Amy Plum's Blog, page 44

March 28, 2011

A reading from DIE FOR ME

When I made my first video for DIE FOR ME, I dedicated it to HarperTeen fans. And Little, Brown / Atom very politely told me that they enjoyed it, and then very rightly suggested that I make one for their fans too!


So I decided to read the first couple of pages of Chapter One. Please keep in mind that Actress was at the very bottom of my list of professions I thought I would be good at. And I have only ever read for my children, and let me tell you – picture book vocabulary ain't that hard. With that in mind…I hope you enjoy the very beginning of my book!

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 28, 2011 07:57

March 12, 2011

DIE FOR ME's New US Cover

Yesterday, Kari of A Good Addiction announced the newest of news in the DIE FOR ME publishing story. It seems that at this point, there's something happening almost every day. But comparatively, this news is HUGE: a cover change. Or in the words of my editor, "A Jacket Switcheroo".


You all know the original Kate-in-a-Boat cover. Here it is in all of its magnificent glory:



Well I got a note from my editor three weeks ago telling me that when the marketing people at Harper saw the British cover, they fell in love with it. And though everyone raved about the Kate-in-a-Boat cover, Kate-on-a-Roof seemed like a "bigger" cover to "people in positions of power". So they got in touch with Little, Brown UK, got Atom's jacket files, and tweaked them a little bit to create this…the NEW HarperTeen cover of DIE FOR ME:


HarperTeen's New DIE FOR ME Cover


Since the announcement yesterday, people have been writing me on Twitter asking, "But isn't that the UK cover?" So I have used my amazing and highly advanced Photoshop skills to put one cover next to the other (below) in order to demonstrate the differences. ALERT: since these are images that have been emailed back and forth a dozen times, the colors might not be COMPLETELY ACCURATE. But this will at least give you an idea:


US cover on left, UK cover on right



I think they're both gorgeous, and the small differences in font and hue make each distinctive from the other.


BUT…as I said on Facebook yesterday, even though I love the new cover, I also loved the old one, so it is sad to say goodbye. And the saddest part of all is that we won't have the lovely Michelle Cartwright gracing the cover. But Michelle – if you're reading this, I want you to know that you will ALWAYS be Cover-Kate in my mind.


And on the happier side, a HUGE congratulations to Mark Ecob, the original cover designer, and Johanna Basford, who calls herself Ink Evangelist, but who I call "Queen of Swirls" for making a cover that was so beautiful that it went global! And congratulations to me for having garnered the favor of the Cover Fairy*. I must have been Mother Theresa or someone of equal standing in a past life to have been granted such a stunning cover for my very first book!


*Thank you Atom. Thank you HarperTeen.

You both make kick-ass Cover Fairies!

1 like ·   •  20 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 12, 2011 04:17

March 9, 2011

Literary Lunacy in New York: The Sane Post

The last time I was in New York—in June 2010—it was 100 degrees, I had two toddlers with me, as well as a husband who had a ton of work to get done, and I was staying in a not-very-nice neighborhood far from all subways. I blogged about the result (basically, me crying in a drag-queen bar after shooting a deer-in-headlights video for my book).


So when I took a trip to New York this January, I decided to do things differently. I went by myself. I stayed in a beautiful apartment that a friend lent me while she was away, in a neighborhood that I know like the back of my hand. Instead of a heatwave, there was snow. I love snow. Therefore, this time everything was different.


My one day of meetings  started with a leisurely trip to Rockefeller Plaza with my friend Kim. She had spent the night in order to watch certain films starring Robert Pattinson that we can both quote word-for-word, thus annoying anyone else in the room, which is why we only do it when we're on our own.


In that excellent mood, we parted at the Rock Center Café, where I spied my editor, Tara Weikum sitting at a table waiting for me. I've only met Tara once (during the June heatwave), but we have talked on the phone a couple of times and communicate constantly by email. So it felt like a huge treat to actually sit down right there in front of her and have a real chat, where eye-contact and body language and all those good things are involved.


