Blended Notes is available to pre-order from the IP Web Store and select online book retailers.
(via interludepress)
@kittystephenswrites / kittystephenswrites.tumblr.com
Blended Notes is available to pre-order from the IP Web Store and select online book retailers.
(via interludepress)
Hello! Do you have any recommendations for lesbian books for younger girls? My daughter is only 11, but knows shes a lesbian, and I'm struggling to find her books with representation that are age appropriate. Thank you :D x
For sure! That’s amazing that she’s been able to know about herself so young, and to be an accepting environment. Here are a few books that should be a good fit for her!
(Starred books I’ve read and recommend.)
Comics:
Novels:
There are a couple middle grade lesbian/bi girl books being published soon: Hurricane Child by Kheryn Callender and P.S. I Miss You by Jen Petro-Roy
Mormon missionaries, love, conflict… It comes to pass in the latest novel from Laura Stone, and I reviewed it here. Go forth and read. Or multiply. But I’d rather read, since I hate math.
SPOT ON review. This book is truly special.
Sneak Peek!
I asked readers what story of mine they’d like to see a little short story from, and What it Takes was the clear winner. Short story is in progress, but I thought I’d share little bits :D
(via judesierra)
The Seafarer’s Kiss is now available from the IP Web Store and other book retailers.
(via interludepress)
Huntsmen’s main character is Kiara Lyons, and she is, in author Pene Henson’s words, “a divine grouch”. No description could have pleased me (or Kiara) more.
In The Better to Kiss You With, Deanna Scott is bright, bubbly, and charming. She blushes when she flirts and would happily describe herself as a pleaser. With the second book in the series, I wanted to write a different sort of woman.
Enter Kiara. The surly, scowly, stubborn Alpha-designate of her werewolf pack. A woman with mega control issues, who has to struggle to keep her temper, and doesn’t always manage it. Certain of her own power, and unafraid to flex it, Kiara isn’t exactly likable… and I love that. In a year where we’ve had to hear about “nasty women”, a year where women are scolded for their persistence, a year where an under-qualified man takes the job over an exceptionally qualified woman, Kiara’s rudeness seems all the more relevant.
Also important to me was Kiara’s position as her father’s heir. Even before I had put any thought into writing the second book, I established in The Better to Kiss You With that Kiara, not her older brother Cole, was heir to their pack. In Huntsmen it’s Kiara’s position as Alpha-designate that puts her in charge of the hiding werewolves, and what stands between her and her lone wolf ex-lover, Ryn.
When Kiara finds herself facing off against the Huntsmen as well as the General North American Assembly of Werewolves (GNAAW), it’s her insolence and her persistence that keeps her pack safe. Kiara doesn’t need to be likable, she needs to be effective.
It’s time we start telling stories about women who aren’t nice. We need to destroy the idea that an unlikable man has character, whereas an unlikable woman is just unpleasant. We need to allow space for women and girls who don’t want to smile, who don’t care that you hate their makeup, and who might hurt you if you touch them without permission. We need to tell stories where women are monsters, ones who just might bite…
Last night’s library find.
Coming in November, literary fiction for Young Adult readers: Nancy’s Stewart’s Beulah Land, a dark, evocative, and ultimately triumphant story of a girl surviving the deep-rooted clan culture of Ozark Mountain life.
Summary
Seventeen-year-old Vi Sinclair’s roots run deep in the Missouri Ozarks, where, in some areas, it can still be plenty dangerous to be a girl who likes girls. Her greatest wish is to become a veterinarian like her boss, Claire Campbell. Fitting in at school wouldn’t be so bad, either. Only one obstacle stands in the way: She may not live long enough to see her wishes fulfilled.
With help from her only friend, Junior, Vi unravels a mystery that puts her in conflict with a vicious tormentor, a dog fight syndicate, and her own mother. Vi’s experience galvanizes her strength and veracity as she overcomes the paradox of mountain life, in which, even today, customs and mores seem timeless, and where a person can wake up dead simply because of being who she is.
About the Author
As a professor of education specializing in Children’s and Young Adult Literature, Nancy Stewart’s love of words and stories aligned with valuable life experiences and drew her to write her first book. She is the author of the Bella and Britt series and Katrina and Winter: Partners in Courage, the authorized biography of Katrina Simpkins, a special needs girl who found herself through Winter, the dolphin (Guardian Angel Publishing).
The original manuscript for Beulah Land received the 2015 State of Florida Rising Kite Award (first place) from the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators.
A frequent speaker and presenter at writing conferences throughout the United States, she conducts workshops and seminars for school children on helping save their planet. She lives with her husband and an adopted Bichon/Shih Tzu pup, Louie, in Tampa, Florida.
I don’t know who at my local library keeps buying IP books, but I think they’re my new friend.
Looking for a breezy holiday read? Need a little RomCom in your life?
We’re celebrating our first stand-alone digital short story by sharing the first chapter of Lilah Suzanne’s new short story, After the Sunset. You can download it here, and the entire story will be available July 6 from the IP Webstore, Amazon, and other eBook retailers for $2.99.
