Monday, March 24, 2014

**GIVEAWAY** A Hundred Summers paperback release Blog Tour


I'm so pleased to be first on the A Hundred Summers paperback release blog tour. I've included my original interview with Beatriz from when the novel came out, plus a link to my interview I did when she first came on the publishing scene with Overseas and my review courtesy RT Magazine of A Hundred Summers.
Also Beatriz's publisher Penguin Group is offering one paperback copy of this incredible historical literary masterpiece to one lucky US ONLY entrant.
See Below for details.
Enjoy the blog post




  • ISBN-13: 9780425270035
  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
  • Publication date: 4/1/2014
  • Pages: 432






Penguin Group US is offering one lucky
US ONLY entrant
one newly released paperback edition of
A Hundred Summers
use the Rafflecopter form below
Good Luck!
Thanks Penguin!




“Beatriz Williams does it again! A Hundred Summers sparkles like the New England summer sun.
A brilliantly told tale of love lost and found, of friendship, and of family ties…
Definitely a book for my keeper shelf.”
—Karen White, New York Times Bestselling Author of Sea Change

“Williams’ sweeping saga of betrayal, sacrifice, and redemption
trenchantly examines the often duplicitous nature of female friendships and family expectations”
Booklist

Beatriz Williams burst onto the literary scene in 2012 with a debut novel so irresistible, it not only earned raves among trade reviewers and in the blogosphere, it snagged awards even before its pub date.  Championing heroic values and the fateful power of love, Overseas made romantics out of cynics and went on to become an international bestseller. 

On the heels of that captivating debut, Williams enchanted readers yet again with the hardcover release of A HUNDRED SUMMERS, an evocative Depression-era tale about love lost and found, and the devastating price of guarding secrets.  Now, a year after its original release, A HUNDRED SUMMERS (Berkley Trade Paperback Reprint; April 1, 2014; 978-0425270035; $16) reappears once again in trade paperback, just in time for beach season.

As the summer of 1938 opens, New York socialite Lily Dane has arrived at her family’s idyllic cottage on the Rhode Island coast with her mother and six-year-old sister in tow.  Seven years earlier, as a Smith College senior, Lily fell head-over-heels for Dartmouth quarterback Nick Greenwald in a whirlwind romance gone wrong.  Now, after a difficult year, Lily is looking forward to a rejuvenating respite in the place that helped her heal after her broken engagement. 

But her plan is upended when Budgie, her ex-best friend, and Lily’s former fiancĂ© arrive in Seaview for the season.  Newly married to Nick, Budgie intends to restore her family’s cottage and reclaim her spot in Seaview’s posh social scene.  The pair’s arrival rekindles a wildfire of gossip and casts a pall over Lily’s beloved home-away-from-home.  In this small class-conscious community, Lily is hard-pressed to avoid her faithless ex-friend.  Budgie is nothing if not seductive and resourceful and she soon pulls kindhearted Lily back into her orbit, insinuating herself into Lily’s good graces. 

As a cataclysmic hurricane churns north through the Atlantic, and uneasy secrets slowly reveal themselves, Lily and Nick will confront an emotional storm that will change their worlds forever.

Slipping gracefully back and forth between fictional Seaview and glimmering moneyed New York in the ‘30s, A HUNDRED SUMMERS brilliantly captures an endangered way of life and the twin devastations heaped upon a community that summer: the loss of innocence and the loss of a way of life. 

Beatriz, Hi! Welcome to my blog.

Debbie, thanks so much for having me! It’s always a pleasure to talk books with you!

Tell your many fans here about your latest novel A Hundred Summers.
Well, my agent calls it “High Society meets A Perfect Storm!” Like Overseas, it’s a love story, set in the wealthy beach community of Seaview, Rhode Island, in the summer before the great New England hurricane of 1938. Lily Dane returns to her family’s generations-old Seaview cottage with her mother and young sister, as she does every year, but this time she’s confronted with a heartbreaking pair of neighbors: her childhood friend Budgie and her old flame Nick Greenwald, with whom she shared a passionate courtship six years ago. As the story alternates between Lily and Nick’s romance in 1931 and the sticky, hot summer of 1938, all the buried secrets start simmering to the surface, until the famous storm crashes into Seaview with all its potential for destruction and redemption.



How did the original novel idea come to you?

