Enjoy news, interviews, personal commentaries, publishing buzz from a fresh perspective, chat about the real writing life, events and more. This entertaining space is dedicated to lovers of wordsmiths, regardless if your favorite genre is something mild or a little wild. Information about Grove Street Ezine, our digital publication that is available via http://issuu.com/bloggertime and http://alexhaley.com/grove_street.htm can be found here, too. You never know who may stop by. Ciao!
Monday, August 26, 2013
Free preview of Pat Tucker's Sideline Scandals starts Aug. 27th.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
The Barefoot Spirit Is A Must Have Business Read.
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Issue #11 of Grove Street takes you behind the scenes of literature, business & celebrity philanthropy.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Maintenance Man part 1 free to download August 21st & 22nd.
Monday, August 19, 2013
Founder of Bess the Book Bus Kicked Off the 6th Annual Success is in Sight Tour. Founder aspires to give away 60,000+ books to children in need. Is your city on the list?
Be on the lookout for a bus loaded with books, smiles, and perhaps glasses, too. On March 24th, 2014, Bess the Book Bus (Bess) launched her 6th annual Success is in Sight Tour, thanks to continued support from volunteers, CITGO's Fueling Good program, Transitions Optical, Townsend Press, Mercedes-Benz USA and additional corporate sponsors. Bess the Book Bus is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization, run by Jennifer Frances. The mission of Bess is to extend literacy across the country.
“Without our wonderful sponsors like CITGO, we would not have the resources to reach all of the children and families that we do. We look forward to traveling across the country again to meet local CITGO Marketers and the Fueling Good Road Trip team in our continuing quest to spread a love for literature," Ms. Frances remarked.
Over the course of 2014, Bess will reportedly travel the United States, making stops at shelters, schools, community centers, and Head Start facilities in nearly 60 cities. Donated books will also be read aloud to children, to help spread a love for reading. The mobile literacy initiative, headed by Jennifer Frances, will also visit school classrooms and libraries this year. The new opportunity is projected to significantly increase the impact of the program that donates free books to the nation’s most underserved students.
Bess the Book Bus has previously supported more than 60,000 children, donated more than 450,000 books, and visited 48 states. In 2014, Ms. Frances aims to give away more than 60,000 books on the tour. She is still looking for a hotel sponsor. I encourage book lovers to visit www.bessthebookbus.org and www.FuelingGood.com.
Please like Bess the Book Bus on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bessthebookbus. Watch videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/bessthebookbus. You may also follow Bess on Twitter @BookBess. Find out where Bess will be. It could make the difference in the life of a child in need.
If you missed the interview about Jennifer Frances, and Bess the Book Bus, please read it below.
--The Nook
"We lived in MA, TX, GA, LA, NY, and FL while I was a kid. I have lived in FL, TN, AZ, MA, NC and FL again in the last 15 years," she said.
Jennifer: We have been very fortunate to have some great corporate sponsors step up and help us. Transitions Optical, VSP Vision Care, CITGO, Townsend Press and Capstone Publishers have all been with us for five years. They support our national outreach. Last year, Mercedes-Benz USA donated a brand new fully outfitted Sprinter 3500. We are also lucky to get donations from publishers such as Candlewick Press, Two Little Birds Publishing, authors like Rebecca Emberly, Mo Willems, Cynthia Lord, John Perry, and Debbie Diessen. And from organizations like
David Fain is the longest standing and currently traveling with us. This is his third nationwide trip.
Andrea: How, when, where and why did you start the Book Bus?
could do. Something I had to do.
Andrea: From what I learned about this project, it seems like your 11 year journey has been rewarding but sometimes tough. How did you feel
cashing in your 401(k) to get started with charity work? Did you ever worry about giving up your job and stability to pursue your dream?
Jennifer: It felt great. It was exhilarating, really. It was the most natural thing ever. I never second-guessed it. It got REALLY hairy in 2009. Ok, it was hairy to start with, but 2009 was critical. I almost lost everything. I went to a lawyer, got advice, got mad at it and decided to double down and keep at it. We were not raised to surrender in my family. Bess is worth fighting for. Our kids deserve to be fought for. I worked nights until 2011. I will again if I need to. Nothing will stop me from chasing this dream.
In 2009, thanks to SuperPages.com, we got our first national sponsorship. First Book put us in touch with them. The Summer of Good Reads and Good Deeds took us to 35 states in 70 days and landed us on the CBS Early Show, in People Magazine and in Family Circle. It also got us our sponsorships from Transitions Optical, Townsend Press, Capstone Publishers and CITGO.
Andrea: How many states have you traveled to?
Jennifer: We have been to all 48 contiguous states. Most of them several times. We hope to go to Hawaii in 2014 through a sponsorship from a Hawaiian Company and Alaska in 2015.
