Offering Signed First Edition Copies of My Novel

“Fiction reveals truth that reality obscures.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

TheHardWay

Hey Blog Readers,

To celebrate the second printing (2) of my first novel (1), I’m selling first edition signed copies (trade paperbacks) for three dollars (3) plus shipping (3) while there are still some left in the box in my basement! (Only $6 each!)

Email me (julieluongo@gmail.com) your address and I’ll send you The Hard Way (Forge, 2008) – my unanimously praised novel-in-stories (like early Nick Hornby but with a female protagonist).

Here’s a link to my paypal account.

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Check Me Out

I’m just happy to be nominated.

The Hard Way

The Hard Way

I was nominated for a Reviewers Choice Award from the Romantic Times in the Chick Lit Novel category. Awesome late birthday present! Thanks.

That’s right, I had another birthday. If you forgot to lavish me with love and attention, you should know that I receive gifts all year. So, no worries.
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October 25th – Save the Date

Join me and bring your friends! I’ll be answering questions and reading from The Hard Way:

  • Eastern Monroe Public Library (Hughes Library) in the Community Room
  • 1002 North Ninth Street, Stroudsburg, PA.
  • October 25, 2008 (Saturday)
  • 10am to 12pm

It’ll make you feel good.

On the (Marketing) Campaign Trail

“Make it simple. Make it memorable. Make it inviting to look at. Make it fun to read.” ~Leo Burnett

The Hard Way by Julie Luongo on bookstore shelf

As you may know, my first novel, The Hard Way, is now in bookstores. If you happen to mosey into one this summer, check it out. And if you’re up for a little point-of-purchase marketing fun, I received some secondhand advice from a publishing expert who offered these suggestions (thanks, Lisa):

Ask everyone you know to:

  • Pull your book up on the computer screens in the bookstore
  • Find your book on the shelf and front face it (instead of spine facing it)
  • Or, better yet, move your book to one of the appropriate middle tables – such as New in Paperback

Actually, The Hard Way is on the New in Paperback table in lots of bookstores from what I’ve heard. So, if you find it there, you can do what my brother-in-law did and stand by the table and wait for customers stroll up then tell them all of the wonderful things you’ve heard about this debut author. Ok, so he made stuff up…he said he heard me on NPR. I wish. Hmm, maybe that should be my next marketing task…find a way to make myself NPR-newsworthy (though not like Krystian Bala.)

Link here for reviews and praise.
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Allusions of Esprit de Corp

“Film lovers are sick people.” ~Francois Truffaut

Sophia Coppola

Marshal Zeringue is a reader / writer / producer who hosts several very cool blogs that authors contribute to including MY BOOK, THE MOVIE, Campaign for the American Reader, Writers Read, The Page 99 Test, The Page 69 Test, LIT LISTS, author interviews, and NEW BOOKS.

Recently he asked me to contribute to MY BOOK, THE MOVIE, which is pretty exciting since Marshal has some sort of Midas touch in that a good number of authors he fingers for his blog actually get their books optioned. Here’s what I wrote on the subject:

***

When I imagine The Hard Way based on the novel by Julie Luongo coming to a theater near you, I generally think of it as a rich romantic comedy with a who’s-who ensemble cast and a top director. And I’m no literary snob. I have no problems at all with the Hollywood elite.

But The Hard Way would also work as a dark and/or quirky indie film with soon-to-be famous actors. What I mean is that I could imagine—I do imagine—a lot of different directors handling the subject material well. Judd Apatow would make it young and light; Sofia Coppola brooding and layered; Wes Anderson quirky and beautiful; Ron Howard fun and Oscar-worthy.

Wes Anderson

However, if I were directing my movie, I’d probably go with a Robert Altman style a la Short Cuts to mimic my book’s novel-in-stories structure. (Incidentally, I think Richard Linklater would pull this off well.) I’d give each vignette its own cast, tone, and style.

Nooo, I haven’t wasted a ton of time on this fantasy. Nope, not much time at all.

