Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

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April 19, 2014 By Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Today’s OMG! All The Books! Giveaway: Joanna Rakoff’s MY SALINGER YEAR

Today (April 23rd, 2014 until 8:00 PM ET) we are giving away one signed copy of Joanna Rakoff’s memoir My Salinger Year. To enter the giveaway, see the bottom of this post. Click here for full information about this individual giveaway and the 23 other books participating in the OMG! All The Books! Giveaway through May 8th.

About Today’s Book: My Salinger Year

JoannaSmithRakoff.jacket“It feels a great friend is telling me the best story ever. So seamless, so smart. It’s everything you could want it to be – insightful, elegant, smart, touching. There’s so much I loved, but I keep coming back to the beauty and clarity of the sentences – it reads as if it’s exactly what it’s supposed to be. Nothing that’s posing or drawing excessive attention to itself. Elegant. that word again. And the portraits of all the people are full and also moving.” – Robin Black, author of Life Drawing

JoannaSmithRakoffAuthorPhoto

 
A Short Q & A With Joanna Rakoff

What is the title of your book? Why?

My Salinger Year. As it chronicles the year I spent answering Salinger’s fan mail and generally working for Salinger. As it happens, it was a momentous year for him, in which he decided to publish a new book and rather came out of his decades-long hermitude. When I began the job, I was told “you’ll never hear from Salinger, you’ll never meet him, you’ll never speak to him.” Then, my first day at the office, he called.

What were the seeds of this book?

I’m primarily a novelist, but this new book is a memoir, a chronicle of the year I spent answering J.D. Salinger’s fan mail as an assistant at New York’s oldest literary agency, a strange and storied place that even in the mid-1990s conducted business as if it were the mid-1950s. No computers. No voicemail. Assistants typed correspondence on ancient IBM Selectrics and if the phone rang when the receptionist was out, well, too bad. The Agency—as I call it in the book—had a code of silence with regard to Salinger, as per his wishes, and much of my job involved protecting his privacy.

Many years ago, the wonderful Times reporter Ralph Blumenthal suggested that I write a personal essay on the Agency and Salinger and his fans, but I was still so in the thrall of the Agency that I said something like, “Oh, I could never do that!” A few years later, I mentioned the idea at a story meeting, and ended up writing a piece on it, which struck such a chord with people I couldn’t quite believe it. Editors and agents wrote, asking me to write a book on the subject, some with incredible persistence. But I was writing a novel and didn’t want to take a break from it. And I also just couldn’t see the essay as a book. It seemed to me a small story. Some years later, after I’d published that novel—A Fortunate Age—Salinger died and I wrote a couple more pieces on the subject, one of which became a BBC radio documentary, and again editors came calling. Again, I said no, but as the months wore on, the first sentence of what would become My Salinger Year floated into my head, and the next few pages followed, and suddenly the story arc came to me. I realized it was a much larger story—a story larger than me or Salinger—and that I could indeed write it.

Was there a particular moment that this book became its own beast, outside of you?

Perhaps two moments: First, when I was writing it, very intensively, in the final few months before it was due, it did indeed seem to be a train operating of its own accord, as though I were merely steering it. Much as a novel does, at a certain stage.

Second, would be now, these last nine months, as people read it and begin to write about it, and I see the ways in which it is like a child, of me, but not me.

What sentence (or phrase, or idea, or innovation) in this book are you most proud of?

I’m not really a person who thinks in those terms. I’m rather more prone to self-deprecation than statements of pride. I suppose when I think about writing the book, what makes me most excited are those moments when everything began to fall into place: That day, sitting at my desk, when I wrote those first lines, the lines that framed the book as something larger than myself, the story larger than simply myself, for instance. Or the days when I sat there crying, as I realized that I’d broken through to a larger truth, that I’d faced something terrifying about my youth, my mistakes, my vast and incomprehensible emotions. This is the difficulty of memoir: Facing your former self. In the case of this book, it meant revisiting a terrible thing I’d done at age twenty-three: Abandoning the man I loved, for reasons I didn’t understand and chose to ignore rather than explore. In signing on to write the book, I sort of forgot that this was part of the story. But it was, and I had to write it. In a way, fiction is no different: You have to be brutal to your characters, just as you do to yourself in memoir.

When did you first know you were a writer?

