Taking a one-off break from the movie theme to announce that the paperback of Randy Susan-Meyer's page turner, The Murderer's Daughters, came out February 1st and was immediately chosen by Target as a Club Pick.
For those late to the party, The Murderer's Daughters concerns two young sisters who witness the murder of their mother at the hands of their father and how this trauma dogs them through their adult lives. If you haven't picked up her book yet, check out an excerpt, and then get thee to your local indie bookstore. The paperback includes a brief Q & A with Randy, and questions to ponder for book groups.
Randy is a full-time member (along with myself and ten other writers) of the group writer blog, Beyond the Margins. If you want to find out more about Randy and her experiences writing and publishing the book, check out an interview I did with her before her book was published in hardcover, then this follow-up after it was published. (Hey, it's not every day your writer friend gets published.) Can't wait for her next novel to hit the shelves!
Check out her book trailer:
Showing posts with label The Murderer's Daughters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Murderer's Daughters. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
New Interview with Randy Susan Meyers
Last March I interviewed author Randy Susan Meyers. I had a great response to what turned out to be Randy's first interview. Now that her novel, The Murderer's Daughters, has been out for a few months, I thought it would be fun to conduct a follow-up interview and find out how things are going for Randy since the book came out. And Randy was gracious enough to agree.
Unreliable Narrator: This past January your first novel, The Murderer’s Daughters, was published in hardcover by St. Martin’s Press to excellent reviews. Unreliable Narrator interviewed you in March of ‘09, after the manuscript sold but before publication. At that time you said, “I am convinced, that for me, the less drama in my life, the more drama in my fiction.” Has your drama quotient changed, for better or worse, since the book came out?
Randy Susan Meyers: My life has certainly been busier and I guess a bit more dramatic, but all the drama, thank goodness, has been on the professional side, like waiting for reviews and the like. It’s been going wonderfully. This is drama I welcome and I am feeling truly blessed.
UN: For me, it was a great experience to critique parts of your manuscript in workshops at Grub Street, and then read the published version. I noticed at least one difference in the finished book, namely the scene where the father murders the mother. It seemed toned down, less violent and bloody, than in earlier iterations. Was this your choice or your editors’? Or, am I imagining things?
RSM: Hmm. That must have been my choice, because the few things my editor requested that I change stand out so large in my mind that I remember each one. It’s a funny thing, the editorial relationship. First, the changes requested get your back way up. What! Change that brilliant decision that I probably made on one hour of sleep?
Then, you let the editor’s ideas settle and slowly you see the wisdom and merit. My editor was great; her editing was light and smart. Many things she suggested I accepted, others I didn’t. We had a solid working relationship.
I imagine if I toned that first scene down, it was because I wanted the book to be about Lulu and Merry’s life, not about the murder or their father. And I think I also realized that when going through a traumatic experience as Lulu and Merry did, only very key moments would stand out and much of the painful scenes would be buried.
UN: Book tours, at least subsidized by publishers, are becoming rarer, especially for first-time novelists. Did St. Martin’s send you out, or did you book readings, etc., on your own?
RSM: I was not sent on a book tour, per se. St. Martin’s certainly did arrange for some speaking and readings—though they were more attuned to getting the books out to online sites and blogs (which was smart) than to my reading in bookstores. Debut authors do not equal big crowds was their belief, and I imagine they are correct. It certainly is a cost-benefit-analysis world out there. Other things they concentrated on, which were so important, were print reviews and the all-important Amazon Vines early reviewers program.
