Showing posts with label Paperback. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paperback. Show all posts

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Hop Onto the "Unexpecting" Book Tour



AUTHOR! AUTHOR!
LORI V. FOGARSI!


Lori Verni-Fogarsi has been an author, speaker, and small business consultant since 1995. She has been featured in media including “Lifetime Women’s Network,” the “My Carolina Today Show,” and “Boston Globe Forums Live.” Her public speaking has occurred at many prestigious venues including “North Carolina State University,” “Nassau Community College,” and many more. She has received two awards for her novel, “Momnesia,” and her nonfiction, “Everything You Need to Know About House Training Puppies and Adult Dogs,” continues to be one of the most highly recommended in its genre since 2005. Lori is a happy married mom of two, step mom of two more, and has two cats, both rotten. She is very excited about the release of “Unexpecting,” and enjoys getting to know her readers via social media and in person. She invites you to learn more at www.LoriTheAuthor.com.


Unexpecting

 Shelley and David are a couple of almost-empty-nesters preparing to embark on the next stage of their lives. They just ordered white furniture and planned the vacation they’ve waited their entire lives to take when Alexandra, seventeen and pregnant, shows up on their doorstep and announces that she’s the daughter they never knew they had!

Length: 272 Pages
Prices:
Paperback:  $14.99
E-Book:  TBA

LORI’S SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS:

Lori’s Website: http://www.LoriTheAuthor.com
Like other social media? Look for her at LoriTheAuthor everywhere!

Visit the Blog Tour Page to find more features, book giveaways, and enter to win a $100 Amazon Gift Card! http://www.LoriTheAuthor.com/UnexpectingRelease



Meet Alexandra

R:  What's your story/back story? Why would someone come up with a story about YOU?

A:  My name is Alexandra, and I'm the girl who shows up unexpectedly and announces that I'm the daughter he never knew he had. I guess someone would write a story about me because it's kind of weird that my mom never even told my dad I existed. Plus, with my mom dying and me being an orphaned, pregnant teenager, I guess someone had to write about it... it's not like they could just leave me alone!

R:  Can you tell us about your hero/ine

A:  Are we calling them the hero and the heroine? Because sure, Shelley and David did take me in and do help with the baby, and they've tried to make me a part of the family, but the truth is, I feel like things would have been so much better if my real mom were around. Plus, I can't stand their daughter Grace, who thinks she's so great just because she doesn't have a baby like I do and is on the dance team!

R:  What problems do you have to face and overcome in your life?

A:  Where do I even start! First I go on vacation with my mom and the very first time I ever break a rule by sneaking out of the teen program and going to a bar, I end up getting pregnant. Then my mom dies out of the clear blue sky and I have to go live with my dad who I never even met before. Not to mention his family, who are all a bunch of goody-goodies. Impossible!

R:  Do you expect your hero/ine to help or is s/he the problem?
You would think they would help me, but they hardly do! I mean, sure, Shelley watches the baby while I'm at school and David (my dad) watches him a few hours in the evenings and on Saturday mornings, but then they, like, expect me to still wash bottles and do laundry and stuff! And then, just because I forgot to change him a few times and like to do a little partying and stuff, they think I should go in a drug program? Puh-lease!

R:  That’s all the questions we have for you. Thank you for speaking to us, and thanks for bringing Patrick along.  He’s such a cute baby, with those big brown eyes.  I have a great-granddaughter just about his age.  I’ll bet they’d be darling together.

A:  Yeah, sure.  Thank you, too. Because I'm glad someone even cares whether I live or die... not like these people who are trying to make my life miserable!

Don’t forget to hop next door to “Rochelle’s Reviews.”  Just click on the icon in the left column of this blog.  I gave Unexpecting five stars.  See why.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

“Unpacking—Or Moving is Such a Pain” from Rock Bound



This time it isn’t my political prisoners who have moved; it’s me.  When my daughter got engaged last winter, she and her fiancé looked at their families and decided our house was the logical place for everyone to live, as his house was too small for four generations.  So, he, his daughter and baby granddaughter moved in with my daughter, granddaughter and me.  Needless to say, the only one who got along with everybody was the baby.  No wait, Marshall’s dog, Amonte, was jealous of Sydney.  He was used to being the baby of their family.