As a child, I spent most of my free time reading and writing. I think my first poem appeared in print when I was perhaps 7 or 8: In my elementary school’s literary magazine. But my family was not quite the sort in which a person could say, “I want to be a writer,” and, thus, I couldn’t even articulate that desire to myself until well into my adulthood, much less think “I’m a writer.” But I suppose I knew very, very early on, when I preferred reading and writing above all else, when my peers complained about writing papers and I looked forward to it.

And in terms of thinking of myself as a writer in the real, professional sense, I suppose publishing some of my first pieces in magazines—writing for the Times, in particular–led to my tentatively telling people, at parties, “I’m a writer.”

Which writers (or books) have made you think about your own writing in new ways?

Oh, God, so, so many. In preparing to write this book, I read dozens and dozens of memoirs, trying to figure out my own tone and style and structure. I’m not a writer who employs the first person much, so memoir struck me as a little tricky. But then there are the few, the sublime, the memoirs that read like novels. Alice Sebold’s Lucky, a brilliant, brutal account of rape and its aftermath. Said Sayrafiezadeh’s When Skateboards Will Be Free, which chronicles his childhood in the Communist party with tremendous tenderness and humor—and anger. Carlene Bauer’s Not That Kind of Girl, a dense, rigorous coming of age tale, in which Bauer struggles to reconcile her fundamentalist background with her intensely personal quest for intellectual and spiritual development. Poser, Claire Dederer’s brilliant autobiography through the lens of yoga–sounds silly, unless you know that Dederer is hands down the finest book critic in America, a thinker of the highest accord, with a cult following (that includes me). And Cheryl Strayed’s wonderful, singular Wild, an account of Strayed’s long ago trek—solo trek—up the Pacific Crest Trail.

These memoirs, as I said, read like novels, but with an added layer of intimacy, which lends them a frisson, I suppose, and which also makes you, the reader, want to simply call up the writer on the phone, in the words of Holden Caulfield. They made me understand what James Atlas was getting at, all those years ago, when he described the memoir as the form for our age: our age, in a way, is one of transparency in storytelling, of “reality” television; but it’s also one of intense loneliness—despite all our ways of contacting each other—and isolation. And the memoir, with its whispered confessions, breaks through that uneasy solitude. It makes us feel less alone.

But these memoirs also made me understand, of course, the heights to which the form can soar: That a memoir, despite being confined to that relentless ‘I,’ can possess an enormous sweep and scope, can take stock of a cultural moment and a generation, can be narrated with humor and grace and self-awareness, rendered in language as complex and gorgeous as Eliot. That the ‘I’ doesn’t necessarily need to be confining. It can be freeing, if you let it.

Are there any writers featured in this giveaway with whom you have a strong friendship? How did you meet that person? How do you support each other’s work?

Yes, a few, in different ways! Edan Lepucki is a dear and cherished friend, to whom I came in a funny way: We both went to Oberlin, at different times (she’s a little younger than me), but shared a mentor. Four or five years ago, he said to me, “You need to meet Edan Lepucki. You guys will be fast friends.” But she lived in Los Angeles and I in New York. Soon after, I found out I was traveling to LA for an event, and…a note showed up in my inbox from Edan, asking if she could interview me for The Millions. At that point, I read everything she’d written and saw that we shared a certain sensibility, both literary and otherwise, and I just knew we’d become friends. Her essays were brilliant: elegant, honest, funny, perfectly composed. As was she.

Other friends would be Porochista Khakpour and Julia Fierro, both of whom I met through friends of friends, but—and this is sort of typical of modern life—whom I got to know primarily through email and social media. In the case of Porochista, before we were introduced, I’d read much of her work—fiction, essays, interviews—and not only loved it, but thought, who is this person? She just has such a fierce and brave approach to the world, and she’s a genius: a truly original thinker. Then we began corresponding and became fast friends. With Julia, I admired her as a person—on social media, she’s so warm and funny and kind—before I got to know her myself or read a word she’d written. Then, we became friends, and then I read and LOVED Cutting Teeth (as does everyone who reads it!).

Also, Robin Black: We know each other because I wrote her a fan letter after reading her wonderful collection If I Loved You, I Would Tell You This. I suppose we’re more acquaintances than friends, but I hugely admire her.

