Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reading. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2017

Cheesus Was Here Pre-Order Giveaway & Gifts

In just a few short months CHEESUS WAS HERE will be out in the world! Which means it's the perfect time to kick off a pre-order campaign. Everyone who pre-orders the book and emails me a valid proof-of-purchase will receive the following:*

  • Two limited edition art cards
    Each 4" x 6" card features Nadiya Kovalchuk's beautiful artwork inspired by Cheesus on the front and a quote from the book on the back. 
  • A Cheesus Bookmark
  • A Cheesus Button
  • A signed bookplate
    I'm happy to personalize the bookplate if you let me know the name you'd like in your email.
  • A Gouda cheese wedge charm
    This can be used as a necklace pendant, cell phone charm, stitch marker, bracelet charm, or however you like.
* While supplies last. Only the first 20 pre-orders will receive cheese wedge charms.

In addition, everyone who submits proof of a pre-order will be entered to win an original art piece created by the author and a fun tote bag featuring a quote from the book.

The artwork also features a quote from the book and is combination of paper-cutting and watercolor. It has a lovely 3-dimensional quality.

The tote bag is screen printed and available in either natural canvas or black with white lettering.

To enter: pre-order CHEESUS WAS HERE by April 10th, 2017 and email a valid proof-of-purchase to jcdavis.books@gmail.com. Pre-order gifts will ship within a week of your email being received. I'll draw a winner for the tote bag and artwork on April 11th.

The giveaway and pre-order gifts are U.S. only. However, if your pre-order the book and live outside the U.S., please email me at the address above with your proof-of-purchase and I'll send you a signed bookplate, bookmark, and art cards. 

You can pre-order CHEESUS WAS HERE from the following online booksellers, or request the book from your local US bookseller:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | IndieboundPowell's | Books-A-Million

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Happy Christmas from Kate and Winell Road!


When Winell Road: Beneath the Surface was released back in April, Kate didn't embark on a great deal of promotion. Because of a lot of 'things'. So, to make up for that and to kick off the festivities for her favourite time of year – Christmas! – she's taken Winell Road on a little tour, hoping to spread the word and introduce lots of new young readers to, what she believes is, a great big dollop of sci-fi fun and adventure.


Here's a little info...
Twelve-year old Jack Mills lives at 5 Winell Road and has probably the world's weirdest neighbours. Like freakishly weird. And to top it off, he lives with Mum: nosy, interfering, a hideous cook, and Dad: unsuccessful inventor of the Camera Belt and Self-Closing Window. All in all, it's a boring, embarrassing, dead-end place to live.

So when Jack arrives home from school one day, a close shave with a UFO is the last thing he expects. But the fact it doesn't abduct him, and that no one else, not even Mum, sees the gigantic flying saucer hovering over the street, adds a whole new layer of strange. Soon after, an alien encounter threatens Jack’s life and he becomes embroiled in a galaxy- saving mission. With the assistance of his new neighbour, frighteningly tall Roxy Fox, he discovers Winell Road is hiding secrets—secrets Jack might wish he'd never uncovered.

REVIEWS!
If you're still not sure, here's a couple of reviews...

'Winell Road: Beneath the Surface is a fast-paced middle-grade adventure story with the feel of Men in Black. Jack is a smart, resourceful boy with more abilities than he’s ever dreamed off, and he finds out that the world is a far stranger place than he imagined. The action is non-stop and will keep readers riveted.' examiner.com

'This book will work wonderfully read aloud in class. There are enough cliff-hanger chapter endings to keep them begging for more. It will also promote discussion about making snap judgments while providing plenty of scope for related art projects.' Buzz Words Magazine

Go to Goodreads to see a few more.

ABOUT KATE!
Kate is an Englishwoman on the Gold Coast in Australia. A middle grade writer, freelance editor, the editorial director at Lakewater Press and all around lover of the written word, she is ruled by her three sons, husband and spoodle pup. Not one to have a quiet day, she spends her free time mentoring new writers in contests like Nest Pitch and Pitch Wars, judging writing contests and helping out at Writers Activation on the Gold Coast. Other than that, she likes laying in bed or by the pool with a book!

GIVEAWAY!
It would make a great stocking filler for children. BUT, if you're feeling particularly lucky, she's giving away three signed copies just in time for Christmas! Yippee!

Goodreads Book Giveaway

Winell Road by Kate  

Foster

Winell Road

by Kate Foster

Giveaway ends December 01, 2015.

See the giveaway details at Goodreads.

Enter Giveaway
GO BUY IT!
If you don't win, then the book is available all over the virtual world.

