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novel Archives - The Book Doctors

Tag: novel

  • Winning Pitchapalooza by Gloria Chao

    This is originally from a great website called Novel Pitch

    Gloria Chao was the winner of the 2015 Pitchapalooza contest put on by The Book Doctors. She and I connected via twitter. The following is her experience from the event. 0wjqQGQB

    I am honored that NovelPitch has invited me to share my experience pitching in The Book Doctor’s 2015 Pitchapalooza contest. I’m a strong supporter of writers helping writers, and am excited to give back (though I wish I could give more!) to the community that has helped in my journey thus far. Thank you, Ralph, for your Novel Pitch efforts, and thank you, fellow writers, for your constant support.

    I heard about the Pitchapalooza contest through Twitter and submitted my query. Based on The Book Doctors’ comments, I believe my pitch stood out because of the specifics—namely, the wording and humor. Since my novel is multicultural, I used words that gave a taste of Chinese culture, e.g. “sticking herself with needles” and “fermented tofu.” I also highlighted the wacky characters with phrases such as “expiring ovaries,” “unladylike eating habits,” and “Taiwanese Ivy Leaguer.” I think capturing the manuscript’s voice in the query was why my pitch was chosen.

    Winning Pitchapalooza gave me confidence and the courage to keep fighting. It also helped bring my manuscript to the next level. I had struggled with my genre, pitching NA contemporary for the contest. The Book Doctors helped me realize this was the incorrect categorization, pointing me toward adult with suggestions to age up my manuscript by changing from first person to third. This released a flood of ideas, and I spent the next several months rewriting—adding 24K words, changing the POV, and writing with a women’s fiction audience in mind. I ended up with a manuscript that finally felt right.

    The journey to publication is infamous for being long and relentless, but enjoying the small accomplishments along the way (and the writing, of course!) is what keeps me motivated. Putting ideas into words, sharing work with others, getting a personalized rejection, receiving a request, winning a contest—these are all achievements that require courage and are worth celebrating. And the writing community, including myself, will always be happy to celebrate with you!

    Here are some of my tips for making your query stand out:

    • If you’re new to querying, check out Query Shark, published authors’ blogs, Writer’s Digest, and craft books.
    • Keep the 250 word count in mind, but only at the end. When you first start, just write. You’re more likely to have gems if you’re whittling down.
    • Avoid clichés, generalities, and obvious stakes. Use unique words to convey your voice (and do this in your manuscript as well).
    • Cut out every word that’s not essential. Too much detail bogs the story down.
    • When you think your query is ready, get fresh eyes on it—family (my husband read a thousand versions of my pitch), friends, and other writers you meet through Twitter. Start with those familiar with your book, then end with people who know nothing about it. The latter will help identify confusing elements and will let you know if the pitch as a whole is not grabbing enough. Then, seize every critique opportunity by entering contests.

    You can read Gloria’s winning pitch for AMERICAN PANDA here.

    About Gloria:

    I earned a bachelor’s degree from MIT and graduated magna cum laude from Tufts Dental—the perfect Taiwanese-American daughter. Except I wasn’t happy. To get through practicing dentistry, I wrote. It took years to gather the strength to push my dental career aside, against my parent’s wishes, to pursue writing full-time. Our relationship suffered, but my most recent novel, AMERICAN PANDA, strengthened our bond by forcing me to ask questions I never dared before. Now, my mother and I laugh about fermented tofu and setups with the perfect Taiwanese boy (though I think she still worries about my expiring ovaries).

    You can find out more about Gloria at her website and on twitter.

    Website: https://gloriachao.wordpress.com/

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/gloriacchao

  • The Book Doctors Interview Virginia Pye, First Time Novelist, on Writing, Writers Conferences, and How to Get Your Book Published

    Originally published in Huffington Post.

    We first met Virginia Pye at the James River Writers Conference, one of the best writers conferences in America. If you’re a writer, do yourself a favor, get yourself to Richmond, Virginia and go to this conference. It’s filled with warm, generous, talented writers, editors and agents. When we first met Virginia Pye three years ago, she’d been writing and rewriting a novel for a very long time. It’s always exciting when you see a dedicated, talented writer who keeps evolving and changing and working, then finally gets their novel published, and actually gets lauded for it. So we thought we would check in with her to see exactly how it all happened.

