One Boy, No Water by Lehua Parker

When old Uncle Kahana and his poi dog ‘Ilima find a newborn with a funny birthmark abandoned on a reef in Hawaii, he soon finds out just how special the child is: the boy is allergic to water. One drop on his skin and it’s like water on a white hot skillet; his allergies also make eating anything raw from the sea or rare meat impossible, which is simply absurd for an island dweller.

Strangely, the boy’s peculiar allergies lead Uncle Kahana to believe this child is ‘ohana—family—and doesn’t have to work too hard to convince his niece and her family to adopt and give him a name—Alexander Kanoakai Westin, or “Zader” for short.

If only the rest of Zader’s life were so easy! On the surface, despite his unusual allergies, Zader is an average eleven year old boy with typical challenges of fitting in with his peers, getting into a good prep school, and maintaining his relationship with his surfing crazed brother. In reality, Zader is Niuhi, a shark with the ability to turn into a person.

As he matures and begins to adapt to his “allergies” in ways that make it easier to live a normal life, Zader’s world begins to turn upside down—he will not only have to come to terms with who he is, but what he is.

Read excerpt   View trailer

Title: One Boy, No Water

Author: Lehua Parker

Illustrator: Corey Egbert

Publisher: Jolly Fish Press

Release Date: September 29, 2012

ISBN: 978-0984880126

Size: 284 pages, hardcover

Genre: Middle Grade Fantasy


Two Important Announcements!

Two important announcements:

September Book Winners will be announced on October 3, 2012.

I’m going to a writers conference and won’t be back at my computer until Wednesday, October 3rd. While I can auto-post most things, I can’t pick and auto-post winners of the free books for September.

What? You didn’t know you could win free books here? You can! Just leave a comment on any post. Details are here.

I need sponsors for October through December.

The fall sponsorship slots usually fill up pretty fast but right now I don’t have any! If you want to have your book featured in the sidebar, first READ THIS. Then send me an email with the appropriate information, including WHICH of the three months you want to sponsor. I won’t respond until Oct 3rd, but if you follow the rules, assume that you’re in. (Unless of course I get like 1,000 responses from eager sponsors-to-be. Then it will be a first come, first chosen situation.)

 

What About This Cover?

We talked about your responses both here and on Facebook—Thank you!—and came up with this:

Click to enlarge.

Here’s our thinking:

1. We want it to visually feel like our previous book, therefore, keeping the frame. Also, we feel like some of the commenters—our eyes fall off the edge of the book just under the title in the non-framed version and we never make it back to the globe with the nativity. The frame sort of makes your eyes bounce back to the center and the globe.

2. Font choice for title is the same as our first book, so we want to keep that but we made it more readable. (We also got the title correct this time.)  (Oh, and ignore the weird spacing before the letter “t” and those extra dots. Those will come out in the final version.)

3. We did change the font on the subtitle and moved it up. There’s just no good place to put it at the bottom of the framed version. Yes, we know it will be difficult to read in thumbnail size, but it’s a subtitle so that’s okay.

4. We really want a Santa AND Savior cover because it goes with the message of the lead story, “Checkin’ It Twice”. There’s not a lot out there that’s cute and has reasonable royalty fees. (Reasonable = we’re working on a shoestring here.)

5. As to the “creepy” Santa face…ummm…we thought he was cute. But we will make his eye all green. That brown/green combo is a little on the weird side.

So. What do you think? Better?

Pick a Cover

Which of these two covers do you like better for the new Christmas anthology?

With the frame? Or without?

Click on image to enlarge.

 

You’re not judging the details, like exact color matching or if the drop shadow is perfect. These are quick and dirty mock-ups using comp copies of the images (ergo, the white stripes and the iStockphoto logos on them).

We’re looking for an over all feel and gut reaction to the cover. Ask yourself, “If this book was displayed face out on my local bookstore shelf, which one would I be more likely to pick up?”

You can say why if you want. This will help us tweak things, even if we don’t go with your choice.

This is not necessarily a majority rules decision. We are definitely leaning toward one over the other. But we also want to know what YOU think.