I did an enormous amount on my own. A wise agent, when speaking last year at The Muse and The Marketplace, said something that truly imprinted on me: No one will ever care as much about your book as you do. Not your agent, not your editor, not your publicist. No one. That’s true. I dove into promoting my book because I believe in it and I very much want people to read it.
UN: You’re great at blogging, keeping your author website fresh, tweeting, and facebook. I know you started doing these things, and more I’m probably not aware of, well before the book came out. How important have these social media tools been to the marketing of your book?
RSM: Enormously important (I believe) but still, one shouldn’t do things that don’t feel natural or pleasing. I found that I loved writing posts—my essays, for my blog. It’s a different form than fiction. It’s short and driven by my voice and opinions, not the ones I am giving to my characters. It’s a place where I can talk about what I love: books, magazines, writing and everything associated.
On Facebook and Twitter, I’ve made tons of new friends (even if my husband doesn’t believe they’re real). One builds a community of writers and readers who help each other. It’s lovely.
Face it, the world is online. Writers can’t really hide from it and why would they want to? It’s our medium—words.
UN: How about Amazon pre-orders and reader reviews? Did exposure on Amazon, and other retail sites like Barnes & Noble, help book sales?
RSM: I absolutely think so. St. Martin’s put The Murderer's Daughters in Amazon’s early reader program, which gives books to Amazon top reviewers before the book comes out. There is no guarantee here, and they are probably the toughest critics you can find, but I was blessed and most of them truly liked the book. These are the only reviews allowed up before the book comes out. It gives a book an early buzz on its reception. I consider Amazon Vines the canary in the mine.
Also, Amazon chose to highlight The Murderer's Daughters both as ‘Our Favorite Books to Read Right Now’ and as a ‘Find New Voices in Fiction’ Amazon Book Club recommendation. This truly helped the book.
UN: Sounds like Amazon was really supportive. When the book came out, it seemed to have a generous presence in big box and independent bookstores, at least in the Boston area. Are you satisfied with the push and print run St. Martin’s gave the book?
RSM: St. Martin’s truly showed their belief in The Murderer's Daughters through their large print run and the books solid presence nationwide, both in independents and big box stores.
UN: After the book was sold in the U.S., your agent, Stephanie Abou, started selling the foreign rights. When I interviewed you last, the book had been sold to five countries. Since then, have more rights sold? How has the reception been overseas? Any plans to travel to Europe to promote the book?
RSM: At this time, my wonderful agent has sold foreign rights to twelve countries. The first release was in Holland (where it was on the nationwide bestseller list for three weeks!) Then it came out in Australia and Germany, where it’s doing quite well. Next will be France, Great Britain, Scotland, Ireland, Portugal, Poland, Israel, and Taiwan.
UN: Wow, that truly impressive. When will The Murderer’s Daughters come out in paperback? And what are the big differences between the hardcover and paperback publication?
RSM: The paperback version should be out around January 2011. I am not certain about all the differences, but I was surprised to learn that the paperback is brought out by an entirely different arm of St. Martin’s Press (though I get to keep my terrific editor). The cover may or may not change. (I hope it stays the same, as I do love my cover.) When the paperback comes out, there is a larger push for book clubs (such as including a questionnaire).
UN: I know a little bit about your next book. Can you touch on the status of that? Bottom line: when do we get our next fix of RSM?
