Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with 'See It')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
<<June 2024>>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
      01
02030405060708
09101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: See It, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Book tour!

Look what’s coming to a town near you! Well, hopefully….

My Princess Diaries/Middle School Princess book tour!

 

ogimage

 

Here are just a few of the places I’ll be this spring/summer.  Not all my events/signings have been finalized so I’m only listing the ones I know right now for sure.  Stay tuned!

 

Dallas, TX
The RT Booklovers Convention
Thursday, May 14-Saturday, May 16
Click here for events I’m currently scheduled to attend!
(I’ll also be signing on Saturday in YA Alley!)

Meg.Cabot_.Princess.Diaries_0

 

 

From the Notebooks of a Middle School Princess tour, official pub day May 19!

Columbia, SC
The South Carolina Book Festival
Sunday, May 17, 4:00 PM
Richland Meeting Room A & B

 

Cincinnati, OH

Joseph-Beth

Monday, May 18, 7PM

 

Naperville, IL

Anderson’s

Tuesday, May 19, 7PM

 

St Paul, MN

Red Balloon

Wednesday, May 20, 6:30-8:30

 

Boulder CO

Boulder Bookshop

Friday, May 22, 6:30PM

 

New York, NY
BEA and Book Con
Friday, May 29-Sunday, May 31:

Friday at Book Expo you’ll find me signing at ________ (info to come!!!!)

Saturday, May 30, 2015
SPOTLIGHT ON ROMANCE: READER LOVE
With Robyn Carr, Kristan Higgins, & Sarah MacLean
2:15PM
Signing directly after

Sunday, May 31, 2015
A New Chapter in Genovia! With the Leading Expert on Genovian Princesses, MEG CABOT
12:30 PM – 1:30 PM
Signing after

 Meg-Cabot-Book-Con

Princess Diaries Volume 11, Royal Wedding tour, official pub day June 2!

St. Louis, MO
60th Annual IRA Conference (only now it is called ILA)
Keynote Speaker at YA Literature Luncheon
July 19, 2015

 

Columbus, GA
Columbus Children’s Book Festival
Keynote Speaker
September 18 to 19, 2015

 

Brazil
Flica Festival and various other locations to be announced
October 22 to 29, 2015

 

Charleston, SC
YALLFest
November 13 to 14, 2015

 

Book Tour FAQs:

Q: Why aren’t you coming to my town/country?

A:  Authors (like princesses and vampires) can only go where we’re invited, so if I’m not coming to a place near you, it’s because no one (official) asked.  I’m so sorry! Maybe next time.

 

Q: Can I bring books from home for you to sign?

A: It’s really up to the venue. It costs money to fly me to these events, so the venue needs you to buy at least one book at the event. If you do, they might allow me to sign two or more of your books from home.  It’s a great idea to contact the venue in advance to ask!

 

Q: Will you sign other things besides books?

A: Like what? Probably not, that is just weird.

 

Q: Can I get a selfie with you?

A: If it’s OK with the venue, it’s OK with me.

 

Q: Can I bring my tiara?

A: Tiaras are strongly encouraged.

 

That’s it for now!  When I get more info, I’ll be sure to add it.  Check my Twitter and FB pages for the absolute LATEST updates!

 

More Later.

Much love,

Meg

The post Book tour! appeared first on Meg Cabot.

Add a Comment
2. Princesses and Popstars

I have a LOT to say about what happened at the Bienal. Brazilians. Love. Books. And. Authors.

Really, though, words cannot describe. Except to say: WOW.

And thank you!

(Obrigada!)

But first, it’s been pointed out that my post on Clarice Lispector has disappeared!

I can’t believe that, especially because the other night at the official Bienal party, Clarice’s son Paulo introduced himself (and his lovely wife) to me, because he heard I was a fan of his mother’s work!

It was so amazing! Really, I was speechless upon meeting a relative of someone so inspirational to me. I wanted to bow down like Mike Meyers on Saturday Night Live and do the “I’m not worthy” thing (but I restrained myself…barely. And only because my Spanx were so tight and denied all movement).