All of us, I think, support each other’s work on social media and through word of mouth, as well as in other ways (helping arrange events, etc.).

If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be? Put another way, what else fills your life besides writing (and how does this influence your writing, in practical or ephemeral ways)?

I honestly don’t know. Perhaps an editor? I do an extraordinary amount of yoga, so much so that I’m qualified to teach, but I can’t imagine doing this, as part of what I love about yoga class is that I’m not teaching it. In the rest of my life, I’m in charge. At yoga, I just follow instructions, put myself in my teacher’s hands. Yoga does, however, dramatically affect my writing—as does meditation–in that it has taught me the concept of practice: Yoga, like writing, is a practice. The pleasure has to be in the practice itself, not the end result. Otherwise, there is only pain and dissatisfaction.

More About Joanna Rakoff

Joanna Rakoff’s novel A Fortunate Age won the Goldberg Prize for Fiction, and was a New York Times Editors’ Choice, a winner of the Elle Readers’ Prize, an Elle and a Booklist Best Book of 2009, and a San Francisco Chronicle Best Seller. Her memoir, My Salinger Year, is out from Knopf in June, will be published in eight countries worldwide, and is being adapted for film by River Road Productions. You can find her on her website and Twitter.

Enter Today’s Giveaway!

To enter, answer the following question in the form below:

In My Salinger Year, Rakoff has a challenging first day at her job at the Agency. What was your first real job, and how did your first day go?

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One winner will win one signed copy of Joanna Rakoff’s memoir My Salinger Year. Limit one entry per IP address. No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the United States, who are the age of 18 or older. Deadline for entry is 8:00 P.M. ET on April 23rd, 2014. Read the complete rules. 

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April 19, 2014 By Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Today’s OMG! All The Books! Giveaway: Kevin Clouther’s WE WERE FLYING TO CHICAGO

Today (April 25th, 2014 until 8:00 PM ET) we are giving away one signed copy of Kevin Clouther’s collection We Were Flying to Chicago. To enter the giveaway, see the bottom of this post. Click here for full information about this individual giveaway and the 23 other books participating in the OMG! All The Books! Giveaway through May 8th.

KevinCloutherCoverAbout Today’s Book: We Were Flying to Chicago

“Kevin Clouther’s remarkable collection illustrates, page by page, the unique joys of reading short fiction. By turns subversive and poignant, darkly humorous and deeply moving, these ten stories show us the author’s expansive range and the heart that drives his imagination. Clouther’s beautifully rendered characters will stay with you long after you’ve finished the book—you’ll see them on the street, in the office, in your mirror.” — Bret Anthony Johnston

KevinCloutherAuthorPhotoA Short Q & A With Kevin Clouther

What is the title of your book? Why?

I started We Were Flying to Chicago on a flight diverted, in air, from Detroit to Chicago. I quickly abandoned autobiography, and the title story is narrated from the collective perspective of female passengers.

Are there any elements in this book that are drawn from your own life?

The near-accident I describe in “On the Highway near Fairfield, Connecticut” is a lot like something that happened to my cousin and me on a highway near Fairfield, Connecticut. There are all of these real-life triggers that send me inward, and once I start writing, I have only a limited sense of where I’m going.

Which writers (or books) have made you think about your own writing in new ways?

In terms of wow-I-didn’t-know-you-could-do-that, the biggest are Italo Calvino’s Invisible Cities, Graham Greene’s The End of the Affair, and Denis Johnson’s Jesus’s Son, all of which had me completely entranced before devastating me in the end. I stand in unending awe of Alice Munro and Flannery O’Connor.

Are there any writers featured in this giveaway with whom you have a strong friendship? How did you meet that person? How do you support each other’s work?

Julia Fierro and I met while we were both students at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and then didn’t reconnect, in earnest, until the Brooklyn Book Festival years later when we were both living in New York. Since then, she has been a great advocate for me, and every now and then, I try to remind her how talented she is.

If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be? Put another way, what else fills your life besides writing (and how does this influence your writing, in practical or ephemeral ways)?

I would be a left-handed pitcher for the Boston Red Sox.

