Archive for 2009

Free downloads!

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

Thanks to the Simon Pulse marketing department, I’m able to offer these really awesome downloads to everyone. There’s a super cool moving avatar and wallpaper in two different sizes. Download ‘em, share ‘em, send ‘em to your friends. Hooray for marketing folks! Hooray for Claire de Lune! Hooray!

Happy news!

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

newspaper

I’m thrilled to announce that the still-untitled sequel to CLAIRE DE LUNE is going to be published by Simon PULSE. It’ll be coming to bookstores in the summer of 2011! Hooray! I’ll be staying with my wonderful editor, Anica Rissi, and I can’t wait to work on another book with her. And thanks, of course, to my fab agent, Caryn Wiseman, for facilitating the whole thing.

Here’s the Publisher’s Marketplace blurb: Christine Johnson’s sequel to the forthcoming CLAIRE DE LUNE, about a 16-year old girl who discovers that she is a werewolf, one of a long line of female werewolves, to Anica Rissi at Simon Pulse, for publication in Summer 2011, by Caryn Wiseman at Andrea Brown Literary Agency (world).

Note that the sequel is untitled. If you have any title ideas, I’d love to hear them. Seriously. It’s my least favorite part of writing.

Guest Blogging

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

detour

Hey, everyone! I’m guest blogging this week over at peaceloveandpat.blogspot.com – go check it out!

http://peaceloveandpat.blogspot.com/2009/12/author-guest-post-christine-johnson.html

Book review: GOING BOVINE by Libba Bray

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Going bovineSo, I’ve just finished GOING BOVINE, Libba Bray’s newest work. And wow, was I seriously impressed. Not only was it fabulously written, with an intriguing story line and absolutely unique and impeccable narrative voice, it was different. Massively different. Especially when held up against her previously-published Gemma Doyle trilogy.

Though I would have enjoyed the book immensely no matter which author engendered it, to see this thoroughly modern teen boy – complete with cursing and pot-smoking and raging hormones – spring from the pen of a woman known for corsets and secret Victorian societies made me want to stand up and applaud. How incredible to be so flexible! It’s the writing equivalent of being able to do the splits.

It’s true that both of the books contain fantasy elements, but it wouldn’t be possible for them to be more different. Especially in her latest effort, Bray does an excellent job of blurring the lines between the fantastic and the real, creating a world in which the two live so closely side-by-side that a miniscule Norse god seems like the most logical next narrative step in the world. It’s got everything. Adventure. Excitement. Fantasy. A driven plot happening on an urgent timeline. The writing is contemporary without having the timbre of prose that will be outdated in five years.

If you haven’t already (and there are plenty who have jumped me on this review, since I’ve been in a slow reading phase,) run out and buy a copy of GOING BOVINE. Seriously. It’s good, people.

Holiday Madness

Sunday, November 29th, 2009

Christmas lightsSo, Thanksgiving is over, Black Friday is past, and we’re now in the Heart of The Holiday Season (all the Christmas commercials have inspired me to embrace sentimental and saleable capitalization.) Over the next four weeks, I will attempt to take care of my newly-larger family, write, shopwrapbakegive, and get back to maintaining this blog. That’s a lot of multi-tasking (and not a lot of sleeping!)

Is there really a secret to getting it all done – I mean, short of a nanny and some No-Doz? How do all those cards get sent? Trees decorated? Latkes made? If you know how to do all of it without losing your mind, please leave a suggestion in the comments section. No, really. Please?

Anyway, in spite of being a little overwhelmed by the addition  of holiday tasks to my workaday to-do lists, I really love this time of year. Mostly it’s the anticipation. Everything from the smell of impending snow in the air to the mystery of wrapped gifts and promising aromas coming from the oven. The fevered sparkle in a toddler’s eye as they approach Santa. The way the too-long nights promise a spring-time brightening ahead. The holidays themselves are great fun, of course. I love spending time with family, eating too much and laughing until we cry. I love watching other people open their gifts and seeing the delight (forced or genuine) on their faces.

But mostly it’s the anticipation that I adore; the unspoiled possibility that the next few weeks provide.

That, and Carol of the Bells. Best. Holiday song. Ever.

Okay, I’m off to buy some eggnog, now. Let the madness begin!

Price Wars

Monday, October 19th, 2009

So, the Book Wars that began late last week are continuing . . . with Wal-mart and Amazon slashing prices on their best-sellers to crazy levels, what will happen to independent bookstores and new-to-the-scene authors? For those of you who aren’t as into book-business geekery as I am, there’s a great article at  wsj.com ( http://tinyurl.com/yjhr26w ) about the whole situation. In a nutshell, though, Wal-mart and Amazon.com are each trying to out-low-price the other, selling their most popular titles at a loss!

