Showing posts with label Crazy For Trying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crazy For Trying. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 02, 2022

How my debut novel and I gave birth to each other during chemo

I'm celebrating turning 60, rolling out fresh editions of six backlist books. Watch this space and follow me on Instagram for opportunities to score autographed copies. Out of the vault this week: Crazy for Trying 25th Anniversary Author's Cut, my debut novel originally published by MacMurray & Beck in 1996.

This book and I gave birth to each other in the mid-1990s while I was undergoing chemotherapy for non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a virulent blood cancer. My prognosis was poor: a 50 percent chance of survival up to five years. Anything beyond that was “statistically negligible.” I was thirty-two years old, confronted with the question: How does one live a full life by some metric other than time? 

I developed a five-year plan that included two realistically achievable goals: First: Vigilant in word and deed, I would leave a handprint of lovingkindness on my five-year-old daughter, Jerusha, and my seven-year-old son, Malachi, hoping that would give substance to their incomplete memories of me. Second: I would write one good book and get it published. 

As a talented dabbler, I’d been working on a wad of purple prose and zingy dialogue that vaguely resembled a book. Most first novels are autobiographical in some way, and I did borrow details from my life for Tulsa, my zaftig protagonist. There were stories I wanted to tell my daughter, and some of them are injected here, but I purposely made this book recognizably not a roman à clef. I hoped that, in my absence, my daughter would eventually understand that all these characters are, in some aspect, me: Tulsa, whose seeking instinct overcomes her self-loathing. Mac, who finds his best life when he’s at his most broken. Anne Marie, the overwhelmed mommy. Alexandra, a compulsive creator of words, and Jeanne (pronounced in my mind like jay-ann, not gene), a purveyor of shalom. The radio listeners, the passersby, the mountains, the music, the dead—I wanted my daughter to know that I was all and none of these so that she would feel empowered to be all and none of whomever she pleased. I wanted her to see me in the pages of this book and see herself between the lines. 

As my real life became unbearable, I retreated into Mac and Tulsa’s world. Their story was a life raft I climbed onto; had I not found it, I would have drowned. I wrote and rewrote, loving the work and the self I became while doing it. As a lifelong voracious consumer of books, good and bad, I had a strong sense that this book was good. I refined a query packet that included a cover letter, synopsis, and the first thirty pages of the manuscript, sent out my first seventyish queries to agents and editors, and collected my first seventyish rejections. Most were form rejections, probably triggered by the bulk of the overwritten manuscript. As books tend to do when written in a vacuum, it had bloated like a beached orca. 

The personal query responses I did get contained high praise for the writing, heartening close-but-no-cigar agent-speak, and invitations to send my next book. Only one story-specific note came up again and again; agents consistently pointed to the Alexandra/Jeanne relationship as “off-putting” or a “deal-killer.” Everyone knows God didn’t create bisexuality until the mid-aughts, so for most mainstream agents in 1994, a nonbinary love story was the kiss of death unless it involved gay men or arcane reference to the price of salt. Tulsa’s mother, Alexandra, struggled in that version of the manuscript—as many of us did in real life—scorched equally by gay and straight sanctimony. 

One agent advised: “If the book is about that, it has to be about that. Otherwise, it’s just a hill you died on for no reason.” I didn’t want this book to be “about that,” but I did want my future girl to see bisexuality normalized in the context of a loving, long-term relationship that deserved to be a legal marriage blessed with the emotional bounty, healthcare parity, and tax advantages of any other marriage. I couldn’t accept the premise that bisexuality is so grotesque, the mere mention of it as an aspect of a secondary character makes the whole book “about that,” and the Alexandra in me suspected that if this book was being written by a man—queer or straight—he would not be dying on this hill or any other. 

I sent out a last round of queries, making only one change: The title page and cover letter said J. L. Rodgers instead of Joni Rodgers. Within a month, out of twelve queries, I had eleven requests for the full manuscript, which led to offers from two publishers. Every one of the positive responses began: Dear Mr. Rodgers . . .

I can laugh now—the luxuriously guilty laughter of the bullet-dodger. I survived, against all odds, in large part because Crazy for Trying gave me something to be. This book quite literally saved my life; now I’m returning the favor. 