The living room became my bedroom and things clearly needed to change the day the priest came to call.  Our house was in front of the Volo Auto Museum, across the street from a Catholic church.  Marshall got married in the Catholic Church and that’s where the kids want to have their wedding.  My ex-hubby was Catholic and I turned Catholic when I married him because I believed families should go to church together, so my kids were raised Catholic.  My girls turned away from Catholicism for many years and Elizabeth’s first two marriages took place under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church.  But in recent years she’s grown closer to her paternal grandmother and gone back to the Catholic Church.  Anyway, since we live right there, when some paperwork came in for Marshall’s annulment, Father Anthony figured he’d walk it over.  He woke me so I rolled out of bed and answered the door.  Fortunately, living in such a crowded house, I got in the habit of sleeping fully clothed so I was dressed when I opened the door and invited him in.  I swear, the poor man almost fainted when he saw my bed taking up half the room—although, he was standing by my recliner, so technically he was in my living room.  One step to his left and he would have been in my office.  ;-)  Yes, it was a small room.

At any rate, it was obvious we were overcrowded.  The house was a pressure cooker and tempers were getting shorter by the day, so I put my name on the list for government senior housing.  I expected it to take months, if not years to get an apartment.  Imagine my surprise when I got a phone call two days later.  They had not one, but two apartments available for me and one of them was in the only building in Lake County, Illinois that includes heat.  So, I’ve moved. 



I’m mostly unpacked.  My new place is tiny and I’ve decided I need to rearrange my living room so I’ve not yet unpacked my china cabinet.  I’ll wait until the kids come back over and move it into the corner before I unpack my china and crystal.  At least the boxes are on my pantry shelves.  The worst part of this move, however, is that I don’t have room for all of my books.  I guess I’m finally going to have to give away most of them.  I suppose a lot of people think, “They’re just books.  Big deal.”

I’m an author and a reader.  Giving away my books is a big deal.  One of the times I moved, someone asked if I’d ever heard of a library.  My response?  “Of course I have.  I’m building one!”  Needless to say, my dream house includes at least one room lined with books.  And nowadays, most of them would be written by friends of mine.  Wow!  Is that a great thought or what?  It didn’t help when it came time to move, though, that most of my friends were writers who live out of state or even out of the country.  It’s not like my author friends from Down Under could come over and carry a few boxes for pizza and beer.

Otherwise, I’m settled.  Hopefully this will be the last one, unless I manage to make a major splash, make all the best-seller lists, and buy that dream house with the library, indoor pool/hot tub, etc.  Well…  A girl can dream, can’t she?


Speaking of Rock Bound, here’s an excerpt.

October, 2051
Moon Base Alpha

Annie slowly climbed back to consciousness. She noticed the guards were sort of sliding along the aisles, and then realized she was on the Moon and they were trying to walk in the much-lower lunar gravity. As she exited the shuttle, Annie, too, was awestruck by the stark beauty of the lunar surface and the star-studded velvet vault above her.

Mount Aragaeus towered close by. Like Jake, Annie had half expected to see snow on such a tall mountain and had expected it to be jagged rather than rounded, but it was bare rock, like the rest of the surface. She turned, saw the Earth hanging in blue, green, brown and white splendor above the shuttle and glanced quickly away from the blinding ice of the polar caps. There was a storm brewing over parts of Canada and the United States and it looked just like the satellite photos they showed on the weather each evening, although the effect was breathtaking when viewed on the huge globe hanging before them. The women lined up next to the shuttle, noticing figures coming through the airlock toward them.

A guard prodded Annie and she moved toward the airlock with Crystal and Vivian, all stumbling, looking over their shoulders at the Earth, as they learned to keep up with the long, loping strides of the guards.

The large airlock was the size of a freight elevator and they cycled into the dome all together.

“Remove your p-suits, ladies,” a female voice instructed over their helmet radios. The women removed their suits and faced the guard. “I’m Chief Kazinski,” she said. “You’ll help the men put away the supplies.” Her blonde hair was cropped short, and her green eyes looked serious as she concentrated on her chart. “Anything marked “Rec” stays in here. We’ll set up the galley at that end.” She gestured at the wall farthest from the door. “Your bedding and clothes are in the crates marked ‘Women.’ Your barracks is Compartment One, down that…tunnel.” She consulted the chart again and pointed to an airlock to the left of the one through which they had entered.

