It was time.
Back in 2008 or so when I had sold DREAMING ANASTASIA and realized that yes, I was an 'official' author now, I begged my friend the computer teacher at the high school where I was teaching English to be my webmaster. Actually, that's an overstatement. I don't think I knew the word webmaster. I asked her to help me set up a domain name and block out SOMETHING. And the original Joy Preble dot com was born. A basic site. With my bio and eventually a picture and eventually stuff about a book!
Over the past few years, it's grown, that little site. Three more books and an anthology and the nice stuff people have said and the workshops I present and all the other stuff it should have. We added a little here and there and it grew along with me.
But like I say, it was time.
New book this month -- part of a new series with a new publisher.
And so...
Thanks to Little Willow of Rock the Rock (who is also Little Willow of Bildingsroman/Slayground), I present JOY PREBLE DOT COM 2.0--- the new look!!!
I LOVE IT!! I hope you do, too!
Click on over HERE
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
Monday, May 20, 2013
THE SWEET DEAD LIFE Goes to Austin
The weekend began with Star Trek Into Darkness with my Austin bff, author PJ Hoover, whose SOLSTICE is coming in June from TOR. We are NERDS. This means we were FIRST IN LINE for the 8 PM show. Here we are, waiting:
Then on Saturday it was on to Book People. This was my first time signing at the store and so I was THRILLED! and EXCITED! and like I had had too much coffee. Which actually I had.
I set up the special SWEET DEAD LIFE cookies! (thank you Posh Cookies in Houston!)
Me, PJ (Tricia) Hoover, Cory Putnam Oaks, Cynthia Leitich Smith, Jessica Lee Anderson |
Cynthia Leitich Smith and a boot coozie! |
Don Tate, Varian Johnson, Greg Leitich Smith |
Lindsey Scheibe (who launched her RIPTIDE Sunday), Nikki Loftin, Salima Alikhan |
Kari Anne Holt, Lindsey Scheibe, Shelli Cornielsen |
Mari Mancusi wins at angel trivia |
Houston blogger Kate Sowa |
Greg Leitich Smith, Emily Kristen Anderson, Nikki Loftin |
signing! And then there was graffiti land! |
Narrator Jenna and her unlikely hero guardian angel brother with a few bad habits Casey were thrilled to go to Austin, but now they're back here in Houston. Comicapalooza this weekend! And then on 6/8 at 2PM, the Houston launch of THE SWEET DEAD LIFE at Blue Willow Bookshop!
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO THE SWEET DEAD LIFE
So once upon a time, my editor emailed my agent and said, "I have an idea."
And then he emailed me and said, "I have an idea."
And I said, "Yay!"
And he said, "Could you write a novel about a down on his family luck stoner dude who returns from a fatal car accident as his dying sister's guardian angel and solves a vast family mystery?"
And I said, "YES!"
And then I said, "I think this story takes place in Houston, Texas. In the suburbs. Where you can eat things like this:
And also kolaches, which look like this:
And then we both decided we would pitch this project as FALLEN meets VERONICA MARS meets PINEAPPLE EXPRESS.
Which was cool.
All from a brilliant and nimble publisher (headed by a brilliant woman named Bronwen Hruska) to whom I am very thankful-- called Soho Press, with a new imprint that looks like this:
And the story got bigger and fuller and became a paranormal mystery about love and family and siblings and poison and blackmail and things we do for the people we care about and the sometimes wasteland that is the suburbs and the battle between good and evil. And it was a Texas makeover of the angel story with a full and wonderful world that did not adhere to any particular faith tradition. Its angels were flawed and kinda cranky. Its narrator was a fourteen year old girl named Jenna whose brother became an A-word even if she didn't want him to. She was funny and smart and loving and sometimes bitter. She occasionally used colorful but justified language. And thought that people really shouldn't wear Crocs. Like ever. Plus there were cowboy boots and breakfast tacos. And kolaches.
And then my editor said, "Would you write the sequel, too?" Which I did. It's called THE A WORD. It also has a kick ass cover (to be revealed soon) and will be out in May 2014!
And people began reading early copies. After which they said things like this:
And this:
And this:
And then it was TODAY!
May 14th, 2013!
When I was finally able to say, HAPPY BIRTHDAY to THE SWEET DEAD LIFE!!