It was such an honor!

So I’ve made sure to add the post again below. I don’t know WHY it disappeared. Half the things I post/Twitter disappear on a regular basis though (sometimes this is a good thing. In this case, not) for mysterious reasons.

Really, I blame it on Rio. HA HA HA!

Secondly: My Internet connection here is very sketchy because I have a MacBook Air and I forgot my Ethernet adaptor so a lot of the time I can’t find a wifi connection.

But I’ve been TRYING to keep up with the news/your emails/etc!

And all I have to say is, oh my God, I go away for five minutes, and Patrick Swayze dies?

NOOOOO! Patrick, we love you. Nobody ever put you in the corner! Sob!

Then Kanye goes crazy (again)?

Kanye has apologized on his blog for what he did to Taylor Swift at the VMAs (I CAN’T BELIEVE I MISSED THIS. Also, Pink on the trapeze, and Lady GaGa).

But should we forgive him, Taylor fans? I will always have a soft spot for Kanye for letting Zach G make a video of one of his songs (Come on, you know you love chainsaws and clogging, especially when combined.)

Still…dissing our little Taylor? That was a jackass moment (even the President agrees).

So, anyway…back to Rio and the Bienal:

What can I say, people? First of all, check out where I ate breakfast every morning:

Yes, that is the pool where I was served slices of mangoes on a silver tray with my eggs and bacon. How will I ever go back to normal?

Answer: I will not. (Yes, that is Jesus floating over my pool. Actually, Christ the Redeemer from Corcovado, the mountain above!)

And one morning when we were eating our mangoes and drinking our coconut water (!!!) this live band began to sing John Mayer songs in soft Portuguese (John Mayer is SO MUCH BETTER in Portuguese! Really, he should consider taking it up) for a wedding upstairs on the terrace, and we all got a free concert. HOW AWESOME IS THAT?

It all happened at the Copacabana, the hottest spot north of Havana.

I didn’t spend all my time at the hotel, though. I went to Sugar Loaf! In a cable car! Thousands of feet in the air! And many other cultural spots, such as the National Library!

And I saw monkeys (and not at the zoo. Just sitting around, with their tiny monkey babies on their backs)! So sweet! And possibly infected with hideous viruses that will kill us all! Don’t touch them! No really!

I also hung out with Bernard Cornwell and Arthur Phillips (you might know them for being totally famous smart authors who wrote “The Sharpe Books” and “Prague”) for dinner and samba (FOR REAL) and stuff ALMOST EVERY NIGHT!!!!

And since we all we couldn’t fit into one car, our publisher hired this party bus to take us around. I KID YOU NOT.

So I was in this totally awesome Rio party bus with these amazing authors, just going around to places like the US consulate’s house for cocktails, and the Rio Scenariom, for samba:

It was insane. But I can’t tell you more because my motto is: What happens on the party bus stays on the party bus.

So, the Bienal. Amazing! So many sweet, affectionate readers, who waited so long (some all day) and came from so far away!

Brazilians love to read, and what’s more, they love to read anything, from huge super intellectual tomes to comic books. Plus, they love AUTHORS!

I did two packed presentations, two signings (one for five hours!)!

And still, sadly, there were people who came that I never got to meet!

I’m so sorry to anyone I missed and especially to anyone security and I mowed down on our way to the signing booth.

Authors are treated like rock stars in Brazil! It’s a little like being Xuxa…

…who, in case you don’t know, is a huge children’s television star here, and who was in the booth next to me for one signing. You should have heard the screaming.

(Sometimes in my head I still think I hear the screaming. Like Vietnam.)

Thank you to everyone who came! You were all such princesses!