Amazon UK    Amazon.com    Booktopia    Jet Black Publishing

Thanks for stopping by. MERRY CHRISTMAS!

Monday, April 6, 2015

Read To Learn

The best writers are also enthusiastic readers. It’s an old adage, but a true one. It’s important to remember, however, that while you read for pleasure, you should also read to learn.


There are so MANY things you can learn that will improve your writing each time you read a book. Pay attention to pace, conflict, character development, dialogue. All the little nuances that bring a story to life. Even if you’re not enjoying a book - that can be just as helpful. What is the author doing that’s turned you off? How would you improve the narrative?

As you read, ask yourself questions: how different would this book be if it was in a different point-of-view? What if the point-of-view character was different? What do you love about the book? Write down phrases and descriptions that sing to you. What is it about them that makes you sit up and pay attention?

If possible, keep a reading log and jot down notes about the books you read. What worked, what didn’t? Make a shelf of your favorite books and when you’re stuck in your own writing, take one of those books down and see how that author approached the same problem. Struggling with your opening? Study the openings of several books you love and see if it sparks any ideas.

You don’t have to analyze every book you read, but if something occurs to you mid-story, jot it down. I often read a book two or three times. The first time is for pure pleasure, falling into the words and reveling in them. The second time is with an eye to structure, pace, and all the little tools we use as writers. I want to know how authors I admire bring a story to life so that eventually I can make my own writing just as strong.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Post Book Depression - A Survival Guide

Post Book Depression, PBD, is real and troubling syndrome that affects tens of thousands of people each day. Are you suffering from this debilitating condition? Read on to discover the stages of PBD and how to speed up recovery.


The problem with an excellent book is that it inevitably invokes the law of diminishing returns. When you’ve read a great book, one that drags you into its world, wraps you tight in its confines and leaves you utterly breathless and enthralled, your next book, no matter how intriguing, will fall flat. If you do happen to stumble across another fantastic book immediately after finishing the first, the Post Book Depression will be even worse when you finish the second. You have been taken to the the peak of a glorious mountain and now you are going to plummet.

PBD has several stages. Stage 1 begins before you’ve even finished the inciting book. When you are three quarters of the way through you begin to notice that the end is nigh. You are giddy with excitement at finishing the story and finding out how it all ends, but dread begins to tighten your stomach as well. Like the incline leading to the top of a roller coaster, it’s both thrilling and disturbingly scary.

Stage 2 occurs the moment you finish the book. Euphoria, grief, nostalgia, the pressing need to tell ALL your friends about this book immediately get together in your chest and throw a party. Grief, sneaky bastard that he is, will sabotage the party in short order and you can feel his creeping influence already.

Stage 3 begins when the party ends. This is the first moment you truly realize the book is over. You’ve read, you’ve conquered, you’ve been forever changed and now all of that is gone. You are aimless and dissatisfied, the magic of the book still lingering, but it’s like the smell of cake wafting after you when you’ve left the bakery — enticing and delicious but you know you’re not getting cake any time soon. Stage 3 is marked by the listless perusing of to-read lists, eliciting book recommendations from friends, hunting through bookshelves for a new read and generally trying to find something, anything that will satisfy.

Stage 4 is hiding inside the pages of the first book you pick up following PBD. It can take a perfectly nice book and turn it into unsatisfying drivel. The book may be well written, tightly plotted and, in ordinary circumstances, one you’d really enjoy. But in the throws of PBD all enjoyment is lost. This book just can’t measure up. It doesn’t have the amazing characters, the gorgeous scenes the fantastic plotting that made your last book so unforgettable. This book is just a book and so it becomes like eating plain toast after large slice of the best chocolate cake, bland and instantly forgotten.
Stage 5, recovery, is variable. It may take one book or it may take a half dozen, but eventually, eased by the lull of new words, you get back to your normal equilibrium and can once again enjoy random books.

If you’ve ever suffered from PBD you know how distressing it can be. There are a few tricks you can use to get to stage 5 more quickly, however.

First, when you realize you’re reading a truly excellent book, begin planning ahead. As soon as you finish the book write a review, even if it’s just for yourself to look back on later, detailing all the reasons you truly loved this book. This allows you to enjoy the euphoria a little longer and it helps get stage 2 under way with a bang.

Second, seek out friends who have also read the book and talk about it with them. You can share your enthusiasm for the book and get support from other PBD sufferers at the same time. You might even get some different perspectives on the book and get to enjoy it in an entirely different way. A good book discussion can do wonders to help find closure.

