Photo Friday: Austin Teen Book Festival!

So, so much fun. Anyone who hasn't attended the Austin Teen Book Festival should really start planning for next year. Truly. There's a writeup of the festival in Publishers Weekly (along with a pic of me eying John Corey Whaley skeptically, though really he's super amazing and so is his book), so check that out. Some highlights: 2,500 people, $30,000 in books sold, hugging Maureen Johnson (a reader, not me, though I did too). I also got to talk to tons of awesome readers and librarians and authors and publishing types whom I'd otherwise only known through Facebook and Twitter. Loved it. (And Hip Mama Jenn did an amazingly detailed post on my panel, "Life is Messy.")

 

And okay, the only photos I took were of cookies (above, by Kellie's Kandies--they had our book covers on them!) and decorations (below). Steph Pellegrin made these incredible hair flowers/broaches out of book pages. I'm hoping she opens an etsy shop because: CUTE.

Next week I'll show you the Friday Night Lights field... EPIC.

Happy Friday!

Win-It Wednesday: The Beginning of After

Last week's winner of Elizabeth Scott's As I Wake is... Travis! Remind me of your address, T. This week, I'm giving away an ARC of Jennifer Castle's The Beginning of After (read a sneak peek here). Kirkus say it's "An honest look at grief that is both achingly real and powerfully hopeful." Um, how good does that sound? It also sounds like I'd need a box of tissues to get through it, but sometimes reads like that are cathartic and AWESOME (like Gayle Forman's If I Stay, for example). Who's with me?

Anyway, to enter to win this book, tell me about the last time you cried. Eek, I know I'm getting personal here, but I'm curious. Me? I cry all the time. Seriously, it's a big release for me. I cried today because I'm overwhelmed by baby stuff--it's really hard. And I always cry at movies on airplanes. That's actually a thing, you know. So there's me getting all personal. Your turn.

I'll choose a random winner next week!

 

Cover Stories: Swear by Nina Malkin

Back in 2009, Nina Malkin talked to me about the gorgeous cover for Swoon, and now the sequel is here with another enticing cover image. Here's Nina:

"Writing is intensely present for me. With SWEAR I was so in the moment of the action and emotion as it unfurled, no way was I thinking about the cover. I was lucky if I thought about lunch. Besides, it’s such a privilege to be able to publish, I trust the pros at Simon & Schuster to do what they think is best for a book, and that includes the cover. After all, once you deliver a novel it’s no longer this magical collaboration between your conscious and your subconscious—it’s a product.

"Of course, I didn’t always have such a laissez-faire attitude. My first novel, 6X: The Uncensored Confessions, was about a band. Unbeknownst to me the publisher did an expensive photo shoot—too bad the girl on the cover looked more like a cheap hooker than rock chick (right). I threw some major hissy but got nowhere. And if I thought that cover sucked, the next one was worse. That’s when I realized the novels weren’t 'mine' anymore; I had to let them go.

"Once I did, my luck changed. The first thing I thought when they showed me the cover for SWOON was: That’s hot! And my streak is continuing with SWEAR. I like covers that are evocative as opposed to literal—imagery that makes you feel something: excitement, passion, dread. That said, the visual elements of roses and iron do happen to be central to the story of SWEAR.

"My only concern? That the image was maybe too pretty to convey the evil lurking in the pages beyond, and I asked if there was a way to convey that malevolence. Still, the only difference between the final and the original is they photo-shopped the hair to mess it up a bit. I didn’t press the point. Come on, it’s a SWOON novel. Sinclair Youngblood Powers is the leading man. Anyone familiar with the first book will know: The Teacups Ride at Disneyland it ain’t gonna be.

"Some people have wondered why a blonde, when Dice, the heroine of SWOON (cover at left) and SWEAR, is dark haired. A few even speculated that it’s Dice’s golden girl cousin Pen on the cover. Uh…no. You’ll realize that right away. It would’ve been a simple matter to photo shop the subject into a brunette, but Swoon, CT, is the land of blondes—and that’s the only thing that hasn’t changed since Sin cut his seductive swath through the town.

"As to the pose, it makes you wonder: Is she overcome with desire? Heartbroken and sobbing her eyes out? Gathering her strength to rise? Since Sin can wreak some serious havoc with a woman. All I know is, the more I look at the cover, the more I want to look at it. If I didn’t already know what goes down inside, I’d be very tempted to find out."