Andrea: What kind of youth have you met along the way?
Jennifer: The kids we meet are what keep us going in the roughest times. They are hungry to learn and succeed. They shine.
Andrea: Please share your wonderful news about partnering with Transition Optical, and how current funding efforts have been for you.
Jennifer: Transitions Optical and VSP Vision Care bring the magic of healthy sight to our kids. Thousands of kids that could not afford healthy sight otherwise get free comprehensive eye exams and free glasses with Transitions Lenses each year. The mobile vision clinic really is magic. I tear up just thinking about it.
Though funding is better than ever, we are still operating at about 85%. We could really use a hotel sponsor and a serious commitment-50,000+ books a year- from a big publisher like Scholastic, Disney or Penguin.
Andrea: How do you decide where to go, and where will you be next?
Jennifer: We choose locations based on need. Schools and centers need to serve underprivileged families. We coordinate with our sponsors for some locations and we also pick a lot of our own. Our next big event is with Transitions/VSP and Darius Rucker in Charleston, SC on 8-14-13. Hooties Homegrown Roundup will make sure that over 1,000 kids have school supplies, vision screenings, books and more. Then we head to Maine with CITGO’s Fueling Good Road Trip. We will visit dozens of towns there and see thousands of kids. After that is Camden, NJ with Townsend Press and then the Buffalo Zoo with Double Eagle and Ellicott Development. That is a Head Start event that will serve over 1,000 kids. Our last event is Neptune Fest in VA Beach with CITGO on9-28-13. Then home to Tampa to see our kids here!
Andrea: How can the public support you?
Jennifer: We could really use help finding a hotel sponsor. Also, every $1 donated via our website provides up to TWO NEW BOOKS for our kids. Also, liking us on Facebook is a plus!
Twitter@BookBess; Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/bessthebookbus;
website www.bessthebookbus.org
Friday, August 9, 2013
New teen release! House of Cars by Shelia E. Lipsey.
Monday, August 5, 2013
Interview with R. Kayeen Thomas, winner of Phillis Wheatley Book Award for "Antebellum."
R. Kayeen Thomas is based in Washington, D.C. His fiction titles include Antebellum, The Seven Days, and Light: Stories of Urban Resurrection. The Seven Days was released on April 16, 2013.
Synopsis: The Seven Days is a prequel to my first novel, Antebellum. Antebellum is about a rapper who is transported back into the antebellum slavery period, and The Seven Days is about two men who both share a bloodline that allows them to be possessed with the spirits of dead slaves.
Andrea: I would like to congratulate you on receiving a prestigious award. Please share what it is called, the purpose of it, when you received it, and the book that earned this honor.
Thomas: I recently won the Phillis Wheatley Book Award in the category of First Fiction for my novel, Antebellum. Earlier this year, Antebellum was also nominated for a 2013 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Debut Author.
Andrea: The premise of Antebellum is unusual but thought provoking. How did you come up with the idea for the plot?
Thomas: The plot for Antebellum was inspired by both my love for the African-American community and culture, and my love of hip-hop music and culture. I wanted to write a book that could potentially bridge the gap between the older civil rights generations that don't understand hip-hop, and the hip-hop generations that don't understand and feel completely detached from the civil rights era. I believe Antebellum provides a window for both sides to see each other more clearly.
Andrea: Many aspiring authors today may feel pressure to write a manuscript that fits in comfortably with mainstream books. Your originality stands out. What would you tell anyone who wants to pen something different, but he or she is afraid the book wouldn't sell?
Thomas: Originality is what sets you apart from other authors, so I would tell anyone and everyone to embrace your uniqueness and be true to yourself no matter what. Cookie cutter stories will only get you so far. The books may sell, but as an author you have to ask yourself if you want your books to survive after you're dead and gone. Only the unique stories outlive the storytellers.
Andrea: You self-published once, but currently are traditionally published by Zane's company, Strebor Books and Simon & Schuster. Some people assume that being traditionally published requires less work. What are a few things that you've had to do to promote yourself and your work in both scenarios?
Thomas: I actually had that same assumption when I signed my first book deal - that the publishers would take care of everything and I could just sit back and collect a check. I got my rude awakening pretty quickly. In my experience, the publishers make your book available to a wider audience, and they jump start the marketing process when the book is released, but after that (especially if you're a first-time author) you'd be well advised to continue acting as if you're self-published. You have the option of sitting back and doing nothing, but finding your own venues, pushing and promoting your own books, and networking in different circles is essential for building your brand and increasing your own sales. Even though the publishers have already picked up your work, they'll only put big money behind it if the sales numbers suggest that an investment like that is worth it. And unless you're already famous, those initial sales will be a direct result of your own hustling. The authors I've met who have this process mastered have managed to build their own team of people focused specifically on their work. I'm actually in the process of trying to do the same thing.
