Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Come to the Art Show and Poetry Reading on Saturday!

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Don't miss the St. John's High School Art Show and Poetry Reading this Saturday, May 30! The show will begin in our auditorium at 10:00 a.m. and the poetry reading starts at 11:00 a.m. The St. John's High School Art Department, under the guidance of art teacher, Dona Dowling, has some wonderful art in their annual spring show and sale. Proceeds support art students and the Arts at St. John's High School. Students will be reading selections from the school's art and literary magazine, Islander Lines. The art show will end at 3:00 p.m. See you @ the library!

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

New Books Now On Order in Our Catalog!



These books are now on order in our catalog. What does that mean? Now is the time to place a hold on your library card account for any titles that you would like to read. Click here to go to our catalog and begin placing holds today, or call any library location with your library card number and ask to be placed on the hold list.

The Scarecrow by Michael Connolly
I'm Down: A Memoir by Mishna Wolff
Shanghai Girls by Lisa See
Skin Trade (Anita Blake Vampire Hunter Series #17) by Laurell K. Hamilton
Fugitive by Phillip Margolin
The Lovers by John Connolly
Martha Stewart's Cupcakes: 175 Inspired Ideas for Everyone's Favorite Treat by Martha Stewart Living Magazine
Matters of the Heart by Danielle Steel
Medusa by Clive Cussler
My Father's Tears and Other Stories by John Updike
The Story Sisters by Alice Hoffman
The Strain: Book One of the Strain Trilogy by Guillermo del Toro
Undead and Unwelcome by Mary Janice Davidson
Roadside Crosses (Kathryn Dance Series #2) by Jeffery Deaver
Actor and the Housewife by Shannon Hale
American Passage: The History of Ellis Island by Vincent J. Cannato
Apocalypse 2012 by Gary Jennings
Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Deception by Eric Van Lustbader
Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City by Greg Grandin
Relentless by Dean Koontz
The Angel's Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
Finger Lickin' Fifteen by Janet Evanovich
Swimsuit by James Patterson
The Apostle by Brad Thor
Killer Summer by Ridley Pearson
Return to Sullivan's Island by Dorothea Benton Frank
The Devil's Punchbowl by Greg Iles
South of Broad by Pat Conroy

Meet Author Katy Kelly!





Photo by Matt Mendelshon

Jennifer Vido has interviewed children's author, Katy Kelly. Keep reading to learn more about Katy Kelly and Adam Melon, the ten-year-old star of her funny new book, Melonhead.

Jen’s Jewels
May 20, 2009

Katy Kelly

Being the mother of two boys keeps me on my toes. From bullfrogs to mud pies, there is never a dull moment. Despite the gender difference, we’ve come to an understanding. Dirty socks, loud music, and sporting events are par for the course. Neat rooms, manners, and a mutual respect for family members are non-negotiable expectations in our home. Together, we have created a harmonious family life.

This month’s Jen’s Jewels touches upon the hilarious adventures of boyhood, a topic which my husband and I know all too well! In her latest release, MELONHEAD, Katy Kelly chronicles the daily mischief and mayhem of a delightful ten-year-old boy named Adam Melon and his comical group of friends in the Nation’s Capitol. Laugh-out-loud funny, this book is sure to be a big hit among young readers everywhere!

As part of this interview, Delacorte Press has generously donated five copies for you, my lucky readers, to win! So, don’t forget to look for the trivia question at the end of the column. And as always, thanks for making Jen’s Jewels a part of your reading adventure.

Jen: Since you belong to a family of prolific writers, I guess you could say writing is a part of your genetic make-up! So that my readers may have a better insight into the path that led to your career, please tell us about your educational and professional background.
Katy: I learned to tell stories at our family dinner table—four kids, two parents, all talkers—but I went to college to become an artist. A summer internship at People magazine showed me how much fun writing is once you get past the term paper stage of life. A few years later, when I was working as an illustrator, People offered me a job. I stayed for six years before leaving to become a feature writer for the Life section of USA Today. Almost a decade later I left to be a senior editor at U.S. News & World Report.

Jen: As you mentioned, your career began as a journalist. What then was the driving force behind your decision to switch gears and become a children’s author?
Katy: As a reporter I got to do incredible things, go amazing places and meet extraordinary people. After I’d written well over a thousand stories, I wanted to see what I could create in my own head. I wrote fact by day and fiction by night until 2006. Now I write at home.

