Showing posts with label new adult. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new adult. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2014

It's Here!

It's midnight, and you know what that means? Fall with Me is out! 
*happy dance*
*muppet flails*

Since I know you all want to get your copies immediately (especially since the 99 cent price is limited time only), here are a whole bunch of links to help you on your way:

Amazon US
Amazon UK
Amazon CA
Amazon DE
Amazon IT
Nook US
Nook UK
iBooks
Googleplay
Kobo

I think that just about covers the main e-railers.

Also, for those of you who haven't joined my street team yet (and why not?)... I'm holding a special contest this week for the Particka Gang, but you have to join to play.

FIND SUTTON!Here's the deal. You know my character model for Sutton, and you've (hopefully) read the book. Your task, should you choose to accept it, is to find me a real life Sutton and share his picture with the gang. No old year book photos, I want this to be someone you know or randomly find. The shot can be clandestine or posed. (The "best" of the bunch will be chosen--by someone other than me--for a $5 gift card.)

There is also a second $5 gift card up for grabs in a random draw--details on the street team


I'm also doing another something special with the team, but it's only being announced there today. It involves tattoos. :P 

Also, don't forget to attend the Entangled Embrace Spring Break Blast with me, Tessa Bailey, Erin Butler, and Reese Monroe! Yes, you guessed it, even more prizes there. Also shenanigans :) 

Finall, in case you missed it, here are the dates/locations for my blog tour the next two weeks (and more prizes!):


Apr 28deea reads


Apr 28Books Over Boys

Apr 29Perusing Princesses

Apr 29Reader Girls

Apr 30Bookcrastinators

Apr 30My Reading Room

May 1The Lusty Literate

May 1Trips Down Imagination Road

May 2Lisa Loves Books

May 2Ramblings of a Book Lunatic

May 5Manga Maniac Cafe

May 5kimberlyfaye reads

May 6Book Angel Booktopia
May 6Becky on Books

May 7Talking Books Blog

May 7You Gotta Read Reviews

May 8Sizzling Hot YA Books

May 8Ramblings of a quirky, slightly mad journalist…
May 9Book Purses & Reviews

May 9Laurie’s Thoughts and Reviews

May 9Nerissa Luna
 





Sunday, April 13, 2014

Is This Thing On?

*taps mic*

Apologies. One really shouldn't sell a book and then leave their blog dormant. That's totally bad juju.

But I am back and for those of you who have been waiting for news (but haven't been following on Twitter or Facebook), I have a book coming out in TWO WEEKS! 

That's right, my first new adult novel, Fall with Me, is releasing with Entangled Publishing's Embrace line. 

In the game of love…Dumped by her college boyfriend for her best friend, the last thing Jenna Brandt needs to deal with is working beside her backstabbing-BFF's hotter-than-hot brother. But when he offers her a chance to get some revenge on her ex, she can hardly say no--even if spending more time with Sutton puts her heart in jeopardy all over again.
Someone's going to get hurt…Sutton Bell has had a thing for Jenna since they were in high school, but after one screwed-up night, she didn’t want anything to do with him. Now, with just the summer before he leaves to begin his new career, Sutton’s determined to convince Jenna he’s not the player he used to be. But saving his sister from making an awful mistake may mean losing Jenna for good.

NOTE:
Fall with Me is new adult, not YA. It is much sexier than Pretty Souls, so be aware of that if you are one of my younger readers.

I'm really excited about this book, so I hope you'll check it out:

I've also revamped the website and have created a street team for all things related to my books. Please check out the site and send a request to join the street team if you are so interested. I give advance peeks and ARCs and such there. Plus, we have cupcakes. ;-) 

I'll be updating with blog tour dates as soon as I have them!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Age Group Jumping

There are two of me. One writes adult and the other writes YA/NA. There's a simple reason why I write all three. I am an adult (and quite frankly, that stuff sells better digitally) and I loved high school and college. That was a great age for me, so I'm drawn to writing it.

Much to my children's sorrow, I will not write middle grade or chapter books. It's not anything weird like a lack of respect for the genre. I am HUGELY appreciative of those categories because those are the books that make lifelong readers. Problem is, I didn't come into my own until high school, and I don't look back on the earlier years with any fondness. If someone said to me "Hey, we're going to make you twelve again and you can live your whole life over!" My response would be "No thanks, I'd rather choke on my own panicked vomit and die." Plus, quite honestly, I don't have the right voice for it.

There are people who can bridge from picture books all the way to adult and do it all well, but they are few and far between. It always makes me shake my head when I see writer friends/acquaintances who seem to jump on whatever the "it" genre is.

"MG is hot? I'm going to write that!"

"NA is the new thing. Sign me up."

Now, anyone who knows me knows I'm all about trying new things and stretching as a writer, but if the reason you're doing it is because it's popular, you're doing it for the wrong reasons. It's like dating the captain of the football team in high school even though he's a misogynistic creep who never bothers to comb his hair or brush his teeth. Hey, he's still football captain. Hello...popular.

Hello... lame... stupid... ridiculous. (Pick an adjective.)