More About Kevin Clouther

Kevin Clouther was born in Boston and grew up on Cape Cod and in South Florida. He holds degrees from the University of Virginia and Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where he completed his thesis under Marilynne Robinson and won the Richard Yates Fiction Award for best short story. His stories have appeared in The Baltimore Review, The Gettysburg Review, The Greensboro Review, Gulf Coast, Hayden’s Ferry Review, The Madison Review, Natural Bridge, and Puerto Del Sol. He teaches creative writing at Stony Brook University, where he coordinates the Program in Writing Reading Series, and Johns Hopkins. He lives in Floral Park, New York, with his wife and two children. You can find him on Twitter and Goodreads.

Enter Today’s Giveaway!

To enter, answer the following question in the form below:

What would you call that thing beneath Kevin Clouther’s name on the book cover (see it here)?

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One winner will win one signed copy of Kevin Clouther’s collection We Were Flying to Chicago. Limit one entry per IP address. No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the United States, who are the age of 18 or older. Deadline for entry is 8:00 P.M. ET on April 25th, 2014. Read the complete rules. 

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April 19, 2014 By Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Today’s OMG! All The Books! Giveaway: Marie-Helene Bertino, 2 A.M. AT THE CAT’S PAJAMAS

Today (April 24th, 2014 until 8:00 PM ET) we are giving away one signed copy of Marie-Helene Bertino’s novel 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas. To enter the giveaway, see the bottom of this post. Click here for full information about this individual giveaway and the 23 other books participating in the OMG! All The Books! Giveaway through May 8th.

MarieHeleneBertinocoverAbout Today’s Book: 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas

“Once you enter the imagination of Marie-Helene Bertino—a world as weird as it is warm—you will not want to leave. Each sentence is a pop-up box: first delightful for its sweet music, then profound with the shock of truth. This is a dazzling book.” – Eleanor Henderson, author of Ten Thousand Saints

“Clever, charming and full of life…like the best jazz, 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas is a marvel of the unexpected, a buoyant, swinging tale of interwoven destinies that Marie-Helene Bertino tells with verve, wit, and warmth. I loved it.” – Maggie Shipstead, author of Astonish Me and Seating Arrangements

“Marie-Helene Bertino bops across Philadelphia like an alleycat on the run, energetic and wild. Her sentences are sharp and surprising, and her wonderful story is full of heart. There is funny poetry in the sound of loneliness, and Bertino has found it.” – Emma Straub, author of The Vacationers

MarieHeleneBertinoAuthorPhotoA Short Q & A With Marie-Helene Bertino

What is the title of your book? Why?

I’m delighted you asked! The title of my book is 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas. It refers to many elements of the book, now that I’m thinking about it. The story takes place over the course of 24 hours, from 7 a.m. to 7 a.m. the following day on one fateful Christmas Eve Eve.  We follow a nine-year-old aspiring jazz singer, her fifth grade teacher, and a down-on-his-luck jazz club owner. The chapter headings are times instead of numbers, and 2 a.m. is the hour of a significant moment in each of these character’s lives. The setting of this confluence is The Cat’s Pajamas, the aforementioned jazz club in the Fishtown neighborhood of Philadelphia. The title is also sonorous, like a musical somersault, which fits the book’s preoccupation with music.

What sentence (or phrase, or idea, or innovation) in this book are you most proud of?

Innovation is extremely important to me. For 12 years while writing 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas I toyed with traditional ideas of sentence phrasing and novel structure, using nouns as verbs, and just plain making up my own words out of existing nouns (“arpeggiate” in the very first paragraph). I’ve carried around some of the innovations like butterflies in my pocket, pulling them out on nights when publication seemed unlikely. Perhaps my favorite concerns the 7 p.m. hour. After the narrative takes a quick, sweeping inventory of people around the city, a dinner party is presented in its entirety. It is the longest chapter in the book, both page-wise and real-time-wise, and is almost autonomous. I think of it as the book itself sitting down to supper.

Are there any elements in this book that are drawn from your own life? 

One night several years ago my friends Rocco and Aurelio, who are tremendous guitarists, took me to a musician’s open mic at Warm Daddy’s, a jazz club on Front Street in Philadelphia. This is when a venerable house band that has probably been playing together for decades plays song after song and brave musicians who want to can walk onto the stage in between songs, plug in, and try their luck. It was one of those nights–we were all in good moods and having correct conversations and we were open to divinity and coincidences. A night that shines brightly but ultimately doesn’t change the crappy circumstances of your life. I remember thinking: I want to write a book about how this night feels. It took me many years to grow into a writer who could (try to) do it. There are many elements in 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas sourced from my life– many I’m probably not even aware of. Like Sarina, once I waded through the Rittenhouse Square fountain on a cold night with my friend Bob. Like Madeleine, I sang in Church as a little girl. And am petrified of roaches.