Caleb Harris and Ty Smith-Santos are struggling actors who have never crossed paths until their lives take a turn for the bizarre when they learn that a farm in Sunset Hollow, Washington has been bequeathed to both of them. Intent on selling the property, Caleb and Ty clear out the cluttered farmhouse, but soon find themselves falling for the charming farm nestled between two misty-topped mountains, the lonely man who left it to them, and each other. When a real estate developer offers them a hefty payout, will they take the money and run or keep the farm and their budding relationship?
Interlude Press and Duet Books authors have received a lot of honors and awards lately, and we’re celebrating with 25% off our award winners and finalists at the IP Web Store:
Hold, by Rachel Davidson Leigh (Tofte/Wright Children’s Literature Award)
In the Present Tense by Carrie Pack (Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Bronze Award for science fiction)
Into the Blue by Pene Henson (Lambda Literary Award for Gay Romance)
Luchador by Erin Finnegan (Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Gold Award for Romance)
Sweet by Alysia Constantine (Foreword INDIES Book of the Year Honorable Mention for LGBT Fiction)
Black Dust by Lynn Charles (Foreword INDIES finalist)
Not Your Sidekick by C.B. Lee (Lambda Literary Award finalist)
Sideshow by Amy Stilgenbauer (Foreword INDIES finalist)
The King and The Criminal by Charlotte Ashe (Foreword INDIES finalist)
Desperate to pay for college, Bridger Whitt is willing to overlook the peculiarities of his new job—entering via the roof, the weird stacks of old books and even older scrolls, the seemingly incorporeal voices he hears from time to time—but it’s pretty hard to ignore being pulled under Lake Michigan by… mermaids? Worse yet, this happens in front of his new crush, Leo, the dreamy football star who just moved to town.
Fantastic.
When he discovers his eccentric employer Pavel Chudinov is an intermediary between the human world and its myths, Bridger is plunged into a world of pixies, werewolves, and Sasquatch. The realm of myths and magic is growing increasingly unstable, and it is up to Bridger to ascertain the cause of the chaos, eliminate the problem, and help his boss keep the real world from finding the world of myths.
About the author:
F.T. Lukens is an author of Young Adult fiction who got her start by placing second out of ten thousand entries in a fan-community writing contest. A sci-fi enthusiast, F.T. loves Star Trek and Firefly and is a longtime member of her college’s science-fiction club. She holds degrees in Psychology and English Literature and has a love of cheesy television shows, superhero movies, and writing. F.T. lives in North Carolina with her husband, three kids, and three cats. Her first two novels in the Broken Moon series, The Star Host and Ghosts & Ashes, were published by Duet Books.
Connect with F.T. at authorftlukens.wordpress.com, on Twitter @ftlukens, and on Facebook at facebook.com/ftlukens.
Cover art by C.B. Messer.
From Duet Books, the Young Adult imprint of Interlude Press.
You’re going to get criticism as a writer. I guarantee it. A few people will hate what you’re doing (or if you’re lucky, a lot of a few people will hate it). Some people will think you’re not good enough to be published. Some people will send you long lists of all the mistakes you made in your last book. Some of those mistakes may be real. People will tell you they don’t know why your book is a big deal (or a little deal). People will also tell you they couldn’t read past the first paragraph or the first page because it was boring, or stupid or about a girl or about a dog or about something they don’t care about.
Here’s what I want you to remember: You’re not writing for everyone. You’re not writing for the people who don’t get what you’re writing. You’re not writing to get that kid who hated you in seventh grade to like you. You’re not writing for critics. You’re not writing for the future you can’t see into. You’re not writing to some writer in the past who’s dead now and will never know if you used a cool reference to his book. You’re not writing to get someone who hates this genre to change their mind.
You’re writing for friends. And by that I don’t necessarily mean the people who are your friends right now. I mean the people who get what you’re doing and care about it. If you’re writing fantasy, you’re writing for people who like fantasy and the particular kind you’re writing. If you’re writing humor, you’re writing for people who want to laugh. If you’re writing mystery, you’re writing for people who want to be scared.
For every person who thinks what you tried to do doesn’t matter, there are ten who think it does. Those are the ones you’re writing for. They laugh in the right places. They feel sick in the wrong places. They didn’t guess all the twists and turns before you wanted them to. They didn’t know that character was going to turn villainous. They believed in the rules you set forth. They let you weave your magic over them and they didn’t see any of the holes they might have seen.
So when you’re dealing with criticism, remember that you’ve got friends who are rooting for you to succeed in the next book. You’ve got people who know you can do this. You have friends who pick up the last book and think that all they want is another one just like this, that does all those same things, that surprises again and delights in the same way, and hits all the right notes. They don’t want you to wonder about if what you’ve spent your whole life perfecting matters. Of course it does! They’re your friends.
c
This is true. Please reblog.
“… We have an administration in power eager to strip us of our most fundamental rights. Clearly, we have a very long way to go. But, we must persist.”
- troye sivan (the youngest recipient of GLAAD’s Stephen F. Kolzak Award)
okay but guys think about it. one day we’re going to have all these books with queer characters and disabled characters and poc characters, and they’re going to be well-written and not just laughingstocks/token representation, and it’s going to be a common occurrence and there’s going to be this whole generation of kids that’s going to be able to look at these books with these characters and think “that’s me” without having to struggle to find them and honestly that’s so beautiful.