Catherine Ryan Hyde Catherine Ryan Hyde is the author of more than 25 published and forthcoming books, including the bestselling When I found You, Pay It Forward, Don't Let Me Go, and Take Me With You.

         

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Better Than Blurbs: Out by Laura Preble

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Because I no longer write blurbs, but still very much want to help other authors, I'm launching a blog series called Better Than Blurbs. The authors and I will have in-depth discussions about their books, which I hope will help readers identify whether they'd enjoy reading them.

This is the first post of the series. The author is Laura Preble, and the book is OUT. Which I'd like to announce is FREE for Kindle, but today only. So read the interview, and if it sounds like your kind of book, go grab a copy. 

Laura, will you start by telling us about OUT in your own words?

Laura: The Nature of OUT  

My new novel, OUT, was born in a manger. 

Well, not exactly. It was more like a mountain lodge, with a fireplace and a cocktail bar. But it was out in the middle of nowhere. I think there were farm animals in the vicinity. I know for a fact that there was a stuffed bear on the porch. 

I had gone to a writing conference where the goal was to work on novels intensively. I was so fired up about this—as a high school teacher with two kids, I barely had time to go to the bathroom by myself let alone write. But of course, on the first day the electrical current in the quaint mountain cabin zapped my laptop, and that was that. 

I took to the lodge to drown my sorrows in Pinot Grigio. I took a yellow legal pad along for company, figuring I'd draw uncomplimentary doodles about the universe. Instead, I got the idea for OUT.

It popped into my head as an iconic image of the parallel and perpendicular symbols. In my book, Parallels are same-sex couples, and they are the ruling class, the government, and the church combined. Their symbol is two sets of parallel lines formed into a cross. The Perpendiculars are opposite-sex couples, a small minority. However, because of strict political and social controls, the Parallels have criminalized the opposite-sex couples. Chris Bryant, a minister's son, discovers that he is Perpendicular, in love with a girl. He has to decide whether he should remain faithful to what he has been taught by his church and his society, or follow his heart and risk imprisonment and possibly death. 

I've already had hate mail about this book, and it's not even out yet. People read the description and decide I'm a gay-basher, which is as far from the truth as you can get. I've been a Gay-Straight Alliance advisor for nearly twenty years, my own son is gay, and I've worked for PFLAG, GLSEN, and many other groups. This book is not about anything except love. It's a love story, just as the story of same-sex couples in our country is a love story. 

My goal was to give people who are in the lucky majority, the opposite-sex couples, a glimpse of what it would be like to be told that who you are and whom you love is deviant and unacceptable. LGBT people live every day with discrimination, both subtle and direct. I've seen it happen at my school, with my son, and with other people less close to home. I've done research; there are still people who believe in reconditioning LGBT people, or "praying the gay away." This isn't fiction or far-fetched. It exists. There are people who still believe that aversion therapy is the way to go, that psychological torture will "heal" people of their "addiction" to their same-sex attraction. 

The world of OUT is, of course, fictional. It is heightened reality. Our society does not physically imprison people for being LGBT. But in many subtle ways, the system does imprison them. People are still beaten, killed, ostracized, and disowned for being gay. I know students in my high school GSA who cannot be in the yearbook picture because if their parents found out, they'd be without a place to live. 

So, I suppose people who read the book will have lots of reactions to it, but at the core, I meant it to be a love story between two people whom society did not see as acceptable. Love is love. No matter what anyone else says or thinks, I know that is the message of my book.

Me: I think you’ll find that when people start reading the book, any idea that you are gay-bashing will disappear. Your message is quite obvious from the start: that it’s pointless and wrong to persecute people for who they love. Now the question is, are you ready for the second kind of hate messages? The ones that tell you how horrible you are for trying to teach their kids that it’s wrong to persecute people for who they love?

Laura: Hate messages do not bother me. I’ve been a GSA advisor for more than 20 years, and have had to live with persecution on my own school campus from administrators and parents who think it’s wrong to teach kids to love who they are. I do wish people would read it before judging it, though. I’ve already had really nasty, spiteful messages from people who haven’t even read one page of the book. 

Me: This is a concept that’s bound to open a lot of discussion. What would be the best thing you can see coming from that dialogue?