Each tunnel was accessed by an airlock at each end, a safety measure to prevent widespread damage in case of any breaches. A large enough hole could create an explosive decompression and kill everyone. Sealing each dome separately with airlocks at the entrances and exits would serve to minimize loss of life.

~*~

A detail sorted the crates while other prisoners delivered them to their designated sites. Prisoners in each barracks opened long, thin crates about a foot deep which became bunks that attached to the walls in tiers of four. Furthermore, each bunk was also a locker already filled with their clothing. Their names were stenciled on the sides of their bunks. The bedding had been packed in crates and had to be sorted and distributed among the bunks.

There was a head compartment inside each wedge-shaped barracks room. They had been instructed on the use of the heads before they left Earth. There were sonic showers and sinks, and waste was removed from the toilets by a pressure evacuation system that in some way separated the liquid from solid so the liquid could be sterilized and recycled, and the solid waste was used as fertilizer in the hydroponic farms. Annie didn’t want to think about what the liquid was used for after it was sterilized and distilled. Clean though it was, she didn’t want to think she was in any way drinking it.

The prisoners surveyed their bedding, which consisted of a very thin foam mattress, a small pillow, one pillowcase, two sheets and a thin blanket. When Annie saw the mattress, she wondered how she would ever get any sleep on such a thin cushion, or how that little blanket could possibly keep her warm, but her fears were allayed the first night. In the low gravity of the Moon, the one inch-thick mattress provided plenty of padding, and the temperature in the barracks was constant and comfortable.

Finally the prisoners lined up in the rec area.
Length:  270 Pages
Price Paperback:  $11.99
Price E-Book:  $5.99
Buy Link Paperback: Createspace
Buy Link E-Book:  Smashwords


You’ll notice I always include the publisher’s buy link.  That’s because authors usually receive 40% of the book price from the publisher.  Editors and cover artists usually receive about 5%.  When you buy a book from Amazon, Barnes & Noble or another third-party vendor, they take a hefty cut and the author, editors and cover artists receive their cuts from what is left.  So, if a book costs $5.99 at E-Book Publisher.com and you buy from there, the author will receive about $2.40.  If you buy the book at Amazon, the author will receive about $0.83.

Downloading the file from your computer to your Kindle is as easy as transferring any file from your computer to a USB flash drive.  Plug the USB end of your chord into a USB port on your computer and simply move the file from your “Downloads” box to your Kindle/Documents/Books directory.  I actually download my books using “Save As” to a “Books” file on my computer that’s sorted by my publisher, friends, and books “to review,” and then transfer them to my Kindle from there.  That way, if there’s a glitch with my Kindle, the books are on my computer.  Your author will be happy you did when he/she sees his/her royalty statement.


Tuesday, February 22, 2011

E-Books Have Arrived


Forget the NY Times Best Seller List or industry predictions. E-Books have made it! Ever since I first started writing, my sister and brother-in-law have been asking when my first book, Rock Bound, would come out in print. When I signed my contract with MuseItUp Publishing, Inc. for Rock Crazy, they asked whether it would be out in print. This evening, I visited them. Earlier this month they turned 75 and 78 respectively, but we got snowed in so I finally got around to taking their birthday cake over to them.

I took along the galley proof of the paperback version of Rock Bound and the Kindle my younger daughter gave me as a belated b-day gift when her taxes came in. A friend of my brother-in-law recently got one, so he was familiar with the fact that it holds thousands of books at once, and how easy it is to order them. I told them you could also load MP3s on it and listen to music or books on tape and showed them how you can change the font if you need to make it bigger, and how it keeps your page when you turn it off. I couldn’t believe my ears when he mentioned it saves trees.

My sister had a stroke about six years ago that affected her right hand and arm, and she loves to read, but library books are heavy and a Kindle is not only lighter, you don’t have to hold it open and changing pages is much easier for a stroke victim. I should have taken along the plate holder I use to prop mine up when I’m eating out. You know—the kind you can buy at Wal-Mart or a craft store to display collector plates. It works great.

So, they nodded politely when I showed them the paperback galley of Rock Bound, and now they’re asking if my books will be on Kindle. E-books have truly arrived!