As we caught up on real-life stuff and watched the Zamboni smooth the skating rink just twenty feet away, my publicist Elyse Miller joined us. She's one more person I had been dying to meet, but only knew through email. I was not surprised in the least that she was super-smart, funny and had so much energy she could generate enough power to keep a small city running for weeks.


We talked about ourselves for a little while, and then Elyse asked me how I had gotten my ideas for DIE FOR ME. I admitted that I hadn't read much YA before writing it, and she and Tara asked me what kind of books I liked. And I didn't know what to say, because the answer would be "not YA", but I didn't mean that I didn't like YA, and I don't know the names of literary categories, never having thought about it before.


So I said I loved Neil Gaiman (since I knew Elyse had seen him the day before) and that I loved books like A History of Love by Nicole Krauss. And then I was trying to remember her husband, Jonathan Safran Foer's name. Or even his book's name (Everything is Illuminated). But often when I am put on the spot, my brain kind of empties and I am left with a big fat blank. Because of that, I've gotten really good at changing subjects, so we launched upon the publicity planned for DIE FOR ME and then the book tour, and Elyse told me that she'd be sending me the books of the people I'd be traveling with and get us in touch in time to communicate about what we would be talking about.


At which point, I swallowed my croissant without chewing and must have gone all big-eyed because she said, "You did know that you'll be doing a little Q&A between yourselves and answering questions from the audience?"


"Uh, no. I thought a signing meant just sitting there and signing books."


She and Tara laughed in a nice way, while throwing each other a little concerned look. And I felt like saying, "I have been doing my homework." And I have. It's just that I'm starting from zero. Put me in the middle of a Sotheby's auction with $20,000 of Winona Ryder's money and a bidding paddle, and I'll know exactly what to do. (True story.) Or throw me in the middle of a medieval castle with forty French tourists asking me questions about the heraldry woven into a tapestry and I won't bat an eye. (Also true.) But ship me off to Anderson's Bookstore in Naperville, Illinois, with a pen and few illustrious authors and a crowd of book fans and I won't have a freaking clue what to do.


So I calmed my choking fit with a glass of water and nodded and tried to look like the whole thing was very funny while thinking in my mind, "Oh shazam. What am I going to do?"


Elyse then went on to tell me about the Beach Bag giveaway that Harper would be doing for the Dark Days of Summer authors, and how she was sending books out to reviewers and when and all of those details that I'm so glad someone competent and knowledgeable is handing for me.


After breakfast we walked the few blocks back to the HarperCollins monolith and I met Christina and Kristina in marketing whose boss was also named Christina, which must have been terribly confusing for everyone involved.


And then came the meeting—the real reason I was there. I wanted to talk to Tara and Melissa, DIE FOR ME's assistant editor, about Book 2. I had sent them an outline—okay a 300-page rapidly-written draft—in September and they had gotten back to me with their thoughts on it. Based on that I had formulated a plan for the three books, with a back-story that I thought could tie the three together.


I had practiced my presentation on both Kim and my friend and beta-reader Claudia during the two previous days. I'm a kazillion times better at writing than I am at speaking, so I wanted it to be clear, make sense, and not drag on too long. Even so, it took me about twenty minutes just to explain the basics to my patient editors. And right in the middle of it there was a fire drill. To my great relief, they tiptoed over to the door, shut it, and in quiet voices we continued.


And oh, how great it was to get immediate feedback. To be able to talk without that annoying speakerphone shell-sound muddying the conversation. To see that little flash pass between them and be able to say, "I can see you guys don't feel very comfortable with that idea." And then listen to their reasoning and be able to respond so that, in the end, we were all on the same page. I wish all of our meetings could be like that, but because of one small hurdle (called the Atlantic Ocean), face-to-face meetings will be few and far between.


And as I walked down Madison Avenue after the meeting, I wished I had a hat so that I could throw it up in the air Mary-Tyler-Moore style and do a little joyful spin. Instead, with a smile that wouldn't fade for the rest of the day, I went back to my apartment, put my head down, and got back to work.