 

P.S.  You may or may not have noticed that we went with Kasey’s suggestion for a subtitle. Kasey, send me an email with your full name so we can mention you in the credits.

 

Help Title Our Christmas Anthology!

 

<——- See this?

This is the cover for our first Christmas collection.

The cover for the second one (to be released next month) is not quite ready to be unveiled. It will have different colors and images, but will hopefully have the same feel to it.

However, the inside of the second LDS Publisher Christmas short story collection is now in typesetting. Yay!

But. We have a problem…

We need YOUR help coming up with a title.

 

The lead story in the first collection was “Stolen Christmas” by Sarah M. Eden. So we titled the book, Stolen Christmas and Other Stories of the Season. Had a nice ring to it.

In this second collection, the lead story is…drum roll…

“Checkin’ It Twice” by Michael Young

 

We need a title along the lines of Checkin’ It Twice and _____

We want it to be clear from the title that it’s a collection of stories. Tie in holiday imagery or phrase. We like alliteration, but not if it’s forced. Some of the stories are funny, others more thoughtful, so we need something that allows for both. Oh, and we need it by Friday!

Leave your suggestion in the comments of this post. If we use your idea, you’ll be mentioned in the credits. If two people suggest the same thing, the comment with the earliest date/time stamp gets the credit.

Okay. Ready… go!

 

Didn’t Get Your Book Trek Prize?

All of the Summer Book Trek prizes are being shipped or emailed straight from the sponsor (author or publisher).

If your prize was an ebook, first check your Spam folder to see if it’s in there.

If you haven’t gotten your prize yet, please let me know and I’ll contact the sponsor to see what the problem is.

Looking for September Sponsors

With the end of the Summer Book Trek fast approaching, I’m now looking for sponsors for the month of September.

Details are here: http://www.ldspublisher.com/be-a-sponsor/

If you’re interested, contact me via email.

I’m Moving as Fast as I Can

Several of you have sent me requests to post your book info here or to add you to the Author Network site. Just wanted to let you know that I’ve got them on my list. My day job is in Christmas release crunch time right now so I’m running behind. Please be patient. I will get to them as soon as I can.

Also, if you’re following the Summer Book Trek, I’m pretty sure that everyone who signed up has earned a prize now. Many have earned two, thanks to the random integer generator. I’m guessing that by the end of the week, some names will be popping up for a third time.

What do you care? Well, if you join up now, odds are YOU’LL win a book too!

Just sayin’…

Summer Book Trek Coming in August

Remember how a million years ago (or three) we did that Summer Book Trek reading thing? Yeh, it’s vague in my mind too and apparently I lost some posts when I transferred from Blogger to here because I can’t find them…

But whatever. It was lots of fun. And we’re going to do it again August 1st through 31st.

That’s only 10 short days away so you have plenty of time to plan for it. Right?

Oh, and I’ll want sponsors. LOTS and LOTS of sponsors.

A REAL challenge button and detailed details will go up soon, but in the meantime, here’s the short list.

READING PARTICIPANTS:

• Read as many (or few) books as you want but they MUST be by LDS authors.

• Bonus points if their book is on this site.

• Even more bonus points if the book is a 2012 release.

• And even more bonus points if you blog about what you’ve read.

Why do you care about bonus points? They earn you prizes!

 

SPONSORS

• You need to be an LDS author (or publisher of an LDS author) and provide a book as your prize (print or ebook).

• You are responsible for sending the prize to the winner & decide where you’ll ship.

• Sponsors will get a spotlight post & be listed on a special sponsor page.

• I’d love to be able to give away a book or three every day. So the more the merrier. Help spread the word.

If you want to sponsor, contact me ASAP and I’ll email details by Wednesday.

 

Oh, and if you haven’t already done so, please go take my survey.

 

Help Make LDSPublisher.com Better!

Please take this survey.

Survey ends July 28, 2012

Molly Woodhaven by A.D. Duling

Molly Woodhaven is an eight year old girl with quite an imagination,or does she? Behind their Victorian and the wooden fence of their backyard are the woods; where Molly’s mother has said not to go in.

Molly doesn’t listen to her mother and does. Deep inside, she finds a little elf man named Mr. Pickett who takes her on an impossible sailing adventure to and on the great Atlantic Ocean.