    Author photo, 200 MB

    Book cover for web

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    We first met Virginia Pye at the James River Writers Conference,  one ofbook doctor logo the best writers conferences in America. If you’re a writer, do yourself a favor, get yourself to Richmond, Virginia and go to this conference. It’s filled with warm, generous, talented writers, editors and agents.  When we first met Virginia Pye three years ago, she’d been writing and rewriting a novel for a very long time.  It’s always exciting when you see a dedicated, talented writer who keeps evolving and changing and working, then finally gets their novel published, and actually gets lauded for it.  So we thought we would check in with her to see exactly how it all happened.

    The Book Doctors: Congratulations on being named an Indie Next Pick for your new novel, how did you feel when you found out?

    Virginia Pye: I felt honored and excited, especially when I learned the other chosen authors, such as Caroline Leavitt, Benjamin Percy, Gail Godwin and Therese Anne Fowler. To be supported and encouraged by IndieBound booksellers means a lot to me. They’re smart and savvy book aficionados whose opinions I value. For years, I’ve read the books they recommend.

    TBD: When did you start writing your book and why?

    VP: Almost a decade ago as I helped my parents clear out their house, I came upon boxes of yellowed onion-skin pages with faint typescript on it. My grandfather, who was a missionary in northwestern China in the nineteen teens, had recorded his daily experience and impressions of that pre-industrialized, desolate, and yet eerily beautiful landscape. I’d always known about the roads, hospitals and schools that he had built in Shansi Province, but now I found his actual tally book in which he kept track of his converts. I felt both pride about his humanitarian successes and shame at his missionary zeal.

    As I read his papers and studied the brown-tinged photographs, I was seated on an Oriental rug in the living room were I’d grown up–a room decorated with Chinese antiques and furniture.  I was surrounded by my family’s history in China and I realized that, whether I liked it or not, part of my inheritance was a colonialist perspective on the world. I had not chosen it, nor felt that I shared it, but it was somehow mine to make peace with just the same.

    The two main characters in my novel, the Reverend and his wife Grace, are upright, Midwestern missionaries who, over the course of their dramatic story find their faith tested and their world view shattered. It took some years for their story to fully emerge, but the germ for it began when I decided to wrestle with my grandfather’s legacy that I had previously tried to ignore.

    TBD: What is your book about?

    VP: On the windswept plains of northwestern China, Mongol bandits swoop down on the missionary couple and steal their small child. The Reverend sets out in search of the boy and becomes entangled in the rugged, corrupt landscape of opium dens, sly nomadic warlords and traveling circuses. He develops a following among the Chinese peasants who christen him Ghost Man for what they perceive as his otherworldly powers. Grace, his wife, pregnant with their second child, takes to her sick bed in the mission compound, where visions of her stolen child and lost husband beckon to her from across the plains. The foreign couple’s savvy, elderly Chinese servants, Ahcho and Mai Lin, eventually lead them on an odyssey back to one another and to a truer understanding of the world around them. River of Dust is a story of the clash of cultures and of retribution, and also of redemption. As the young American couple’s search for their child becomes more desperate, their adopted country comes to haunt them, changing not only what they believe but who they are.

    TBD: You are involved with the James River Writers Conference, how did that community help you with the writing and selling of your book?

    VP: James River Writers is a literary non-profit in Richmond, Virginia with around 400 members. I was chair of JRW for three years and on the board for close to a decade. JRW holds an annual conference each October, which is especially welcoming and friendly to writers of all types. I enjoyed working with everyone involved and made friends with many fellow aspiring writers, as well as the published authors and publishing professionals who came for the conference. Many of them were encouraging and offered to introduce me to their agents or fellow editors. JRW set a supportive and generous tone that I think everyone benefited from.

    TBD: Did you hire an editor?

    VP: For many years, I had worked on a previous novel that was about three generations of an American family with ties to China and Vietnam. It went through twenty-one drafts and dozens of agents saw it in various stages. They admired the writing and characters, but found that it just wasn’t quite working. Finally, I decided to take my manuscript to The Porches, a writing retreat in rural Virginia where I met author and editor, Nancy Zafris. She offered a different sort of editing experience from anyone else I’d heard of: she works with authors one-on-one over a weekend, discussing and brainstorming about the work. With Nancy’s perceptive questions, I began to see a new book emerging, one that was not a multi-generational story at all, but a compact and dramatic tale set in one year–1910–and in one setting–northwestern China. I left The Porches after that weekend with a new book in mind and a new, carefully conceived outline. I sat down on April 1st and completed a first draft on April 23rd. I had lived with the previous manuscript for so long– had wrestled with its problems and relished its strengths–that when it came time to write an altogether new version, I had enough previous connection to the characters and setting that the story came forth easily. It was both miraculous and not at all.