See my previous Literary Lunacy posts here:

Literary Lunacy: A Multi-Post Story, Part 1

Literary Lunacy: A Multi-Post Story, Part 2

Literary Lunacy: A Multi-Post Story, Part 3

Literary Lunacy: A Multi-Post Story, Part 4

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 09, 2011 06:57

March 8, 2011

Booklist Review of DIE FOR ME (HURRAY!!)

Booklist Issue: March 1, 2011


Die for Me. Plum, Amy (Author)


May 2011. 352 p. HarperTeen, hardcover, $16.99. (9780062004017).


Move over, Bella and Edward. Zombies replace vampires in this well-crafted paranormal romance. After the tragic death of their parents, Kate and her older sister, Georgia, move to Paris. Georgia fits into the party scene immediately, but Kate continues to grieve and brood until she meets the dashingly handsome Vincent. Although their attraction is immediate and intense, Kate is uneasy, even wary. Through a narrative that alternates between romance and violence, Kate and the reader are introduced not only to contemporary Paris but to a war-torn netherworld populated by zombies who save people from death and other beings who plot to kill them. In her debut novel, Plum deftly navigates the real world and the fantastical. Her characters are authentic, and their romances are believable. Plum introduces a world and a story that are sure to intrigue teen readers and will easily attract fans of the Twilight series.


— Frances Bradburn

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 08, 2011 06:07

A Note on My Goodreads Ratings

Now that DIE FOR ME's release date approaches, I have more and more people friending and following my reviews on Goodreads. You've probably noticed that I don't give most books a star-rating, while for others I do. So I wanted to let you know just what my perhaps-confusing rating rules are!

This is my system of rating: I put my very favorite books up on Goodreads with 4 or 5 stars - mainly to give an idea of what I love, and sometimes because I'm so excited about a book I just have to tell someone.

HOWEVER, I do not give stars to YA or books similar to my own, or books by friends. If I hate a book, I won't even put it on Goodreads. If I put a YA book on Goodreads, I will tell you what I liked about it, but not what I didn't like. These authors are my colleagues, and I am not a reviewer, so I don't feel the responsibility to point out what I might see as their failings.

I will also always let you know if I am friends with someone, touring with them, etc. so you can consider that as you read my comments.

Oh, and if anyone ever wants to label me as YA Mafia, I would like my code-name to be Scarf-face. Just saying...

Happy reading, everyone!

♥Amy
1 like ·   •  3 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 08, 2011 05:04

A Note on My Goodreads Ratings

Now that DIE FOR ME's release date approaches, I have more and more people friending and following my reviews on Goodreads. You've probably noticed that I don't give most books a star-rating, while for others I do. So I wanted to let you know just what my perhaps-confusing rating rules are!

This is my system of rating: I put my very favorite books up on Goodreads with 4 or 5 stars - mainly to give an idea of what I love, and sometimes because I'm so excited about a book I just have to tell someone.

HOWEVER, I do not give stars to YA or books similar to my own, or books by friends. If I hate a book, I won't even put it on Goodreads. If I put a YA book on Goodreads, I will tell you what I liked about it, but not what I didn't like. These authors are my colleagues, and I am not a reviewer, so I don't feel the responsibility to point out what I might see as their failings.

I will also always let you know if I am friends with someone, touring with them, etc. so you can consider that as you read my comments.

Happy reading, everyone!

♥Amy
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 08, 2011 05:01

February 20, 2011

DIE FOR ME's first blurb

As the release date for DIE FOR ME approaches, more and more exciting things are happening. Fun things like:


• getting to listen to—and vote on—which actress will read DIE FOR ME on the audiobook. (All five women were fluent in French. And I ended up voting for the one that Harper's audio group liked the most.)


• getting to look through photos of male models to vote on who will be Vincent in my book's video trailer. (All because Vania is so nice that she let me participate.)