Where she becomes a cabin girl, meets a mermaid King, goes to the Isles of Three for medicinal lily pads and collects Spitfire fireflies at the Spitfire Caves! And all this in one day! When she returns home, time has not turned, not even by a minute and Molly realizes she has not been caught.

She also realizes that tomorrow she can go on another adventure and the next day and the day after that…

Read excerpt

Title: Molly Woodhaven: Stories of Her Adventures & Other Extraordinary Experiences

Author: A.D. Duling

Publisher: Self

Release Date: April 12, 2012

ASIN: B007TVV8PY

Size: 54 pages, ebook

Genre: Middle Grade Fantasy

*This book may not meet the length requirements for a Whitney Award.



When is a Vacation Not a Vacation?

I took a couple of days off and got back to over 2,000 spam comments on this site!

It took all of my  lunch break, and then some, to deal with them. I think most of them are gone now. I don’t think I deleted any real ones, but if I deleted yours, I’m sorry. After the first 100, I admit, I quit reading them.

I don’t get what spammers like this are trying to accomplish. Are they thinking I’m dumb enough to click on their links? Are they fishing for you? I hope none of you got caught up in any of that.

*sigh*

For awhile at least, all comments will be moderated. Sorry about the inconvenience.

 

 

Seven Splinters by L.N. Jennings

When eighteen-year-old Tuuli Jakobsson awakens into her true race, she discovers that her people face a second extinction.

The Realm Gate, once designed to protect her race from human destruction, has been choking their magic while the Viking Warlord, their race’s ancient enemy, savagely herds them to reap their dwindling powers.

With her race’s history fractioned between seven Lordship stones, can Tuuli solve the mysteries that surround the artifacts, bring the pieces together, and convince her mate to embrace his destiny before they’re destroyed?

Read excerpt

Title: Seven Splinters

Author: L.N. Jennings

Publisher: Self

Release Date: March 7, 2012

ISBN: 978-1-105-31201-4

Size: 425 pages, 6×9, softcover

Genre: Young Adult Fantasy


Merry Christmas!

Wrapping Up 2011


I’m trying to get the 2011 Fiction list for this blog wrapped up and as complete as possible this week. I usually post the full list on Dec 31st, but then it’s too late to encourage Whitney nominations—so I’m shooting for this Friday.

That way, you have the full list in front of you and can make last minute nominations for your favorite books.

Trust me. The Whitney people LOVE last minute nominations. They will thank you for them.

(That is only slightly sarcastic. They would really rather you nominate all year long, but any nomination before the end of the year will be considered.)

(For details on Whitneys & nominations, click here.)

But I digress. This is not a post about the Whitneys. It’s a post about the 2011 LDS Fiction list. This list is for fiction titles written by LDS authors and published in 2011.

I currently have 275 titles on the 2011 Fiction list. That’s a lot. But, unfortunately, I’m sure I’ve missed a few.

That’s where YOU ride to my rescue!

Please take a moment (or 10) and look at the list. Scroll down to view the 2011 Fiction list in the sidebar. If you know of any book that belongs on this list—and it’s missing—please, please, please send me info about it. (Link to info I need.)

As far as I know, the current list is complete. I am not aware of any other books being released through the end of this year. Please correct me if I’m wrong by sending an e-mail ASAP or by posting the title of the book and the author’s name in the comments of this post.

Thanks so much for your help!

Oh, and P.S. Some authors believe that if their book has a post on the LDS Fiction blog, that means they’re automatically nominated for a Whitney. This is not true. My blogs have no official connection with the Whitney Awards. This LDS Fiction blog is simply to make readers aware that a book exists. It’s up to the reader of the book to nominate it for a Whitney. (Authors and publishers may not nominate their own books.)

Wrapping Up 2011


I’m trying to get the 2011 Fiction list wrapped up and as complete as possible this week. I usually post that list over on LDS Fiction on Dec 31st, but then it’s too late to encourage Whitney nominations—so I’m shooting for this Friday.

That way, you have the full list in front of you and can make last minute nominations for your favorite books.

Trust me. The Whitney people LOVE last minute nominations. They will thank you for them.

