Our teenage sleuth has a very permissive aunt and father who both give her a lot of freedom as she goes about her search for the killer. They are the opposite of "helicopter parents" and she gets in all sorts of dangerous situations. My husband and I have our Nancy running through Bourbon Street while being chased by a guy in a hoodie, and dodging into a gay bar, only to be rescued and brought home by The Lady Chablis from "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil." Our humor is PG-rated--this is not your Grandmother's Nancy Drew. We have Nancy trying to bond with her aunt by mixing up Hurricanes and serving them to her and her girlfriend. Construction workers admire how well Nancy looks in her shorts and ask her aunt, "Who's the little cupcake?" "The Ghost in the Plantation" is a gumbo of a whodunit, not for the fathers of teenage daughters nor for teenage girls. It's for the ladies--gentlemen, step aside. We wrote this book with a deep love of the city of New Orleans and all of the wonderful experiences we've had there. I'm grateful to that publisher for teaching me a very valuable marketing lesson: who is your audience? Never forget to make that foremost in your mind when marketing your books--you writers out there. The last thing we want is for our readers to be disappointed after they've bought our book, hoping for something entirely different.
Showing posts with label The Lady Chablis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Lady Chablis. Show all posts
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Who is your audience? Pay Attention, You Writers Out There
A book publisher gave me one of the best pieces of advice I ever was asked, "Who is your audience?" My husband and I had just written a book about a teenager sleuth, modeled after Nancy Drew, but geared towards women babyboomers, not teenagers. We almost got a book deal based upon a misunderstanding of how we were marketing it. Our book, "The Ghost in the Plantation," is about a precocious 16 year old who gets involved in trying to track down the murder of a docent at Oak Alley Plantation. The PG-rated scenes and jokes would never go over well with teenagers. The opening scene of our book has Nancy and her girlfriends talking about, not Justin Beiber or One Direction, but about Don Draper from Mad Men and Vampire Bill from True Blood--men who women might find attractive, not my teenage nieces.
Our teenage sleuth has a very permissive aunt and father who both give her a lot of freedom as she goes about her search for the killer. They are the opposite of "helicopter parents" and she gets in all sorts of dangerous situations. My husband and I have our Nancy running through Bourbon Street while being chased by a guy in a hoodie, and dodging into a gay bar, only to be rescued and brought home by The Lady Chablis from "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil." Our humor is PG-rated--this is not your Grandmother's Nancy Drew. We have Nancy trying to bond with her aunt by mixing up Hurricanes and serving them to her and her girlfriend. Construction workers admire how well Nancy looks in her shorts and ask her aunt, "Who's the little cupcake?" "The Ghost in the Plantation" is a gumbo of a whodunit, not for the fathers of teenage daughters nor for teenage girls. It's for the ladies--gentlemen, step aside. We wrote this book with a deep love of the city of New Orleans and all of the wonderful experiences we've had there. I'm grateful to that publisher for teaching me a very valuable marketing lesson: who is your audience? Never forget to make that foremost in your mind when marketing your books--you writers out there. The last thing we want is for our readers to be disappointed after they've bought our book, hoping for something entirely different.
Our teenage sleuth has a very permissive aunt and father who both give her a lot of freedom as she goes about her search for the killer. They are the opposite of "helicopter parents" and she gets in all sorts of dangerous situations. My husband and I have our Nancy running through Bourbon Street while being chased by a guy in a hoodie, and dodging into a gay bar, only to be rescued and brought home by The Lady Chablis from "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil." Our humor is PG-rated--this is not your Grandmother's Nancy Drew. We have Nancy trying to bond with her aunt by mixing up Hurricanes and serving them to her and her girlfriend. Construction workers admire how well Nancy looks in her shorts and ask her aunt, "Who's the little cupcake?" "The Ghost in the Plantation" is a gumbo of a whodunit, not for the fathers of teenage daughters nor for teenage girls. It's for the ladies--gentlemen, step aside. We wrote this book with a deep love of the city of New Orleans and all of the wonderful experiences we've had there. I'm grateful to that publisher for teaching me a very valuable marketing lesson: who is your audience? Never forget to make that foremost in your mind when marketing your books--you writers out there. The last thing we want is for our readers to be disappointed after they've bought our book, hoping for something entirely different.
Friday, November 29, 2013
Christmas Gifts for Book Lovers
Hello, everyone. The Christmas season is officially here. Are you wondering what to buy for that special person in your life who likes to read? For baby boomers who grew up loving the Nancy Drew books, we wrote two PG rated mysteries about our teenage sleuth, Nancy Keene. The books are: "The Ghost in the Plantation" and "The Buried Treasure on Route 66". Both are available in print on Amazon.com
Merry Christmas and Happy Reading,
Lewis Hathaway
Merry Christmas and Happy Reading,
Lewis Hathaway
Labels:
baby boomers,
ghosts,
Louisiana,
Nancy Drew,
New Orleans,
PG-rated,
Plantations,
road trip,
Route 66,
teenage sleuth,
The Blue Swallow Motel,
The Lady Chablis,
The Movie "Cars",
voodoo
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Good News: Our Books Are Now In Paper and E-book Formats
Hooray!! Both of our Nancy Keene Mysteries are now available in paper and e-book formats!
Now, you no longer need an e-reader, and can read our books, "The Buried Treasure on Route 66" and "The Ghost In The Plantation", the good old-fashioned way.
Here's a link to the paperbacks
Now, you no longer need an e-reader, and can read our books, "The Buried Treasure on Route 66" and "The Ghost In The Plantation", the good old-fashioned way.
Here's a link to the paperbacks
Saturday, August 10, 2013
The Ghost in the Plantation
This humorous, PG-rated mystery about a teenager sleuth, who's very similar to Nancy Drew, is written especially for women baby boomers who grew up reading and loving the Nancy Drew series. This book takes place in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Nancy, her father and friends go there on vacation, and the concierge at their hotel dies mysteriously in Oak Alley Plantation. This is the first murder case Nancy has taken on, and she's only 16. Nancy's fun and funky Aunt Audrey joins the investigation, and they get some help from surprising real life characters. When Nancy's not having café au lait and beignets at the Café du Monde, she's being chased down Bourbon Street by a man in a hoodie who suspects she knows about Agent Q. Come ride the St. Charles streetcar through the Garden District, eat at Brennan's, listen to live jazz in Jackson Square, and learn about voodoo and ghosts with Nancy in her latest adventure.
Thursday, July 18, 2013
The Ghost in the Plantation: A Nancy Keene Mystery
Do you like Nancy Drew? Or mysteries set in New Orleans? Have you always wanted to see a Southern plantation, like the one Scarlet O'Hara lived in? Well, stay tuned. We are busy writing our latest book in our Nancy Keene series. Our new book takes place in New Orleans where Nancy searches for the killer of a concierge who was working as a docent at Oak Alley Plantation.
Look for our book, "The Ghost in the Plantation: A Nancy Keene Mystery" to come out around the end of August.
Meanwhile, here's a link for the one we've already published.
The Buried Treasure on Route 66: A Nancy Keene Mystery
Look for our book, "The Ghost in the Plantation: A Nancy Keene Mystery" to come out around the end of August.
Meanwhile, here's a link for the one we've already published.
The Buried Treasure on Route 66: A Nancy Keene Mystery
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