Thanks too to everyone who gave me such lovely notes—I’m STILL reading them all—and gifts. Just a few of the wonderful things I received were this handmade “Game of Meg”…

…and pink Havaianas, teddy bears, bracelets, necklaces, and of course, this amazing cake, which two wonderful girls made themselves and carried ALL DAY, and which by the end of my signing I was still gazing at longingly (even though I was quite tired)…and so was everyone else who worked so hard to make my signings happen! My publisher here is INCREDIBLE (and so are all the people who organized and worked for the Bienal!)

It was so nice!


(This is how I look at the end of a 12 hour work day. Note the dazed expression, due to proximity of cake.)

A special thanks to Brazilian author Talitha, who showed me how it’s done!


Talitha showing me how to make “heart fingers” to the readers down below. All these photos courtesy of the Bienal’s Twitter page, including this one:


Seriously, can we just talk about my hair? I got it professionally curled and styled two hours before this photo was taken, but conference hall air HATES my hair. I’m mortified.


And no matter how much I primp, nothing works. This one ended up on the Bienal Twitter page, too!

But now I’m off to the second part of my tour, Curitiba, Sao Paolo, and Salvador! I had the best time at the Bienal, and in Rio—everyone was so kind, and so welcoming! I will seriously miss you all.

But Curitiba is going to be a blast, too! See you tonight from
7:30 PM-10:30PM

Sign session at the
Livrarias Curitiba
ParkShopping Barigui 

Rua 
Professor Pedro Viriato 

Parigot de Souza n°. 600 – Mossunguê


Tchau! I love you!

More later.

Much love,

Meg

Missing Post about Clarice Lispector

All About Brazil!

Thanks so much for the love, everyone who wrote me with tips on what to wear during my book tour in Brazil over the next two weeks! I think I’m going to be fine.

But if not I’ll know who to blame! (Ha, just kidding.)

Anyway, now that I’ve got the clothing down, I’ve realized I still need to learn Portuguese.

So I’m hoping people won’t hold that against me. I know “Obrigado” means thank you. I’m still working on the rest, with the help of this amazing(ly boring, but helpful) video:

So I’ve got the basics (kind of).

The two top questions Brazilian interviewers keep asking me (in English, thankfully) are:

#1, What books have you read by Brazilian writers, and

#2, Do you know any Brazilians?

Weirdly, I don’t usually remember the nationality of the authors I read. I can’t remember ever going around saying, “I just read this great book! It’s by a Canadian.”

But I do recall reading a book of short stories (Family Ties) by an amazing author called Clarice Lispector who was Brazilian. I wonder if she’s required reading in Brazilian schools?

Anyway, I liked her because:

a) Her writing struck me as humorous and sarcastic and yet moving.

b) Many of her short stories seem at first glance to be about…nothing. A woman putting her mother on the train after a visit. A girl who wants shoes without wooden heels so boys won’t notice her click-clacking as she walks to school. But the stories are actually about a lot. Much of it only women can understand, I think:

c) Clarice was Jewish and extremely glamorous. She once lit herself on fire after falling asleep while smoking.

OK, maybe this last part wasn’t exactly glamorous, but it adds to her mystique.

If you want to know more about Clarice, read one of her books (my friend Michael swears by “The Hour of the Star”), obviously, or the new biography about her called Why This World, by Benjamin Moser, which is in stores now. Here’s a review of it:

What the legendary soccer player Pelé is to sport in Brazil, the author "Clarice" is to that country's literary culture. Stunningly brilliant, beautiful and enigmatic, the daughter of Russian-Jewish émigrés achieved instant celebrity at the age of 23 with the publication of her debut novel Near to the Wild Heart. From that auspicious beginning in 1943, she emerged during the post-war decades as one of Latin America's greatest modernist writers and ambassadors of Brazilian culture and avant-garde thought. But, with only a few of her works available in translation, Clarice Lispector (1920-1977) has remained unknown to most English readers until now. Benjamin Moser's Why This World makes up for this long drought by offering a detailed and dramatic biography of Lispector's incredible life and times. Based on new interviews with family and friends, recovered manuscripts, and other fresh sources, Moser crafts a moving and tangible portrait of the famously inscrutable Clarice. --Lauren Nemroff

Edited to add later: I have been promised an English copy of “The Hour of the Star” is waiting for me in Sao Paolo! I hope this is true!

