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Showing posts with label Cape Maybe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cape Maybe. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Must Read Beach Reads

by Carol Fragale Brill
I am a sucker for a good beach read. Put a beach scene on a book’s cover and you can safely bet I’ll buy it.
Over the years, I’ve lost myself in countless stories about love, friendship, and family dynamics set along a myriad of sandy coastlines. Often these books by popular authors such as Elin Hilderbrand, Karen White, Dorothea Benton Frank, Susan Mallery, and Cassandra King are more guilty pleasure than literature. My favs show realistic women facing day to day ups-and-downs, relationships, love, and loss, and have at least a somewhat happy ending. Their stories engage me while I’m reading them, even though they often run together or slip from my memory a few weeks later.
And, then there is the other kind of beach book—the ones that stay with me—even haunt me—in some memorable way. A book I may have read 10 or 20 years ago that remains on my bookshelf because something made it a book I want to own.  Here are a few of my all-time favorites.
THE SAVING GRACES by Patricia Gaffney - Emma, Rudy, Lee, and Isabel have been best friends for years.  They find salvation in sharing their dreams, complaints, and sorrows with humor, acceptance, and grace, hence their nickname “the Saving Graces.” If you have a BFF you will recognize the Saving Graces.
I read THE SAVING GRACES over 15 years ago when I first started writing PEACE BY PIECE. I was entranced by the intimate friendships, joys, and heartaches of these four friends. THE SAVING GRACES has a special place in my reader heart and on my bookshelf, because in my early days as a writer, I often studied how Ms. Gaffney used details to show the qualities and flaws that make Emma, Rudy, Lee, and Isabel distinguishable and lifelike.  While THE SAVING GRACES falls into the more guilty pleasure than literature category, the tender loyalty these girlfriends share made it memorial for me.
BEACH MUSIC by Pat Conroy - When it comes to gut-wrenchingly depicting the inner turmoil and the anguish of dysfunctional family secrets, especially with a southern flavor, Pat Conroy is the master. BEACH MUSIC is about a father and his young daughter trying to find peace after his wife’s suicide. A complex set of circumstances compel him to return to his roots in South Carolina. Pat Conroy’s imagery and—occasionally over the top—lyrical prose brings the south to life. If you’ve read any of his books, you know he has a special talent for creating complex southern mothers and sympathetic tortured characters that you simultaneously love, cringe from, or at times, want to slap. Pat Conroy’s expressive prose and heart-tugging drama isn’t for the faint of heart. Be ready for an emotional roller-coaster.
THE YEAR OF FOG by Michelle Richmond – A haunting, heartbreaking and hopeful must read.  Abby Mason is taking pictures on a foggy beach with her soon-to-be stepdaughter, when the unthinkable happens. Six-year-old Emma vanishes. Abby‘s guilt consumes her in the weeks following Emma’s disappearance. Well after the police search has died down, she repeatedly retraces that stretch of beach searching for clues. Her single-minded persistence and unwillingness to give up on finding Emma will resonate with anyone who has ever loved someone too much to let them go. This book had me from page one—actually, it had me with once glance at the cover.
Now you know a few of my favorite beach reads, what are some of yours?   
And, here’s a Memorial Day thank you for you. Just in time for the unofficial start of summer, CAPE MAYBE is on sale. Starting today, download your e-copy for just 99¢   Buy Now
This special 99¢ countdown sale price is for a limited time—download now so you don’t miss out. And, share this special with your friends so they can get their on-sale copy, too.
Happy Summer and Happy Reading.
 

Saturday, November 9, 2013

JUST FOR TODAY – LIFE ON PAUSE

After a few hefty nudges from Jim, family, and friends— it dawned on me that it might be time to take a few deep breathes, put my Type A+ just-get-it-done life on pause . . . and celebrate the publication of CAPE MAYBE!

Putting life on slo-mo may sound easy-peasy, but if you know me, you know slowing down is not my strong suit.
The last two years have been a whirlwind of working with editors, rewriting, revising, proofreading, learning book design, self-publishing, social networking, book marketing, and in less than nine months publishing PEACE BY PIECE and CAPE MAYBE. Oh, and in between, I left one job and started another, because writing is NOT my day job, it’s my “hobby.”
To say I’ve spent more than a few days on fast-forward is an understatement, but Carol on fast-forward is nothing new. It hit me that it might be time to pause and take stock when I noticed others viewed CAPE MAYBE’S publication as a huge accomplishment while I treated it as one more thing checked off my long to-do list with so much more to do!  
It reminds me of a time about 20 years ago when I was a Human Resources Director in a four person H.R. Department. We were simultaneously doing the due diligence for a merger, closing one pension plan and creating another, installing a new payroll system, going through our annual employee benefits open enrollment—and all while our benefits coordinator was on leave. At a staff meeting the day after our near flawless payroll go-live, I said something like, “Go-live yesterday was almost perfect which means today we shift gears and focus full-force on the open-enrollment deadline, auditing the pension plan, blah, blah, blah  . . .”
My secretary meekly waved her hand, asking if instead of diving head first into the next projects, we could take a one day breather and celebrate bringing up a new payroll system and everyone getting paid right.
See? Carol on fast-forward—nothing new.
So, just for today--and if Jim has his way, tomorrow, and the next day(s)--I’m trying to put my over-achieving-self on pause.
It has been more than half my lifetime since the first time I said out loud that I wanted to write a book.
Just for today, I will try to pause and bask in the realization that after 15 years of writing and rewriting, in the last nine months, I have finished and published TWO!