At this point, it’s not just independent bookstores that will suffer. Even the larger bookstore chains – like Barnes & Noble – that don’t have a plethora of other products with which to turn a profit are being placed in a difficult situation by the Wal-mart/Amazon duopoly. And once something like this is hurting Barnes and Noble, you can believe that your corner bookseller, who has no choice but to sell books for the actual price that is actually printed on the actual cover, is already neck-deep in the fast-rising waters of business failure.

Beyond the people who are selling the books, this sort of crazy pricing is hard on authors who don’t have the selling power or name recognition of, say, a Stephenie Meyer or a Dan Brown. In these tough economic times, all writers appreciate consumers opening their ever-thinner wallets to buy the stories we’ve worked so hard on – the books that, for us, represent rent paid, food bought, and the boon of continued electrical service. But when faced with the choice of Dan Brown’s novel for $8.99 (in hardcover! Good God!) or taking a chance on a new author whose book costs several dollars more, my fear is that too many of these customers will reach for the cut-rate book. Maybe that sounds like paranoia, but I’ve heard enough rumbling and grumbling from my cohorts in the publishing industry to know that I’m far from the only one who feels that way.

Are there any upsides to the new low, low, LOW prices? Sure. Someone who is on a tight budget may buy a nine-dollar novel. If the only books on offer are fifteen dollars – or more – that may pass the threshold of affordability for a segment of the population, resulting in a missed sale for everyone. And while I have no love for Wal-mart, I’ll admit to liking (and using) Amazon. I can shop there in the middle of the night, when the brick-and-mortars are closed. I can find any book I might need. The prices are attractive, even to me.

Still, I think everyone who loves to read should be concerned about what these latest pricing maneuvers are doing to the publishing industry as a whole. If prices fall dramatically, it will result in lower earnings for the publishers. Which could quickly translate into less pay for the authors who provide those publishers with material. And that only makes it harder for us to do our jobs, what with the whole worrying-about-paying-for-heat thing. Writing in a drafty garret may seem romantic, but I don’t think numb fingers are anyone’s idea of success.

Happy Dreaded Chore Day!

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Monday! Hurray! I am so in love with Mondays. No, seriously! On Monday mornings, my dear husband goes to work, my sweet son goes off to preschool, and I’m left with a couple of hours to myself to work. It’s heaven – the best way to start the week. By the time I have to go retrieve the toddler, I usually feel like I have at least a vague idea of how much needs to be accomplished during the rest of the week.

Monday morning is also my time to do The Dreaded Chore. I’m not much of a procrastinator, but every week, there’s something. It varies, but The Dreaded Chore is usually something that got put off from, say, the previous Thursday. A phone call I didn’t want to make. An email that I was “too busy” to return. A bit of tedious research that I’d been successfully avoiding. Monday morning, I just hold my nose and tackle whatever it is I most don’t want to do. And man, is that a great way to start the week – with the whew-that’s-done relief of having The Dreaded Chore behind me.

This week, it’s double-checking the timelines from my copy edits. I’ve heard friends of mine – already published authors – complaining about doing their copy edits. I never really understood. I mean, copy editing is just to correct that last, nit-picky stuff, right? Except that’s the problem. For most writers I know – and I can now include myself in this group – copy editing makes us want to throw up our hands and declare it too hard. Missing weeks, inaccurate sunrise times . . . this stuff can make a person crazy! Which is not to say that I am in any way frustrated with my copy editor. On the contrary – I’m deeply grateful that there’s someone out there dedicated and detailed enough to catch those sorts of mistakes before some eagle-eyed reader goes: “Hey! It couldn’t have happened that way! What sort of hack is this woman?”

The problem is fixing all of those mistakes. It’s a Dreaded Chore. And since it’s Monday morning, it’s time for me to quit procrastinating and finish correcting my slip-ups. Happy Dreaded Chore Day, everyone!

Upcoming Events

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Upcoming In-person Events

Upcoming In-person Events

Saturday, Oct. 22nd

Book signing

Barnes and Noble

17090 Mercantile Blvd, Noblesville, IN

3-4:45 p.m.

Saturday, November 5th

Book signing

Indianapolis Marion County Public Library, Irvington Branch

11 am – 4:30 p.m.

Indianapolis Marion County Public Library: Happy Birthday, Irvington!

Welcome to ChristineJohnsonBooks.com

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

Welcome to ChristineJohnsonBooks.com! Things are just getting started here, so be sure to check back in the future for more updates and news about the upcoming book, Claire de Lune, available May 2010.