As to the second question, “Do you know anyone from Brazil?” I do, I know thousands of readers who’ve emailed me, maybe even tens of thousands!

But if you mean personally, I do know a young Brazilian woman who moved to the US knowing next-to-no English, but was nevertheless determined to make a life for herself, and after marrying a friend of mine opened her own restaurant in New York City which became a sort of neighborhood hangout for a lot of celebrities (including some who’ve been in the tabloids recently and whom I’ve mentioned on this blog)!

I think this kind of chutzpah is typically Brazilian. Nothing can stop a Brazilian!

Anyway, our friend’s restaurant is where He Who Shall Not Be Named In This Blog and I used to go almost every Tuesday night until closing. Afterwards, we’d all hit the town.

That’s how we started calling Tuesday nights Danger Night, because we’d usually be out until 4AM (this wasn’t good, since some us had to work the next day).

So, that’s the story of my favorite Brazilian author and my friend from Brazil.

I think Clarice Lispector would have appreciated Danger Night immensely.

See you in Rio!

More later.

Much love,

Meg

Add a Comment
3. Brazilian SOS

Calling all fashionable Brazilian girls (which, according to my research, is all Brazilian girls):

I’m leaving for my trip to Brazil for the Rio Book Fair and my book signings in Sao Paulo, Curitiba, and Salvador, and I just realized:

I have NO idea what to bring to wear in Brazil. NO IDEA. And I leave, like, NOW!

I need your help! Can any of you email me with some tips and photos?

One thing I’m pretty sure I need to bring is pants, so I can avoid looking like Leann Rimes in this photo:

Poor Leann! I know she is going through a divorce, so she has an excuse. But really, this look is not for me.

I had a terrible nightmare that I went to Brazil and although I remembered my pants, they were pink Juicy Couture sweat pants (which I don’t even own), and then in my dream, I accidentally wet them.

I know! It was so traumatic. But wait! It gets worse.

And then on the Brazilian news, they were all, “Today at the Book Festival, Meg Cabot wet her pants.”

And they showed pictures of it!

So you can see why I’m concerned about this.

When you email me with suggestions of what to bring to wear, can you include links to hot places to shop in the cities I’m going to (but not places that sell pink Juicy Couture sweat pants)?

Come on, I know my readers love to shop. So hook me up! I’ll be eternally grateful.

I’m not going to have much time to shop, but I hope I’ll have some!

And as much as I love Tori Spelling, she looks very unhappy in this photo, so I’m not sure this a look I want to emulate either:

So it’s up to you girls to HELP me!

Also, do you need a coat at night in Brazil? Is the air conditioning so cold that you need a sweater inside? Are girls in Brazil wearing maxi dresses or is that completely over (it’s still all the rage here in Key West)? Except for the girls who go out wearing…well, something like this:

Only without the booties (a lot of them skip the top, too…and the pants. It’s a party town).

The point is, I have to go to cocktails at the American consulate’s house (for real! I KNOW! I have to get dressed up for THAT), and opening ceremonies and breakfasts with the press and of course signings with YOU all!

So I need to bring some fancy clothes, not clothes like the photos above (Tori not included)!

Any suggestions, ladies?

And for any men reading this blog going, “Oh my God. Do women really talk about things like this?”…YES WE DO! We do this so that we never make the mistake of wearing something like this:

You see? Lily Allen obviously has no friends, because if she did, they would never have allowed her to go out in this top. That’s what sisterhood is all about. Am I right?

So help me, oh wise Brazilian girls! Show me the Brazilian love, because I just read here that YOU ARE THE HAPPIEST PLACE ON EARTH!

I’m so excited to be going to the happiest place on earth!

Here’s the schedule one more time of where I’ll be. I really hope I’ll see some of you! I can’t wait! Even if I do show up somehow without pants….

More later.