• planning my book's playlist with the help of my British friend Jim and my New York friend Dee Jay. (Jim is a music lover and Dee Jay is a music maker and, duh, a DJ, and knows everyone in the NY music scene.)


• something huge happening to the U.S. cover that I can't tell you about yet.


But for me, the most exciting and flattering thing that has happened in the last few weeks is DIE FOR ME's very first blurb.


I know that a blurb is a really big deal for the blurber because their opinion is being plastered onto the cover of a ton of books with their name attached. Permanently. It's not like they can change their mind afterward. It goes "down on your permanent record", as the Violent Femmes so memorably said.


Maybe not everyone would think about it that way, but I do…because I can imagine that sticking your neck out for someone who hasn't yet been proven is a very brave thing.


So when I heard that someone really special had written a truly fantastic blurb for DIE FOR ME, I immediately wrote her a note thanking her for it. And she wrote back with an even bigger compliment, saying that she's so picky nowadays that she often doesn't even finish books. And then she thanked me for writing a book that she enjoyed finishing. Which immediately sent me into a catatonic shock, because…her??? me??? Once I recovered and could once again move my facial muscles I—needless to say—went around smiling like an idiot for the rest of the day.


And so here it is—DIE FOR ME's very first blurb. I can't imagine anything more wonderful…other than Madeleine L'Engle popping back from the afterlife and writing "Her book rocks" in permanent Magic Marker across my forehead. And since that is very unlikely (Madeleine L'Engle would never use the word "rocks"), I'll just go ahead and say this is the most wonderful blurb I can imagine.


"I devoured this lush, mysterious romance, which delivers a refreshingly human heroine alongside a hero truly deserving of the title."––Aprilynne Pike, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Wings series.


Thank you, Aprilynne. From the bottom of my heart.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 20, 2011 12:29

February 10, 2011

I ♥ St. Louis (especially Pattonville High School)

Yesterday I let a few of my old blog followers see a deleted scene from DIE FOR ME—the original prologue (which has since been replaced with something completely different). One of my long-time readers, Judith, who teaches high school French in St. Louis, read it to her French 4 class.


She reported back: "It held them in a trance, Amy! You could hear a pin drop while I read. One of them said, right after, 'I really have to buy this book!'"


And not only that, they sent me this:



Ms Chabot's French 4 class at Pattonville High School:

Janna, Michelle, Luke, Stephen, Erika, Vivi, Grace V, Grace R,

Taylor, Rachel, Ben[from Germany!], Sofía, Kim, Alex, and Katie.


Are they so cute, or what?


So I just want to say…THANK YOU Ms. Chabot and Pattonville French 4 class for MAKING MY DAY!!!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 10, 2011 01:26

February 4, 2011

The winners of my "I ♥ You" Valentine's Day Contest

Between this blog page and my blog on Goodreads, there were 74 entries in the contest—44 from US and Canada for the HarperCollins copy and 30 from the rest of the world (with a good showing from Australia!) for the Little, Brown/Atom version.


So with all of those names X 2 or 3 entries (depending on if you followed on Twitter and FB), instead of using one of the online randomizing websites to mix up the names of the entries, I concocted a much higher-tech option, as can be seen in this video:



And here is the drawing!



The winners are:

Leanna O'Reilly from Ireland, who said "When I think of Paris…Macarons & Crepes, Jim Morrison and The Petit Trianon."


and


Aydrea Rickert from the U.S., who said "When I think of Paris I think of romance and fashion."


CONGRATULATIONS Leanna and Aydrea!!!!! (And please send me your addresses.)


Thank you everyone for participating and for your fabulous answers—I so enjoyed reading them all!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 04, 2011 07:36

January 26, 2011

Book Signing Poll

Just a little poll. I'm booked to go to Chicago and Portland on the Dark Days of Summer Tour.

But if I have a signing in Paris (in May), how many people would come? And how about New York in June?

Will add your names to the people who respond on FB and Twitter, and if there are enough all together, I'll do it!
1 like ·   •  3 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on January 26, 2011 02:23 Tags: signings-ya-paranormal-romance