Book Reviews: See Jane Write and Will Write for Shoes

Nancy’s Reviews of Two Books on How to Write Chick Lit
 

See Jane Write: A Girl's Guide to Writing Chick Lit by Sarah Mlynowski and Farrin Jacobs
 
Bestselling author Sarah Mlynowski and chick lit editor Farrin Jacobs team up to provide a thorough guide to writing novels for the increasingly popular sub-genre of women’s fiction, chick lit. From developing your novel to selling it, Mlynowski and Jacobs provide practical tips about what to do and what to avoid as you navigate through your overall debut novel experience. In addition, they include advice from other bestselling authors such as Sophie Kinsella, Meg Cabot, Emily Giffin, and Marian Keys. Mlynowsi’s special feature It Happened to Me is included throughout and details her specific experiences while writing her own novels. Jacobs’ special feature Mistakes I’ve Known describes issues that she has seen and dealt with as an editor, providing valuable insight from an editor’s point of view. The book is divided into two parts: The Big Picture and The Details. In The Big Picture, Mlynowski and Jacobs delve into their definition of chick lit, reasons to write, the therapeutic power of writing chick lit, and how to rid yourself of excuses not to write and finally dive into your story. In The Details, they discuss how to create compelling main characters and secondary characters, style, structure, pacing, revising, and querying agents.

See Jane Write is a fantastic resource for aspiring chick lit authors. The fun illustrations and straightforward advice through actual authors’ stories contribute to the fresh, honest outlook from which this book is written. Mlynowski’s and Jacobs’ guide is comprehensive and packed with essential information for anyone trying to break into chick lit. However, some of the tips are obvious and will be familiar to most aspiring authors. If all of the information is brand new to you, you have a lot more work to do than you thought. But you’re in luck because there is another guide to writing chick lit that can help you as well.

Will Write for Shoes: How to Write a Chick Lit Novel
by Cathy Yardley

 
Chick lit and romance author Cathy Yardley shares her own guide for penning a successful chick lit novel in Will Write for Shoes. This easy to read how-to book gives aspiring novelists a point of reference when embarking on their first journey toward publication. Yardley includes an agent listing, a publisher listing, sample submission materials, and online resources. The main content of the book is separated into four parts: It’s a Chick’s World, Where Do I Sign Up?, Baby Needs a New Pair of Shoes, and Frequently Asked Questions. The first part defines chick lit and gives a history of the genre, as well as the basics of traditional chick lit and new, emerging trends. The second part delves into how to write a chick lit novel by focusing on premise, characters, plot, outlining, structure, point-of-view, setting, voice, and revisions. The third part provides readers with tips on selling a novel, such as how to write a query letter and a synopsis, how to find an agent, how to approach publishers, how to network online, and how to form a critique group. The final part answers questions that Yardley is asked on a regular basis by aspiring authors.

Will Write for Shoes is another must have resource for aspiring chick lit writers. Yardley’s friendly tone is refreshing and candid. She writes with wit and ease, providing valuable advice. Like See Jane Write, some of the pointers will be familiar to writers. However, this is still an essential guide for any aspiring chick lit author to have on hand. Romance authors may also find this book helpful and necessary. The samples and agent listing are particularly important and can serve as a starting point when trying to sell your novel.

See Jane Write
and Will Write for Shoes are key writing guides for anyone who wants to write chick lit. Every aspiring author will learn at least a few new pieces of information. That information can make all the difference when establishing a novel writing career.

To learn more about Sarah Mlynowski, visit http://www.sarahm.com
To learn more about Cathy Yardley, visit http://www.cathyyardley.com
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Book Review: Names My Sisters Call Me

Nancy’s Review of Names My Sisters Call Me by Megan Crane
 
Names My Sisters Call Me is a novel about the dysfunctional relationships between the Cassel sisters. It tells the story of Courtney’s journey as she tries to bring her sisters, Raine and Norah, together after a falling out six years ago. Norah cannot forgive Raine for ruining Norah’s wedding and then running away to California. Courtney still cannot make sense of Raine’s actions either but knows she wants Raine at her own wedding to her fiancé, Lucas. She decides to accompany Lucas on a trip to San Francisco to find Raine and figure out why she never called or kept in touch at all over the years.
 

Courtney is a driven person who is a professional cellist with the Philadelphia Second Symphony Orchestra. She loves Lucas and loves Norah, despite Norah’s controlling behavior and harsh attitude. Even though Courtney’s life is seemingly going well, she has not been able to fill the void that Raine left when she disappeared. Also, she has not been able to forget about her first love, Matt, who left her to follow Raine to California. Courtney must confront the past to mend the present and bring her family back together. Has everything gone too far though? Will these sisters be able to reconnect despite their many differences?

The characters in Names My Sisters Call Me are humorous, engaging individuals. Crane captured the stark personality differences between the Cassel sisters but also incorporated some of their similarities. She did so with wit and charm, creating a dynamic between the sisters that is believable. It is likely that all readers have had an ex-boyfriend like Matt. He is the one who got away, should have gotten away, and needs to stay away for Courtney’s sake. Her relationship with him is confusing and complicated. As she develops her own identity, Courtney’s transformation throughout the book is refreshing and inspiring. Names My Sisters Call Me is worth reading for anyone who has sisters, has family issues, relationship issues, or just wants to dive into a well-written story about different kinds of love.