Thanks, Nina! I'm really into falling petals. I know they can get cheesy, but whatever. They're soft and pretty and light and I'm all about them. Also, the dark background with flashes of red? Gets me every time. (And that 6X cover? Let's just say I'm glad Nina's latest books have a different look.)

What do you guys think?

Win-It Wednesday: As I Wake

You guys, when you have a new baby, Thursday looks a lot like Wednesday, so go with me here. The winner of last week's giveaway of Gabrielle Zevin's All These Things I've Done (which I'm reading and totally into because it feels really original and fluid) is... LiLi! Send me your address, L. This week, I have a copy of Elizabeth Scott's As I Wake. This new book, which I'm cracking open next, is about 17-year-old Ava, who wakes up with no memory of who she is or the world she's living in. Instead, she remembers another life. On her site, Elizabeth talks about how the inspiration for the story (which she wrote most of in 2007) is that there isn't just one world/reality, but many (modal realism). Scroll down to Extras (past the great reviews of this book) to hear more.

Exciting! Explosive cover! Plus, who doesn't love an Elizabeth Scott book? She's awesome, am I right?

To enter to win the hardcover, just comment below and tell me about the best movie you've seen in the theater lately. I haven't been to a movie in weeks, so I'm dying for some cinematic tales.

Happy Wednes--uh, Thursday.

Cover Stories: You Are My Only

Beth Kephart has shared many Cover Stories in this space--for Undercover and House of Dance, for Nothing But Ghosts and for The Heart is Not a Size. Her latest novel is high in my pile, and it should be in yours too! I dare you to read a Beth Kephart book and not sigh at the beauty of her words. She's truly a poet (check out her blog for proof). Here's Beth talking about the cover of her new novel, You Are My Only:

"For many months I have wondered just how I would write this cover story. In some ways, I still don’t know quite what to say.

"Should I start with the title, You Are My Only, which sets the mood? And if I start with the title, then aren’t I really starting (or shouldn’t I start) by thanking my agent, Amy Rennert, and her colleague, Robyn Russell, who helped me toward knowing what the title must be during a week of grave uncertainty?

"You Are My Only, then—a title that I was helped toward. Words that struck me once, and strike me again today, as singular and brave.

"To create the image, we turned, of course, to Neil Swaab, who had designed the gorgeous cover for Dangerous Neighbors [read that Cover Story on bn.com], and who seems to get books the moment he reads them—seems to settle on that symbol or scene that obsessed the writer or, in this case, kept the writer going. Both of my protagonists—Sophie and Emmy—are caught inside worlds, trapped in places they should not be. Both look out through windows on people and places just out of reach. What might symbolize that? What single image might tell the story of two young women separated by time and place and hurt?

"Neil Swaab seemed to know at once. He found a photograph taken by the tremendously talented Yolande de Kort. It said trapped. It still said beauty. It was right. Neil made that image his own—adjusting its orientation and palette, working the typography so that the words, too, became weather.

"I saw no other cover image for You Are My Only. I did not have to. I can’t even imagine this book with any other title, any other photograph, any other typography. Sometimes things just work, and I am grateful to Laura Geringer, who brought Neil Swaab into the Egmont USA team, for making this cover work for me. It doesn’t mean to be scary. It means to suggest. It means for readers to look past the surface of things and into the hearts of others, to see what truths lie there."

Thank you, Beth! I am a sucker for a rain-soaked window, and the orange of her shirt and the muted lip color... so pretty and soft. This is one I will savor reading.

What do you guys think of this cover?

Cover Stories: Enthralled

Jeri Smith-Ready stopped by for her GCC tour! She's shared her Cover Story for Shade, and now she has a story in a new anthology edited by Melissa Marr and Kelley Armstrong. While it's not exactly her cover, she does have some thoughts on it: "I LOVE the cover for ENTHRALLED. It’s mysterious and evocative. The stories are all about journeys and road trips, and the cover brings out those elements well. The girl looks like she’s on an uncertain road but has the confidence she needs to get where she’s going.