The Hard Way takes place over the span of 30 years (1970-2000) and is about one woman’s journey toward self-awareness and personal fulfillment. Lucy has a long road though. Her childhood was spent as the reluctant subject of a painter her parents were supporting when she was born.

In the vignette of her childhood, I’d cast Lucy as Miranda Cosgrove (Summer in School of Rock). Her self-involved parents would be played by Catherine Keener and Harold Ramis. The painter, a smug artist who occupies the bulk of her time, would be played by Johnathon Schaech (Jimmy in That Thing You Do).

Miranda Cosgrove as Lucy 1

When Lucy is in college, she goes on a tropical vacation with her mother, her mother’s new boyfriend, and his unhappy adult children. In this story, she’d be played by Alia Shawkat (Maeby in Arrested Development). Lucy’s sister Nancy appears here as a shrill, tense, and jealous woman. I think Judy Greer would pull off nicely (another Arrested Development actress – she was Kitty, the secretary). There is also a great male character, a moody man-child, which would be an excellent part for Jason Schwartzman.

Alia Shawkat as Lucy 2

After college Lucy stumbles through some ill-chosen careers. In her first one, as a freelance reporter, Lucy would have to be played by Lauren Ambrose (Claire in Six Feet Under). Probably in a misguided attempt to mourn her father, she dates a self-possessed older man who is distracted by his own issues. Bill Murray is my top pick for this character.

Lauren Ambrose as Lucy 3

Lucy makes more than one misguided choice in love and leaves a number of discarded boyfriends in her wake. One of my favorite boyfriend characters is Keith, a wacky guy with a lax work ethic and a penchant for retro slang. I think Owen Wilson would have fun with this role (opposite Kate Winslet as Lucy).

Kate Winslet as Lucy 4

Lucy’s least favorite boyfriend is Todd, who tells her what to do, what to eat, and how to act, which is amusing to her at first and eventually annoying then exhausting. Todd also suffers from road rage. People who don’t give the courtesy wave beware! I think Matt Damon could expertly reveal Todd’s suppressed fury.

Matt Damon

Everyone’s favorite boyfriend of Lucy’s is Ben. He’s a Dean Martin with a little Jerry Lewis, which means he’s confident and sweet; handsome and goofy. I imagine that Paul Rudd or even James Franco could do a lot with this character.

Paul Rudd

If nothing else, The Hard Way, The Movie has range with cheek to rival Juno and depth enough to kill a mockingbird. (This synopsis rated H for Humble.)

***

Naturally, since writing this, I’ve heard a lot of suggestions that appeal. My sister thinks Drew Barrymore would make a perfect Lucy. She’s got the look I’m going for, for sure:

Drew Barrymore

My friend wants John Cusack and Jeremy Piven in the movie. Why not? As long as we’re dreaming.

John Cusack

Also, I’ve thought of a couple more directors that I think would be great choices, including Todd Solondz (Welcome to the Dollhouse), Mike Judge (Idiocracy), and Alexander Payne (Sideways, Election, Citizen Ruth). And now I need a pain killer because Truffaut was right, I’m sick.
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Romantic Times Reviewed The Hard Way

Lauren Spielberg reviewed The Hard Way for Romantic Times BOOK Reviews Magazine in the June 2008 issue. It won’t be on their website for two more months (subscribers get the first look at what’s what). But here’s a scanned copy of the review. It was the TOP PICK! on page 64 in Mainstream Fiction. So, yeah, that’s cool.

Romantic Times BOOK Reviews Magazine review

No, I didn’t bribe her! Oh, and 4.5 GOLD stars is the highest star rating one can get in RT. So, I missed it by a GOLD. Nevertheless, I’m pretty pleased. Yaaaay, Lauren Spielberg (thanks)!
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Booklist Reviewed The Hard Way

“…those who venture to criticize us perform a remarkable act of friendship, for to undertake to wound or offend a man for his own good is to have a healthy love for him.” ~Michel de Montaigne

Miniture Books From The Grolier Club\'s exhibit

Kristine Huntley reviewed The Hard Way for Booklist Magazine. (If you want to read it at Booklist Online, you have to subscribe – 30 days free!) If you don’t get a thrill seeing the review in its original setting, here’s a copy of what Kristine Huntley so generously wrote:

The Hard Way
By Julie Luongo
Release: June 2008.