MarieHelenBertinolittlegirlWhen did you first know you were a writer?

When I was four I wrote a story about a cat going through a divorce. A short time later I wrote my first poem about a man standing underneath a streetlight, alone, on the cobblestone. I’ve been weird since I can remember, imaginative, overly-sensitive, excited about things most people would think of as insignificant (e.g., the discovery that alone rhymes with cobblestone), and in possession of a nature that uses humor to make sense the oddities of life. My writing is intrinsically linked to my awareness of myself as a Marie. I can’t remember one without the other.  

If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be? Put another way, what else fills your life besides writing (and how does this influence your writing, in practical or ephemeral ways)?

I like to paint, run, dance, sing. I like to play hooky with my fiancé and go to The Museum of Natural History. I’ve had the same group of friends since I was little, and I like to do absolutely anything with them. I also like to spend time alone. Travel alone, write alone, daydream. I used to edit for One Story, and I like working one on one with a writer. Walk my dog. Attend class. Turn off my phone. Have dinner with my Mom. I was raised that you have dinner and then you stay seated at the table for hours, talking. Conversation is a lost art. I’ve worked as a music interviewer and biographer of people with Traumatic Brain Injury, so I ask a lot of questions and I’m curious about everyone. Curious, not nosy. I’m the least nosy person on the planet. My Mom showed me empathy. I’ve listened to other people for all of my life, and I’ve always been able to empathize with them. Both of these things help me identify the right “sound” of characters who lead lives that are seemingly unlike mine. If I wasn’t a published writer, I’d be a barista with a tendency to daydream. But who’d still be a writer. The nice thing is, being a writer is like being an alcoholic. You’re never not one. Who knows how way will lead onto way? I may go back to being a barista yet. Never say never.

More About Marie-Helene Bertino

Marie-Helene Bertino’s debut novel 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas will be published in August 2014. Her debut collection of short stories Safe As Houses received The 2012 Iowa Short Fiction Award, The Pushcart Prize, and was long-listed for The Story Prize and The Frank O’Connor International Short Story Prize. She was an Emerging Writers Fellow at New York City’s Center for Fiction and lives in Brooklyn, where she was the Associate Editor for One Story. She teaches at NYU, The Center for Fiction, and The Sackett Street Workshops. She is writing this in Brooklyn, where it is cold, but hopefully by the time you read it, it will be warm again. You can find her on her website, Twitter and Facebook.

Enter Today’s Giveaway!

To enter, answer the following question in the form below:

Bertino’s website has a list of her favorite places, people and things – read about them here. What would you put on such a list?

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One winner will win one signed copy of Marie-Helene Bertino’s novel 2 A.M. At The Cat’s Pajamas. Limit one entry per IP address. No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the United States, who are the age of 18 or older. Deadline for entry is 8:00 P.M. ET on April 24th, 2014. Read the complete rules. 

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April 19, 2014 By Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Today’s OMG! All The Books! Giveaway: Edan Lepucki’s CALIFORNIA

Today (April 22nd, 2014 until 8:00 PM ET) we are giving away one signed copy of Edan Lepucki’s novel California. To enter the giveaway, see the bottom of this post. Click here for full information about this individual giveaway and the 23 other books participating in the OMG! All The Books! Giveaway through May 8th.

EdanLepuckiCAcoverAbout Today’s Book: California

“In her arresting debut novel, Edan Lepucki conjures a lush, intricate, deeply disturbing vision of the future, then masterfully exploits its dramatic possibilities.” —Jennifer Egan, author of A Visit from the Goon Squad

The world Cal and Frida have always known is gone, and they’ve left the crumbling city of Los Angeles far behind them. They now live in a shack in the wilderness, working side-by-side to make their days tolerable in the face of hardship and isolation. Mourning a past they can’t reclaim, they seek solace in each other. But the tentative existence they’ve built for themselves is thrown into doubt when Frida finds out she’s pregnant.