Jen: Many of my readers identify your name as being the author of the highly popular Lucy Rose series. To date, you have written four Lucy Rose books. How did you arrive at the premise? And, what makes Lucy Rose such a lovable character? (I think she’s one in a million!)
Katy: Thank you! I grew up on Capitol Hill- a place many people assume is made up entirely of government buildings. I wanted to introduce readers to the real neighborhood.

I gave Lucy Rose the characteristics that I was raised to think were important-- being an original thinker, a storyteller and a problem solver, having a love of words, a curious mind and a kind heart. She’s also outspoken, can be bossy and not inclined to consider consequences.

Jen: Your latest endeavor is a spin-off called MELONHEAD, a hilarious tale of a ten-year-old boy named Adam Melon. I understand that your nephews have provided much fodder for Melonhead’s mischievous adventures. Isn’t it wonderful to have such fresh material at your fingertips? Is Melonhead an agglomeration of the group or is he more of a product of your imagination?
Katy: Two days ago I looked up and saw one nephew standing on the carriage house roof, about to jump down onto the top of our neighbor’s garden shed. ‘What are you doing?’ I yelled. “What?” he said. “Nobody told me I couldn’t jump off the roof.” My nephews are great people and provide fodder, and then I stretch it as far as it will go. How lucky can I get?

Jen: In technical terms, what was the most challenging aspect of developing a storyline, which would appeal to boys?
Katy: It was hard to think like a boy. I would ask myself W.W.M.D.? What would Michael do? My brother, Mike, was 16 months younger than me. We spent a lot of rowdy times together. Well, he was rowdy. I felt my job was to be the one who said, “If you don’t get out of that bell tower right now, I’m telling Mom and Dad.” Today, if I’m unsure of how Melonhead would react, it’s back to the nephews.

Jen: The setting of the story is Washington, DC, which is also your residence. Since the inauguration of President Barack Obama, what changes have you personally experienced on a day to day basis in relation to the city’s new energy?
Katy: It’s amazing. The city feels fresh and exciting. There is a sense that the Obamas are accessible. Mrs. Obama is all over the place, dropping into public schools, dropping Sasha and her friends (and the Secret Service) off at the movie theater near our house. My Louisiana cousins recently took a White House tour. The First Lady was on the lawn, training their puppy, Bo. The girls take turns walking the dog on the grounds.

Jen: Let’s talk about the book’s secondary characters. First of all, Lucy Rose does make an appearance (for all her fans!), but the book really centers on the escapades of Melonhead and his best friend, Sam. At times, I felt as if these two were like Zack and Cody from The Suite Life. What makes them such a comical yet compatible pair?
Katy: Lucy Rose’s best friend, Jonique, is, loosely speaking, the voice of reason. Sam and Melonhead are both go-go-go boys, full of ideas and quick to try them out. There is no voice of reason. I love that about them.

Jen: Without giving too much away, the snake episode is my favorite part of the book for a couple of reasons. First of all, Melonhead’s scheme is brought to fruition due to the collaborative efforts of his friends. Quite simply, it shows kids the importance of teamwork even if its outcome is not so favorable. Secondly, it demonstrates for us parents how easy it is to miss what’s happening right under our noses. Is our society creating a family environment similar to two ships passing in the night? Why or why not?
Katy: I think we should all be doing less. Families need hanging out time more than the kids need another activity. You can strengthen family connections fairly easily. Eat the same meal at the same table. Don’t make kids’ bedrooms more fun than the common areas. If they have a computer or TV in their room, that is where they will spend their time.

Jen: I have to admit, after reading MELONHEAD; I went to the grocery store and bought a box of Cap’n Crunch! Your mentioning of it brought back fond childhood memories. I thought it was interesting how Melonhead always kept his pocket full of it. Would you say that he used it as a sort of security blanket? Why or why not?
Katy: Like many boys Melonhead is rarely full. Cereal is his snack between snacks. Having a pocketful is a comfort. Allowing sugar-laden, marshmallow filled, magically delicious cereal is one of the few areas in which Mrs. Melon is more relaxed than Sam’s parents.

Jen: What has been the most rewarding part of embarking on this new series? What has surprised you the most?
Katy: The first time I read Melonhead to a roomful of fourth graders, a boy sitting on the floor at my feet looked up and, in an awed voice, whispered, “I am a Melonhead.” I have been delighted at how many boys—and some girls—claim the honor. Today’s kids live in a structured, monitored world. I think they like picturing themselves as brave independent and funny. Teachers tell me that their most reluctant-to-read boys have tuned into Melonhead. That thrills me.