I’m from Seattle originally, so I came as an outsider into this whole East Coast culture of clubs and summer houses and intricate social relationships. As I writer, I find it so compelling, because so much takes place below the surface, which is how I tend to write my books anyway! Meanwhile, I’d always been fascinated with the legend of the 1938 storm––it came without warning and swept away entire shoreline communities. So I started combining these two ideas in my head, a secret love affair among the insular WASP upper crust of the 1930s together with a cataclysmic end-of-summer hurricane, and A Hundred Summers was born!


This is your second novel. 
Does the writing get easier or harder?

What’s the biggest difference as a “now published” author from an “aspiring” author?
The writing is definitely easier! I’ve often described how I wrote Overseas in six weeks, but I had to follow that six weeks with months of editing to get the prose and the story where I wanted it. I drafted A Hundred Summers in about the same time, but I felt much more comfortable in my voice this time around, so I could polish and self-correct as I went along. Of course, as a debut author, you get a certain amount of publicity mileage just for appearing on the scene, fresh and dewy-cheeked. This year, I’m probably much less exciting!


Both your novels have been historical but this one happened during the time of an actual natural disaster.

When researching the novel did you discover anything about the hurricane that surprised you?
What shocked me most was the suddenness of it. Back in an age without satellites or Doppler radar, no one had any way of knowing that this particular storm was shooting straight up toward Long Island at sixty miles an hour instead of hooking rightward over the Atlantic, as hurricanes were expected to do. So coastal New Englanders heard this forecast for sunny skies in the morning and a bit of bluster in the afternoon, and they went about their business. By the time the winds cranked up to a hundred and thirty miles and hour, and a fifteen to twenty foot storm surge rolled in like a tsunami, it was too late to prepare, let alone to flee.


On your bio it says you divide your time between writing and laundry because of your 4 children. I love your humor in your interviews, in your novels and on your website.
When writing such poignant and serious scenes, how do you think humor helps the plot line?


Oh, I think a bit of humor is an absolute necessity, in life as well as in books! You can’t have three or four hundred pages of uninterrupted pathos; you need something to pace the tension. I think that’s why it’s called comic relief! But writing humor can be a lot harder than writing drama. Your timing has to be perfect, your rhythm has to be perfect. Delivery is everything!



The characters in both novels are unforgettable for me and yet both sets of heroines and heroes are so different.
As an author how do you put one set of characters down and pick up another, is it intrinsic or do they tend to mix if you’re not careful?


I’m certainly guilty of falling in love with some of my characters; it’s how I’m inspired as a writer, and how I keep myself glued to the page so that––well, fingers crossed, anyway!––readers stay glued to the page. By the time I sit down to write a story, I’ve usually been thinking about it for some time, so the characters are like real people in my head, with their own histories and personalities and voices. Sometimes they even surprise me, once they appear on the page and start interacting with each other, but confusion is never the problem!



Of all your characters so far do you have a favorite?

I can’t play favorites! The hardest part is starting a new book before I’m completely over the book I’ve just finished, which I had to do recently. I have to force myself to feel something for these new characters and to care about their problems. Once I get going, of course, I slip into the story just fine. But it was definitely tougher to start writing before I felt I knew my characters well enough. It’s like when you’re at a dinner party with a bunch of people you’ve only just met, and you’re trying to make interesting conversation with them. Hard work.



As you know I reviewed A Hundred Summers for RT Magazine (below)
How much credence do you put on reviews either editorial or reader?

Reviews are tough for me! I’m a second child and have that pleaser personality, and unfortunately you can’t please everyone in this business: What one person adores is another’s pet peeve. So I tread carefully over at Goodreads and Amazon, although I do try to listen to the thoughtful, constructive reviews, whether good or so-so. And trust me, we writers really do appreciate the good ones! It means so much when a reader or reviewer (like you, Debbie!) really connects with what I’ve written. I have a lot of fan mail I take out and re-read when my writerly mojo needs a boost.



Will you share your road to becoming an author with us. Are you an overnight success or did it take a little longer?


Like most authors, I’ve wanted to write books since the moment I could read them, so to me that road feels very long indeed! But I really didn’t pursue the craft seriously until I was home with my kids and felt my time had come, and I was ready to face all the challenge and rejection and criticism that I knew would come my way. I started off with a few failed efforts, as I learned how to tell a compelling story, but everything clicked with Overseas and things started happening pretty quickly after that. But I’m not sure I’ll ever feel like a success, overnight or otherwise! I’m too much a perfectionist. I can hardly even read my books once they’re out in print and I can’t change anything!