Crane is also the author of Frenemies, Everyone Else’s Girl, English as a Second Language, and forthcoming I Love the 80s. She contributed to anthologies It’s a Wonderful Lie: 26 Truths About Life in Your Twenties and Everything I Needed to Know About Being a Girl I Learned from Judy Blume. She also writes romance novels under the pen name Caitlin Crews. For more information, please visit
http://megancrane.com and http://www.caitlincrews.com.
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Book Review: Nancy's Theory of Style

Nancy’s Review of Nancy’s Theory of Style by Grace Coopersmith (Marta Acosta)

Nancy Carrington-Chambers is a socialite who moves to her own apartment in San Francisco after separating from her husband, Todd. She dives into her event planning business, Froth, and hires a British assistant named Derek Cathcart. Nancy is attracted to him but assumes that he is gay. She tries to sort out her feelings for Derek and the details of her impending divorce but must confront an even more important situation when her cousin, Birdie, leaves her daughter, Eugenia, with Nancy indefinitely. Nancy, Derek, and Eugenia soon become an unconventional family. Will Nancy be able to leave her new family behind for her old socialite lifestyle? Is Derek really who he says he is? Nancy’s usual controlling attitude must take a back seat when she realizes that there are so many things in her life that she cannot control.

Nancy's Theory of Style is a good effort from Grace Coopersmith, who also writes the Casa Dracula series under her real name, Marta Acosta. However, the characters in this book were difficult to relate to. Nancy is very snobby throughout the book. Coopersmith likely wrote Nancy’s character this way on purpose since she is supposed to be a stuck up socialite. However, her attitude does not transform enough during the course of the book. Without giving too much away, it should also be noted that Derek’s dialogue and tone can be very frustrating to read. Coopersmith does have a purpose for writing Derek’s dialogue this way but it distracts from the story. The relationship between Derek and Nancy is lacking as well. More of a connection between them and further development of their friendship would have been ideal. Coopersmith does have a knack for detail, revealing engaging information about design, architecture, and fashion.

Acosta says she uses a pen name to write romantic comedy "because Grace Coopersmith is always elegant and tasteful, and she never leaves her clothes in a pile on a chair or sings to her dogs. Despite Grace's annoying superiority, she is hilarious and always shows up with a good bottle of wine." To read an interview with Coopersmith, you can go here. You can also learn more about her at http://www.martaacosta.com, read her blog at http://vampirewire.blogspot.com, or follow her on Twitter. The books in the Casa Dracula series include Happy Hour at Casa Dracula, Midnight Brunch at Casa Dracula, The Bride of Casa Dracula, and Haunted Honeymoon.
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Book Review: The Wildwater Walking Club

The Wildwater Walking Club by Claire Cook steps into the life of Noreen Kelly right after she has made the life altering decision to take a buy-out from her company. She soon finds that her job is not the only thing she must learn to live without when her boyfriend stops answering and returning her phone calls. Without any direction or notion of what she should do with her life, Noreen puts on a pair of new walking shoes and takes the first step of the rest of her life. She meets two of her neighbors, Tess and Rosie, who feel equally lost in some aspect of their lives and join her in her daily walks down their street, Wildwater Way. 

The threesome’s daily walks turn into group therapy sessions, debates about local issues and most importantly, a way to rack up steps on their pedometers. Cook has a knack for creating relatable characters and authentic friendships. The dialogue between the three friends is very believable and often includes the quarrels and tension that real friends experience.

Though the Wildwater Way women are in their forties, the message of taking the time to find yourself is one to which every generation can relate. The book will likely inspire the reader in some way or another, whether it be deciding to dust off your walking shoes and hit the pavement, finding the courage to leave a job that no longer makes you happy or simply recognizing that you have been living for others and ignoring your passions and desired pursuits.

Cook is the author of seven fiction novels, including Seven Year Switch, Summer Blowout and Must Love Dogs, which was made into a romantic comedy film in 2005. The Wildwater Walking Club has a slightly autobiographical tone, as Cook once wrote advertising copy for a shoe company, as Noreen did. Cook’s first novel was published when she was forty-five and she encourages women and men in their midlife who may have “buried their dreams” to “dust them off and go for it.” To learn more about her, visit www.clairecook.com
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Book Review: The Opposite of Love

Nancy's Review of The Opposite of Love by Julie Buxbaum
 
Emily Haxby is lost. She decides to end her two-year relationship with her boyfriend Andrew when she thinks he is going to propose. She hates her mind numbing job as an attorney. She has a rocky relationship with her father. And she still harbors grief and guilt over the loss of her mother when she was fourteen. Emily dives into her work to try to ignore her sadness, but it only gets worse. To top it all off, her "favorite person in the world" Grandpa Jack is diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. Emily can't handle much more. She is still in love with Andrew but he wants to move on. After she finally quits her job, she succumbs to depression and does not leave her couch for days. Her best friend Jessica comes to her rescue and Emily starts seeing a therapist. The Opposite of Love is the story of one woman's journey to overcome loss, confront her inner demons, and learn how to love so that she can truly begin to live.  
 
Buxbaum's debut shows tremendous potential for a successful writing career. She has the ability to draw readers in with compelling characters and raw emotion. Many people will be able to relate to Emily's insecurities. The portrayal of the corporate world is accurate and can apply to many industries. The favoritism and scandal that goes on behind closed doors can happen at any company, making Emily's experiences and decisions even more understandable. Buxbaum writes with such detail, wit, and intensity. The scene in which Emily finds out that Grandpa Jack has wandered away from the retirement home is written with such a sense of urgency that the reader can feel Emily's anxiety as she desperately searches for him. Buxbaum is a writing talent not to be ignored.  
 
The Opposite of Love is a novel representing the darker, deeper side of chick lit. Readers will not enjoy this book if they are only looking for the fun, fashion-centric chick lit. Readers will enjoy this book if they are looking for an in depth portrayal of a woman's transformation from completely lost and grief stricken to better understanding herself and her relationships.
 
Buxbaum is also the author of After You. To learn more about her and her books, you can visit http://www.juliebuxbaum.com. You can also follow her on Twitter and Facebook.
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