RSM: Here I am in Provincetown just finishing the last touches! It’s a story of the collateral damage of infidelity, revolving around a child who was the product of an affair. I’m hoping to get this last revision to my agent very soon!
UN: I look forward to seeing your next book hit the stores. Randy, thanks again for taking time out to chat with Unreliable Narrator. And congratulations on the success of The Murderer's Daughters.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
This Week's Boston Literary Scene
Lots going on this week in the world of Boston's literati. Let's get right down to it, shall we?
Try To Remember
I'll start off with a big congratulatory shout out to fellow Grub Street writer Iris Gomez whose first novel Try To Remember is hot off the Grand Central Publishing presses.
"It's the story of spirited Gabriela de la Paz, a Colombian teenager struggling to forge her own identity in the changing cultural landscape of 1970s Miami, while keeping her increasingly volatile, mentally ill father out of legal trouble - in order to protect his green card status and save her family from exile in disgrace."
It's already garnering great reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist. Can't wait to crack it. Catch Iris on May 10th when she holds a discussion and book signing at the UMass Boston bookstore, May 12 at the Downtown Crossing Borders, and May 13 at Brookline Booksmith.
The Muse and the Marketplace
The Muse and the Marketplace
Hurry, time's running out! For what? For registering for Grub Street's 9th annual The Muse and the Marketplace writer's conference, which will be held this upcoming Saturday and Sunday, May 1st and 2nd. Registration ends this Tuesday, April 27th, at noon.
This year you can catch keynote speaker Chuck Palahniuk, along with guest authors Steve Almond, Donovan Campbell, Michael Downing, Hallie Ephron, Ethan Gilsdorf, Elizabeth Graver, Lauren Grodstein, Ann Hood, Victor Lavalle, Jennifer 8 Lee, Benjamin Percy, Michelle Seaton, Jessica Shattuck, Anita Shreve, Janna Malamud Smith, and Elizabeth Strout among many others.
Where else can you mingle with literary agents and editors from agencies and publishers large and small? No where else. Sign up to join the 500+ writers who will be in attendance. Register online, or give Grub Street a call at 617.695.0075.
This year you can catch keynote speaker Chuck Palahniuk, along with guest authors Steve Almond, Donovan Campbell, Michael Downing, Hallie Ephron, Ethan Gilsdorf, Elizabeth Graver, Lauren Grodstein, Ann Hood, Victor Lavalle, Jennifer 8 Lee, Benjamin Percy, Michelle Seaton, Jessica Shattuck, Anita Shreve, Janna Malamud Smith, and Elizabeth Strout among many others.
Where else can you mingle with literary agents and editors from agencies and publishers large and small? No where else. Sign up to join the 500+ writers who will be in attendance. Register online, or give Grub Street a call at 617.695.0075.
Randy Susan Meyers
Be sure to catch Randy Susan Meyers this Thursday, April 29, at 7 PM over at Newtonville Books reading a selection from her novel The Murderer's Daughters. She'll be appearing along with Kelly O'Connor McNees, author of The Lost Summer Of Louisa May Alcott.
Tinkers
Belated congratulations to local rocker (drummer for Cold Water Flat) turned novelist, Paul Harding, who made more than good by winning this year's Pulitzer Prize for fiction for Tinkers, which was published last year by independent Bellevue Literary Press with a an initial run of 3,500 copies. This week Perseus Books Group (parent company to the book's distributor, Consortium) is readying another 100,000 books for shipment.
Read Geoff Edgers' article in The Boston Globe about how Tinkers rose from collecting dust in the author's desk drawer to prize winning novel. It's a great underdog story. What writer doesn't like to hear that a tiny novel, with a small first printing and a 1,000 dollar advance, can climb into the heady clouds of year-end top ten lists and then ascend even farther to be the first novel released by a small press in thirty years to win the Pulitzer? Not this writer.
Here's Magnetic North Pole, the Cold Water Flat song Boston's WFNX played in the mid-'90s:
Sunday, January 24, 2010
An Evening with Randy Susan Meyers