272p. Forge, paperback, $13.95 (9780765316677).
REVIEW. First published April 15, 2008 (Booklist).

Like the novels of Melissa Bank, Luongo’s first offering is a novel-in-stories. Her protagonist, Lucy Venier, spends her twenties floundering in careers and relationships that are wrong for her. Lucy tries her hand at journalism, advertising, sales, and even law school, but none of the professions feel like the right fit for the artistic Lucy, who is most at home when painting or filling her surroundings with her creations. Her taste in men is even more misguided: she dates a feckless, unfaithful newspaper editor; an arrogant cad who magnifies her self-loathing; and an incomprehensible loser who gambles away $800 on her credit card. The only winner of the bunch is Ben, who is both charming and funny and believes in Lucy, but his proposal and their subsequent engagement feel suffocating. Though Lucy’s boyfriends aside from Ben are almost unrealistically unappealing, her sharp observations (“I’ve stopped reading women’s magazines, so I feel less and less trivial everyday”) make her a heroine worth rooting for. — Kristine Huntley

Yeah, I’m totally rooting for her.

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The Hard Way Makeover

“Beware so long as you live, of judging men by their outward appearance.” ~Jean de La Fontaine

The Hard Way by Julie Luongo - new book cover art

The Hard Way has a new look. Yep, in the ninth hour, we’ve changed the book cover art. Why, you ask? Because the people who want more than anything to make me rich thought it was a good idea. And I don’t bite the hand that distributes my book. No sir, I do not.

So, whether you like it better than the pink Chucks version or not, this is what The Hard Way is wearing to the deb ball. Personally, I like that it’s slightly more gender neutral. Sure, there’s still some pink on the cover. But pink is the new hunter green.

I’ve gotten a lot of positive feedback from men who’ve read the book and I’d like it if guys could tuck themselves behind my book on the train without seeming too terribly uncool. I mean, just because I’m a woman and so is my protagonist doesn’t mean I can’t write things that appeal to men. I’ve always thought The Hard Way was more like About a Boy (Nick Hornby) than Bridget Jones’s Diary (Helen Fielding) anyway.

So, I feel pretty special that my book was chosen for a makeover. Now I just need new clothes and a fancy haircut, and we’ll both be fit for public. Today I ran outside in a gray fleece ankle-length skirt, gray over-sized sweatshirt, white socks, and black clogs, no bra and severe bed-head to ask my landlord for a favor. If I don’t do something soon, my book cover is going to be embarrassed of me.

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Publishers Weekly, 2/25/2008

“It’s been great to have positive reviews, especially because for so long I put myself completely into it. You’re so vulnerable putting yourself up to be reviewed, so it’s exciting that they see something in it that I intended.” ~Sofia Coppola

The Hard Way by Julie Luongo - new book cover art

Here’s an excerpt from this week’s fiction reviews in Publisher’s Weekly:

The Hard Way Julie Luongo. Forge, $13.95 paper (272p) ISBN 978-0-7653-1667-7

After college, Lucy Venier’s search for happiness takes her on a bumpy but ultimately fulfilling ride in Luongo’s witty debut. Should Lucy be a Philly crime reporter, a Web content writer, an advertising whiz, or should she follow in her sister’s footsteps and go to law school? Or should she embrace her gifted inner artist? Although Lucy’s amazingly adjusted in some ways, she’s woefully behind in others. Sometimes her boyfriends—an older newspaperman who uses her for sex; an abusive recovering alcoholic and a boorish store manager who talks like a wasted rapper—lead her down some unfortunate paths. But Lucy’s irrepressible spirit helps her survive, while surprise reconnections with her sister and a former fiancé support her realization that life is an act of art-in-progress. Though it has the trappings of chick lit, this is much wiser and frequently funnier; it reads like a novel-in-stories, each piece contributing to the overall effect of a young woman coming—often roughly—into her own. (June)

Pretty cool, huh?
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Julie Luongo Answers Your Questions About Writing and Whatever Else, I Guess, Within Reason

“I do a great deal of research – particularly in the apartments of tall blondes” ~Raymond Chandler

Christina’s World (After Wyeth) by Josh Agle, aka Shag - http://www.shag.com/index.html

Q: Dear Julie,

Do you do research for topics that you don’t know much about, or do you just steer clear of subject matter than you have no (or little) prior knowledge of?