Laura: The absolute best outcome for me would be for people to honestly admit that being gay is not a choice. Also, I think that love is to be honored, and I hope that comes through in the book. Tolerance is not enough. LGBT people must be honored and appreciated as people. It makes me ill that I know my own son, who is gay, may not be able to marry in this country, a place that is supposed to stand for freedom. 

Me: This is not a complaint, by any means, but I found that I wished the same-sex people in the book hadn’t had to take on the characteristics of right-wing Christian Republicans. I know they had to (and I was pleased to see, as I read on, that many didn’t) otherwise the comparison would have been lost…I guess my question is, do you think it’s possible for human beings to be part of a majority without turning into oppressors? (In life, I mean. In fiction I know there has to be conflict.)

Laura: I wanted to make the Parallels in the book righteous, but not evil. In our world, the  people who think they are fighting God’s fight in this issue believe with all their hearts that they are right. It was necessary to portray the absolute conviction that people like David (the main character’s father) have to their cause, to show how they think allowing Perpendiculars to flourish would literally destroy their world. I didn’t want them to be sympathetic, but it was important that I showed them for what they believe themselves to be: holy and righteous.

I also think it is absolutely crucial that people in the majority are in this fight. In the book, some Parallels (same-sex couples) understand that persecuting Perpendiculars is wrong. They fight for the rights of the minority. Throughout history, no revolution in civil rights has ever been achieved without the assistance of people in the majority. In racial integration, it was necessary for President Eisenhower to demand desegregation. Men had to legislate to give women the right to vote. Straight people have to be allies for things to change. 

Me: I can’t help noticing that the word Anglicant—the church in your novel—sounds like an antonym for the word Anglican. Purposeful?

Laura: Yes. I had done quite a bit of research about the struggles within the Anglican church over same-sex ministers. I don’t suppose they’re the worst of the lot; obviously, the Catholic Church has some very negative attitudes about it. But I loved the wordplay, so I went with Anglicant. 

Me: So much of the point of your book is how we can’t change who we are. And yet I was interested in the fact that when rampant “breeding” threatened society in your book, society changed to a homosexual norm. And since it’s not possible to deny your true nature for long, it got me thinking of a point in my head, regarding the Bible, that I never hear anyone else discuss. It’s this: In Biblical times, the call was, “Be fruitful and multiply.” Yeah. There weren’t enough humans on the Earth. Now there are, if anything, too many. I wonder if more people are gay now than in Biblical times (if in fact they are, rather than just being more open about it) because Nature knows exactly what it’s doing, how to prevent overpopulation. Was this something of what you had in mind for your fictional societal transformation? Or am I overthinking it?

Laura: I had to really spend a lot of time living in that world, and the book was actually a lot of work because of this very question. It’s the one everyone asks right off the bat. I did think it through quite a bit, and I thought that the model of reproduction in OUT makes lots of sense. It’s fictional, a construct designed to facilitate the book’s idea, but I thought, “wow, if we had no unwanted pregnancies, no children born of rape, imagine how that would change things.”  So much of the pain and anguish of our society comes from people having unwanted children and passing on their resentment/hatred/ illness/abuse in those children for generations. But in reality, I would not want a government controlling my ability to have children. I think in this case, the move was engineered by human beings, but nature may have played a part. I’d love to write a companion piece with the details of the history if the book ever became big enough.

Me: You said in your description of the book that this is heightened reality. And of course it’s not the U.S. we live in today. But as I read it, I kept thinking… In Nazi Germany, people were imprisoned, starved, experimented on, and slaughtered for a number of reasons. Being Jewish was the most common, but being gay would get you there as well. In Uganda, they’re trying to pass a bill instating the death penalty for gays. In South Africa, and maybe many other places, men illegally conduct “corrective rape” on any woman they suspect to be lesbian, ostensibly to “cure” that orientation. And then there are the Pray Away the Gay clinics you mentioned. Not to mention the hate crimes. I’m sorry to say it, but for every example you gave, I couldn’t help thinking someone, somewhere, suffered all that and more because of his or her sexual orientation. It’s not so much a question as a comment, I guess. But if you like to speak to it, please do.