Terrified of the unknown and unsure of their ability to raise a child alone, Cal and Frida set out for the nearest settlement, a guarded and paranoid community with dark secrets. These people can offer them security, but Cal and Frida soon realize this community poses dangers of its own. In this unfamiliar world, where everything and everyone can be perceived as a threat, the couple must quickly decide whom to trust.

A gripping and provocative debut novel by a stunning new talent, California imagines a frighteningly realistic near future, in which clashes between mankind’s dark nature and deep-seated resilience force us to question how far we will go to protect the ones we love.

Edan Lepucki Author PhotoA Short Q & A With Edan Lepucki

When did you first know you were a writer?

I have wanted to be a writer for as long as I can remember.  I loved books and reading from an early age, and even before I actually wrote I assumed I’d become a writer.

Was there a particular moment that this book became its own beast, outside of you?

I started this book at Ucross, an artists’ retreat in Wyoming.  As deer pranced outside my window I set down a line, and then another and another. In ten days I had over 40 pages—I am still stunned by how much I wrote in such a short time. By the time I got home this book was already alive and talking to me, insisting I keep writing.  I guess it was never not a beast.

What sentence (or phrase, or idea, or innovation) in this book are you most proud of?

Can I say “The End”?  I mean, I wrote this book and it’s a real book!  Look, Mom, I did it!

Honestly, I am proud of the world building in this book—because it wasn’t easy and there were times when I just wanted to throw the whole manuscript out the window and forget I’d ever tried to “speculate” a future.  In the name of fiction, I ruined Los Angeles, created a terrorist organization, and even let Ikea go out of business.  I’m proud of my imagination.

Are there any elements in this book that are drawn from your own life?

I don’t tend to write autobiographically but there are certainly elements in California that echo my own life.  For instance, Cal and Frida’s marriage—its beauty and its challenges—was in a small part inspired by my own marriage. The relationships are not the same, but real life inspired me to write this fictional one.  Also, Plank College, the school that Cal attended, is based in part on an all-male liberal arts college called Deep Springs, but many of the details come from my experience at Oberlin, where I got my undergraduate degree.  There are a ton of little things in the book that come from my life; I think of them as little secret nuggets for my friends and family to find!

Are there any writers featured in this giveaway with whom you have a strong friendship? How did you meet that person? How do you support each other’s work?

One of my oldest writing friends, Emma Straub, is also participating in this giveaway. Her second novel, The Vacationers, is a lovely, funny, moving and seriously readable book about a family on vacation in Mallorca.  Read it!  Emma and I went to college together. We were in Dan Chaon’s nonfiction workshop, and we went to parties together, drank together, and generally had a fabulous time together.  Once she helped an art major friend put fake tanner on my naked body for a photo shoot. It was…intimate. Since Emma has already gone through this novel-thing once with her amazing and elegantly told book Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures, I email her with all kinds of stupid questions.  She is a wise, wise woman.

Joanna Rakoff is also a friend, but I started as a fan. I fell in love with her novel, A Fortunate Age, and interviewed her for The Millions. We drank Lillet cocktails and talked about books—the best. At AWP this year we hung out a lot—it feels like we’ve known each other for decades.  I loved her memoir, A Salinger Year: it’s fun to read and very moving. She really captures the era (New York in the 1990s) and one’s twenties, so beautifully.

Caeli Wolfson Widger teaches for Writing Workshops Los Angeles. Her students love her and I feel very grateful to have her on our roster of instructors. I am waiting for my special order of her novel, Real Happy Family, to arrive at the bookstore so I can devour it! I know I’ll love it.

If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be? Put another way, what else fills your life besides writing (and how does this influence your writing, in practical or ephemeral ways)?

If I weren’t a writer or writing teacher, I’d probably become a fitness instructor, an accountant, or a midwife.  Or, of course, a world famous pop star.  Or maybe all of the above.

More About Edan Lepucki

Edan Lepucki is a staff writer for The Millions and the author of the novella If You’re Not Yet Like Me. The LA Times named her a 2014 Face to Watch, and she’s the founder and director of Writing Workshops Los Angeles. California is her first novel. You can find her on her website, Twitter, and Tumblr.

Enter Today’s Giveaway!

