I hope I will be able to publish
my novel in about a month.
Not exact matches
One
month he's giving 50 of his friends a new
novel he adores, the next he's suggesting everyone get out the tissues and check out a heartbreaker of a memoir, then a bit later he's back on his blog enthusing
about a deep dive into eviction
in America.
35 year old single man, living
in pune, work
in senior position with a large corporate, an avid runner have run marathons, like to write,
about to publish first
novel this
month, looking for a good friend..
Edward St. Aubyn's darkly comic
novels about upper - class life
in Britain, beloved by a generation of distinguished readers, come to Showtime next
month.
Books have been written
about how to write a
novel in a
month, and 27 participants have had their books published, including Sara Gruen, author of the best seller Water for Elephants.
Lastly, while it's not a speculative
novel, and thus doesn't get a place
in our list, we can't talk
about next
month's releases without at least mentioning The Casual Vacancy, J.K. Rowling's very first contemporary
novel written for an adult audience.
Also
in BookPage: I gushed
about a new Allende
novel back
in December of 2009 on this blog, then reviewed the
novel (Island Beneath the Sea) for BookPage a few
months later.
I've been buying a lot of ebooks
in the last 6
months and there are huge differences, depending on author, type of book, age of the book etc For instance; I recently bought the first 15 Mr Monk
novels for
about 5 $ a piece.
Four
months remain before Jodi Picoult's 2011 release, Sing You Home, hits stores
in March — complete with a CD of custom - written tunes inspired by the main character's career as a musical therapist — but she's already sharing news
about her 2012
novel.
A few
months ago we posted
about Ann Patchett's «Conradian»
novel set
in the Amazon jungle, and now we have a little more info on this June 2011 release.
If you're a writer, you know
about NaNoWriMo, National
Novel Writing
Month, every November when aspiring authors scramble to try to write the first draft of a new book
in one
month flat.
I still occasionally wake
in the wee small hours thinking
about the enormous blooper that hid
in plain sight
in my
novel's all - important final paragraph for SIX WHOLE
MONTHS before I spotted it!
An inventive suspense
novel, a moving debut
about growing up
in the modern South and an award - winning memoir make for great group discussion this
month.
In recent
months, I've seen graphic
novels about Hurricane Katrina, emigration from Iran, weight loss and just
about any other topic imaginable — including rap singles.
I co-authored the
novel with the Pulitzer - Prize nominated Churchill Biographer James C. Humes and spent
months reading Winston Churchill's memoirs, accounts of the events leading up to the Iron Curtain speech; composing his speech
in the British embassy
in Washington; facts
about Soviet spies who had penetrated the embassy during the war; the relationship between Churchill and his lone bodyguard.
In past
months, I've blogged
about Madeleine L'Engle's birthday and her granddaughter's debut
novel.
If,
in the process of publishing these
novels, you're able to gain some true fans, the types of people who tell their friends
about your work, you might find that 50 sales a
month per
novel is very beatable (with a little spent on advertising here and there, my EE
novels are still selling 300 + a
month, though I've completed the series and moved on to other things).
When I finish a
novel now,
in about a
month it has been proofed and formatted and cover done and is
in print
in Smith's Monthly and two
months after that it is
in print standalone so readers can find it.
The Neapolitan
novels by Elena Ferrante So many of my female friends were raving
about Elena Ferrante's The Story of a Lost Child that I read all four of her Neapolitan
novels in a
month.
So, within a year, I published the next two
novels in the series within
about a
month of each other and all four books started selling
in numbers I'd never seen before.
There are two types of romance
novels: a series romance, which is meant to have a shelf life of
about a
month and are short
in length, and standalone
novels, much more meatier than a series of romance and often have several subplots.
This
month's question is
about how much is «too much information»
in a science
novel...
And blogging
about the creation of the book has been shown to work quite well, for instance
in Joanna Penn's case with her year - long development of a
novel she published a few
months ago.
Personally, I was
about to go public with my decision this year to not do NaNoWriMo for two reasons — I wanted to concentrate on finishing up the writing guide on Evernote, and I should be revising previous
novels I've written
in a
month.
Personally, I took
about a seven
month break from book reviewing (mostly non-fiction with the occasional
novel thrown
in for ha - ha's), mostly because I felt I was getting burned out from trying to come up with fresh new ways to describe why I liked, or didn't like, a particular book.
This morning at over the Kirkus Book Blog Network, I've got a Q & A with illustrator and graphic novelist Hope Larson
about her graphic
novel adaptation of A Wrinkle
in Time, released by Farrar, Straus and Giroux this
month.
Not only did the marketing campaign work wonders for spreading the word
about the new
novel,
in the very last
month, on the very last day of the tour, Moonlight Falls became an Amazon Kindle bestseller!»
«Concentric, unfolding Buckminster Fuller spheres [the futurist architect born two
months prior to the books» publishing
in 1895] create the Time Machine from H.G. Wells first
novel about competing societal...