An excellent time was had by all who gathered this past Thursday at Bella Luna restaurant in Jamaica Plain to see Randy Susan Meyers read from and sign her brand-spanking new hardcover The Murderer’s Daughters.

The back room of Bella Luna (the Milky Way) was packed with well wishers, friends, family, and fellow writers. Jenna Blum was on hand to introduce Randy to the crowd. Randy read a riveting section of her book, which is about two girls, Lulu and Merry, who witness the murder of their mother at the hands of their father.


A collection of some of the foreign covers for The Murderer's Daughters:

Proud book owner:

Many writers were spotted throughout the night, including Chris Abouzeid, Christiane Alsop, Nichole Bernier, Cecile Corona, Kathy Crowley, Ginny DeLuca, Stephanie Ebbert, Chuck Garabedian, Andrew Goldstein, Iris Gomez, Leslie Greffenius, Eric Grunwald, Javed Jahangir, EB Moore, Henriette Lazaridis Power, and Becky Tuch.
Here I am, chatting up a few lovely ladies of lit, including Stephanie Ebbert, Agent StƩphanie Abou, Jenna Blum, and Henriette Lazaridis Power:

It was a successful evening, and a great kick-off for Randy and The Murderer's Daughters.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Happenings
Through an unusual but not unwelcome series of events, there's plenty to talk about today. So let's get down to it, Boppers!
New Blog!
I've been two-timing on the Unreliable Narrator with my new bloggy mistress, Beyond the Margins. Beyond the Margins is a group blog featuring the diverse experiences of twelve Boston-area writers from different backgrounds and disciplines. We'll be offering interviews, publishing tips, book reviews, and other articles on writing.
If you're a writer or a reader or just a curious web surfer, you'll find many topics of interest. We'll be posting each weekday and I'll be adding my perspective once every couple of weeks (don't worry, the Unreliable Narrator will continue as always).
Currently we have three posts up:
- Nichole Bernier interviews Newbery Awards judge Diane Bailey Foote who gives us the inside scoop on what makes for an award winning children's story.
- Kathy Crowley talks about her decision to write a novel from the perspective of multiple characters and the five lessons she's learned from the process.
- Randy Susan Meyers, always entertaining and enlightening, delivers the ten commandments for book launch day. Which is a perfect segue for...
The Murderer's Daughters, by Randy Susan Meyers

Today Randy’s book came out, following a wave of advance praise. Congratulations Randy! I was lucky enough to read some of her manuscript in a Grub Street class (and give her an exhaustive critique, from which I'm sure she cribbed many brilliant passages--anything I can do to help) and look forward to receiving my pre-ordered copy in the mail. Thursday I'll be covering The Murderer's Daughters book launch party. So stay tuned for full coverage of the event. I'm bringing my camera! Read my interview with Randy here.
First Guest Post Ever
I've been working on a guest blog post for fellow Beyond the Margins writer Henriette Lazaridis Power, and her blog The View Finder. The post is about revenge violence in the movies of Quentin Tarantino and Sam Peckinpah. Check out part 1. Part two will be posted Thursday. While you're there, be sure to browse through Henriette's other posts. She's a wonderful fiction writer and The View Finder is full of well-informed, thoughtful pieces on contemporary cinema, books, and language.
New Blog!
I've been two-timing on the Unreliable Narrator with my new bloggy mistress, Beyond the Margins. Beyond the Margins is a group blog featuring the diverse experiences of twelve Boston-area writers from different backgrounds and disciplines. We'll be offering interviews, publishing tips, book reviews, and other articles on writing.
If you're a writer or a reader or just a curious web surfer, you'll find many topics of interest. We'll be posting each weekday and I'll be adding my perspective once every couple of weeks (don't worry, the Unreliable Narrator will continue as always).
Currently we have three posts up:
- Nichole Bernier interviews Newbery Awards judge Diane Bailey Foote who gives us the inside scoop on what makes for an award winning children's story.
- Kathy Crowley talks about her decision to write a novel from the perspective of multiple characters and the five lessons she's learned from the process.
- Randy Susan Meyers, always entertaining and enlightening, delivers the ten commandments for book launch day. Which is a perfect segue for...
The Murderer's Daughters, by Randy Susan Meyers
Today Randy’s book came out, following a wave of advance praise. Congratulations Randy! I was lucky enough to read some of her manuscript in a Grub Street class (and give her an exhaustive critique, from which I'm sure she cribbed many brilliant passages--anything I can do to help) and look forward to receiving my pre-ordered copy in the mail. Thursday I'll be covering The Murderer's Daughters book launch party. So stay tuned for full coverage of the event. I'm bringing my camera! Read my interview with Randy here.
First Guest Post Ever
I've been working on a guest blog post for fellow Beyond the Margins writer Henriette Lazaridis Power, and her blog The View Finder. The post is about revenge violence in the movies of Quentin Tarantino and Sam Peckinpah. Check out part 1. Part two will be posted Thursday. While you're there, be sure to browse through Henriette's other posts. She's a wonderful fiction writer and The View Finder is full of well-informed, thoughtful pieces on contemporary cinema, books, and language.
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
Writing Group Plugs
Two weeks ago the new book of poetry, New Eden, A Legacy, by E.B. Moore (which I had pre-ordered earlier this year), arrived in the mail. E.B. Moore is in my writing group, so it was a delight to receive a fellow writer’s work delivered to my condo’s doorstep (okay, mail room—no actual steps in front of my door).

