Novel News

Novel News

I’m very excited to announce my next novel with St. Martin’s Press and my editor Vicki Lame (The Gin Lovers). It’s a New Adult novel called SWEET DESCENT.

If you’ve noticed, I’ve become fixated on the street art around NYC, and this novel is the result. art1med

SWEET DESCENT is the story of an NYU college student  caught between the relentless expectations of her famous art dealer mother, and her dangerous obsession with a brilliant but reclusive street artist.  In this novel, I really want to explores the things people keep hidden, their deepest fears – and their unspeakable secrets. SWEET DESCENT is ultimately the story of what happens when a young woman’s dark secrets are called into the light – and how far she will go to claim the life that she truly wants.

I can’t wait to share it with you.

 

Talking books, sex, and e-serials with Hello Giggles

I had a great chat with Deanna Raphael of Hello Giggles a few weeks ago. This a bit of our girl talk…

“I got to sit and sip coffee with the lovely and intriguing Jamie Brenner, author of The Gin LoversBettie Page Presents: The Librarian and the brand new eSeries Miss Chatterley.  Jamie Brenner also writes under the pen name Logan Belle. Kind of like when Beyoncé goes from regular Beyoncé to Sasha Fierce. Things just get hotter.

Before reading Jamie’s work, my only experience with erotic novels was the 50 Shades series. I devoured those books, wrapped them in brown paper and delivered them to friends and friends of friends in some Harriet Tubman type underground railroad situation. I was definitely primed for the erotic fiction genre. But what Ilove about Jamie’s books is not only that they’re super sexy but they offer compelling characters that live in complete and detailed worlds.

We chatted about the exciting advent of eSerials, what lead her into the erotic fiction genre, and about her plan of attack when she begins the journey of writing a book.”

Click here for complete article

Updates & News

photo.JPG BEA could not have been better today. For one, we had air conditioning.  Secondly, I met some amazing bloggers, including smart and sassy Jacqueline Tobacco and Melissa Bartolone from Literary Vixens, and amazing authors and bloggers Liz & Lisa from Chick Lit Is Not Dead. Thanks to all the readers who came to my book signing for The Gin Lovers. I hope you love it!

I also met the wonderful  CJ Ellisson this week. She is a bestselling author and shared many words of wisdom with me. Finally, thank you to my agent Adam Chromy, who is always by my side.

Finally, a big thanks to the San Francisco Book Review, who seemed more excited about The Gin Lovers than my parents. Click here for the review

See you next month at RWA!

You Never Forget Your First Time…

reading an erotic novel.

Are erotica authors born, or made? After a lifetime of reading sex-drenched novels, I finally took the plunge two years ago and published one of my own. Now, five steamy (and occasionally raunchy) “Logan Belle” novels later, I’m still thinking about the books that started it all:

chatt1the juicy, passionate, explicit, heart-stopping novels of my youth that made me hide my books under my bed and set my imagination (and other parts of me) on fire.

As a pre-teen, I devoured any book with even a hint of sex. I think the first “erotic” scene I ever read was in Judy Blume’s Deenie, in which the heroine Deenie was hooking up with her crush Buddy Brader and he tried to feel her up but she was wearing a back brace. A shockingly short time later, I readD.H. Lawrence‘s  Lady Chatterley’s Lover—easy to sneak past the parental censors because of the classic-looking cover. Emboldened and hungry for more, I progressed to Jackie Collins’s Chances. I swapped the jacket cover featuring the photo of the vampy brunette for something innocuous. Well-worth the subterfuge: the sex scenes were scorching hot. Those first “erotic” novels are unforgettable—imprinted in my head like nothing that has followed. I recently asked fellow romance and erotica authors if they remember their first erotic read. The answer was, of course, emphatically “yes!”

Read what these authors had to say on Heroes & HeartbreakersHeroes&Heartbreakersimage

The Art and Craft of Erotica Writing

The Art and Craft of Erotica Writing

Chatting writing and erotica with Jason Boog on Morning Media Menu today:

How Writers Can Explore Erotica Writing

By Jason Boog on May 13, 2013 12:34 PM

The erotica genre has never been more exciting or more crowded. On today’s Morning Media Menu, author Jamie Brenner shared advice for writers looking to explore this new world.