"I also love the spine, where the road-vanishing-in-the-distance segment is mirrored top to bottom, i.e., it’s upside down at the top of the spine and right-side up at the bottom. Lovely touch. I adore all the art elements of this book inside and out."

Thanks, Jeri! I love the mist around the girl in this image. I haven't been able to find a picture of the spine--anyone seen one?

Win-It Wednesday: All These Things I've Done

You guys totally filled up my DVR with fall TV suggestions... I'm really craving a Friday Night Lights replacement. Sigh. Thank you! The winner of Matched by Ally Condie was chosen by a random number generator and she is... Gaby! Send me your address, G. This week, I have a copy of Gabrielle Zevin's All These Things I've Done. This book has been recommended to me a ton, and it's on the top of my pile! Can't wait to read it.

To can enter to win the book, leave a comment telling me what you're reading right now -- for school, for pleasure, for whatever. What's on your nightstand, and how are you liking it? I'll choose a winner next week.

Oh, and check out the trailer for Gabrielle's book too!

Cover Stories: Putting Makeup on Dead People

Hi, look at that cover. The title alone intrigued me enough to want to red Jen Violi's debut, but that cover? I love it! Jen's here to share the Cover Story:

"I did indeed have my own cover idea, and revealing that will also reveal why I’m a writer and not a designer.

"So, when I was little, my parents had quite a record collection, and I loved listening to so many of them, from The King and I soundtrack to Vicki Carr or Frank Sinatra or, my absolute favorite: Aunt Carmela’s Italian Favorites. So many gems on there, my favorites from Lou Monte. And the cover, priceless. Which of course I have to show you here. Please note the fabulousness of Aunt Carmela, right.

"Believe it or not, as I was writing Putting Makeup on Dead People, I had a distinct vision for the cover to feature Aunt Carmela. As an enlivened corpse. Basically, my vision involved Aunt Carmela, sitting much like she is on the chaise lounge on the album cover, but instead, on a coroner’s metal slab, with a white sheet draped over her body, sitting up and grinning out at us. Why, one might wonder, would I think that was a good idea?

"Well, I have a great love for old Italian music, so there’s that. Also, I thought it would be hilarious. For me, Putting Makeup on Dead People is as much about the joy as the pain, about finding humor in unexpected or perhaps inappropriate places. And last, but not least, that album always makes me smile and calls up fun childhood memories of singing with my dad, to whom the book is dedicated.

"All of that, of course, is really personal to me, but I think that what great book covers do is welcome others into the story.  So although Aunt Carmela amuses me, I think she might perplex or even perhaps alarm a potential reader, which falls into the not so welcoming category.

"When I saw the real cover, I thought it was gorgeous. I'm pretty sure I cried. I thought it looked like springtime—so, so pretty. I tend to be more of a red and turquoise kind of girl and probably never would have picked pink as a focal color, but I’m so glad Tanya Ross-Hughes did and so grateful for her work. This is Donna’s (the main character in PMODP) cover, truly, and it has been the same since the beginning. I think Tanya knocked it out of the park right away, and since the book came out, many readers have told me how much they love that cover.

"I feel like it’s a breath of spring, that first breath you can get after a long winter, when the air is just a little warmer, but still cold enough that it’s a little bracing. There’s something cool about those lips, the icy pink, but also something promising warmth with the unfurling lilies. Putting Makeup on Dead People is all about finding new life after a long time of darkness and cold and quiet. It’s also about a young woman blossoming into herself, the beauty that can be present in death, and life and death as intricately linked, and I think the cover reflects all of that exquisitely."

YES! That last paragraph puts my own thoughts into words more eloquent than I could muster. What do you guys think?

Win-It Wednesday: Matched by Ally Condie

Okay, it's Thursday. But in new-baby-land, days don't distinguish themselves, so roll with me here. The winners of last week's Dear Bully giveaway are... Jenny and Maryann Nixon! Send me your addresses, ladies. This week, I'm giving away the paperback of Ally Condie's Matched... she shared her girl-in-a-globe Cover Story last year and I am still into its green glow.

To enter to win, tell me what new shows you'll be watching this TV season. I've got "Up All Night" in my DVR, and I need to add "Awkward" and catch up there, because I've heard it's good... what else? (Oh, and I can't wait for "Good Christian Belles" as a mid-season replacement -- it's way fun.)