Poet and novelist Ann Killough says, “New Eden is a wonder. The story of Moore’s great-grandmother’s disastrous 19th-century exodus West from her Old Order Amish community in Pennsylvania is detailed in a sequence of short poems and letters.” I’m familiar with Ms. Moore’s work as a novelist, as she has been working on a beautifully crafted, lyrical narrative that covers some of the same themes, locales, and time period as New Eden. I can’t wait to immerse myself back into her stories. She also designed the lovely cover image.
New Eden is published by Finishing Line Press, out of Kentucky. Get your copy while supplies last.
Upcoming Books
E.B. Moore is not the only writer in my group to come out with a book. Actually, two others are set to release novels in the coming year.
While its U.S. publication date is six months away, I figured it’s not too soon to tout Randy Susan-Meyers' The Murderer’s Daughters, to be published by St. Martin’s Press in January 2010.

The Murderer’s Daughters concerns two young girls who witness the murder of their mother at the hands of their father, and the effects of this act throughout their adult lives. Great hook. The book’s garnering a lot of interest in the publisher world. It's positioned to be a major hardcover next year and is also being published in France, Germany, Holland, Israel, and the UK. Can you say international book tour? Read my interview with Randy from this past March.
Pre-order it now!
Here’s the Dutch cover:

Then there's Iris Gomez’s novel, Try To Remember, to be published in May 2010 by Grand Central Publishing (Hachette Book Group). I’m relatively new to Iris’ work, but have been blown away by everything I've read. Her writing is lyrical, evocative, and honest.
Try To Remember is about a Colombian teenager living in the strangely evolving cosmopolis of 1970s Miami. She desperately tries to love her increasingly mentally ill father as he drives her family into poverty, and towards possible deportation. Another great hook. Keep an eye on amazon--the book should be available for pre-order later this year.
Here’s her cover:

Thanks to Iris for supplying me with her book's description, and to both Randy and Iris for supplying their cover images.

Poet and novelist Ann Killough says, “New Eden is a wonder. The story of Moore’s great-grandmother’s disastrous 19th-century exodus West from her Old Order Amish community in Pennsylvania is detailed in a sequence of short poems and letters.” I’m familiar with Ms. Moore’s work as a novelist, as she has been working on a beautifully crafted, lyrical narrative that covers some of the same themes, locales, and time period as New Eden. I can’t wait to immerse myself back into her stories. She also designed the lovely cover image.
New Eden is published by Finishing Line Press, out of Kentucky. Get your copy while supplies last.
Upcoming Books
E.B. Moore is not the only writer in my group to come out with a book. Actually, two others are set to release novels in the coming year.
While its U.S. publication date is six months away, I figured it’s not too soon to tout Randy Susan-Meyers' The Murderer’s Daughters, to be published by St. Martin’s Press in January 2010.

The Murderer’s Daughters concerns two young girls who witness the murder of their mother at the hands of their father, and the effects of this act throughout their adult lives. Great hook. The book’s garnering a lot of interest in the publisher world. It's positioned to be a major hardcover next year and is also being published in France, Germany, Holland, Israel, and the UK. Can you say international book tour? Read my interview with Randy from this past March.
Pre-order it now!
Here’s the Dutch cover:

Then there's Iris Gomez’s novel, Try To Remember, to be published in May 2010 by Grand Central Publishing (Hachette Book Group). I’m relatively new to Iris’ work, but have been blown away by everything I've read. Her writing is lyrical, evocative, and honest.
Try To Remember is about a Colombian teenager living in the strangely evolving cosmopolis of 1970s Miami. She desperately tries to love her increasingly mentally ill father as he drives her family into poverty, and towards possible deportation. Another great hook. Keep an eye on amazon--the book should be available for pre-order later this year.
Here’s her cover:

Thanks to Iris for supplying me with her book's description, and to both Randy and Iris for supplying their cover images.
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