Jen: What does the future hold for Melonhead? And, when can we expect to read about his next adventures?
Katy: I just finished Melonhead and the Big Stink. It comes out in May 2010.

Jen: Please tell us about your website. Do you have e-mail notification of upcoming releases? Do you participate in author phone chats? And if so, how would my readers go about arranging it?
Katy: I am in the throes of creating a new website. You’ll be the first to know when it’s up. For now I can be found at www.randomhouse.com/kids/lucyrose/author.html .
I send out Breaking Book News when I have a book on the way. Readers who would like a heads up, can message me at AskKatyKelly@gmail.com. That’s also the place to send questions and to request an author phone chat for your book club or class.

Jen: Thank you so much for stopping by to chat with my readers. This fabulous new series is a must-read for all boys and girls! I wish you only the best.
Katy: Thanks!

I hope you have enjoyed my interview with Katy. Please stop by your favorite bookstore or local library branch and pick up a copy of MELONHEAD today!

Better yet, would you like to win one? Be one of the first five readers to e-mail me at jensjewels@gmail.com with the correct answer to the following trivia question and it’s yours!

Name the title of the sequel to MELONHEAD.

In June, I will be bringing to you some fabulous interviews including Bethenny Frankel of The Real Housewives of New York City! You won’t want to miss it!

Until next month…Jen
Jen's Bio:When a twist of fate landed Jennifer Vido at the "Reading with Ripa" roundtable discussion with Kelly Ripa and Meg Cabot, she knew that her career as a French teacher would never be the same. A graduate of Vanderbilt University, Jennifer is a member of Romance Writers of America and reviews books for the major publishing houses, such as Random House, Penguin, and Harper Collins. Currently, she is a columnist and reviewer for www.freshfiction.com, where her popular monthly column, Jen's Jewels, also appears. As a national trainer for The Arthritis Foundation's Aquatic and Land Exercise Programs, she is an advocate for those like herself who suffer from arthritis, the nation's #1 cause of disability. In addition, she serves as Vice-chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Harford County Public Library where she resides with her husband and two sons. She may be reached at jensjewel s@gmail.com and JenniferVido.com.

Monday, May 11, 2009

June Computer Classes

Computer classes are free and for adults and young adults. For more information, please call 559-1945 and ask for the Reference Department. Class space is available for 8 participants per session. Registration is required.

Computer Basics
Tuesday, June 2 from 10:00 a.m. – 12 Noon

Registration starts 5/19
This class provides a basic introduction to the personal computer and its parts. Learn how to use the mouse and navigate the computer screen. There is time for hands-on practice. No computer experience is necessary.

Keyboard Basics
Tuesday, June 9 from 10:00 a.m. – 12 Noon

Registration starts 5/26
Basic orientation to using the computer keyboard. Learn to be a more efficient keyboarder. General instruction and hands-on practice. No computer experience is necessary.

Files and Folders: File Organization and Management
Tuesday, June 16 from 10:00 a.m. – 12 Noon

Registration starts 6/2
Learn how to organize your computer files more effectively. Basic concepts include: creating a file or document, creating folders, naming folders and saving document in a folder and deleting files. Prerequisite: Computer Basics will be helpful.

Internet Basics
Tuesday, June 23 from 10:00 a.m. – 12 Noon

Registration starts 6/9
An introduction to the Internet, focusing on the World Wide Web, using Internet Explorer. Provides an overview of how the Internet is structured and introduces searching on the World Wide Web. Prerequisite: Some experience using a mouse will be helpful.

Jennifer Vido Interviews Nicole Seitz


Local Author Nicole Seitz




Jen’s Jewels
May 11, 2009

Nicole Seitz
Have you ever given any thought as to how well you know your parents? Sure, you probably can name their alma maters, birth places, and the top three crazy relatives on each side, but how about their innermost feelings of joy or deepest, darkest fears? It seems as if life is like a merry-go-round. We just keep spinning round and round rather than taking the time to experience the simple pleasures of being with the ones we love.
This month’s Jen’s Jewels, Nicole Seitz, explores the unchartered waters of familial issues in her latest release A HUNDRED YEARS OF HAPPINESS. It’s the story of a family from South Carolina’s low country, forced to come to terms with ghosts from the past. Beautifully written with an unforeseen ending, this book will leave its imprint on your heart and soul. Without a doubt, it is a must-read novel for May.
As part of this interview, Thomas Nelson has generously donated five copies for you to win. So, don’t forget to look for the trivia question at the end. And as always, thanks for making Jen’s Jewels a part of your reading adventure.