Laura: I actually did quite a bit of research on this before writing the book. I bought a video called CHASING THE DEVIL: INSIDE THE EX-GAY MOVEMENT by Bill and Mishara Hussung, a chronicle of several people who were sent to reconditioning camps to change them. I also watched a tragically funny DVD called  DOIN’ TIME IN THE HOMO NO MO’ HALFWAY HOUSE by Peterson Toscano, a funny but sad glimpse into his own experience in ex-gay ministries. People do not believe me when I tell them that there are still active ministries where people send their loved ones to be “reconditioned.” Politician Michelle Bachmann and her husband practice this. Huffington Post states that “Documentary filmmaker Kristina Lapinski, who is currently at work on "GAY U.S.A. the Movie," went undercover at Bachmann & Associates, the Minnesota-based Christian counseling clinic co-owned by Marcus and Michele Bachmann, and once again captured a staff member conducting what she described as "reparative" therapy.” I personally know of one student whose parents, psychologists, practiced aversion therapy with patients, trying to change them. So this is not extreme exaggeration, unfortunately. 

Me: This is not a debut novel by any means. Will you tell us about your earlier books, and how they differ from OUT?

Laura: I have published three novels with Penguin/Berkley Jam: Queen Geek Social Club, Queen Geeks in Love, and Prom Queen Geeks. They’re much lighter, funnier, and skewed toward a younger audience, I think. I still love them; I wrote them for all the girls in high school who don’t fit the cheerleader paradigm, the readers, the sci-fi lovers, the gamers. I still get email from girls who read them, and they’re ecstatic that somebody gets them!  That makes me feel great. I also self-published a paranormal novel called Lica’s Angel that deals with voodoo and is set in New Orleans.  I’ve written several other books, but haven’t found homes for them in the traditional publishing world.  I guess I don’t fit well in a pigeon hole. 

To learn more about Laura and her books, click here to visit her website. And remember the ebook is free only until midnight tonight. 

The Long, Steep Path is Here!

Catherine Ryan Hyde

I'm pleased to say that my first-ever book-length collection of creative nonfiction is now for sale as an ebook. Hopefully you will be pleased to learn that today, tomorrow and Tuesday, it will cost you nothing to "buy" it. It's called THE LONG, STEEP PATH: EVERYDAY INSPIRATION FROM THE AUTHOR OF PAY IT FORWARD, and it's on free promotion for three days. So just follow this link and add it to your Kindle.

If you don't have a Kindle, follow the link anyway. On the right-hand side of the page, a couple of boxes under the buy button, you'll see a box that says: Read books on your computer or other mobile devices with our FREE Kindle Reading Apps. You click that link. Simple.

If you have a Nook, click here for instructions on how to convert the file.

The book won't always be Kindle-exclusive. Just for the first three months or so. Then we'll go wider, to almost everyplace ebooks are sold.

And, UK readers...I'm happy to say this means you this time! I own world rights to this book, so it will be available as a free ebook (Sunday-Tuesday only) worldwide. I'm sorry that in the past I've run free promotions that couldn't include you. Those rights were out of my hands. This is where I begin to make it up to you. Of course, you'll need a link to the book on Amazon.co.uk, so here it is.

If you want to learn more about the book you can go to my THE LONG, STEEP PATH book page. But, at these prices, you might want to snag a copy and learn more by reading it. Your call.

And I hope you'll come back and let me know what you think! 

More Kitty: Jordan

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Remember the More Kitty and More Puppy memes, in which I spotlighted my own pets (one current, some former) and those of my readers? I guess I'm briefly bringing that back.

If you follow me on social networks, you undoubtedly know there's someone new in the house. His name is Jordan, and much to the chagrin of my dog Ella, he is a cat.

I'm not going to go into great detail about their introduction, because I'm guessing most of you follow me on Facebook, or could easily enough (if I'm wrong about this, let me know in the comment section below). And I have gone into quite a bit of detail each day. I've left reports almost every day to chronicle the process of the cat and dog getting to know each other with no bloodshed, and with a minimum of chasing, clawing, hiding and hurt feelings. My Twitter friends also probably noticed shorter updates. (Hey, it's Twitter. Short is built in.)

I'd have thought people would quickly grow sick to death of hearing about the minor ups and downs of a dog and a cat learning to get along. I would have been wrong. If anybody is not enjoying it, they've kept it to themselves. And I can't tell you how many people have told me they enjoy "watching" the progress. I guess it's more encouraging than watching the process of peace in the Middle East, the gun debate, or Congress. 