Okay it’s time to get into your “writing cave”. Does anything or anyone suffer while you’re on deadline?

My kids and my house! I’ve come to accept the fact that while I adore my husband and his many sterling qualities, he’s no housekeeper. (Not that I’m Mrs. Beeton myself, mind you!) He’ll pitch in willingly when I ask him to do something, but it just won’t occur to him to do things like pick up the clutter on his way upstairs, or wipe our four-year-old’s sticky hands before her fingers hit the computer keyboard. So when I’m in the homestretch of a book, the kitchen winds up littered with detritus and the kids wander around unwashed. It’s pretty grim, and it’s usually when my in-laws decided to pop in for a spontaneous visit!



Beatriz, it’s just us friends, you can trust us.
Tell us a secret.


My hair is seriously growing gray! It’s horrifying. It must be all the kids and writing deadlines. I have to touch up my roots at home, or I’d go broke.


My review of A Hundred Summers is courtesy of RT Magazine



A HUNDRED SUMMERS 
by Beatriz Williams
Genre: Historical Romance, Historical Fiction, America
Sensuality: HOTSetting: 1930s New England
4.5 STARS TOP PICK
Williams’ historical masterpiece is an all-encompassing, period-perfect read. Set in a historically accurate Rhode Island summer community, her narrative delivers visions of Gable and Garbo, and her storyline is a medley of political incorrectness, intrigue, debauchery and scandal. Her entire cast shines, but it’s her unsinkable, timeless couple who awes with their tenacity and integrity in the face of every unscrupulous act against them.
In the fall of 1931, the country stews between the ‘29 crash and WWII. Against all odds, Lily Dane and Nick Greenwald meet and fall in love. With much working against them, some obvious factors and some unknown, a personal tragedy proves too much for their fragile love and tears them apart. They reacquaint in 1938, during a perfect social storm, when the secrets and scandals that separated them come to a crashing climax that will seal their fates one way or the other. Will they weather the tempest or become its victims? (PUTNAM, Jun., 368 pp., $26.95)
Reviewed By: Debbie Haupt


For a look at our interview and my review of Overseas click the link Here, did you know Overseas was my TOP PICK for 2012 and A Hundred Summers made my TOP 20 list of 2013


About the author:

A Stanford University honors graduate with an MBA from Columbia, Beatriz Williams spent several years in New York and London as a corporate and communications strategy consultant. She now lives with her husband and four children near the Connecticut shore, where she divides her time between writing and laundry. She is the author of the international bestseller Overseas and also writes as Juliana Gray. Visit her online at www.beatrizwilliams.com.

Blog Tour Schedule
Blog Tour19 Blog Tour stops
March 24                     The Reading Frenzy, spotlight & giveaway
March 25                     So Many Precious Books, So Little Time, spotlight & giveaway
March 28                     Entertainment Realm, review & giveaway
Chefdruck: French Foodie Mom, review & giveaway
Bookfoolery, review & giveaway
Handcrafted Reviews, review & giveaway
March 31                     Anita Loves Books, spotlight & giveaway
March 31                     TwoClassyChics, review
April 1                         Book-alicious Mama, review & giveaway
April 1                         Chick Lit Plus, spotlight & giveaway
April 2                         Minding Spot, spotlight & giveaway
Sincerely Stacie, spotlight & giveaway
April 4                         Amusing Reviews, review & giveaway
April 10                       Book Addict Katie, review & giveaway
Luxury Reading, review & giveaway
April 8                         Book Dilettante, spotlight & giveaway
April 8                         Leah's Thoughts, review & giveaway

April 25                       Kritter’s Ramblings, review


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11 comments:

  1. This has been on my to read list!

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    1. Hi Janet, have you read Overseas?
      Thanks for posting

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  2. Fantastic interview, this is a book already on my wishlist, thanks in part to you I am sure! :)

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Kim, sometimes this blogger connection is more trouble than help when our tbr pile's falling down around our ears. :)
      thanks

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  3. Whewboy yeah you'd have to have a good sense of humor with a full house like that. lol And love that she brings a humorous element into her books. That really is such an important one for me :)

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  4. Hi just heard about the book, sounds intriguing! :-)

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  5. I am new to author Beatriz Williams. I'll look at her website. This book sounds like something I would love to read Romance Suspense. Thanks for the giveaway.

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  6. New author; interesting book inspiration

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