Archive for the ‘St. Martin’s Press’ Category

What’s in a title?

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Titles? Do they really matter to you? Would you not buy a book because the title is just too unpalatable for your tastes? As a writer, I try very hard to give my books titles that fit. My first book had four titles before it was all said and done. It started out as An Honorable Rogue, then moved to A Midsummer’s Night Folly before being changed to A Lady’s Compromise. I really thought A Lady’s Compromise was a completely appropriate title for the book because, well, my heroine is a lady and indeed is compromised. Alas, however, that title would not do so it became SINFUL SURRENDER, sexier, hotter?

My second book was titled simply The Gauntlet. Even though I knew I’d never be able to keep it because it wasn’t sexy or romantic enough, I did love it and thought it suited my hero and heroine’s relationship to a ‘T’. I believe my editor came up with A TASTE OF DESIRE and I’m happy with it. I’m pretty happy with both titles of my books.

But within the past two years, I’ve definitely noticed a trend where titles are concerned. The first book that comes to mind is Julia Quinn’s WHAT HAPPENS IN LONDON, which is an obvious play on the famous saying, “What happens in Vegas stays in Vegas”. Her next book was titled TEN THINGS I LOVE ABOUT YOU, again a play on the popular movie starring Heath Ledger, 10 Thing I Hate About You.

On a brief aside, I thought The Dark Knight was the best super hero movie every made and Heath was beyond brilliant as The Joker.

Okay, getting back on point, recently, this title caught my eye, WHEN HARRY MET MOLLY by debut author Kieran Kramer. Okay, now you got me because When Harry Met Sally is my favourite romantic comedy ever. Yes ever. Love love love that movie. Of course now I’m intrigued with the book simply because of the title. This particular title will make me at least pick it up to read the back cover copy. And as you can see the cover isn’t bad either. ;)

Next in Kieran’s offerings? DUKES TO THE LEFT OF ME, PRINCES TO THE RIGHT. Okay, some of you may be too young to get where this title is coming from. This time it’s the Stealer’s Wheel song Stuck in the Middle with You written by Joe Egan and Gerry Rafferty.

Chorus:
Clowns to the left of me.
Jokers to the right.
Here I am stuck in the middle with you.

I love that song, so Jennifer Enderlin, Kieran’s editor at St. Martin’s Press who came up with that title, totally tapped into my love of 70s hit songs. Again, the cover isn’t bad either. ;)

Yes, there are many more book titles now following in that theme (and have in the past). Some I find completely delightful, others not so much. So as you can see, the title of a book can intrigue me enough to make me want to know more about the book, but can a title totally turn me off one? Unless, I find the title totally offensive or roll my eyes just plain silly, nope. I know many authors have very little say in the title of their books so, I, as a reader, don’t want to hold that against them.

What about you, how much, if any, do titles influence you when selecting books? Can a title totally turn you off a book?

Louisa Edward gives us JUST ONE TASTE

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Please welcome Louisa Edwards to the blog today. We’re chatting about, amongst other things, her latest release in her Recipe for Love series, JUST ONE TASTE and she’s coming bearing gifts. ;)

~**~**~

Please tell us about your Recipe for Love series and more specifically your new book, JUST ONE TASTE?
The Recipe for Love novels are all contemporary romances with a strong culinary theme. I have lots of hot chefs, restaurant critics, servers, and food writers! If you love “Top Chef” and the Food Network shows, and think Anthony Bourdain, Gordon Ramsay, and Tom Colicchio are weirdly sexy, this is the series for you!

JUST ONE TASTE is the third installment in the series, and it returns us to trendy Manhattan eatery, Market. The hero is Wes Murphy, ex-con artist, who left culinary school after falling for one of his professors, food chemistry genius Dr. Rosemary Wilkins. But Rosemary’s not through with him yet, and tracks him down at Market to enlist his help on the project they’d started together . . . a study of the sensual properties of foods reputed to be aphrodisiacs!

What is so sexy about a man who knows his way around the kitchen, like all of your heroes do?
They say the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach, but I think that’s actually true for all of us. The sense of taste is one of the strongest for evoking emotion and memory . . . and there’s just something about the time and care it takes to produce something delicious. It’s a tangible outpouring of love. What could be sexier?

I loooove your website. Does it mean that your stories will always have something to do with professional cooking? If you haven’t yet been to Louisa’s website click here to check it out. It’s très gorgeous!
Thank you! I have a lot of fun with that site, posting excerpts and free reads, contests and giveaways. There’s always something going on! And I’ll keep writing culinary romances as long as people keep wanting to read them—I absolutely love it. Food and romance are the perfect combo for me!

You worked for Berkley as an assistant editor. How well (and in which way) did that prepare you for writing your own book?