Monday, May 13, 2013
SWEET DEAD LIFE is almost Here
I am excited. I really am. But I'm also anxious and nervous. A little too hopped up on coffee. It's been that kind of May. THE SWEET DEAD LIFE releases into the world tomorrow, May 14th. I am also writing interviews and blog posts and just turned in a full 300 pages of 2nd draft revisions for THE A WORD, which is the TSDL sequel that comes out next May, 2014! And revising a different project that hopefully will become SOMETHING you can hear about at some point. Planning the last plans for the Austin road trip where for the very first time I will sign and celebrate TSDL at Book People this coming Saturday 5/18 at 3 PM. A new book with a different publisher and my first time at this big and venerable store! Followed by the Houston launch on Saturday 6/8 at my dearest Blue Willow Bookshop where we will party again! Valerie Koehler and Cathy Berner and the gang have helped build my career and there is honestly no other place I'd rather launch this book!
In between all that, there are graduations of people I love and a bunch of birthdays and anniversaries of people I love and my vague attempts to finally start figuring out how we are going to save up to redo our bathroom and I need to make plans to go to a wedding in CA later this summer and then there are the ensuing book events and conferences and Comic Cons and other wonderful things that will go on a few a month until February... when the TSDL paperback comes out and we begin the run up to May and THE A WORD and do it all again.
It is as full and crazy as every May I had when I was teaching high school English. But it doesn't involve standardized testing. Although I really do miss prom. I have been to a LOT of proms. But it's creepy if you go and you're not chaperoning, you know?
Okay. Gotta write.
And maybe print something since the hubs bought me a new printer that is -- huzzah!--wireless for Mother's Day. Scoff, all you like, scoffers. This was a thrilling tech advance in this house where once we buy something we KEEP it and make it work. Like our printer that was, um, about 10 years old!
Tomorrow I'll talk about the book itself -- this Texas makeover of the YA angel book.
In between all that, there are graduations of people I love and a bunch of birthdays and anniversaries of people I love and my vague attempts to finally start figuring out how we are going to save up to redo our bathroom and I need to make plans to go to a wedding in CA later this summer and then there are the ensuing book events and conferences and Comic Cons and other wonderful things that will go on a few a month until February... when the TSDL paperback comes out and we begin the run up to May and THE A WORD and do it all again.
It is as full and crazy as every May I had when I was teaching high school English. But it doesn't involve standardized testing. Although I really do miss prom. I have been to a LOT of proms. But it's creepy if you go and you're not chaperoning, you know?
Okay. Gotta write.
And maybe print something since the hubs bought me a new printer that is -- huzzah!--wireless for Mother's Day. Scoff, all you like, scoffers. This was a thrilling tech advance in this house where once we buy something we KEEP it and make it work. Like our printer that was, um, about 10 years old!
Tomorrow I'll talk about the book itself -- this Texas makeover of the YA angel book.
Friday, May 10, 2013
A Letter to F Scott Fitzgerald: Why I Love the GREAT GASTBY
Scott dear-
I first read GATSBY when I was seventeen. I have no idea what we said about it in class-- it was senior year and springtime and it had finally stopped snowing and my English teacher was, while an intelligent woman, rather hideous to look at and even worse to listen to and so mostly I did neither. Self-preservation and all that.
But GATBSY stuck in my head anyway, testimony to your writing and the brilliant editing of one Maxwell Perkins, arguably the greatest editor of the 20th century. Pardon me for that writer-geek moment, but you have to praise greatness when you see it and both of you were genius in a way I will probably never be, but that's okay. (briefly, let me interject here that I said just this on someone's FB post about Gatsby the other day and someone else commented that it was odd to praise an editing (of all things!) because all that said was that you were praising what was NOT in the book-- to which I couldn't even respond because it demonstrated this wholesale lack of understanding of what editing a novel is all about... but that's another story.)
Back to you, Scott. You published GATSBY when you were just 28 years old. But it was old enough to understand what drove-- and still drives-- America. Old enough to understand dreams that we strive for but might never achieve. Old enough to understand the pull of money - both old and new -- and the corruptive influence of the same. You knew how simple and easy it was to slide the slope toward moral bankruptcy. You wrote a book -- God bless you, F. Scott Fitzgerald-- that is forever contemporary and current because we haven't changed one whit. Not one. You gleefully and thoughtfully scoped out the landscape and put in the Eyes of TJ Eckleburg and that damn wonderful green light and a cast of characters who are all unlikeable but mesmerizing. Perhaps the only truly 'honest' person in the story is poor doomed Mr. Wilson. And you did that word by word, image by image, in this tightly composed 48k word novel that is probably the best of the 20th century and possibly beyond.