As you can see, it's going well. (Jordan and Ella, not peace in the Middle East, the gun debate, or Congress.) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So far as I know, I haven't said much, if anything, on social media regarding why I adopted a cat. So I'll do that here. I'll start with why I didn't get a cat a long time ago:

1) I love cats. I grew up with a beautiful Siamese named Ming. I had other cats in (young) adulthood. Then I adopted a parrot named Ziggy. I got help finger-training him from a young man who clipped his wing feathers for the purpose of training. They never grew back in properly. So he never flew dependably well. So I didn't get a cat while he was alive. He lived to be 27.

2) My goal just before I adopted Ella was to adopt a dog and a cat more or less together. That way, I figured, they'd be more likely to accept each other. But on the same week I got Ella from the Humane Society, I began seeing someone who was allergic to cats. So I just adopted the dog. A couple of years later, Ella seemed quite jumpy and chase-y (sure, that's a word) when we saw a cat on the street. So I figured it was too late, I had missed my moment.

Why I changed my mind now:

Ella's friend Tony1) Ella has a new doggy friend. His name is Tony. He comes over sometimes when his people go away for a long day. And Ella is welcome over there any time. But they have a cat, Edward. And I wasn't sure how that would work out. But Ella met Edward, and she was FINE.

2) Most of you know my mom passed away in March of 2012. It's been a little too quiet around here. For both Ella and me. Part of me worried Ella would be sorry I adopted the cat, jealous, or maybe constantly on guard. Another part of me felt it's almost always better to step outside one's comfort zone. I'd rather have a life that's richer and broader than one that's comfortably unchallenged. And I decided I wanted the same for my dog. Our "pack" had shrunk from three to two, and that felt too small. Less like a family and more like a person and a dog. 

3) I kept seeing these Facebook ads during the holidays asking if my home and my heart weren't big enough to take in one more homeless pet. (Hint: turns out they were.)

So I'm formally introducing my blog readers to Jordan, who is from H.A.R.T. (Homeless Animal Rescue Team) in Cambria.

I'm still open to feature other people's pets, if you want to send photos and stories. And if you want to go back and see the ones I've featured in the past, you can click on the blog index category Pets, Mine & My Readers.

I have a new blog meme coming up this year to help newer authors by spotlighting their newly-released books with in-depth discussions. And I have no fewer than four new book releases of my own for 2013, possibly more. So, as always, please do stay tuned.

Big Giveaway on YA Outside the Lines

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Some of you know I'm one of many bloggers on the Young Adult Lit site YA Outside the Lines. Each month we have a topic we all use for our posts. In January of the new year we'll be writing about gratitude. And, of course, if you ask authors what they're grateful for, they'll almost always point to their readers. An author is nothing without readers.

So to show our appreciation, the folks at YA Outside the Lines are doing a big giveaway, with lots of great packages of stuff for readers who love YA fiction. Holly Schindler tells you more in this video:

 

So stop by the January Giveaway post at YA Outside the Lines and enter. I'm pleased to say that a couple of the prize packages will be shipped to international winners.

Good luck!

Have You Ever Had a When You Were Older Moment?

Catherine Ryan Hyde

My mind is on my new release When You Were Older today, and I've been thinking about the way I use "crucial moments" in some of my novels. In Electric God, a life was lost over a crucial moment. A moment when the main character, Hayden, could have done something, but didn't. Of course, he had no way of knowing it was a crucial moment. We almost never do. That's what I find so fascinating about them. Looking back, you realize the gigantic nature of a moment, the way life turned on it. In fact, in Electric God I referred to it as a "fulcrum moment." But at the time you have no way of knowing you just passed an important crossroad.

In my newest, When You Were Older, Russell is late for work when the phone rings. And he almost doesn't get it. Because he's late. Thing is, he's late to work at the World Trade Center. On September 11, 2001. If he had kept going and ignored the phone, he would have been at work when the first plane hit. If the call had been of no importance, he might still have made it in time to be killed. But it was far from unimportant. It was a neighbor in his home town of Kansas, telling him that his mother has died suddenly, and he has to come home and look after care for his brain-damaged older brother, Ben. So he doesn't rush out the door. And he survives.

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Heifer International Fundraiser

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Nathan Bransford is holding his fourth annual fundraiser for Heifer International.

Two words: I'm in.

Leave a comment on this blog post, and I will donate $1 to Heifer International. $1 for every comment left, up to 250 comments.

