offer a giveaway of my advanced reader copy of Julie Buxbaum’s ‘AFTER YOU,’ which releases today in stores. You can read more about Julie and the book here on my site. For now though, let’s have a contest!
First, the disclaimer: the ARC does not have the official cover of the book. The copy I have is an advanced copy, so the cover is paperback and very plain and says it’s an advanced copy, which I think is kind of the coolness of it! But if you like pretty covers and pictures, then buy the book! (Well, buy it anyway!)
Now, the story is about how Ellie drops everything to help a friend’s daughter after the friend has died suddenly. And ultimately the novel is about the quest for home, what home means and how to find it. In honor of that deeper theme in the novel, let’s do a five-word contest on the theme of home.
In FIVE WORDS only, please write in the comments what “home” means to you. The winner gets my ARC!
Published August 25th, 2009 at 5:51 am in Contemporary Women's Fiction, Recommended Reading with 10 comments
Tagged with after you, Julie Buxbaum
I am a big-time fan of Julie Buxbaum. Her debut novel “The Opposite of Love” was one of my favorite books of 2008 and remains on my all-time top reads list. It’s fresh and riveting. What is best about Buxbaum’s writing is just that — the writing. She is a master of words, clever with verbs and inventive in her descriptions. I will never forget how the heroine Emily in “The Opposite of Love” described her emptiness: “The opposite of love isn’t hate; it isn’t even indifference. It’s fucking disembowelment. Hara-kiri. Taking a huge shovel and digging out your own heart, and your intestines, and leaving behind nothing.”
Now her second novel “After You” is due to hit the shelves on August 25 and the writing remains inimitably Buxbaum-ian. Consider how the main character Ellie describes her complicated affection for her god-daughter: “A feeling of love rushes through me like vertigo, an overwhelming, sharp tilt, and then just as quickly, a righting, slamming, shaming pain when I catch myself, for just a moment, pretending that Sophie is mine.”
I love the cadence of Buxbaum’s words, the way she describes a character thinking as “riding out the carnival in his head,” how you feel the harsh weight of truth as she juxtaposes words like “destructive” and “confession.”
“After You” is the story of how Ellie comes to terms with her own marriage, potential parenting and willingness to love by caring for a grieving child.
I remain a devoted member of her fan club and will be eagerly awaiting her next book as well!
Published August 20th, 2009 at 8:08 pm in Contemporary Women's Fiction, Uncategorized with 3 comments
Tagged with after you, Contemporary Women's Fiction, Julie Buxbaum, the opposite of love
I’ve read all the Harry Potter books, I’ve read the Twilight series, but I don’t know that I’d buy every single book written by J.K. Rowling or Stephenie Meyer. I haven’t read Meyer’s “The Host” and I haven’t read Rowling’s “Tales of Beedle the Bard.” But I do buy and read every single book Emily Giffin writes. I fell in love with her debut novel “Something Borrowed” back in 2004 when it was released and since then I’ve known the release date of each of her next three books and have bought them all and starting reading them all the day they went on sale. Her next novel “Heart of the Matter” releases next spring and that’s not soon enough for me.
Emily Giffin would be tops on my list of authors whose books I will always buy and buy right away. On that list I would also include Khaled Hosseini, Courtney Summers, Julie Buxbaum, Allison Winn Scotch, and, increasingly, Elizabeth Scott.
Julie Buxbaum’s second novel, After You, releases this summer and I am anxiously awaiting the arrival of my advance copy because I happen to think Julie is a phenomenal author and her debut “The Opposite of Love” is one of my favorites.
Whose books will you always buy? Which authors do you track? Whose tales do you make sure to purchase or check out from the library the day they release?
Published July 27th, 2009 at 10:19 am in Authors with 14 comments
Tagged with Allison Winn Scotch, Courtney Summers, Elizabeth Scott, Emily Giffin, Julie Buxbaum, Khaled Hosseini