So many phrases linger in the back of my brain, not the least of which includes: They were careless people, Tom and Daisy--they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made..."
God, Scott!! That line. That beautiful line!
Truth? I despised a lot of the American lit I was required to teach when I taught junior English once upon a time. I mean seriously -- Daniel Day Lewis in Last of the Mohicans is a thing of beauty. James Fenimore Cooper's clunky prose with all that moccasin sneaking and branches snapping and whatever it was that I refuse to remember-- that's something else and not something fun. And Scarlet Letter-- well actually I like Hawthorne. But sixteen year olds aren't ready for a story where the characters are motivated by guilt. They shouldn't be, really. Wharton was okay -- but not that insufferable Ethan Frome where the happiest moment is when they bash their sled into a tree-- on purpose!-- and live life as cripples. Cause you know, Edith Wharton was trapped in a wealthy but unhappy marriage and that was a metaphor. Which you probably know, since there's this great story about her being rude to you once, I think. I need to look that up. I'm a lousy academic, Scott. that's why I write novels now. Age of Innocence was better, but I digress. Scott, it was GATSBY that got me through. Because even if the students didn't read -- and often they did not, which depressed the hell out of me but made sense because as I said at the beginning, who reads anything willingly in the late spring?-- I could talk about what you did in this book and bring it to them and hope that it would stick and they would come back to it and see what was in there.
I suppose you say it best at the end-- what an end! God, Scott!
"So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."
All of which is to say, the husband has promised that we will see Leo play Gatsby this weekend. We're going to the regular one, not the 3D. In case you are interested.
xoJoy
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
WELCOME CRYSTAL ALLEN AND THE LAURA LINE
Today I’m welcoming
fellow Houston author and friend Crystal Allen!
Crystal’s the author of HOW LAMAR’s BAD PRANK WON HIM A BUBBA SZED
TROPHY (Balzer and Bray 2011), which arrived to great acclaim and starred PW
review among other things. Plus it’s one of my favorite MG books ever because
of Lamar’s voice.
And now, Crystal’s
second book is here – THE LAURA LINE (Balzer and Bray 2013), with another great
voice, one Miss Laura Dyson. I would say that Crystal Allen has hit another
home run with this one – a fitting analogy since Laura loves baseball.
Here’s the cover copy:
Thirteen-year-old
Laura Dyson wants two things in life: to be accepted by her classmates and to
be noticed by ultracute baseball star Troy Bailey. But everyone at school makes
fun of her for being overweight, and Troy won't give her a second glance. Until
their history teacher puts Laura front and center by announcing a field trip to
the old run-down slave shack on her grandmother's property. Heck to the
power of no way!
Her grandmother insists
that it's more than just a shack; it's a monument to the strong women in their
family—the Laura Line. Something to be proud of. But Laura knows better: if her
classmates can't accept her now, they never will once they see the shack. So
she comes up with the perfect plan to get the field trip canceled. But when a
careless mistake puts the shack—and the Laura Line—in jeopardy, Laura must
decide what's truly important to her. Can Laura figure out how to get what she
wants at school while also honoring her family's past?
From Crystal Allen
comes this touching and funny story of one girl's path to figuring out where
she came from, and the unlimited possibilities of who she can become.
I asked Crystal some
questions so you could get to know her and Laura and here’s what she had to
say!
Joy: Tell us about Laura Dyson.
Crystal: Laura Dyson is a
humorous, 13 year-old, overweight African American girl with dreams to do great
things. She loves fashion, which leans
her dreams toward modeling. However, she
also loves pitching and would love to get invited to play baseball, especially
if that invite came from Hunky Chunky, Troy Bailey! Unfortunately, bullying by her classmates
causes Laura to be unsure of herself.
Joy: What drew you to
this character once she popped into your head?
Crystal: I wanted to tell the story of the little
house on my grandmother's farm. During a
"what if" brainstorm, Laura entered my thoughts with a low
self-esteem. She had several personal
issues, one being how important it was to keep the "little house," a
secret from her classmates.
Joy: Was she as
insistent you tell her story as Lamar was?
Crystal: I'll probably never have a character as
insistent as Lamar. :)
Joy: Tell us about
writing a story that balances a thirteen year old girl's regular life -- school
and crushes and insecurities-- with a family history that goes back to this
slave shack. Was that a challenge?
Crystal: Yes, it was a challenge, and I'm not sure if there ever
was a balance for Laura in this story. And that's okay. Laura's life wasn't complicated; it was
contaminated with insecurities and fears of the unknown. So, my biggest challenge was making sure she
traveled the path from low-self esteem to confidence in a way believable to the
reader.