Jen: Being an artist as well as an author enables you to creatively blend the many facets of your personality. Please paint for us a picture of your educational and professional background that led to your career in publishing.
Nicole: Originally I wanted to be in television. I thought 60 Minutes was my ultimate career path. So I went to school for Broadcast Journalism at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. My senior year, I interned at a medium-sized market station in Raleigh, NC, and realized that television was not quite for me. Not yet, anyway.

I was bummed and baffled, but wound up going to Savannah College of Art & Design for another degree in Illustration. I could envision using my writing and art to do freelance articles and illustration for magazines like Gourmet and Conde Nast Traveler. But I never did. Instead, to help pay for SCAD, I wrote freelance articles for The Bluffton Packet and The Island Packet newspapers in Hilton Head Island, SC. I especially loved personality profiles and painting pictures of my subjects with words.

After SCAD, I went into graphic design and then web design. I worked for several large corporations as a web designer until I married and started my own web/graphic business. It had been many years, but I was feeling the urge to write again. I wrote two articles, one on three Lowcountry artists and their studios and another on a local sweetgrass basket maker for SouthCarolina Magazine. I was getting back in the swing of things. Working from home allowed me the flexibility to work at all hours of the day, which, with my background in journalism, all came together when I got the idea for my first novel about five years ago.

Jen: Having experience as a freelance writer and illustrator allows you to dabble in various areas of the business. What was the driving force behind your decision to become a novelist? And did you intend to write for the Christian market from the get-go or do you believe God steered you His way?
Nicole: I don’t feel I really decided to become a novelist—instead, it feels as if my first book simply wrote itself. I was pregnant with my second child when I woke up with my character, Essie Mae, telling her story about family, sweetgrass, and heaven. After bed rest and an emergency early birth for my son (he’s fine, by the way), I would wake at all hours of the night, having to tell that story. My mother convinced me to try and sell it, so I got an agent and within the year, it sold in a two-book deal. As for the Christian market, I really knew nothing about it. I am a Christian and my character was African-American, loved Jesus, and explored heaven. I believe the Christian publisher who bought the book simply saw the faith of my character and thought it fit the market. I went under contract for four more books with Thomas Nelson, so I definitely think God steered me this way. Fortunately I landed with a publisher who allows me to write mainstream novels from a Christian worldview.

Jen: Before we talk about your book, let’s chat about your artwork. Each cover of your three published novels portrays your original works. Are the paintings completed before, during, or after the writing of the books and why so? And, do you paint more than one piece for each novel? Also, are they available for purchase?
Nicole: My first painting, the one on the cover of The Spirit of Sweetgrass, was painted after the book was written and sold. I didn’t realize it would one day be on the cover at the time, I was just moved to paint it. With each novel, I wait until the book is written and well underway before I begin painting for the cover because I want to make sure I really know what the book is about—that it’s not going to change. And yes, I do paint more than one painting for each book. The publisher and I decide which one will work best. Sometimes I have to tweak it to get it write. The cover of my latest, A Hundred Years of Happiness, is actually a composite of two paintings and one of my photographs. All of my paintings are available for purchase and listed on my web site.

Jen: Your latest release, A HUNDRED YEARS OF HAPPINESS, is such a powerful novel on so many levels. Not only could I not put it down, but also I did not see that ending coming. Truly, this book is phenomenal. How did you arrive at the premise?
Nicole: A couple years ago, my husband and I took my parents out for their anniversary, when my stepfather opened up about his time in Vietnam forty years ago. It was an earth-shaking, eye-opening evening for me, so I went home and wrote the scene. I wrote what my stepfather had told us about a recent terrifying experience he’d had confronting “the enemy” from so long ago. My husband loved it, but my mother, my reader, said, “Oh, don’t write about this.” I knew in that moment I needed to write about those things that we’ve been silent about my whole life—the lingering effects of war on families and next generations.