(That is only slightly sarcastic. They would really rather you nominate all year long, but any nomination before the end of the year will be considered.)

(For details on Whitneys & nominations, click here.)

But I digress. This is not a post about the Whitneys. It’s a post about the 2011 LDS Fiction list. This list is for fiction titles written by LDS authors and published in 2011.

I currently have 275 titles on the 2011 Fiction list. That’s a lot. But, unfortunately, I’m sure I’ve missed a few.

That’s where YOU ride to my rescue!

Please take a moment (or 10) and go visit the LDS Fiction blog. Scroll down to view the 2011 Fiction list in the sidebar. If you know of any book that belongs on this list—and it’s missing—please, please, please send me info about it. (Link to info I need.)

As far as I know, the current list is complete. I am not aware of any other books being released through the end of this year. Please correct me if I’m wrong by sending an e-mail ASAP or by posting the title of the book and the author’s name in the comments of this post.

Thanks so much for your help!

Oh, and P.S. Some authors believe that if their book has a post on the LDS Fiction blog, that means they’re automatically nominated for a Whitney. This is not true. My blogs have no official connection with the Whitney Awards. The LDS Fiction blog is simply to make readers aware that a book exists. It’s up to the reader of the book to nominate it for a Whitney. (Authors and publishers may not nominate their own books.)

Give Books for Christmas Giveaway Hop Winner

First, I want to apologize for not being very active here this month. It’s been crazy at work and everyone’s been trying to wrap up the end of the year so that today will be our last official work day and we can play until January. I think I’m just about there…

And now for the winner of Stolen Christmas:

Congratulations to

Maria Hoagland

Send me your mailing address and I’ll ship that right out to you.

Give Books for Christmas Giveaway Hop!

Oh, hi. I’m doing the Give Books for Christmas Giveaway Hop!

I don’t usually do things like this. In fact, I don’t think I’ve ever participated in a blog hop before.

And I may never do it again. We’ll see.

But I was invited to participate in this one through Facebook (that Facebook is a neat thing, isn’t it?), so I decided to give it a try because this hop is right up my alley.

And it’s right up your alley, too—because ALL THE PRIZES are BOOKS!

This seems like a great way to draw attention to your book, if you’re a published author, and/or get more traffic to your blog if you’re unpublished.

If you want to be a blog that people hop to, go sign up here. If you want to hop around the blogs to enter to win the prizes, just click on the links below and enter to win on each blog.


So, I’m giving away a copy of Stolen Christmas & Other Stories of the Season.

This is the first Christmas collection of short stories gleaned from the contests held here at LDS Publisher.

(Yes, there will be a second collection available for Christmas gift giving in 2012.)

Here’s the blurb:
What happens when you’re so poor you have to steal your Christmas presents? Have you ever taken a punch in the face as your Christmas gift to the girl you love? Or saved Christmas while hunting were-weevils?

These award-winning Christmas stories are the best of the best from the LDS Publisher Christmas Story Contests. From Christmases past, to present, to future; from sweet and inspirational, to zany and delightful—there’s a story for everyone in this eclectic collection.

Contributing authors are: Roger Bonner, Don Carey, Laura Craner, Joyce DiPastena, Sarah M. Eden, L.T. Elliot, Gussie Fick, Melanie Goldmund, M. Gray, Taegyn Hutchinson, Angie Lofthouse, Lori Nawyn, Tristi Pinkston, Brian C. Ricks, Sandra Sorenson, Janice Sperry, and Christine Thackeray.

To be entered to win this book, you need to:

  1. Follow this blog and/or the LDS Fiction blog.
  2. Commit to giving at least one book by an LDS author as a Christmas gift this year. (List the title and author in the comments section of this post.)

Deadline to enter: Thursday, December 15, 2011.

US and International entries allowed. If the winner is in the US, you may choose either a print book or an ebook; if international, winner will receive an ebook.

Or if you can’t wait, you can always purchase the book at CreateSpace or Smashwords.



With a Name Like Love by Tess Hilmo

When Ollie’s daddy, the Reverend Everlasting Love, pulls their travel trailer into Binder to lead a three-day revival, Ollie knows that this town will be like all the others they visit—it is exactly the kind of nothing Ollie has come to expect.