    TBD: How did you find an agent?

    VP: After I completed my marathon first draft of River of Dust, I shared it with Nancy who passed it along to her editor at Unbridled Books, Greg Michalson. He liked it and gave me a call. It was then that I realized I needed an agent. Gail Hochman had read the earlier multi-generational manuscript as well as another novel of mine. She had always been kind and thoughtful in her replies to my work, although she hadn’t taken me on as a client. I admired her authors–Michael Cunningham, Julia Glass, Ursula Hegi–so I chose to go back to her with River of Dust when Unbridled made their offer. I’m so glad I did. As everyone knows, Gail is a brilliant agent and an enthusiastic and caring person.

    TBD: What are some of the mistakes you made as you wrote and tried to sell your book?

    VP: In retrospect, I think that it may have been a mistake to work for so long on that previous novel. If something isn’t working, tinkering with it probably won’t help. To give myself more credit, I did revise–sometimes extensively–but I still wanted that manuscript to be the book I had in mind from the start. I was determined to bend the characters and plot to fit the book I envisioned. Somehow I wasn’t listening well enough to the voices of smart readers, or even my own voice that was whispering that it just wasn’t working. The manuscript was telling me that it needed to be altogether different. I was trying to write a book with a complicated structure before ever truly perfecting a simpler one. Perhaps there’s a lesson in that, too: succeed first at something smaller, before trying to tackle your opus. Come to think of it, I know a number of writers who have been working on big books for years and those projects never seem to come to fruition. Perhaps aiming for something less baroque and yet doing it well is a better way to go with a debut novel.

    TBD: How do you plan to promote and market your book?

    VP: I’ve written a number of essays about the backstory for my novel. “A Zealot and Poet,” about my grandfather, will appear in May in The Rumpus. I’m excited to be interviewed at Caroline Leavitt and David Abrams’s blogs and in The Nervous Breakdown. Excerpts from River of Dust will also soon appear in The Nervous Breakdown, and in The Collagist and DearReader.com. I had a great time creating a playlist for River of Dust for the Largehearted Boy. Unbridled has done a great job of setting up book events up and down the East Coast: in Richmond, Charlottesville, Alexandria and Norfolk, Virginia; New York, Boston and Western Massachusetts. I’m excited about all my events, but a few in particular stand out for me: a reading in the Lucian W. Pye Room at M.I.T. (named for my father who was a prominent Political Scientist there); a reading at Back Pages Books in Waltham, Massachusetts, at which my four closest high school girlfriends are coming in from around the country to cheer me on; and what I think will be a great evening at the China Institute in NYC, where I’m eager to share my work with China enthusiasts and experts and look forward to learning from my audience.

    TBD: What are some of your favorite things about being a writer? And what are some of the things you hate about it?

    VP: I am completely biased towards writers and writing. I think there’s nothing better to do with one’s life. OK, being a visual artist or musician is pretty good, too. And my husband is a contemporary art museum curator and that’s not half bad. But, as a writer, you have carte blanche to express your vision of the world, however quirky it may be. You can read voraciously and remain a dilettante. Aleksander Hemon recently said, “Expertise is the enemy of imagination.” As someone who has written a novel set in a country where I have never been, I agree. People ask if I did a lot of research before writing River of Dust. I did only as much as I needed to ignite my mind, which, as it turned out wasn’t a great deal–again, perhaps because I’d grown up with a visceral understanding of China passed down to me through two generations. I think that writers have an obligation to be thoughtful in their work. Good writing needs to offer meaning on several levels at once. A novel that has strong storytelling doesn’t need to sacrifice that goal. I hope that River of Dust is both a page-turner and an intelligent read. I love Philip Roth’s rallying cry to writers at his eightieth birthday and on the occasion of his retirement from writing: “This passion for specificity, for the hypnotic materiality of the world one is in is all but at the heart of the task to which every American novelist has been enjoined since Herman Melville and his whale and Mark Twain and his river: to discover the most arresting, evocative verbal depiction of every last American thing.” The only down side to writing is that it’s no easy task. But who ever wanted easy when trying to live a meaningful life?