Jen: In my opinion, there are four central characters in the story. So, let’s talk a little bit about each one and how he/she contributes to the overall fluidity to the plot.
First of all, Katherine Ann is your typical career woman turned stay-at-home mom with a Southern twist. She has some self-esteem issues (don’t we all?), but generally I find her to be a solid woman with a level head on her shoulders. Why then has she chosen to dig up skeletons from her father’s past despite her fear of discovering some dark, hidden truth?
Nicole: I’m glad you see Katherine Ann as a fairly solid woman because she’s VERY loosely based on me J She chooses to dig up her father’s skeletons because she has a greater fear of what may be happening to her and to her own kids. She starts experiencing unraveling and tension and anger in her own life, and it looks a whole lot like her father. Isn’t it easier to “fix” someone other than ourselves? Katherine Ann simply talks herself into believing that her father is at the root of her pending demise.

Jen: Throughout the novel, I feel as if Katherine Ann treads lightly when it comes to being around her mother, Betty Jo. Why does she keep her mother at arm’s length? What is she afraid of uncovering? And, why does Betty Jo accept their somewhat disjointed relationship?
Nicole: Wow, good questions. Katherine Ann is very connected to her mother, yet from a distance. In fact, she spends every morning at her mother’s house, with her friends, the Water Lilies. I think she wants to be close to her mother, but as Betty Jo is a bit private and stand-offish, Katherine Ann chooses to simply be present for her. I don’t think it’s so much that Katherine Ann is keeping her mother at arm’s length, but rather the other way around. Betty Jo has some things that she is hiding that she’s never shared with anyone. Yet she keeps the persona of being perfectly coifed and put together. There comes a point in all mother-daughter relationships when you don’t try to change the way things are, but rather to work on accepting each party for who she is. Accepting those things you cannot change. I think this is where Katherine Ann and Betty Jo find themselves.

Jen: Secondly, John Porter, Katherine Ann’s father, is a Vietnam veteran trying hard to make peace with his past. His relationship with his daughter is undeniably a strong bond that holds them, as well as his family, together. How does this father/daughter relationship affect John’s marriage to Betty Jo? How does it impact Katherine Ann and RC’s marriage?
Nicole: John is a hard man to be around at times. Katherine Ann is not close, per se, with her father. She simply wants to be. So when John opens up about the war, Katherine Ann feels connected for a moment, and convicted, of never having known or cared to know these things about him before. Thus, her quest to help her father—and ultimately herself—becomes a way for floundering Katherine Ann to feel rooted and connected. Betty Jo acts much more put together than she actually is, so at times, Katherine Ann can pick up on twinges of jealousy when her father spends time with her. When we’re silent about things, it can separate us from our spouse or our child, or our God. There is a lot of silence between John, Betty Jo and Katherine Ann.
RC, on the other hand, is the opposite of John Porter. He is a rock, a good balance for Katherine Ann. I think the relationship Katherine Ann has with her father, one of unpredictability, only strengthens her view of her own stable husband.

Jen: Thirdly, Lisa the illegitimate daughter of a Vietnamese woman and an American soldier, has lived her life with many unanswered questions as to her origins. Now she is faced with the cold, hard truth which ultimately will impinge on her future. What aspect of her personality contributes to her ability to boldly face adversity despite the emotional warfare it may potentially unleash?
Nicole: Lisa has lived a dual life. She has had a Vietnamese upbringing in the home and an American life on the outside. Growing up in Georgetown, SC she’s always been different. By now, with Uncle dead and her mother mute for six months, Lisa has been extremely alone, more than any time in her life. She has run the restaurant on her own and had no “parents” to talk to for months. I think she’s been forced to see what she’s really made of. Forced to analyze her life or lack thereof. It is this priming that allows her to boldly move forward in an effort to dispel the lies and get to the truth. When you’re grieving over the loss of a loved one (and she’s grieving her mother as well), you think that perhaps you’ve dealt with the worst there is.

Jen: Lisa’s mother consciously chooses to become mute upon the death of the uncle. Is this a cry for help or perhaps is it a way of punishing herself for past transgressions?
Nicole: I think it’s a bit of both. Uncle was the one person who knew Doan Vien in Vietnam and in America, her life before and after. She had no secrets from him. Yet she does with Lisa. I think Doan Vien not only grieves the loss of her brother, but allows this sadness to take her back to when she felt destitute as a young woman. What is there left for her to say now? In essence, she has given up.

Jen: The fourth and what I believe to be the most powerful character in the novel is Ernest, John Porter’s comrade from Vietnam. There is so much I would like to ask you, but for obvious reasons (plot spoilers), I can not. Let’s stick to what we can talk about! What makes him put all his trust into John’s judgment? Is he gullible or simply a man fearful for his life?
Nicole: Ernest is a gentle soul. He grew up on a farm, a simple life, loving parents. War, to him, is a shock. He finds himself far from home, terrified, with no way out. John, on the other hand, has had a rough life. He enlisted in the Army to get away from it all. He has also developed a persona that is rough and tough out of necessity. But he is loyal. Ernest and John have a true brotherly bond. It is John’s willingness to protect and Ernest’s need to be protected that makes this bond so strong.

