Category: children

Cover reveal!

SecretsofaCharmedLife_coverreveal When I get the email from my editor that the art department has come up with a cover for a new book, I always take a deep breath before I open the attachment to look at it for the first time. It’s the only time I can ever be just like the reader who is looking for a new book and who stumbles upon mine. They see the cover with fresh eyes and they know hardly any thing about the book except that maybe I wrote it.  What emotions will that first look evoke?

Sometimes I will see a cover and I will know that it is perfect. Other times it will grow on me. Other times I don’t feel like the essence of the book has been captured and I will have to craft a carefully worded email describing what I like about the cover and then attempt to explain, even though the cover has merit, why it doesn’t seem to work.

When I saw the cover for Secrets of A Charmed Life my eyes were drawn instantly like a magnet to the woman’s half-face, her ruby lips, her porcelain complexion and that gloved hand by her cheek. Is she flicking away an errant hair or raising a palm to her cheek in shock as we often do when something surprises us? What is she thinking? Does she know the secrets of a charmed life or is she desperate for someone to tell her what they are? Her lovely green dress fading into the River Thames in London tells me the setting and her 1940s vibe suggests to me it won’t be an easy setting. Not then.

All that it is to say, I did fall in love with this cover, but it was after I contemplated this woman and the mystery that surrounds her. This book, which will release in Feb 2015 by Penguin, is set for the most part in England during the years of the war. In a nutshell, Emmy is a idealistic teenager of a single mother who aspires to design wedding gowns. She sneaks back to London after she and her little sister have been safely evacuated to the countryside. Emmy has an appointment to keep with someone who wants to see her fledgling designs, and no rumors of an attack by the Germans will stop her. But she and little Julia arrive on the very day the Luftwaffe sends a wave of 800 planes over London’s East End – in broad daylight — bombing it relentlessly. When Emmy finally makes it back to the ruined flat where she left her little sister for a meeting that was only supposed to take an hour, Julia is gonSt-Thomass-bombed-1940e without a trace. And since Mum wasn’t expecting her girls to be at the flat – why should she? Emmy and Julia are in the countryside – Mum stayed elsewhere when the attack began. Julia had been left alone in the flat while hell rained down.

And so begins Emmy’s quest for absolution, for redemption, for restitution. She is a girl searching for the secrets to a charmed life. She had thought the perfect life began with the perfect wedding dress – the emblem of happiness and fulfillment. She was wrong…

So the cover works for me. Very much so. I see Emmy in this woman wearing the green dress, especially when Emmy attempts to reinvent herself after the loss of her sister which she clearly believes is her fault.  This is her journey in the book: Becoming someone who can find a way to live with regret. But what she discovers is something else entirely.

I would love to hear what you think of this cover and the little bit I’ve told you. Thoughts??

Monday musings

So there I am in line at Target, it’s two days after Thanksgiving and the world has become a planet of shoppers. A young mother, who looks exhausted by the way, is standing behind me and her cart is overflowing. The little girl who is hanging onto the mom’s cart, clearly has more energy than her mother. She is doing a little dance as she hangs onto the cart. One leg goes up and come down, followed by the other leg.

“I can’t wait to get home to watch it!” the little girl says. “I can’t wait! I can’t wait!”

I wait to hear what mom will say. I am expecting anything from “First, you have to clean your room like you promised,” to “Stop hanging on the cart like that. You’re going to pull it over on yourself.”

But she says nothing.

“I love that movie!” the girl squeals. “I can’t wait to watch it!” Legs up. Legs down.

Mom says nothing.
“You’re the best mommy I’ve ever had!”

I tip my head to hear the mother’s response.

But Mom says nothing.

She’s either heard it before, or she didn’t hear it all.

And both of these thoughts make me kind of sad. I want to turn to that mother and tell her something that is very much none of my business. I want to tell her, “You will blink, and she’ll be gone. Grown up. And you will long for the days when, in her eyes, no one could hold a candle to you. Believe me, you don’t want to miss it.”

But I don’t tell The Best Mommy any of this. I make my way through the line, aware of the happy dancer behind me, and I leave. I do hope this mom will figure it out on a day when she’s not so tired. And bored with motherhood.

Now onto a brighter thought. My good friend Robin Lee Hatcher has a lovely new story out, just in time for the holidays. In A Cloud Mountain Christmas (Robin’s story is in “Hearts Evergreen,” a collection of two novellas from Steeple Hill), introduces you to Maddie Scott, who is reeling from the news that her ex-husband has remarried and is expecting a child. She heads to Idaho’s Cloud Mountain Lodge to negotiate the sale of a valuable manuscript discovered there. But could the lodge’s proprietor, Tony Anderson, a man she knew years before in college, be just what Maddie needs to have a merry Christmas after all? Want a good love story? Well, here ya go. To read an excerpt from A Cloud Mountain Christmas, visit Robin’s web site:
http://www.robinleehatcher.com/hearts_evergreen.htm. Robin is a lovely person, inside and out, and she knows how to weave a tale that makes you glad God thought up romance to make our time here on Earth magical.

Have a great week – and lavish your love on your children.