Andrea: When you penned Antebellum, who did you envision your target audience would be, and what demographic seems to relate to it most now?
When I first wrote Antebellum, I thought it would only appeal to the hip-hop generation. I knew that it had a multi-generational message, but I thought it would be a while before the word spread and the core audience expanded. In reality, it was just the opposite. The first book club meeting I attended was all women between the ages of 35 and 65, and they all loved it. The majority of the people who reach out to me on Facebook or Twitter are over 40. More times than not, they've read the book, and then passed it down to their sons and/or daughters, and its sparked a significant discussion. So at this point, I can't really pinpoint the demographic that it most relates to, because its reach has been so wide. Every time I think there's a group that the book won't reach, someone contacts me and proves me wrong.
Andrea: I write because...
Thomas: I write because I have to. Really, I don't have a choice. If I go too long without putting some words down the world starts to lose its color. I write the kind of stories that I write to try and creatively bring about change in my community, but the general act of writing for me is what keeps my pulse going and my blood warm.
Andrea: Thank you for stopping by. I wish you continued success.
This year, R. Kayeen Thomas was also nominated for a NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Debut Author. Antebellum can be purchased anywhere books are sold. You may keep up with the talented author on Twitter @RKayeenThomas or on Facebook under R.Kayeen Thomas.
Helping youth to make power moves. Author interview with Dashawn Taylor.
Dashawn Taylor is the author of From Poverty to Power Moves. He is located in Newark, New Jersey. I interviewed him about a powerful project called W.I.N.
Andrea: What is W.I.N.? Who started it and why?
Dashawn: The W.I.N.-Writing Is Necessary was created by Next Level Publishing, which is a publishing company I own. Both I and my business partner Aleasha Arthur started WIN in 2011 as a spin off from the 100K Power movement. The goal was to get 100,000 youth excited about reading and writing. As a result, I created the WIN “Writing is Necessary” program.
Andrea: Please share any successes with the program. Where have you been with it?
Dashawn: The project has reached new heights, we have been touring various city’s promoting this new initiative, from Washington, DC, Greenbelt, Maryland, Camden, NJ and East Orange, NJ.
Our biggest WIN workshop was in May of 2013; we hosted the WIN Workshop to over 100 students at the Cicely Tyson School for Performing Arts, East Orange, NJ. The Principal and staff not only supported the program, they were able to see the potential WIN could do for its students. We were asked to come back for the 2013-2014 school year.
Andrea: How does it work?
Dashawn: The W.I.N “Writing is Necessary” Project, is uniquely designed to motivate students and introduce them to an effective method of approaching different writing techniques. Our workshops assist students with assignments, essays, term papers, letters and standardized tests.
Andrea: Why did you decide to try crowd funding? Please share how the community at large can help, where, and what funds will be used for.
Dashawn: We found that, while trying to increase our reach, many schools had limited funding, yet- the schools wanted WIN in their classrooms. We found printing the materials and putting the efforts to make this a successful workshop was costing the company a lot of money. At some schools we volunteered our services. We hope through crowd funding we can eliminate this barrier. Crowd funding will allow us to give scholarships to schools and various school programs thought-out the country.
Andrea: Why are you so passionate about literacy? Who is helping with this cause?
Dashawn: As young kid, I was always interested in writing. I started out writing rap songs. As I got older I moved to writing articles and online blogs for a magazine called Real-hiphop.com. In 2005, I decided to stop procrastinating and put out a book I had been contemplating for years. I decided to publish my first book "From Poverty To Power Moves." I’m now a National Best Selling Author and I owe it all to my love for writing.
I have a team of college students who intern with us. This young energy has helped us promote WIN through social media networks. (Facebook, school boards, Twitter, blogs, events, ect.)
Andrea: Please share any relevant statistics that you learned about illiteracy, while putting together your presentation for W.I.N.
Dashawn: Before launching the project, an intensive research was conducted. Our sources of information ranged from:
Andrea: When is the deadline for your online campaign?
Dashawn: While the efforts of the W.I.N. project is on-going, the date for our most current campaign is September 7, 2013.
Andrea: What kind of response have you received?
Dashawn: The responses have been very positive. We are finding that the more we keep promoting the WIN-Writing is Necessary project, the bigger it will become.
Andrea: How can readers reach you and/or donate?
Dashawn: The link for our contribution campaign is http://igg.me/at/win/x/4070771
The donation link can also be accessed on our website : www.WritingIsNecessary.com
Stay in touch via Facebook: www.facebook.com/WritingIsNecessary
Twitter: www.twitter.com/TheWinProject
Youtube: www.youtube.com/NextLevelPub
This cause is very important. I encourage everyone who wants to help to do whatever they can to help spread the word about W.I.N. and the online campaign.
Thank you,
--Andrea