Jen: How would each of the four main characters (Katherine Ann, John, Lisa, and Ernest) describe their definition of love in respect to their faith? Would you say it’s the driving force behind their actions? Why or why not?
Nicole: Part of the reason each of these characters is tossed by the wind and waves is that they do not have a strong faith in God. They choose to put their faith in one another, in circumstance, in themselves. When those things fail, the impending crisis brings out this crisis of faith. Ernest’s journey exemplifies best the growth of faith in each of these lives. Love has a tendency to be limited or one-sided when it emanates only from ourselves and not from something larger than us.

Jen: When the ink was finally dry and it was time to say good-bye to these characters, how did it make you feel? Why so?
Nicole: Oh, many things. I was happy to be done with it. It was a hard book to write at times. I had to delve into war which was emotionally trying. Yet when it was done and my vision had come full circle, I was so pleased it had worked. I was amazed it worked. I cried as my characters’ journeys ended, but was left hopeful and pleased. Writing this book, as with all, was cathartic. I was ready to let them go and move on.

Jen: Please tell us about your website. Are there Reading Group Guides available for your novels? Do you participate in author phone chats? And if so, how would my readers go about scheduling one?
Nicole: I have a web site, www. Nicolseseitz.com, where readers can contact me, join my mailing list, read about my books, see my paintings, and more. You can find excerpts and reviews of my books as well as reading group guides and questions there. I love to meet with book clubs and can always arrange a telephone or video chat. If you would like to schedule a book club chat, just contact me on my web site and we’ll set it up!

Jen: Are you currently at work on your next project? If so, what can you share with us?
Nicole: My next book, Saving Cicadas, will be released December 1 of this year. Like my other books, this one takes place in the South, in a small fictitious town called Cypresswood, SC. It is narrated by an eight-and-a-half year old girl named Janie, who tells about the summer her single mother got pregnant again unexpectedly, and how she hauled the whole family in the car to escape including Rainey Dae, her 17-year-old sister with special needs, and Poppy and Grandma Mona. It would be the last family vacation they would ever take. It’s a tender and sometimes shocking look at the difficult choices grown-ups make and the secrets and ghosts that remain in every family.

Jen: Thank you so much for stopping by and sharing your book with my readers. I was so moved by your work. Best of luck with A HUNDRED YEARS OF HAPPINESS.
Nicole: Thank you! I loved this interview, Jen. Your questions were thoughtful and probing. It was a true pleasure, and I’m so glad you enjoyed my novel. Hope you look for the next one.

I hope you, my readers, have enjoyed my interview with Nicole. Please stop by your local bookstore or local library branch and pick up a copy today! Better yet, would you like to win one? Okay, be one of the first five readers to e-mail me at jensjewels@gmail.com with the correct answer to the following trivia question and it’s yours!

Name the title of Nicole’s upcoming December 2009 release.

Later this month, I will be bringing to you my interview with children’s author, Katy Kelly. You won’t want to miss it.

Until next time…Jen

Jen's Bio:When a twist of fate landed Jennifer Vido at the "Reading with Ripa" roundtable discussion with Kelly Ripa and Meg Cabot, she knew that her career as a French teacher would never be the same. A graduate of Vanderbilt University, Jennifer is a member of Romance Writers of America and reviews books for the major publishing houses, such as Random House, Penguin, and Harper Collins. Currently, she is a columnist and reviewer for www.freshfiction.com, where her popular monthly column, Jen's Jewels, also appears. As a national trainer for The Arthritis Foundation's Aquatic and Land Exercise Programs, she is an advocate for those like herself who suffer from arthritis, the nation's #1 cause of disability. In addition, she serves as Vice-chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Harford County Public Library where she resides with her husband and two sons. She may be reached at jensjewel s@gmail.com and JenniferVido.com.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Jennifer Vido Interviews Gayden Metcalfe & Charlotte Hays

Jennifer Vido interviews authors Gayden Metcalfe and Charlotte Hays who have written SOME DAY YOU'LL THANK ME FOR THIS...The Official Southern Ladies' Guide to Being a "Perfect" Mother.