Thanks,

Not a writer

A: Dear Not A Writer,

Thanks for your question. It’s a good one and well written for someone who’s not a writer. I didn’t have to make any corrections to it. Are you sure you’re not a writer?

I’m always researching. I’m curious. The problem is that I’m also lazy. Really, I couldn’t be happier that I’m living in a world that has research access at my fingertips 24/7. Oh, and the joy of being able to follow my fleeting interests and make use of everything I learn. It’s probably one of the biggest reasons I became a writer. I wanted to make all of the random bits of information I gathered useful. Plus, I couldn’t ever decide what I wanted to do with my life. I was interested in too many things. So, I thought writing about my interests would give me variety and satisfaction without suffering the consequences of a long-term commitment to any one path … except for the writing path, of course.

I have to do research because, getting a glimpse at what there is to know, I recognize that I have very little knowledge about anything. In the scheme of things, I know almost nothing. It’s upsetting, really.

Given all there is to learn, I’d say I direct most of my research efforts into the study of human behavior and interpersonal interactions.

  • What motivates people?
  • Why do they do what they do?
  • How are strong opinions developed?
  • What do different people do in similar situations and why?
  • Who wants what and what will they do to get it?
  • Why do people believe what they believe?
  • Why do people tolerate what they tolerate?
  • How do people understand and communicate their needs?
  • What are people most afraid of and what do they most desire?
  • What will they do to avoid what they fear and get what they want?

I’m excited just typing these questions. My sister Sarah and I were similarly interested in human behavior. However, Sarah saw what people were doing and thought, “I can help, if I get to them early enough.” And she became a school psychologist. I looked at what people were doing and I thought, “that’s interesting.” I don’t really want to help. I just want to know for the sake of knowing. (My sister’s a better person than I.)

Also, I love to monkey around with ideas and conduct thought experiments. I prefer a discussion about what superpower you’d like to have over talk about the ramifications of the cold war on modern Russian society. I prefer to think about the road to addiction than the Road to Guantanamo. I don’t have much of a yen for straight history or politics. I never have. I like history or politics when it involves an analysis of personality. And I like them when they include the art that comes from a period of time. This is because I think the art that’s created and consumed tells me about the collective consciousness of a period of time better than any timeline narrative. But I think I’m off topic.

To answer your question in another way:

  • I research to know more about what I care about and enhance what I know
  • I research to explore new worlds I know nothing about aside from that they exist and intrigue me
  • And then I integrate my research so it doesn’t seem like I’m writing about things I don’t know about first-hand by talking about it endlessly and turning the new ideas over in my head

I do this by reading, talking, interviewing, living, traveling, asking, wondering, and imagining. I read books, blogs, threads, magazines, interviews, Q&As, police blotters, obits, comics, newspapers, studies, essays, papers, stories, novels, poems, notes, comments, emails. I watch movies and documentaries. I ask questions then I shut my mouth and listen. I watch. I guess. I conjecture. I seek new experiences. By hook or by crook.

But, I tend to write what I know in terms of setting, culture, and time. So, I do steer clear of subject matter I don’t know much about. It helps that I prefer character-driven yarns. I also prefer a modern setting. I think some basic human struggles transcend time and place. The struggle to know more, for example. I can related to that. Maybe I’ll write a book about it.

Whew, that really was a good question, Not a Writer. Thanks for being part of A Writing Life series.

Best,

Julie Luongo

If you have a question for Julie Luongo about writing or whatever else, I guess, within reason, (and don’t expect an immediate answer) email her at: juluongo@yahoo.com

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