Third, ease back into reading with an old favorite. Rather than trying to find a new book that will leave you as breathlessly happy as the last, find a familiar book and curl up for a good read. It’s best if this book is in a completely different genre so you’re not tempted to compare. A favorite book is like wrapping yourself in a warm blanket. It’s expected and comforting and it will help build a buffer between new books you read and the fantastic book you just finished.

Finally, go forth and discover. Find new books and dive back into reading. Try something new, perhaps a genre you’ve been curious about and never tried before. And most importantly, share with as many people as possible how much you loved that first incredible book. Because while PBD may suck, think how amazing it felt when you began the story.  Sharing that with someone else is a wonderful gift for both of you. We are all ambassadors for the books we love.

Thursday, January 1, 2015

#PB365

Our family reads a lot of picture books. We're a little obsessed and it's not just my four-year-old driving our reading habits. My ten-year-old daughter loves a good story as well and I'm always a sucker for gorgeous art and a funny or heartfelt read.

In the past I've read separate bedtime stories to my kids, one for each of them. Over the Christmas holiday, however, we began reading a single book together each night, snuggled together on the couch. I loved that together-time and it sparked an idea.

Each night in 2015, my kids and I will read a different picture book together. Three-hundred and sixty-five picture books by the end of the year. And because social media is a thing and I'll take any excuse to chat up books with the general public I'm going to tweet the title and a cover picture of each book we read.

If you'd like to follow along with us check out the hashtag #PB365. We'd also love if you want to join in with your own families and take the challenge. Tweet along with us and share which picture books you're reading and which ones you love the best. Maybe we can all discover some new favorites!

Saturday, December 27, 2014

The Format Wars

My husband said something that both crushed and enraged me. I had just mentioned how proud I am to have met my 2014 goal of reading 100 books.

He made a face and said, "Well, but you didn't read them did you? You listened to them. How many did you actually read?"

Photo by Jeff Daly

"I didn't keep track," I snapped back. "It's all the same. They were all stories, whether I listened to them or physically held a book and read it."

"Audiobooks are lazy. It's not really reading," he said.

I walked away before I said something I'd regret. Hours later I'm still hurt and fuming, however. His attitude is a common one. How many times have you read about general lit authors turning their noses up at genre authors? Or romance authors not being taken seriously as writers? How times as YA writers and readers do we hear that YA isn't a real category or not as important or lauded or prestigious? If you read comics, you're not really reading. If you listen to audiobooks it's because you're too lazy to read.

If certain people are to be believed, you're not a serious reader or writer unless you read or write a certain type of book.

Bullshit.

A book is a book. No matter what format it's delivered in. Audio, comic, written on post it notes scattered on the street, scrawled on a bathroom mirror in lipstick. They are all, when you boil them down to their most basic elements, words and ideas expressed by one person and conveyed to another. How those thoughts and ideas reach us shouldn't matter!

Are the books I read my kids at night worth less because I am reading them aloud? Are the stories our ancestors passed from one to another via oral tradition lazy and meaningless because they weren't written on paper? Of course not! So why is listening to audiobooks shameful or not real reading? Why is a comic book or illustrated novel taken less seriously than a 400-page general lit book? They might be expressing the same idea - just in different ways.

A story is a story and I really wish people would stop acting like one version/genre/format/style is better than another. In the end, mostly, it's personal preference and thank goodness there are so many options today for how we can enjoy a story!

I adore books. I can't imagine my life without them. I was an only child with a single mom who worked all the time. Books were my first friends. They are my constant.

Before my daughter was born I read an average of 250 books a year. That is not an exaggeration. Actual, physical books that I owned, held, turned the pages of and stayed up late into the night lost among the words. After my daughter, however, things changed dramatically. I had a small infant, a full time job and, far too soon, I'd discover that my daughter had a horrible genetic disease that requires a lot of care and medication. My free time disappeared overnight. I went from reading 250 books a year to less than 25. I had a lot of reasons to mourn that year. Losing my books on top of everything else crushed me. I was depressed and lost.

For years, things stayed that way. I was losing myself. I felt like I was nothing but a care-giver and medicine deliverer. I love my daughter. I would do anything for her. But taking care of her medical needs can be exhausting and it takes a lot of time.

In 2007, I discovered the audiobook section at my local library and tried my first audiobook. Suddenly, while I was still spending hours prepping medication, sterilizing medical equipment, doing laundry, dishes and all the million chores that parents deal with each day, I was listening to a story at the same time. It was like, in some small way, I was reclaiming that time as my own. I was reclaiming myself. I couldn't read the stories I wanted to anymore, not without neglecting my family or my job, but I could listen to them.

I don't care how I get the stories into my brain, whether through a physical book, an e-book or an audiobook. In my heart, a story is a story. I cried the day I figured out I could listen to stories. Since that time I've had another child with his own medical issues and taken up writing and critiquing as well. My reading time is scarcer than ever.