    TBD: I hate to ask you this, but what advice do you have for writers?

    VP: Pay attention to the market: to what agents tell you at conferences and on Twitter; to what your independent bookseller says about the books he or she endorses; to what your most thoughtful and serious readers say about your manuscript. And then, put it all on the backburner while you write. Let it simmer in the back of your mind as you write the book you want to write. If their advice has resonated then it will help shape the next draft. Stick with the manuscript until it’s done and don’t start to shop it around too early. If you’re as eager as I was with numerous manuscripts, most likely you’ll shop it around too early. When you’ve written what you are truly proud of–after listening carefully for any hesitations and heeding them–reach out to agents and published authors with graciousness and gratitude. The publishing world is not waiting for you, but on the other hand, it can’t exist without you. So take up your rightful place, but politely and while keeping in mind that we’re incredibly lucky to be doing this thing that we love. At least, that’s how I try to approach it.

    Virginia Pye’s debut novel, River of Dust, is an Indie Next Pick for May, 2013. Her award-winning short stories have appeared in numerous literary magazines. She holds an MFA from Sarah Lawrence, taught writing at New York University, and The University of Pennsylvania, and has helped run a literary non-profit in Richmond, Virginia. For more about her, visit: www.virginiapye.com

    The Book Doctors have helped dozens and dozens of amateur writers become professionally published authors. They edit books and develop manuscripts, help writers develop a platform, and connect them with agents and publishers. Their book is The Essential Guide to Getting Your Book Published. Anyone who reads this article and buys the print version of this book gets a FREE 20 MINUTE CONSULTATION with proof of purchase (email: david@bookdoctors2.pairsite.com). Arielle Eckstut is an agent-at-large at the Levine Greenberg Literary Agency, one of New York City’s most respected and successful agencies. Arielle is not only the author of seven books, but she also co-founded the iconic company, LittleMissMatched, and grew it from a tiny operation into a leading national brand that now has stores from Disneyland to Disney World to 5th Avenue in NYC. David Henry Sterry is the author of 15 books, a performer, muckraker, educator, and activist. His first memoir, Chicken, was an international bestseller, and has been translated into 10 languages. His anthology, Hos, Hookers, Call Girls and Rent Boys was featured on the front cover of the Sunday New York Times Book Review. The follow-up, Johns, Marks, Tricks and Chickenhawks, just came out. He has appeared on, acted with, written for, worked and/or presented at: Will Smith, Edinburgh Fringe Festival, Stanford University, National Public Radio, Penthouse, Michael Caine, the London Times, Playboy and Zippy the Chimp. His new illustrated novel is Mort Morte, a coming-of-age black comedy that’s kind of like Diary of a Wimpy Kid, as told by Travis Bickle from Taxi Driver. He loves any sport with balls, and his girls.  www.davidhenrysterry To learn how not to pitch your book, click here.

  • 21013 NaNoWriMo Pitchapalooza Winners

    It was an dreadfully difficult decision. Over 600 entries. Astounding pitches of every ilk. Just as in National Novel Writing Month, we consider everyone who submitted to be a winner. But we had to pick one. And readers had to pick one. So… (drumroll) our winner is:

    Stacy McAnulty.  Her awesomely awesome pitch about a boy who hatches a dinosaur egg made our lizard brain hum and our caveman heart laugh. Congratulations!

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    Our popular winner was Katie Nepiris, for her stunningly stunning pitch about a group of friends who undergo seismic changes in the year after high school. She got over 1,000 votes!image

     

     

     

     

    FYI, we’re honored to be doing a Lights & Letters Webinar on May 14: The Art of the Edit: How to Revise Your Novel Successfully. It’s going to be a blast, we promise. Here’s what we’ll be covering:

          Starting off with a bang, Character arcs, Pacing, Building suspense, Opening & closing chapters, Avoiding repetition, Great titles, Knowing when to show and when to tell, Avoiding clichés, Keeping dialogue real, Checking for words you use over and over and over again, Reading aloud, Killing your babies, Finding beta readers, Getting objective,Using your pitch to perfect your plot.