Brenner wrote Miss Chatterley as Logan Belle, creating an erotic and modern update of D.H. Lawrence‘s Miss Chatterley’s Lover. Press play below to listen to the complete interview on SoundCloud. We’ve included some excerpts below…

It’s really important to be aware of what is out there and to know where your work fits. I think a lot of people (and believe me, I don’t have all the answers, by any stretch) who read a lot of romance and erotica like what they like. They’re not necessarily looking for someone to come in and reinvent the wheel. If you are writing something you should have an idea: “Readers who like X, Y and Z will also like my stuff. I fit into this circle of books or readers.” You have to at least know that going in. Once you know where you belong, then you can stretch the boundaries within that genre, niche or milieu. It is really important to know what is working and not to try and write in a vacuum.

Read full article

Our Romance with Fashion

Our Romance with Fashion

What is it about romance and fashion that make such an irresistible combination? I’ve always had a soft spot for “sex and shopping novels.”  We talk a lot about the sex…but what about the shopping part of the equation? In some novels, the passion for fashion is as potent as anything that happens between the sheets. As we get ready to open our closets for spring cleaning, here’s look at a few of the most satisfying sartorial reads this side of Sex and the City.

Visit Heroes & Heartbreakers for the complete list

Do you judge a book by its cover?

Do you judge a book by its cover?

Today I talk to author Melissa Walker (Small Town Sinners) on the BN forums about art, inspiration, and the all-important book cover.

Read more 

Favorite Novel 2012

Favorite Novel 2012

My favorite book that I read this year was The Taker by Alma Katsu, an epic love story told with incredibly lush writing and just enough of a paranormal element to give it an edge. Beautiful and unique.

Click here for the rest of my list along with picks by my fellow bloggers at Heroes & Hearbreakers

The Future of Fiction?

As originally blogged on SheWrites.com, last week I attended “A Conversation with Twitter and The New Yorker on the Future of Fiction.” The event launched Twitter as a vehicle for fiction-writing, and asked writers to rise to the challenge using it as such. I’m not convince this is a challenge writers should spend their time undertaking.

The event was held at The New York Public Library, and was standing room only by the time Twitter’s Andrew Fitzgerald, Head of Editorial Programming, took to the podium to talk about Twitter as a creative medium.

“Twitter is for storytelling,” he said to the crowd of book editors, publishers, bloggers, literary agents, journalists, and fiction writers.

Maybe that’s true – real-life story telling, in real-time. But as a novelist, I have a hard time thinking Twitter is a good vehicle for fiction, despite the fact that Pulitzer-prize winning Jennifer Egan certainly did last spring when she published her New Yorker story “Black Box” entirely in Tweets.

The New Yorker’s fiction editor, Deborah Treisman, took to the stage to discuss the process of live Tweeting a short story, and how Jennifer Egan spent a year constructing “Black Box” with the Twitter in mind. Treisman made a point of saying that this wasn’t just a short story broken up into 140 character chunks – that each sentence of the story was precisely constructed with the format in mind.

Is this the future of story telling? Twitter would like to think so.

At the conclusion of the event, Twitter announced their first Fiction Festival slated for the end of November, a five day event that will feature “creative experiments in storytelling from authors around the world.”

As a novelist who recently did some experimenting of my own publishing my fourth novel as a serialized e-book prior to a print publication next year, I’m all for different modes and methods of storytelling and delivery. But as a writer who spent decades learning how to tell an effective story before finally publishing my first novel, I’m afraid that burgeoning writers will get distracted by technological innovations and lose sight of the craft fundamentals.

Structure. Characters. Plot.  Three simple elements … so complicated to master. My mother always said (although, she was talking about fashion) you can’t break the rules successfully if you don’t know the rules. I do think this applies to storytelling, and are words every writers should heed when diving into the brave new world of storytelling across varied platforms.

During the Q&A portion of the program, an audience member asked Deborah Treisman if Jennifer Egan was planning another publication via Twitter. The answer seemed be no, not at the moment – and that Ms. Egan liked to challenge herself and probably wasn’t looking for a repeat. As writers, we should always challenge ourselves. But for most of us non-Pulitzer prize winters out there, the job of telling a well-constructed, fully-realized story once, twice – again and again – might be challenge enough.

In Praise of a Difficult Woman

In Praise of a Difficult Woman

I had the joy of meeting Elizabeth Wurtzel years ago when she was promoting her genius book Bitch: In Praise of Difficult Women.  In my copy of the book she inscribed priceless advice, which I only partially heeded: “For Jamie:  Stay single! Stay thin! Refuse to succumb to their bourgeois nightmares for you!”

I’m of course thinking about Elizabeth this week because of the Penguin lawsuit against writers for non-delivery. Her bad-ass response did not disappoint: “Who the f**k sues someone who works for David Boies?”

Read more at Above the Law. http://abovethelaw.com/2012/09/lawsuit-of-the-day-penguin-v-wurtzel-and-other-authors/