So is chasing the "it" genre. By all means, if it calls to your muse and fits your voice, have at it. But if you're just doing it because it's popular...

Do you know why I write (some) New Adult? Because I love writing YA, and some of my YA has always nudged into the college arena (I was told at the time it was unsellable). I also write adult, but I've been told I have a "youthful" adult voice. (Appropriate since Julie means youthful.) So that sweet spot for me? It's 16-25. Yes, I've written older characters, but that (even with my adult stuff) is where I like to sit. I'm just lucky enough that it crosses three genres. I have very little desire to branch out much further.

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Young Adult...New Adult...Why Can't You Just Be an Adult?

The last question in the title I won't even bother responding to beyond this. I am an adult. I'm just not a grown-up. The end.

As for the rest (I'm about to show just how much of an adult I am, by the way)...

When I was growing up, there was no such thing as young adult. Yep, that long ago. I think the Sweet Valley High books were just coming into popularity (maybe), but by the time you're in high school I'm not sure those really cut it for reading material anymore. The point of this is kids jumped from reading kids' books to reading adult books. Age-appopriate had no meaning because the best a teenage reader could do was sift through the books and hope to find characters somewhere near their age. (Either that or so foreign that age didn't matter--I think this is one reason so many of us gravitated to sic-fi/fantasy early on.) Truly, the only book I can recall reading that would still fall under the YA heading today is The Outsiders

I'm sure when someone first suggested YA there was some industry backlash. Where will we shelve them? Teens don't have money for books. All sorts of reasons to fight against it. 

Then somewhere, some brave publisher decided to give it a try. And the books sold. Maybe not like hotcakes, but they sold. Over time this led to Harry Potter madness, Twilight insanity, and a few other huge sellers. YA wasn't some void--it was big money! (I can't find hard numbers, but I believe I've seen where YA as a genre is second only to romance in sales.)

There's a simple reason for this. YA is about firsts. First kiss, first love, first time, first car (er...firsts not in any particular order). A lot of things happen for the first time during those high school years. (Yes, some happen earlier or later, but on average, it's high school.) There were very few books that addressed those things. Things teenagers generally don't want to talk to their parents about too much. Teens needed YA fiction. 

And the crazy part? 

Adults needed to go back. Adult sales account for a very large portion of the YA market. Yes, part of it is well-written characters and blah blah blah, but the bigger part is wanting to "re-live" that time in our lives. For some of us (I'm probably in the minority) who loved high school, reading YA brings back a lot of good memories about the crazy shit we did. For others (who weren't so fond of the time), reading YA gives them a different (perhaps better) experience than what they lived through. It's very similar to the way a lot of women will return to romance novels after a bad break up. It's a reminder that there's good stuff out there somewhere.

Now New Adult is going through that same question phase that YA did. Do we need it? Who will it sell to? Is it just erotica for teens? Do we really want that?

The questions make me want to bash my head through a wall. Remember how I talked about the way teens used to jump from kids' books straight to adult? The advent of YA solved that...but there's still a hole. People (generally) don't go straight from high school graduation to a career or marriage and kids. There's college or first jobs or struggling as you move out of your parents' house. From eighteen to about twenty-five, there's a gaping chasm in fiction. Sure, you can sometimes find protagonists in the age bracket, but they aren't that common and there's no definitive place to look for them and even having characters of the right age doesn't guarantee a book that deals with those issues that plague "new adults."

Let me say it up front: New Adult is not erotica with teenagers. Period. Full stop. Books that are erotica with teenagers are erotica. Period. Full stop. It would be a very rare plot that is both erotica and deals with those new adult issues. (I can think of one that does, but it's a sub-plot in an adult book, so it doesn't really apply.)

So what is New Adult?

Young Adult is about firsts, but New Adult is about leaving. It's about exiting childhood, leaving that safety net as well as the one represented by parents. It's also about self-discovery. Those years after you leave home are when most people start to figure out who they really are without the rules of school or the rules of their family home. It's about responsibility on a level they may never have had to deal with before. In short, they're about becoming an adult in everything except age. 

Does that include sex? Maybe. Probably. So does life though. And it is different than teen sex and different than married (or almost-married) sex. Self-discovery, remember? So yes, New Adult books will likely be sexier than their YA counterparts. That does not, however, make them erotica or even erotic romance. It just means sexier. Sort of like the girls in the 60s movies who go to school in their proper below-the-knee skirts just to roll them up once they get there and show a little leg. Sex in YA is (usually) fade-to-black or minimal details. Sex in New Adult is going to be more open--it's going to show a little more leg as it were.

Every time New Adult comes up on Twitter, I see people saying "we don't need it." Sure. We didn't need YA either. Generations of readers got by without it. That doesn't mean readers (and publishing) aren't better off for having it. It's taken self-published New Adult hits for publishers to sit up and take notice. People, readers, want new adult. They want to build a bridge over that gaping hole between YA and adult so they don't have to try to catapult across it. 

And here's a crazy thought. Maybe, just maybe reading about the pitfalls of that time in life will help a few people from making the same mistakes the previous generation (or two) did. I know. Books don't ever teach people anything. Right?