If you don't know about this great organization, click here. They are the ultimate Pay It Forward project! Then...comment away!

A Giveaway for Writers

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Many of you know that my friend Anne R. Allen and I co-authored a nonfiction book for writers that came out this year. It's called How to be a Writer in the E-Age...And Keep Your E-Sanity. It's getting lovely reviews on the bookseller sites, and the writers I know who have picked up a copy have good things to say.

For those of who who don't know Anne (and I'm guessing most of you do, at least by way of her accomplishments), she is a highly successful publishing industry blogger. Her blog, Anne R. Allen's Blog...with Ruth Harris, has garnered numerous awards and is quickly becoming a leading go-to source for up-to-the-minute industry news. So the match was a good one in terms of what we had to offer to our fellow writers, especially those on the newer end of the process.

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Cover Reveals (3!) and What's Up in '13

Catherine Ryan Hyde

A few weeks ago I quietly made book pages for three new books that will be released in 2013. The first two are The Long, Steep Path and Always Chloe and Other Stories. They are both departures for me. The Long, Steep Path is my first foray into creative nonfiction, and Always Chloe is the first time I have ever brought the characters of an older novel back for a sequel-like work of fiction.

And today I have the final cover for both projects, so I'm sharing them with you, and reminding you to keep an eye out for them in 2013. The Long, Steep Path will be released very early in the new year, probably right around New Years, in fact. Look for Chloe later in the year. Because...

I have another big announcement. In March of next year, Amazon Encore will release a new edition of When I Found You, which enjoyed so much Kindle success in 2012. And then in May, Amazon Publishing will release a brand new US title of mine, Walk Me Home. So we're waiting to release Always Chloe and Other stories at a time that won't confuse or interfere with the launches of those Amazon titles.

And, by the way, Walk Me Home is available for pre-order right now.

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Holiday Gifts for Readers

Catherine Ryan Hyde

I don't know if you've noticed this, but I tend to give a lot of stuff away for free. I think it's because I have so many lovely, faithful readers who I feel deserve the gifts.

This hit me rather suddenly this morning:

If you've followed my blog for a long time, you'll know that a little over two years ago, I closed out a storage space and brought the many, many cartons of books home to my garage. At first, they barely fit. So I started giving some away. I wrote a blog post asking readers to send me a self-addressed, stamped mail bag. And I sent them books. 

Now it's about to be the holidays. The books fit in my garage (barely). But there are still plenty. Stacks upon stacks of boxes. I don't travel and speak the way I used to, and I don't intend to die of old age with books in my garage. So...

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One More Free Day!

Catherine Ryan Hyde

In my most recent blog, I said my newest novel When You Were Older would be free yesterday (Nov 26) and today (Nov 27). But it's still right in the middle of doing what it does during a free promotion. It just this morning broke into the top 100 in Kindle Free.

I don't want to rush it.

So we're giving it one extra day. If you don't have your copy yet, you have through tomorrow, Wednesday November 28, to CLICK THIS LINK.

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When You Were Older Ebook Free

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Today and tomorrow, Monday November 26th and Tuesday November 27th, the Kindle edition of my brand new novel When You Were Older is free to US readers.

And it's timed so you can pick up a free copy, then get in on the $75 Amazon gift card drawing if you decide to do an honest review on Amazon.com or your blog. Here's a link to the info on the gift card giveaway, or you can just scroll down to my next most recent post.

Hope you enjoy the book, and good luck!

Gift Card Giveaway

Catherine Ryan Hyde

This is two celebrations at once. I'm celebrating the release of my newest US novel, When You Were Older. And, as always, I'm celebrating reviewers. Because, really...where would an author be without reviewers? I'm talking about reviewers with book review blogs, but I'm also taking about readers who go out to Amazon or other bookselling sites and leave their honest thoughts about a book.

Between now and the 22nd of December, I'm going to hold a drawing for anyone who reads and reviews When You Were Older. I'll draw a winner at random on 12/22, and that reviewer will receive a $75 Amazon gift card (just in time for Christmas).

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Here's What's on Audible

Catherine Ryan Hyde

The rise of Audible.com has made a lot of my older audio editions available again. In fact, Simon & Schuster even re-released the unabridged audio of Pay It Forward.

