Even though my "official" launch date will not be until November 24th when I'll be physically selling, signing, and reading from Missing Emily: Croatian Life Letters at an event for Midwest Writing Center at Southpark Mall in Moline, Illinois, I'm excited to announce the book is now for sale at Amazon.com. As everything gets uploaded, it will be for sale at other online sites as well. And as I pound the pavement, hopefully, it will be for sale at more and more stores in the Quad Cities USA area.
I started thinking about this book about four years ago when Biljana came to work at the same law firm where I was then-employed. I began researching and outlining about a year later. The rough draft was completed about a year and a half ago. And then rounds and rounds and rounds of revisions and editing before starting publication late last spring.
MissingEmily: Croatian Life Letters is the story about how two teenage girls living on opposite sides of the
world, one in the United States and one in Croatia, who are dealing with their
own turmoil, one of deep depression and one of civil war, find comfort and
solace by writing letters to each other in the early 1990s.
The format of the book combining narrative with letters is different from
many books and I am not aware of any book which links someone from the United
States with someone from Croatia. It is historical in that it covers historical
events, namely Croatia’s civil war, but it is was only 20 plus years ago which
is part of the point of the story – civil wars or historical events are
occurring right now. The book is also
different in that it doesn’t neatly fit into its young adult genre; one of the
characters is approximately fifteen to sixteen during the story and one
thirteen to fourteen which put them into the traditional category of young
adult and middle grade, respectively. The subject matter, however, would be
categorized more as older young adult by traditional publishers. This is also
part of the point of the story – death, depression, and war don’t fit into neat
little packages, either. They are messy and sometimes ambiguous. Thus, part of the target market for the book is other adults, like me, who enjoy reading YA books.
To read an excerpt, click here to access the Look Inside feature on Amazon. If you review books for a blog, magazine, e-zine, newspaper (print or web), or other online or print publication and would like a free review copy, please send an email to me at jodie@wordsywoman.com with your name, publication name and URL (if any), physical address, email address and phone number and indicate if you want a paperback or e-book.
Thanks and happy reading!
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