Editing books was great experience, and I think it gave me some good insights into the craft of storytelling, and how to construct a novel. Mostly, I received great mentoring from the more experienced editors there, and a good foundation of understanding the parts of the industry that lots of authors never see.

When did you decide you’d rather write your own stories than edit them? Was there a trigger? Perhaps a scandalously horrible manuscript? Or were you inspired by some of the greats you worked with like Nora Roberts and Jayne Ann Krentz?
I actually always had it in the back of my head that I’d like to write my own stories. I’m a reader, first and foremost, and have been in love with romance since I was 11 and discovered The Shadow & the Star by Laura Kinsale. Getting to read early drafts of Nora and Jayne’s wonderful books, and seeing how their editor (my boss) worked with them to come to the even more wonderful final product only cemented my desire to write. I loved editing, but writing is stimulating and challenging in a whole different way.

Can you give us your “Call Story”?
My fantastic agent, Deidre Knight, called me at the nonprofit kids’ nutrition program where I was working, and I shrieked so loudly, I scared all the other ladies in the office! I had to take my cell phone out back so I could dance around and jump for joy and not get hauled away by the guys with the white coats. Such a great, unexpected-but-very-anticipated moment! And the fact that it was St. Martin’s making the offer was just the butter on the popcorn. They were and are my dream publisher.

You obviously have a passion for cooking. When and/or how did this come about? Is this a love from childhood?

My parents both love to cook, and are very adventurous eaters, so they brought my sister and me up to try anything and everything. I’ve always loved eating, but I didn’t really cook on a regular basis until we moved away from New York (where my kitchen was approximately the size of an airplane bathroom) to a small town in northern Ohio, where I quickly realized that if I wanted something exciting and interesting for dinner, I had to make it myself. So I did!

Can readers expect more books in your Recipe for Love series? If so when is the next book set to appear?

CAN’T STAND THE HEAT, ON THE STEAMY SIDE, and JUST ONE TASTE make up the Market trilogy, and while the next trilogy will be set in the same world (readers can expect to see some familiar faces!) it will have a slightly different bent.

The newly titled  TOO HOT TO TOUCH will kick off the new trilogy in August 2011, followed quickly by SOME LIKE IT HOT and HOT UNDER PRESSURE. They follow a team of talented chefs in a high-stakes culinary competition!

What do you have planned after you’ve completed this series? Can you tell us anything about your next book?
I’m in the middle of TOO HOT TO TOUCH right now, and it’s shaping up to be one of my favorites. The hero, Max Lunden, left home after culinary school to wander exotic locales and learn obscure cooking techniques, but he’s forced to come home to NYC when his family’s restaurant enters a high-stakes culinary competition. The team is run by Juliet Cavanaugh, a self-taught chef with a lot to prove, and a deep desire to repay the generosity of the Lunden family. She and Max strike sparks right away, and the tension of the competition ignites the passion between them in a way that’s been tons of fun to write!

Will your next trilogy feature recipes, like the Market trilogy does?

Yes! All of my books have three recipes from the story in the back, and it’s one of my favorite things about writing this series. Even if the process of developing and testing the recipes is lengthy and time-consuming, it’s usually a lot of fun, too. And my husband is very sweet about eating the mistakes and failures without complaining. : )

Thanks so much for having me on The Season for Romance—I have a complete set of my Recipe for Love novels (autographed, of course) for one of your readers!

Review: Falling For You

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Falling For You
Author: Julie Ortolon
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
Orig Pub. Date: April 15, 2002
Reissue Date: July 2, 2010
Retail: $2.99
Pages: 336
Format: Digital

What happens when Mr. Slow and Steady…

The forecast is smooth sailing for Oliver Chancellor, scion of Galveston’s premier financier. Destined to take his place in the hallowed marble corridors of his family’s bank, Chance is content with the future that’s been mapped out for him, right down to his upcoming engagement to a prim debutante enthusiastically approved by his socialite mother.

Finds himself on a collision course…

But when beautiful Rory St. Claire crosses his path, Chance recklessly plunges into uncharted territory with nothing but his heart to guide him-and a beautiful woman to tempt him…

With Ms. Full-Speed-Ahead?

Propelled by a lifelong goal to buy the island home reportedly haunted by her colorful ancestors, Rory desperately needs Chance’s help in securing a business loan, and she won’t take no for an answer. In the midst of convincing the hesitant blue blood to take a chance on her dream, Rory unexpectedly lands in Chance’s arms, stunned by his red-blooded passion-and her own awakened desire. Now, the mismatched pair can’t keep their hands off one another, and something tells Rory she’s headed for trouble-trouble in the name of love…

~*~*~

A vivacious heroine plus a feeble hero equals a missed opportunity.