Gayden Metcalfe(Meeks Photograhy)

Charlotte Hays(Lisa Helfert)


Jen’s Jewels
May 1, 2009

Gayden Metcalfe and Charlotte Hays

It’s hard to believe that Mother’s Day is just around the corner. I know this because my sons have been conspiring not-so-secretly as to the perfect gift. Jewelry? (Dad says she has too much.) A new CD? (Think she’ll like my favorite rapper?) Maybe dinner at her favorite restaurant? (Doesn’t she always say pancakes are just fine?)
Little do they know that my favorite gifts from years past are hidden in a secret drawer which I visit from time to time. Truly, it’s the macaroni necklace that brings tears of joy to my eyes. And don’t forget the love note with lots of misspellings which often makes my heart skip a beat. These are the gifts I will always treasure. Don’t we all know…life goes by way too fast.
It only seems fitting that Gayden Metcalfe and Charlotte Hays stop by and chat with us this month. Their latest release, SOME DAY YOU’LL THANK ME FOR THIS…The Official Southern Ladies’ Guide to Being a “Perfect” Mother is full of hilarious anecdotes every mother must read. Whether you live north or south of the Mason Dixon Line, it doesn’t matter. This book is for everyone.
As part of the column, Hyperion Books has generously donated five copies for you, my lucky readers, to win. So, don’t forget to look for the trivia question at the end. And as always, thanks for making Jen’s Jewels a part of your reading adventure.

Jen: I think it would be fair to say that you two talented ladies epitomize the true meaning of the term “Southern belles”. So that my readers may get a better understanding of the women behind these delightful books, please, as Southerners would say, “tell us where you’re from and who your people are.”
Gayden: I’m not sure I qualify for a belle at this tender age. But, I am alive and well as something here in the Mississippi Delta (with my people). At best, we’re elder belles—bellelders!
Charlotte: Gayden epitomizes the belle. I’d love to be one, but I’m just not. My wonderful mother was (as was Gayden’s very dear mother). I think Mama’s last words on her death bed may have been, “And my stag line stretched around the ballroom floor.” That is the belle.

Jen: As far as your educational and professional background, how did it prepare each of you for a career in publishing?
Gayden: My Mama and my life in the Delta prepared me as much as anything…besides alcohol.
Charlotte: I like to describe myself as a recovering gossip columnist. Gossip is a trade I learned at my mother’s knee. Also, Greenville has a literary history, and I think we all grew up with the notion that you could become a writer. Gayden and I were good friends of Kate Keating, a talented contemporary who died very young. Her father was Bern Keating, and we knew that Bern—or Mr. Keating, as we then said—earned his living by writing. I always loved to read and wanted to be a writer.

Jen: In terms of collaboration, how did the idea of teaming up to write these delightful books come to fruition? (I’ve read all three and love them!)
Gayden: I could never have done these books without Charlotte. I might remember a story or two that she doesn’t but as far as the writing is concerned…it’s all Charlotte.
Charlotte: It was totally Gayden’s idea. She called me with the idea for Being Dead. I knew it was a brilliant idea, but I felt I had a plate full. Fortunately, I mentioned Gayden’s idea to a friend of mine, Sandra McElwaine, who currently writes for The Daily Beast and other outlets, and she mentioned it to Susan Mercandeti, who was then at Miramax. To make a long story short, Gayden and I went to New York and pitched the idea at Miramax. They bought it. We couldn’t believe it. We worked with
E-mail. We could never have done our books if there were no such thing as e-mail.

Jen: Your latest release, which is a lovely gift for Mother’s Day, is entitled SOME DAY YOU’LL THANK ME FOR THIS The official Southern Ladies’ Guide to Being a “Perfect” Mother. How did you arrive at the premise?
Gayden: My Mother constantly reminded me, “You’ll thank me for this.” Yes, when she was switching the backs of my legs. And another, “You’ll miss me when I’m gone.” She was right one more time!
Charlotte: Lordy, I also heard, “You’ll thank me for this” from my mother. Odd, I never expected to find out how right she was.

Jen: Since you do not live in the same part of the country, how does the actual writing process take place?
Gayden: Well, these books jerked us right into the twenty-first century. We learned a lot quickly about the computer world as opposed to Ma’Bell. We e-mail constantly.
Charlotte: Yes, the wonders of modern technology!