To enter, answer the following question in the form below:

“Edan” is an anagram for “Edna,” Lepucki’s grandmother’s name – read about it here. Were you named after someone? If not, what is your favorite name in literature (Lepucki’s is “Levin” in Anna Karenina)?

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One winner will win one signed copy of Edan Lepucki’s novel California. Limit one entry per IP address. No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the United States, who are the age of 18 or older. Deadline for entry is 8:00 P.M. ET on April 22nd, 2014. Read the complete rules. 

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April 19, 2014 By Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Today’s OMG! All The Books! Giveaway: Megan Abbott’s THE FEVER

Today (April 21st, 2014 until 8:00 PM ET) we are giving away one signed copy of Megan Abbott’s novel The Fever. To enter the giveaway, see the bottom of this post. Click here for full information about this individual giveaway and the 23 other books participating in the OMG! All The Books! Giveaway through May 8th.

MeganAbbottFINAL cover_THE FEVERAbout Today’s Book: The Fever

“With The Fever, Megan Abbott has created a mesmerizing, modern portrait of teenage life today: Brutal crushes, competing allegiances and first-bloom sensuality, all magnified by the rush and crush of technology. The Fever holds true to its title: It’s dark, disturbing, strangely beautiful and utterly unshakeable.”
—Gillian Flynn, author of Gone Girl

 

MeganAbbottAuthorPhoto

A Short Q & A With Megan Abbott

Are there any elements in this book that are drawn from your own life? 

I did work in a pizza joint as a teenager, and I did once live in a town with mysterious weather, which plays a role in The Fever. The kind of place where the entire climate changes on a dime. Living there, it always felt like Wuthering Heights to me. Like living on the moors.

When did you first know you were a writer?

I’m still awaiting confirmation. But I was a book lover since before I can remember and spent most of my childhood running my fingers across book spines at the public library, looking for new bounty, so that much was there since consciousness.

If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be? Put another way, what else fills your life besides writing (and how does this influence your writing, in practical or ephemeral ways)?

Movies, movies, movies. Which is not a profession (at least not the way I mean), but movies have always influenced my fiction. I grew up watching old movies, planted on the shag rug in front of the TV watching retro Saturday matinees, bad basic cable, anything at all. And it all made its mark.

Which writers (or books) have made you think about your own writing in new ways?

For this book, Shirley Jackson, Daphne DuMaurier, Hawthorne short stories and, though not strictly a book, Twin Peaks always seems to find its way in there.

Are there any writers featured in this giveaway with whom you have a strong friendship? How did you meet that person? How do you support each other’s work?

It’s been a great pleasure to get to know the terrific Julia Fiero in the last few years. I feel unduly lucky to have been one of Cutting Teeth’s early readers and to have shared the stage with her at Book Court—and can’t wait to do so again June 18 at WORD Brooklyn. I’m also delighted to have recently met Roxane Gay, I writer I greatly admire, at the Tennessee Williams Literary Festival. And I love everything Emma Straub writes, so I can’t wait for her new one. Thanks to her I first discovered Chocolates for Breakfast by Pamela Moore when she invited me to participate in a book event in celebration of its reissue. (Also excited for Edan Lepucki’s California!)

More About Megan Abbott

Megan Abbott is the award-winning author of seven novels, including Dare Me, The End of Everything and Bury Me Deep. Her stories have appeared in anthologies including Detroit Noir, Best Crime and Mystery Stories of the Year, Queens Noir, Wall Street Noir, The Speed Chronicles and the forthcoming Best American Mystery Stories of 2014. She is also the author of The Street Was Mine, a study of hardboiled fiction and film noir, and A Hell of a Woman, a female crime fiction anthology. She lives in Queens, NY. Her latest novel is The Fever (June 2014). You can find her on her website, Twitter, and Facebook.

Enter Today’s Giveaway!

To enter, answer the following question in the form below:

Writer Tana French writes that Megan Abbott ‘captures the essence’ of being a teenager – read the rest of Abbott’s blurbs here. How would you describe that time of life?

a Rafflecopter giveaway

One winner will win one signed copy of Megan Abbott’s novel The Fever. Limit one entry per IP address. No purchase necessary. Open to legal residents of the United States, who are the age of 18 or older. Deadline for entry is 8:00 P.M. ET on April 21st, 2014. Read the complete rules. 

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