When a historic house is foreclosed on, Aurora St. Claire (Rory) decides she and her siblings must buy it and turn it into a B&B. Their ancestor was killed in the house 150 years ago in a romantic tale that’s become local legend, and Rory has always felt connected to the house.

She finds out it’s on the market when she sees Oliver Chancellor (Chance) pounding a foreclosure sign into the ground, an act he’s been cowed into doing by the east-coast owners of his father’s bank. Chance went to school with Rory’s brother and was attracted to her in high school, when he was a skinny geek and she was quite young. He hasn’t seen her in years and is immediately taken by her exotic beauty.

Rory comes to him to find out about getting a loan, but Chance advises her to put together a business plan first. Rory struggles with analytical tasks, which gives Chance an opportunity to help her out, and puts him in direct opposition to his father, who wants to give the island’s owner—and long-time bank customer—an opportunity to get the place back.

I had some major issues with this novel, but I’ll start with what I liked—the heroine. Though Rory is bubbly and outgoing, she sometimes has low self-esteem moments because of her dyslexia. She worries about people thinking she’s stupid, but she has no qualms about accepting Chance’s help putting together a business plan. I loved that she’s a complex character who works to overcome her limitations and recognizes when she needs help. Rock on, Rory.

My main problems were with the hero and the conflicts. Chance is weak and immature, and I found him difficult to respect. I’m all for a beta hero and a flawed hero, but Chance lets his parents make his most important decisions for him and toys with the affections of two women while he vacillates between them. What’s more, I got the feeling I was supposed to be sympathetic toward him because his flaws are never adequately addressed.

Within a few pages of the reader meeting him, he thinks about his fiancée Paige. It later turns out he hasn’t proposed to her; it’s just always been assumed (including by him) that they’ll get married. This convention works in historical novels, when arranged marriages between the upper classes were more common, but unless it’s connected to a contemporary character’s culture, I’ll need a good reason to buy it. “It’s the easy option” makes the hero seem spineless, and “He’s from money” doesn’t cut it for me. Plenty of rich people marry the person they want, not the person their parents choose. Furthermore, because it’s unrealistic it comes across as a false problem—something the author put in the characters’ way simply to create conflict.

Though Chance and Paige have had an understood arrangement for years, he hasn’t even kissed her. It was moments like this one that made me think the hero had the emotional maturity of a teenager:

He should want to kiss Paige. But once he kissed her—kissed her the way a man kisses a woman he wants to take to bed—the courtship would officially begin. It would no longer be a thing in the future. They’d be headed straight down the path of dating, engagement, matrimony, mortgage, children, diapers, IRAs, retirement, and vacations spent on cruise ships.

It all loomed over his head, ready to crash down on him the minute his lips made contact with hers.

Yet instead of telling Paige he doesn’t want to marry her, he continues to let her and their families think the engagement will eventually happen, all the while fighting his growing attraction to Rory.

He’s overcome by lust and has sex with Rory while Paige (and all of Galveston) believes they’re getting married. This is a massive mark against him. Paige may be as interesting as skimmed milk, but she still deserves better than that. He mistreats Rory as well. After having sex with her the first time, he decides just not to call her, hoping she’ll realize herself how unsuited they are. Of course, she thinks she’s in love and is broken-hearted that he’d use her.

I found his actions not only deplorable but unrealistic. Unless he’s under 15, I can’t imagine his lust is so uncontrollable that he’d repeatedly fall on Rory pelvis-first without thinking about Paige first. He always remembers her afterward, and hustles Rory out of his apartment at dawn the first time they sleep together, telling her it’s in order to protect *her* reputation.

It’s also hard to warm to a hero who fights his attraction to the heroine because it’s impractical. As far as I could see, there are two “impractical” things about it: 1) she’s exciting; and 2) his parents didn’t choose her for him.

When Rory and Chance finally admit their feelings for each other, there’s still quite a bit of the book left. Unfortunately, the story is kept going through a series of misunderstandings that could easily be resolved if the hero and heroine had one good conversation.

I’m sorry I didn’t like the novel more, but I couldn’t help thinking Rory deserved a much better hero, and I needed more realistic conflicts to draw me in.

Rating: 5 (Fair)

Heat-Level: 3 (Sensual)

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Rating: 6.0/10 (1 vote cast)

And the winner is…

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

For commenting on Beverly Jenkins’ excerpt MIDNIGHT, the winner of Lisa Kleypas’s LOVE IN THE AFTERNOON is…

Lori Ann

Congratulations, Lori Ann! Please email your contact information to me at contests at theseasonforromance dot com. You have one week to collect your book.