Joy: What kind of
research did you do for this novel?
Crystal: I studied the
story of the Amistad along with its captives, and actually toured a replica of
the ship when it was docked in Boston a few years ago. It was painful to be on that schooner, and I
wasn't sure where that pain was coming from.
I gave some of that emotion to Laura.
I also sat with my relatives and learned as much as I could about my
ancestry.
And I ate quite a few pork chop sandwiches. :)
Joy: I know there are
many aspects of Lamar that came from you and your personality and life
experiences and love of bowling! What about Laura?
Crystal: The
scenery for The Laura Line was taken
from my grandmother's farm. There was a
small "shack-like" house in a wooded section on the property, very
close to the family cemetery. I later
found out that my mother raised my oldest brother and oldest sister in that
little shack-like house.
I never ventured inside and to this day, I regret it. Later, my grandmother sold the farm to the
city. Everything was torn down to make
room for a freeway. However, in my
grandmother's contract with the city, she specifically requested the cemetery
be preserved, and it was. But now that
my grandparents and all of my older ancestors are gone, no one knows who's
actually buried in that cemetery, other than the fact that they are relatives
since there were no names on the crosses or headstones.
As I've traveled this road to The Laura Line, my relatives have
sent me pictures and newspaper clippings of family members I had never met or
worse, didn't know they existed. Now,
I'm trying to piece my family history together and I'm closer than I've ever
been before. It's been a wonderful feeling
to find my own "Line" as I wrote about Laura's.
Joy: Was the Laura Line always the title?
Crystal: Yes.
Joy: For the writers who
are reading this, talk a little about writing a second novel.
Crystal: Writing The Laura Line was different than
right How Lamar's Bad Prank Won A Bubba-Sized Trophy for several reasons.
1. This story was not a sequel to Lamar.
2. My protagonist was a girl.
3. I'm not sure why, but writing my second book
seemed harder than writing my first.
Joy: Advice for those aspiring writers?
Crystal: Only listen to the voice of truth, the one
that says you can do it.
Joy: What's up next for
Crystal Allen?
Crystal: I'm
working on a series for Balzar and Bray for early middle-graders.
Lightning Round:
M and M's or
Twizzlers? Red Twizzlers rule, baby!
Unicorn or zombies? Unicorns
Favorite guilty pleasure
TV? Cold
case.
Wine or Beer? Wine...no
wait...beer....no wait...
Salty or Sweet? Swalty.
Book(s) for the desert
island? If I'm not there by choice: The Dummies Handbook on How to Build a Boat,
and a the Bible. If I'm there by choice: A
variety bag of trashy romance, legal thrillers and pound-the-sand,
laugh-out-loud funny books.
Perfect vacation? Cruising.
Thank you,
Crystal, for stopping by!
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
THE SWEET DEAD BLOG TOUR HAS BEGUN
SWEET DEAD BLOG TOUR!
The Sweet Dead Blog Tour has begun! Reviews, interviews,
guest posts… Thank you to all the lovely bloggers who have agreed to
participate and to the delightful and brilliant Meredith Barnes at Soho Press
who has coordinated. I am so thrilled for THE SWEET DEAD LIFE to hit the
shelves on May 14th! Check
out each site. You don’t want to miss something!
I will link each post here as it comes up so you’ll be
linked to the actual post and not just the blog itself. Yes, that’s how I roll.
I am just that helpful.
And in a related topic, I am thrilled that Bookist has also
loved THE SWEET DEAD LIFE. Here is part of what they had to say:
"There’s a whole lot going on here: poisonings, blackmail, sibling
relationships, romance, and abandonment, in addition to angels, but the
unifying thread is Jenna’s clever,
bitter, self-aware, and loving voice…The small-town Texas setting
is delightfully detailed but not parochial. Preble’s lively descriptions and
unusually well-drawn, caring sibling relationship (a topic not usually explored
in teen fiction) are especially noteworthy."
