Wednesday, August 20, 2025

Wild For Austen


 

Wild For Austen: A Rebellious, Subversive, and Untamed Jane- Devoney Looser

St. Martin's Press

Release Date: September 2, 2025

Rating: 📚📚📚📚

Synopsis: Thieves! Spies! Abolitionists! Ghosts! If we ever truly believed Jane Austen to be a quiet spinster, scholar Devoney Looser puts that myth to rest at last in Wild for Austen. These, and many other events and characters, come to life throughout this rollicking book. Austen, we learn, was far wilder in her time than we’ve given her credit for, and Looser traces the fascinating and fantastical journey her legacy has taken over the past 250 years.

All six of Austen’s completed novels are examined here, and Looser uncovers striking new gems therein, as well as in Austen’s juvenilia, unfinished fiction, and even essays and poetry. Looser also takes on entirely new scholarship, writing about Austen’s relationship to the abolitionist movement and women’s suffrage. In examining the legacy of Austen’s works, Looser reveals the film adaptations that might have changed Hollywood history had they come to fruition, and tells extraordinary stories of ghost-sightings, Austen novels cited in courts of law, and the eclectic members of the Austen extended family whose own outrageous lives seem wilder than fiction.
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When you think about Jane Austen and her books, what comes to mind? Do you still imagine a quiet woman who never did anything and whose characters never challenge anyone? 

This image has been challenged more and more and in Wild for Austen Devoney Looser wants to put that out-dated Victorian fictional image to rest once and for all. She explores the real Austen, the women in her family who wrote, the ones who inspired her fictional characters, the brothers who spoke out against slavery, and more. Who would Austen have known whose actions and reputations would have been considered "wild" in her day? 

Looser explores what the word "wild" meant (both positive and negative) in Austen's time and how it is used in her books and letters. Each book, including the frequently forgotten Juvenilia, is explored for the "wildness" of its characters and what Austen might have been saying or satirizing on each occasion. It was an interesting angle of exploration that I quite enjoyed. Her research and arguements are interesting and cover a wide range of topics, several that I'd never heard before (like Austen's brothers in support of abolition).

Looser also explores our changing relationship with Austen's works. How has fan fiction, Hollywood interpretations, and our perhaps more willingness to accept Austen as a complete person, changed our relationship with her and her works? Can we accept her today in ways that were denied to her after her death? As perhaps more "wild" than "mild"? I think, based on Looser's arguments, we both can and should- and that an understanding of Austen like the one presented in Wild For Austen might make her more accessible in some ways to younger readers assigned the books in school who find them irrelevant today.   

I received this book as an ARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review






Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Author Interview: Lancy McCall & Code Block


 Author Interview: Lancy McCall & Code Block

Lancy McCall is a self-published author whose first book, Left Turn, came out in 2022. I've had the pleasure of being Lancy's writing coach for some time now and am thrilled that Lancy will be releasing Code Block August 15, 2025. She was kind enough to take a break from her day job and marketing prep for her new book do to this interview with me. 


Q: Do you carefully plot out every scene in your books or see where the characters take you? What’s your writing process?

A: I fall somewhere between a plotter and a discovery writer. I like to say I’m a “GPS-er,” meaning I know my final destination, but I might take a few detours along the way and then recalculate my route to get back on track toward that predetermined ending. My writing process always starts with my characters. Who are they? Where are they at the beginning, and where do they need to be by the end? What internal and external challenges are driving them throughout the story? Once I have a strong sense of my characters, I turn to the plot. I use the 7-point plot exercise described by Dan Wells, where you figure out the key scenes for each plotline, then map them out on a timeline. (This article spellsout my process well: https://lancymccall.com/lm20210531). While I don’t outline every scene in advance, I do need a clear sense of the order of events. If I don’t know when something happens, I have trouble moving forward.

Q: What particular challenges do you face in your writing? What is difficult for you? Do you have any tips for other writers who face similar challenges?

A: Dialogue and action come pretty easily for me, but I struggle with description and narrative. I’m a bit of a bullet-point, bottom-line kind of person in real life, so it makes sense that my writing reflects that. Each revision pass almost always adds thousands of words to the manuscript. I’m still learning how to “show” rather than “tell”—how to write a scene that reveals a character’s traits or emotions through their actions rather than just stating them outright. I also tend to lean too technical in my first drafts. Sometimes I include too much jargon or get overly detailed about the business functions being discussed. During revisions, I rework those sections to make sure they support the story without overwhelming the reader—or tempting them to roll their eyes or skip ahead.

Q: Did publishing your first book, Left Turn, change your writing process?

A: I didn’t really have a writing process before Left Turn. A lot of authors you meet have been writing since they were kids, but that wasn’t me. Before Left Turn, all my writing was technical—part of my day job as a project manager. That first book helped me find my writing process. That said, Left Turn had lived in my head for years before I ever wrote anything. So when I finally sat down to write it, the story flowed out of me fully formed. Conversely, I struggled with Code Block. And I think it’s because it hadn’t had the same time to marinate. I had only a vague idea of what the story was and very few imagined scenes in my head when I started. (And I’m still tweaking my writing process to pull the story out without it needing to percolate like that.)

Q: How did you find your editors?