Much love,

Meg

Add a Comment
4. Seventeen Fiction Winner and the Beast

Happy Monday! Here are some things you might want to know:

The latest edition of Seventeen Magazine (the September issue, on shelves now) has the winning entry in the 2009 Fiction Contest, which I helped judge! Congratulations are in order to Kerry Reardon.

ALL the entries I read were fantastic. You all made it very hard to choose a winner. Great job, everyone!

Grab a copy of the September issue to read Kerry’s entry!

If you’re thinking of being a freelance writer (like Kerry probably is now!)—and even if you’re not—you should be paying attention to all the stuff going on with the new government subsidized health insurance plan!

Especially since you’ll probably end up being self-employed and having to pay for your own insurance someday (and trust me…it’s not cheap).

There are some people who are protesting the government’s offering subsidized health insurance to US citizens–because, they say, it would put private insurance companies out of business…which is baloney, because libraries haven’t put bookstores out of business, have they?

And public schools haven’t put private schools out of business (as we know from Gossip Girl)! And the US post office certainly hasn’t put Fed Ex out of business.

I wish someone would ask those protesters what they think we should do about the 47 million Americans in this country who have no insurance at all, or about the underinsured, who can’t afford dental care or their co-pays…

…and who have started to depend on charities like Remote Area Medical, who are supposed to be doing work in places like the Amazon, but instead are having to work in the US! Video clip from 60 Minutes here and totally worth watching.

Finally, I just opened my September Teen Vogue and saw Paris Hilton’s ad for her new fragrance, Siren.

I still haven’t stopped marveling at it’s sheer brilliance and glory, and knew I had to share it with you!

You really have to see one of her ads up close (check out the individual gold fins) to get its full impact:

Honestly, I don’t know what to say. Except:

Congratulations, Paris. You win. YOU WIN AT EVERYTHING!

Sometimes I just wonder if Paris ever thinks to herself that she should just…pull back a little?

But I’m so glad she doesn’t. Because if people pulled back, we wouldn’t have some of my favorite things in the world, like Drew Barrymore’s Annie Leibovitz Beauty and the Beast photo shoot (circa 2005)!

I love it!

Thank you, Vogue (and Annie and Drew) for those shots.

And thank you, Paris. For brightening this and every single day!

More later.

Much love,

Meg

Add a Comment
5. Meg Cabot Day (and Wet Mr. Darcy)

I totally forgot that today, July 31, is Meg Cabot Day (as proclaimed by the mayor of Bloomington, Indiana way back on July 31, 2004)!

How did you spend Meg Cabot Day? The preferred way to spend it is floating in a body of water, reading books.

But really you can spend it any way you want. That’s the beauty of Meg Cabot Day!

I spent mine getting my hair done, along with a mani-pedi and a super relaxing massage. You can’t spend all your time writing novels and trying to keep tabs on which Real Housewives cast member choked which (although thank God my salon has wi-fi).

Anyway, just in time for Meg Cabot Day, here’s an interview I did with Teen Scene Mag.com, as well as a fun article from Publisher’s Weekly about my trip to the Betsy-Tacy conference….

…including never before seen pictures!

Like the one of me and Jenna and Katelyn, the completely adorable girls who made me this official Minnesota moose plaque:

They told me they made it while they were watching the A&E version of Pride and Prejudice. Which of course makes it extra special to me.

Close up of the Minnesota moose plaque.

Close up of Wet Mr. Darcy.

Watching the A&E version of P&P is a great way to spend Meg Cabot Day. I sort of wonder if you were making a Minnesota moose plaque while watching Pride and Prejudice on Meg Cabot Day, and you fell through a time portal, would you end up at Pemberley, having an affair with Mr. Darcy?

Or would you end up in a Meg Cabot book?

Oh, never mind. I guess I’m thinking about something else.

Thanks, Jenna and Katelyn. I’ll treasure it always!

And happy Meg Cabot Day to you all!

More later.

Much love,

Meg

Add a Comment