I am thrilled to have logged over 100 books this year. So what if I listened to the majority of them. I love books. They repaint my world and let me imagine a million possibilities. They wrap around me like a warm blanket on bad days. Make me smile, laugh or cry.

I am a book addict. Unabashed, enthusiastic and unrepentant. When I lost that, part of me died. That part is alive and well now.

Saturday, August 30, 2014







It's both a blessing and a curse that the world is filled with so many books. Walk into any bookstore and you'll find yourself overwhelmed with the vast selection. The popular books, much like the popular kids in high school, are the ones that get noticed, go on lots of book dates and get talked about. There are other, completely fantastic books that go relatively unnoticed. As time goes on, as years pass, those other books are too often forgotten.

Every few weeks I'll feature a lost book here on my blog. The sort of book I keep extras of to push onto unsuspecting friends and neighbors. The sort of book that didn't get the fanfare it deserved, may not be as well known, and is quite often lost on overcrowded bookshelves.

First up is May Bird And The Ever After by Jodi Lynn Anderson.

When 10-year-old May Bird stumbles through a portal hidden in the swamp, she finds herself in the Ever After, a strange world filled with ghosts. May is quickly followed through the portal by her one friend - her sour-faced, hairless cat, Somber Kitty. In this strange new world, the living are forbidden and cats are public enemy number one. May needs to get home fast, before the bogey man catches her and Evil Bo Cleevil, the despotic tyrant who runs the Ever After,  uses his power to turn her to nothing.

This is one of my favorite series in the history of ever. It's a middle grade reader with fantastic world building, lots of humor, adventure and unforgettable characters. May is a strong, gutsy little girl who stands up for what she believes. Somber Kitty is the original Grumpy Cat, written long before GC was a tiny kitten. In fact, I think GC may owe Somber Kitty some royalties.

Anderson manages to make Somber Kitty a central character to the story, imbuing him with personality and life, and never once resorting to the talking animal trope which is common in Middle Grade fiction. This is an animal companion done right.

Joining May & Somber Kitty on their adventure is a bumbling house ghost named Pumpkin. He's a well-meaning pudding head who sucks his fingers when he's nervous and thinks of May as his best friend, even if she's only just realized he exists.

There is so much to cheer on in this book. May rescues herself, no boys needed. The world building is phenomenal. There are so many lush little details, gorgeous descriptions, blocks of text that make me want to sink into this book and never come out. I laughed at the idea of Soul Cakes, the primary food used in the Ever After, and the Egyptian ghosts who hunt Somber Kitty, determined to capture this living creature and anoint him as their god, and then entomb him in a pyramid as Egyptians will do.

Every little thing in the Ever After has it's own unique, funny name and they're all so perfect. The locations. The characters. I become incoherent trying to describe it all. Let us simply say that if you love a good adventure and you can still find your inner-child, I think you'll love this book.

The publisher has recently released the first book in the series again with a new cover so you should be able to find this book at your local bookstore or library. Pick it up and give it a try. You just may fall in love with characters as much as I have. Fair warning, this is a trilogy and you will want to read the other two books, both of which are just as wonderful.

Find it on GoodReads >>

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Reading As A Writer

I've been addicted to books as long as I've been able to read them. How I read books, however, has changed over the years. Most significantly, when I began writing my taste in books and what I appreciate changed dramatically. I suddenly became a far more critical reader. 

On one hand I mourn those days when a book was simply an escape that I appreciated without thought. On the other hand, I appreciate a good book so much more now because I realize how much goes into every page. I adore when an author can silence my inner editor and suck me into a story so deeply that I don't want to come up for air.

As a writer, I want to study my favorite books and deconstruct them to see how their authors created that particular alchemy that I adore. But I never succeed, even on the 15th read through, because I get lost in the story every time. I find myself appreciating a turn of phrase, a particularly well done description or a zingy bit of dialogue with more pleasure these days. And those moments of appreciation are always followed by a tiny sigh of envy. One day I will write something that makes a reader fall in love. One day I'll write a description that makes another author pause and say "damn, I wish I'd thought of that."

I'm an unabashed book addict and while my friends may fan-girl actors and actresses, for me authors are the celebrities I make an idiot of myself over. That makes me happy in an extremely nerdy way. I'd take a lunch date with Maggie Stiefvater over a chat session with this week's movie star any day.

Books are pure magic when they connect with you as a reader. That's something that hasn't changed and I hope never will. My reading these days is both aspirational and inspirational. But I'll always be a fan girl at heart.