A: For Left Turn, I worked in solitude, figuring things out as I went. I made pass after pass, editing the heck out of that book until I reached the point where I’d done everything I could and it needed someone else’s eyes on it. I used the Reedsy marketplace to find both a developmental editor and a copyeditor. Each gave me helpful feedback, and everything—from payments to communication—was handled within the Reedsy platform. After publishing that first book, I met other authors and heard about their relationships with their editors. It made my experience feel very transactional and not much like a relationship at all. So I decided that for my next book, I wanted to work with someone I could build a deeper connection with. For Code Block, I reached out to other authors and editors I’d met at writing conferences and on social media, asking for recommendations. I compiled a list, checked out their websites, and paid attention to their editing processes. Eventually, I found a couple of editors through word of mouth who felt like the right fit.

Q: Can you talk a little about your editing experience for new writers?

A: When I talk to new writers about editing, my biggest piece of advice is to remember that your goal is to make your book the best version of itself. And you can’t do that alone. You need other eyes on it to catch the things that you’re too close to see. With my first book, I braced myself for brutal feedback. It was my debut, after all. But the comments weren’t harsh; they were constructive. Everything my editor pointed out made sense. It was a lesson in “this is good, but it could be better if…” And honestly, there were so many positive notes that I was a little taken aback—in a good way. I know it’s intimidating to get that first edit back, but every mark or comment is meant to make your book stronger. I love getting feedback that helps me spot things I missed or suggests ways to bring a point forward so readers connect with it more easily. One other thing I want to emphasize: it’s important that you and your editor are aligned on your story. If your editor thinks they’re working on a swoony romance but you’re writing women’s fiction, they might steer the edits in a direction that doesn’t match your vision. In the end, it’s your story. You get to decide which edits to accept. But when you’re both clear up front on the story’s genre and purpose, the process is smoother, more effective, less costly, and—let’s face it—less emotional.

Q: Can you describe your publishing experience with Code Block? Was it similar or different to Left Turn? Why did you decide this was the path for you?

A: Publishing Code Block has been easier because I feel more knowledgeable this time. It’s like returning to a vacation spot and knowing your way around a little better than the first time you visited. With Left Turn, I was learning everything as I went. I did tons of research before making each move. But with Code Block, I already knew the general order of tasks and when things needed to happen. (Thank goodness for my detailed notes!). For example, I knew to line up my editors and cover designer early, which helped compress the timeline. Another big difference was in my approach to the workflow. With Left Turn, I did everything sequentially—each step waited on the one before it, mostly because I was still figuring things out. With Code Block, I knew I could work on the blurb and social media content while the manuscript was with my editor. That made it easier to stay organized and avoid wasting time on things that could wait.  I’m still figuring out the marketing piece. 😉

You can find out more about Lancy on her website.




Saturday, August 2, 2025

He Falls First


He Falls First- Jill Shalvis

Sourcebooks Casablanca

Release Date: August 5, 2025

Rating: 📚📚📚📚

Synopsis: Ryder Colburn has his hands full running the family business and caring for the ailing father who’s a virtual stranger from the cold, heavy-handed man he used to be. He’s got zero free time for hobbies or women. Or so he thinks until one walks into his life… and the path of an oncoming car.

Ryder doesn’t mind playing the hero for the skittish, scarred chef Penny. Maybe it’s the secrets in her eyes or the scar on her chin. Whatever the reason, he’s compelled to get closer.

Penny’s learned her lesson and now she’s paying the price. That’s why she’s sharing a dilapidated house in a tiny California town with her feisty grandmother and tween brother living off the leftovers from her catering job. It’s a far cry from her dream life. But who needs dreams… or love… or sex when there’s amateur plumbing projects to tackle and breakfast casseroles to bake?

One thing’s for sure, she’s never falling in love again. Not even with the sexy, snarky contractor who keeps testing the walls she’s built.
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Penny has learned the hard way not to trust her judgement in men. She's got the scars and the restraining order to prove it and has moved in with her grandmother and 12 year old brother to start over. New job, new life is her plan. The life may mean working till she drops of exhaustion to pay bills, trying to ride herd on an over enthusiastic grandmother and a teenager, but that's ok. Less time to think of how she's failed at everything else. And less time to think of hot construction company boss Ryder, who's a complication she absolutely doesn't need. 

Ryder doesn't need a complication like Penny either. He's drowning in paperwork he can't stand, still greiving the death of a friend and brother-in-law and knowing his sister blames him for her husband's death. He's trying to keep the family and the business together- including a sick father who's gone from an abusive man no one could stand to be around to someone who can't take care of himself and has had a complete personality change. He doesn't have time for himself, let alone a relationship.

But the universe seems to think this is the perfect time for these two people, with brick walls around their hearts a mile high, to come together. And Ryder may have no idea what he's doing, but he recognises the intense chemistry between them and the happiness he feels just talking to Penny means he'd be an idiot not to see where this unplanned, unexpected thing between them can go. When he agrees to let Penny set the pace and isn't chased off by her fears, Penny starts thinking she might be brave enough to give them a chance too.

I loved how you get two damaged people here, both trying to figure things out. Ryder is totally sweet in letting Penny set the pace no matter what, because he understands when she tells him it's about her being brave enough to trust her. But we see Ryder's broken bits too and he learns how to open up to Penny about them. As much as Ryder and his brothers tease each other, they each have their own issues and are there for each other when they need it. 

This was a lovely romance with a great mix of sweet and sassy, friends and family, teasing and fun, and very hot chemistry between the two main characters. I can't wait to revisit the Colburn family!

I received an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review