Art of Appreciation by Autumn Markus

Posted December 17, 2013 by Karen in Book Reviews / 0 Comments


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Cover ~ Art of AppreciationTitle: Art of Appreciation

Author: Autumn Markus

Genre: Adult Contemporary

Publication Date: December 17, 2013

Publisher: Omnific Publishing

Event organized by: Literati Author Services, Inc.

Synopsis

Abby Reynolds is burned out.

Since clawing her way into a great position at a Boston museum, she’s been saddled with a scheming intern and a nagging boss. She’s scuttled her own painting dreams, her cat refuses to be box trained, and now the most boring man on the eastern seaboard just told her, “It’s not you, it’s me.”

Her bestie Sarah offers a much-needed escape: a summer of sand, sea, and younger men in Santa Cruz…

Hot young bike racer Jason is sexy, unattached, and completely ready to spend a summer in uncomplicated flirtation. Since Abby has decided love is off the table, he seems like the perfect match.

Then she meets Matt. Sculptor, surfer (and age appropriate), he’s everything she gave up wanting and then some. He’s a grown-ass man with his own life issues: does he want to sculpt for love or for profit? What about that twentysomething model who’s always clinging to him? Is he ready to let a woman invade his Fortress of Solitude?

Abby has to decide whether she’s satisfied with leaving behind the idea of Mr. Right and settling for Mr. Right Now.

Grown up love. It’s complicated.

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Ten reasons I love my favorite author-Autumn Markus

Since I was a kid, I’ve had one favorite author: Stephen King. “But…but, Autumn…you write Chick Lit,” you say. “Aren’t romance authors your favorite?”  Let me tell you a few things Stephen King taught me about good writing…

10) Scares–This isn’t the only reason I love him, but it was the first. I read his book of short stories, Night Shift, as an eighth grader, and it scared the snot out of me…except one story that made me cry. That taught me that genre expectations aren’t everything, but a good story is.

9) He ‘gets’ kids—And not just his realistic children characters. I read an article recently that called him ‘the first YA author’ (even though he’s stated an aversion to those books). His titles are wildly popular with teens, perhaps because he refuses to talk down to them, pander to fads, or treat them as either angels or devils.

8) He’s not afraid to grow as a writer—Anyone who has read him over a span of years can tell you that Mr. King has changed as a writer. His first books are passionate, violent, sharp; his later books have all of those characteristics, with the seasoning of a man who has lived, loved, and suffered loss. Kids frankly might not understand all of his later works, but adults will recognize themselves in every page.

7) And he’s not afraid of technology—This is a biggie to me, because I’m not so hot at new technologies and abhor change. Mr. King was one of the first to utilize e-books (Riding the Bullet), write a modern serial novel (The Green Mile), do an e-comic book (N.), fit the publishing model to the novel (his latest ‘40s style crime thriller, Joyland, was only available as a pulpy paperback), let small filmmakers license his short stories (his Dollar Babies) inexpensively… The list goes on and on. I admire that like whoa.

6) His taste in music—Anyone who loves AC/DC and the Ramones is a friend of mine.

5) Plotting—Every book is a lesson in plotting a story, sometimes over several novels (his Dark Tower series). He lays out his first chapters as a sort of story argument, making you complacent…until things start to crumble around the edges and you start to see things from another perspective. And another. And another. And then you reach the end, where things are often far different than you expected, but it somehow all makes sense.

4) Love stories—Don’t laugh! There are so many realistic, adult relationships in his books. Wizard and Glass had one of the most heartbreaking, beautiful love scenes I have ever read (and I have read—and written–a lot of them J). I think what he taught me is that a little can be enough, and that it’s what happens before and after the actual act, the way people feel and think, that is important.

3) Characters—Mr. King’s ability to create characters who think, feel, speak, and act realistically, even in the most fantastic situations, is one of the Big Three reasons why I still love him today. They’re not pure evil or pure good; they’re human. I aspire to this with every story I write.

2) On Writing—Quite simply the best book out there about being a working writer, and more importantly, about how to be a good writer.

1) Dialogue—No writer today is better at dialogue. Mr. King respects how real people speak; dialogue is neither over expository, stilted, or unrealistic. Again, something I aspire to.

Purchase Links: Not available at this time. Refer back to the tour page for updated links on release day.

author picAbout the Author

Autumn Markus traveled far and wide as a military brat, but her heart was always in the American west, where she was born. She hikes, reads and writes there still, along with snuggling her husband, four children, and a horsedog. She freelance edits for other authors, reviews Women’s Fiction for the New York Journal of Books, and is the author of the contemporary romances Cocktails & Dreams and A Christmas Wish. She is currently at work on her next novel.

Connect with the Author: Facebook | Twitter | Website | Goodreads

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