Okay,
here’s THE SWEET DEAD TOUR:
May 6 – I READ BANNED BOOKS – guest post
May 7 – BLOOKGIRL -- review
http://www.blookgirl.com/book-blog/272-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble
http://www.blookgirl.com/book-blog/272-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble
May 8 – PAGE SAGE – guest post
May 9 – CHICK LOVES LIT – excerpt
http://chickloveslit.com/2013/05/blog-tour-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html
http://chickloveslit.com/2013/05/blog-tour-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html
May 9 – FICTION FOLIO – review
http://www.fictionfolio.com/2013/05/blog-tour-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+fictionfolio%2FmTma+(Fiction+Folio+-+A+Young+Adult+Book+Blog)
May 10 –DEATH BOOKS AND TEA – guest post
http://deathbooksandtea.blogspot.com/2013/05/who-would-joy-cast-as-amber-sweet-dead.html
May 10 –DEATH BOOKS AND TEA – guest post
http://deathbooksandtea.blogspot.com/2013/05/who-would-joy-cast-as-amber-sweet-dead.html
May 10 – EX LIBRIS --
Interview
http://www.exlibriskate.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour-giveaway.html
http://www.exlibriskate.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour-giveaway.html
May 10 – LADYBUG STORYTIME – guest post
http://ladybugstorytime.blogspot.com/2013/05/blog-tour-review-guest-post-and.html
http://ladybugstorytime.blogspot.com/2013/05/blog-tour-review-guest-post-and.html
May 12 –PAPERBACK TREASURES – interview
http://paperbacktreasures.blogspot.com/2013/05/author-interview-with-joy-preble-sweet.html
http://paperbacktreasures.blogspot.com/2013/05/author-interview-with-joy-preble-sweet.html
May 12 –CONFESSIONS OF A READAHOLIC – guest post
http://iliveforreading.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour-guest.html
May 13 – LOOPY LIBRARIAN -- review
May 13 – LOOPY LIBRARIAN -- review
http://www.theloopylibrarian.com/2013/03/blog-tour-and-book-review-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble/
May 13 – KRISTI BELCAMINO – interview
May 13 – KRISTI BELCAMINO – interview
May 13 – KAT’S BOOK BUZZ --
guest post
http://www.katsbookbuzz.net/2013/05/blog-tour-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html
http://www.katsbookbuzz.net/2013/05/blog-tour-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html
May 13 – BOOK HAVEN EXTRAORDINAIRE – review
May 14th THE SWEET DEAD LIFE LAUNCHES!!
May 14 –BOOKISH THINGS AND MORE --
review
http://www.bookishthingsandmore.com/2013/05/blog-tour-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble.html
May 14 – ROOTS IN MYTH -- interview
http://pjhoover.blogspot.com/2013/05/featuring-joy-preble-and-sweet-dead-life.html
May 14 – ROOTS IN MYTH -- interview
http://pjhoover.blogspot.com/2013/05/featuring-joy-preble-and-sweet-dead-life.html
May 14 – CARI’S BOOK BLOG – interview
http://cariblogs.blogspot.com/2013/05/interview-giveaway-with-joy-preble.html
http://cariblogs.blogspot.com/2013/05/interview-giveaway-with-joy-preble.html
May 14 – SARAH’S BOOKS AND LIFE – playlist guest post
May 15 – MY BOOKISH WAYS—review
http://www.mybookishways.com/2013/05/blog-tour-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble-review-and-giveaway.html
http://www.mybookishways.com/2013/05/blog-tour-the-sweet-dead-life-by-joy-preble-review-and-giveaway.html
May 15 –STEPH’S BOOK CORNER – review
http://stephsbookcorner.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour-and-review.html
http://stephsbookcorner.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour-and-review.html
May 15 – DANA’S YA BOOKPILE – playlist guest post
http://danasyabookpile.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour.html
http://danasyabookpile.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-sweet-dead-life-blog-tour.html
May 15 – PERFECT COMPANIONS HAVE PAGES AND PROSE – interview
http://readerwritercookiebaker.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/an-interview-with-author-joy-preble-and.html?m=1
http://readerwritercookiebaker.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/an-interview-with-author-joy-preble-and.html?m=1
May 16 – NO MORE GRUMPY BOOKSELLERS -- guest post
http://nomoregrumpybookseller.blogspot.com/2013/05/guest-post-and-giveaway-joy-preble.html
http://nomoregrumpybookseller.blogspot.com/2013/05/guest-post-and-giveaway-joy-preble.html
May 17 – CYA PODCAST – interview
May 17 –RUBY’S READS – guest post
http://rubysreads.com/joy-preble-guest-post-sweet-dead-life-giveaway/
http://rubysreads.com/joy-preble-guest-post-sweet-dead-life-giveaway/
May 22-- SEE LAUREN WRITE
-- guest post
Perhaps a few others will sneak in there, but that’s made of
awesome list!!
THANK YOU ALL!!!
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