    The Book Doctors will also randomly select a number of first paragraphs from attendees’ manuscripts during the webinar to demonstrate what a professional edit would look like. Send your first paragraph in the body of the email to nanowrimo@bookdoctors2.pairsite.com when you sign up.

    And as always, any Wrimo who buys a copy of The Essential Guide to Getting Your Book Published gets a FREE 20 minute consultation with the Book Doctors. Just email proof of purchase to sterryhead@gmail.com.

    Thanks to everyone for participating. See you next year. And keep on writing!

    AandDwithBooks

     

     

  • How a Writer Gets Published, Part 1

    I’ve been studying the relentlessly ridiculous publishing business for a decade.  I wrote a book about it called The Essential Guide to Getting Your Book Published (product placement). I’ve come to the conclusion that there are four basic principles involved in getting successfully published: 1) Research, 2) Network, 3) Writing, 4) Perseverance.

    In the last 10 years I’ve also written 12 books that have been published; everyone from corporate giants like HarperCollins, Random House and Penguin, to incredible independents like Soft Skull, Canongate and Workman.  I’ve been on bestseller lists.  My books have been translated into a dozen languages.  So lots of talented amateur writers I work with just assume that anything I write will automatically get published.  But because the publishing business has contracted, and I’ve written books in so many different categories, and I don’t have one agent or publisher I work with time after time, and some of the books I write aren’t for a mainstream audience, I still have to apply all the principles listed above to get my books published.

    I have six manuscripts that are burning a hole in the pocket of my computer.  A ghost story (The Valley of Love and Delight: A Ghost Story); an experimental novel (Mort Morte); an anthology filled with writing from a severely underrepresented and beat down demographic (Johns, Marx, Tricks and Chickenhawks: Professionals Writing About Their Clients); a young adult novel about asthma (Breathless in Flat Rock); a kid’s picture book (The Boy Who Cried Wolf); a collection of poetry by some of the greatest poets in the world, specifically designed for kids to say out loud (The 100 Greatest Poems for Kids to Say Out Loud);  and a collection of shorts.  Since I have already applied principle #3, these books have been written.  It never ceases to amaze me how many people tell me they want to be writers, but they haven’t actually finished writing a book.  There’s a very good chance that several if not all of my manuscripts will have to be rewritten a grotesque number of times.  In fact one of them is with an editor even as we speak; someone I’m paying to tell me why my book sucks.  I’m going to put my money where my mouth is, and hope my foot doesn’t end up there.

    I’m going to get these books published, or have an aneurysm trying.  Every week or so, I’m going to introduce one of my manuscripts, and explain the daily steps I’ve taken to accomplish my goal.

    The Valley of Love and Delight: A Ghost Story.  I’ve been working on this novel for almost four years.  I’ve done 42 drafts so far.  A dozen of my writer friends have already read the book and told me why they thought it sucked.  I’ve already paid two editors to tell me what parts they thought sucked.  Once again illustrating the often-neglected notion that you have to keep rewriting and rewriting and rewriting until you get it right.  I see so many manuscripts by talented amateurs that are just so obviously not as good as they could be.  It’s like inviting someone over to your house for a piece of cake, and serving them something that’s half-baked.  All gloopy and goopy and melty and horrible.

    #1: Writing.  About a month ago an agent I queried expressed interest in representing the book.  I got to her because I relentlessly pursued a famous writer she represents, trying to get him to do a Twitter interview with me.  After five tweets, he finally consented.  When I approached his agent, she was very receptive because I had interviewed her client.

    #2: Networking.  She and her fabulous assistant had some ideas about how I might make it more suck-free.  So I spent a month feverishly rewriting the book.  Then I got a 15-year-old reader to read it.  It was shocking and slightly horrifying how many times she was able to pinpoint exact moments where the book had a gigantic amount of suckage.  A smart teenage reader is worth his/her weight in plutonium.