Jen: The book is divided into seven chapters. Although in my opinion, it feels more like seven hysterical vignettes woven together by one common thread…motherhood. A question I just have to ask. Are the women you depict in these tales actually real people? And if so, how did they feel about being mentioned in the book? (Most of these stories are absolutely laugh-out-loud funny! Others are very endearing.)
Gayden: Thank the Lord, we altered most of the names…just enough. But they know who they are! It’s the people we left out that really complain.
Charlotte: When the first book came out, Gayden sent an advance reading copy to Shelby Foote. He asked why we changed some names and not others. We explained that, if you’d given us a recipe, we didn’t change your name. But, if you’d done something socially awkward, such as hacking your mother to death with the garden shears, we did. Yes, these people are all real. We often have people tell us they know them—if not the very same people, the very same types.

Jen: At times, I found myself underlining some very useful etiquette tips. (My own mother will be so proud.) Let’s take one example from the book. Why should one never reply to a formal invitation in blue ink?
Gayden: Blue ink. Why in the world would you not use black?
Charlotte: Blue ink on a formal invitation! It just isn’t right. My mother talked about an otherwise perfect cousin who did this for years on end. You can use blue ink for many things, but not a formal reply. The rule is “reply in kind.” I suppose if—God forbid!—you received a formal invitation with blue ink, you should reply in blue ink. Please, I hope I don’t live long enough to see this!

Jen: I especially liked the comments by Gayden’s nephew, Hugh Dickson Gayden Miller, peppered throughout the book. I had to chuckle when he mentioned the one about having to clean up before the housekeeper’s arrival lest she would quit if it were known how messy things could be! How did Dickson become involved with this project?
Gayden: He offered and of course, I remember my Mother saying, “Ask a lazy person to do something and they will find an easy way. I was lucky that my nephew expressed an interest. He has the gift of gab. I think he is very talented…and funny!
Charlotte: Dickson became involved because he is brilliant—and we adore him. And, as Gayden says….

Jen: Besides the wonderful stories throughout the book, each chapter contains to-die-for Southern recipes. Have you tested each one? And if so, which is your personal favorite and why?
Gayden: Being a Delta person, I must say the tomato aspic is absolutely to die for (don’t forget BEING DEAD IS NO EXCUSE)
Charlotte: Gayden’s husband, Harley, deserves a medal for all the pimiento cheese he ate when Gayden was testing recipes. She tested them, I don’t cook.

Jen: In fifteen words or less, what’s your definition of the perfect Southern mother?
Gayden: The perfect southern mother worships kindness and good manners and is determined to hand on her religion. (Also, if you ask her to say something in 15 words, she takes 17, if not a book!)
Charlotte: She loves you dearly and devotes her life to ensuring that you never sit on a strange commode seat.

Jen: What’s next on your agenda? Are you at work on your fourth guide? And if so, what can you share about it with my readers?
Gayden: A brief rest.
Charlotte: Ditto.

Jen: Well deserved! Thank you so much for taking time out of your busy touring schedule to stop by and chat with my readers. It has been such a pleasure getting to know both of you! Best of luck with your book!
Gayden and Charlotte: Thank you!

I hope you have enjoyed my interview with the ladies. Please stop by your favorite bookstore or library branch (CCPL Catalog and Branches) and pick up a copy of SOME DAY YOU’LL THANK ME FOR THIS The official Southern Ladies’ Guide to Being a “Perfect” Mother today. Better yet, would you like to win one? Be one of the first five readers to e-mail at jensjewels@gmail.com with the correct answer to the following trivia question and it’s yours!

Who is Harley?

Next time, I will be bringing to you my interview with Nicole Seitz, South Carolinian low-country author and artist. You won’t want to miss it.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Jen

Jen's Bio:When a twist of fate landed Jennifer Vido at the "Reading with Ripa" roundtable discussion with Kelly Ripa and Meg Cabot, she knew that her career as a French teacher would never be the same. A graduate of Vanderbilt University, Jennifer is a member of Romance Writers of America and reviews books for the major publishing houses, such as Random House, Penguin, and Harper Collins. Currently, she is a columnist and reviewer for www.freshfiction.com, where her popular monthly column, Jen's Jewels, also appears. As a national trainer for The Arthritis Foundation's Aquatic and Land Exercise Programs, she is an advocate for those like herself who suffer from arthritis, the nation's #1 cause of disability. In addition, she serves as Vice-chairperson of the Board of Trustees of the Harford County Public Library where she resides with her husband and two sons. She may be reached at jensjewel s@gmail.com and JenniferVido.com.