But on their first day in town, Ollie meets Jimmy Koppel, whose mother is in jail for murdering his father. Jimmy insists that his mother is innocent, and Ollie believes him. Still, even if Ollie convinces her daddy to stay in town, how can two kids free a grown woman who has signed a confession?

Ollie’s longing for a friend and her daddy’s penchant for searching out lost souls prove to be a formidable force in this tiny town where everyone seems bent on judging and jailing without a trial.

Read excerpt

Title: With a Name Like Love

Author: Tess Hilmo

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Release Date: September 27, 2011

ISBN: 978-0374384654

Size: 256 pages, 6×8.5, softcover

Genre: Middle Grade


Mea Culpa

Will the submissions from 2010 ever learn if they were good enough for your compilation or get the promised critique? It’s hard to want to participate again when we’re still all in limbo from B of M and last year’s Christmas contest.

I thought I’d tied up all the loose ends for the last two contests, but it looks like I didn’t. I sincerely apologize.

  1. Book of Mormon Anthology: I did an update post here and I remember posting about it since then and saying “no anthology” but now I can’t find the post where I said it. That was a very messy time in my personal life—starting a new job, being overwhelmed with family issues. I confess, I let some things slide back then. I am sorry.

    The official status is: No Book of Mormon Anthology to be published at this time.

    There is a very slim possibility I may reconsider it in the future, but don’t count on it until I contact you (the authors) directly.

    If you did not receive the critique on your BofM story, please e-mail me.

  2. 2010 Christmas Stories: All authors should have been notified by email with their critiques. I clearly remember sending those out because I was so proud of myself when I finished the last of them.

    If you did not receive the critique your 2010 Christmas story, please e-mail me.

Again, I’m very sorry for dropping the ball and I am promising I will do better this time.

But. Even if I do flake out (which I’m not intending to do but who knows—my house may be taken out by an earthquake at any second and if that happens, critiquing your stories will fall to the bottom of my to do list), you STILL get some valuable feedback from readers.

So please, please, please—send in your stories.

What Is ‘Sweet’?

Stolen from Pub Rants, a blog by literary agent Kristen Nelson.

Late on Friday (July 29) I found out that Jamie Ford was going to be a literature question on that night’s TV show of Jeopardy!

Surely you’ve arrived if you are ubiquitous enough to be a question on a popular game show, right?


Not a single contestant got the answer. LOL!

Yep, take it down a notch Kristin. It still makes me smile though.

— • — • — • — • — • — • — • — • — • —

It makes me smile too because Jamie Ford is LDS and his book, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet was a 2009 Whitney Finalist.

Going On Vacation…

I’m taking a summer vacation, so I’m suspending the Comment Contest for July and August. I’d still appreciate your comments but there won’t be any prizes until September.

Even though I’m on a break, you’ll want to check back here a couple of times a week because I’ll be doing a “Best of”—posting some of the more popular and/or more informative posts a few days a week through the rest of the summer. And there’s always the possibility that Jeff will show up again, or I may have a few other guest posters from time to time.

You’ll want to start working on your Christmas stories (limit 3,000 words) because we’ll have our annual contest when I come back in September!

And keep checking the LDS Fiction blog, as usual. I will still be posting new releases over there.

Oh, and the winners of the June comment contest are posted here.

Missionary Fiction?

Quick question, do you know if lds publishers are interested in fictional stories about missionaries?

Of course. Why wouldn’t they be? As long as it’s well-written and not preachy, has intriguing characters that readers can relate to, an interesting plot line, and upholds LDS beliefs and standards, most LDS publishers will give it a look.

There’s even some precedent for interest by national publishers. I know there are some I’ve heard of recently but Google is not my friend today. The only one I can recall off the top of my head is Charlotte’s Rose by A.E. Cannon published by Wendy Lamb Books (imprint of Random House).

[Readers, if you can think of some other titles of fiction with LDS characters published by national publishers, leave the titles in the comments section.]

Just remember, good fiction needs to be good fiction. No one wants a preachy book or a thinly disguised version of the missionary discussions. It has to be real.