I only just recently found out how many of my titles really are available, so I'm passing the info along for any of my readers who enjoy Audible audiobooks. 

Click any of the images below to go to its Audible.com or Audible.co.uk page.

UK readers have the following titles to choose from:

     

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Harvesting Happiness Talk Radio

Catherine Ryan Hyde

On Tuesday, November 6th, Charley Johnson and I joined Lisa Cypers Kamen for a one-hour segment on Harvesting Happiness Talk Radio. For those of you who don't know Charley, he is president of the Pay It Forward Foundation and the inventor of the Pay It Forward bracelet. He also drives the movement through his website PIFExperience.org.

Now our segment is available as a podcast.

You can find it on the Toginet Radio list of recent podcasts under Tuesday November 6th, or on iTunes.

Or...here's a direct link to download the show.

Hope you enjoy.

Lots. More. Announcements.

Catherine Ryan Hyde

Most of you know by now that "the backlist is back." My earlier out-of-print novels (and one story collection)--Funerals for Horses, Earthquake Weather and Other Stories, Electric God and Walter's Purple Heart--are now available as Kindle ebooks. And through Saturday, they are free. A sort of introductory promotion, a way to let people know they're out there. And a way to say thank you to my faithful readers. So that's a reminder of a previous announcement. Many more details and all the links you'll need in my last blog post, The Backlist is Back! And Briefly Free!

There's more.

I have another frontlist title coming out in the US this month, When You Were Older. It will be a Kindle ebook and a paperback as well. Look for it around Thanksgiving. And, of course, watch this blog for updates.

There's still more.

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The Backlist is Back! And Briefly Free!

Catherine Ryan Hyde

They are here! A little later than I estimated, but we hit the right month.

My four older backlist titles—Funerals for Horses, Earthquake Weather and Other Stories, Electric God and Walter’s Purple Heart—are not only back, they’ve burst into the 21st Century. All four of these titles are now available as ebooks for what I feel is the reasonable price of (when not free as they are just about to be) $2.99 each.

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Don't Let Me Go Blog Tour Wrap-Up

Catherine Ryan Hyde

So, the Don't Let Me Go blog tour is officially over. I had fun, and I hope readers did, too. But I know a lot of you may not have followed all the individual stops. And it's not too late. See, this is what I love about blog tours. If you miss a stop on a live tour, you're out of luck. The event is over, the author is on a plane for home. But the reviews, fun posts, excerpts, interviews...they're still there. You can follow the tour after the fact.

You can use my list below for links to all the stops, and a little of what you'll find at each. Or you can go straight to the CLP Blog Tour page for a full list of links.

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Two More Free Days for Two Ebooks!

Catherine Ryan Hyde

In honor of the Don't Let Me Go blog tour, which is officially winding down to a close, the Kindle ebook of Don't Let Me Go is free on Amazon today. And tomorrow. But that's it. Just two days (because we had another free two days when we first launched the US edition). So definitely go get it now.

If you don't have a Kindle, no worries. Just go out to the Don't Let Me Go Amazon page and download the free Kindle app for your computer, tablet or phone. And if you have a Nook, or other non-Kindle ereader, you can find conversion instructions here.

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Cover Reveal for When You Were Older

Catherine Ryan Hyde

I've hinted recently that, with no disrespect to the UK cover, our US edition of When You Were Older is going to have a cover I just love. In fact, I chose the image myself. And here it is!

The book has been out in the UK since spring. Look for it in late November here in the US, looking like this. It will arrive in both ebook and paperback format.

And, of course, if you subscribe to my blog, or just stop in now and then, I'll always keep you up to date on the latest news and releases.

Thanks for being my reader!

A Post About Posture

Catherine Ryan Hyde

An unusual topic, I guess, but I feel compelled to write about the spine. In a literal sense.

When I was a teenager, I had deplorable posture. It’s still nothing to write home about. But, you know, when you’re young you’re under the thumb of your parents. And my posture wasn’t good enough for mine. So they sent me to this special doctor, this bone specialist. To see if there was something seriously wrong with me.

I took offense to that. I took it to mean that whatever I was doing was somehow not acceptable. That they suspected me of being defective. I could have told them exactly why I had bad posture, but I didn’t choose to. It’s because I had no self-confidence. I rounded my shoulders and carried my head down in a human version of a submissive gorilla, not wanting to meet anybody’s eyes.

 

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