    #4: Persistence. I just got the manuscript back from an amazing editor who the agent recommended.  She’s the one I’m currently paying to tell me why my book sucks.  Today I got back her notes.  They were edifying, horrifying, brilliant and maddening.  Even though she said lots of nice things about the book, it’s clear there is much much work yet to be done.  I have serious psychological problem because I want everything to be finished NOW.  It’s a severe difficulty to overcome when you’re writing a novel.  I also suffer from post dramatic stress disorder, so I immediately plunged into the darkest blackness.  All I could see in the editor’s notes were everything that was wrong, everything that sucked, all my failings and shortcomings.  But I am stepping back from my emotions, using the techniques I’ve developed over these decades to avoid plummeting down into a shame spiral.  I’m using this to learn how to be more patient artist.  And now I will go back to the grindstone and put my nose to it with some elbow grease.  And remind myself how much I love working on this book.  Here’s the pitch, which I’ve also been working on for four years:

    The Valley of Love & Delight: A Ghost Story

    Finn is being haunted by two ghosts.  Only one of them is in his head..

    Finn Hart is 16.  He comes home from a party and finds his mother dead in his bed with a 94 page suicide note by her head.  Since his father disappeared almost before conception, Finn is now an orphan.  He’s shipped off to boarding school housed in buildings made by the Shakers, a religious sect in the 1800’s.  The Shakers are famous for two things. 1) They made exquisite furniture. 2) They didn’t believe in sex.  There are no more Shakers.  Finn’s first night at school, after everyone’s asleep, he hears a baby whimpering and crying.  The crying turns into wailing, and it’s so unbearable Finn feel like he wants to die.  But no matter how hard he looks he can’t find a baby.  When he wakes up his aristobrat roommate, the baby’s wailing stops.  When Finn finally falls asleep, he dreams he’s an orphan being adopted by the Shakers in the same buildings.  Only it’s 1850 and the buildings are brand-new.

    Finn lives two sleep-deprived lives.  One at boarding school where a cool new headmistress creates a culture of abstinence, and he tries to overcome the death of his mother, who haunts him daily.  In his dreams Finn tries to live a simple hard-working Shaker life, where sex is the road to burning for eternity in hell with Satan.  In both worlds Finn falls madly in love.  And gets both girls pregnant.

    Finn’s mind deteriorates until he can’t tell the difference between dream and reality, natural and supernatural, now and then.  The only things he knows for sure are that he’s madly in love with two girls, neither of whom he’s allowed to so much as kiss.  And that it’s somehow up to him to help the baby who wails in his room at night, and trying to kill him in the woods during the day.  When Finn gets expelled by the suddenly-not-so-cool Headmisstress, he has to fight for his life in court, with the horrors of Juvenile Detention breathing hot down his neck.  And somehow liberate the ghost of the Shaker baby.

    This fantasy Young Adult novel centers around the hot button topic of sexual repression and teenage pregnancy combined with a supernatural horror element revolving around one of the most bizarre religious cults in history, the Shakers.

    David Henry Sterry is the author of 12 books, the latest of which was featured on the cover of the Sunday New York Times Book Review.  “Eye-opening, astonishing, brutally honest and frequently funny… unpretentious and riveting — but also graphic, politically incorrect… and that rare ability to tell the truth.”  This is his debut novel.

    “Imagine Stephen King writing Catcher in the Rye.  It’s that rare beast, a truly literary page turner.”-Tamim Ansary, best-selling author of East of New York, West of Kabul

    At 16 I was exiled to a boarding school in the Berkshire Mountains that was housed in buildings built by the Shakers.  When I was at boarding school, they remodeled one of the old Shaker buildings.  Buried inside the wall they found the skeleton of a baby.  A chill froze my soul cold.  This is the book I wrote in honor of the Shaker Baby. – David Henry Sterry

  • Pam Satran to host March Book Club at The Fine Grind

    The Fine Grind Book Club
    Suburbanistas by Pamela Redmond Satran
    Monday, March 7
    6:30pm-8pm

    $5 (one drink–tea, coffee, cappuccino or latte– and a delicious appetizer spread)

    Author Pamela Redmond Satran will lead a lively discussion on her book Suburbanistas. This little gem is the story of a Jersey Girl who becomes a movie star, but ends up moving back to her small suburban town and reconnecting with her oldest friend, a mother of four married to a local cop. It’s a story of how female friendships change, survive, and ultimately sustain us through marriages, divorces, kids, moves, careers, success, and adversity. This book is for sale now at The Fine Grind.

    RSVP at The Fine Grind counter with one of our excellent baristas, contact jessica@thefinegrindcoffeebar.com or call 973 837 0199. Please check out The Fine Grind Coffee Bar’s list of fabulous events at www.thefinegrindcoffeebar.com.