I’m thrilled to present this 25th Anniversary Author’s Cut to the next generation of readers, including the fabulous woman my daughter has grown up to be. (She is now the same age I was when I wrote this book. Insert “mind blown” emoji.) The story is unchanged for the most part, but all the greenhorn machinations, flabby adverbs, and exclamation points are safely biodegrading in the landfills of literary history. This made room to restore some of the original banter that defined Mac and Tulsa’s relationship, which was always more Socratic dialogue than romance. 

I’m a grandmother now, in the twenty-sixth year of my five-year plan, still striving to leave a handprint of lovingkindness. Whatever book I’m working on today is that one good book into which I pour my good intentions, but Crazy for Tryingwill always have a special home in my soul. It was my sanctuary and school of hard knocks. 

When Crazy for Trying was first published in 1996, Lisa Gray’s review in the Houston Press summed it up perfectly: “Think Jane Eyre with rock and roll.” Enough has changed—and not changed—about love, addiction, motherhood, and sexism that Tulsa’s story, like Jane’s, remains relevant and, I hope, entertaining. Thank you for being part of her journey and mine.

Tuesday, February 01, 2022

Out of the vault: CRAZY FOR TRYING 25th Anniversary Author's Cut

In the coming weeks, I'll be rolling out fresh editions of six bestselling backlist books. Watch this space and follow me on Instagram for opportunities to score autographed copies. 

This week, Crazy for Trying, my debut novel originally published 25 years ago by MacMurray & Beck is out of the vault, available in paperback and ebook. 



Here's the logline:

In 1970s Montana, a zaftig disc jockey sets out to reinvent herself, fleeing the shadow of her two (in)famous moms—a radical author/activist and an aging hippie artist—but she's soon embroiled in volitile office politics and an impossible love triangle, forced to choose between her mom’s artistic protégé and a damaged Viet Nam war vet. 




 

Wednesday, January 05, 2022

It's happening...

 This winter, in celebration of my 60th birthday, I'm releasing fresh editions of my first six books, featuring fabulous cover art by Kapo Ng. Watch this space!


Wednesday, February 25, 2015

I feel like a 20 year old! (My firstborn book keeps evolving.)

20 years ago this week, I got the life-changing call every writer works and waits for. Fred Ramey​ of MacMurray & Beck (which later morphed into MacAdam-Cage) pulled my first novel out of the slush pile and offered to publish it. His belief in the book and in me as an author changed my life. He also changed the title from Last Chance Gulch to Crazy for Trying.

I was just coming out of a long stretch of cancer treatment, which had left Gary and me bankrupt, so we did the responsible thing and used the advance to take our kids to DisneyWorld. And 18 months later, we used the first royalty check to make a down payment on a house. This book and I have both come a long way, as you can see. I adored the hardcover design. Gary had it blown up into a poster for my office. The paperback, I felt was a bit, um... phallic (Gary promptly dubbed it "the blow job cover"), but I gotta love MacAdam-Cage -- they graciously reverted the rights back to me in 2010 so I could indie pub an ebook edition. After I threw away almost a thousand dollars on professionally done cover designs, all of which I hated, Gary shot a photo of my old 12-string guitar resting on my daughter's hip, and I created a cover I loved. I didn't care what anyone else thought of it and still don't.

I'm so thrilled to have Crazy for Trying included in Outside the Box: Women Writing Women, a limited edition digital boxset of seven top-drawer novels by powerhouse women authors. The common thread: each compelling story features a strong, idiosyncratic woman protagonist. This edition of Crazy for Trying has been updated with a fresh edit and a new look by FUdog Book Bling. 

I was happy to find, as I revisited it, that the story set in the 1970s still holds up. If anything, it's more relevant than ever, because the secondary plotline focused on what happens to a child being raised by two mothers when the biological mother dies, and the longtime partner parent has no legal standing. "I feel like a widow," she says, "but I don't get to wear the classy black veil."

(Visit www.womenwritewomen.com for more info and links to buy the box set! It's available through May 24 only!)

Sunday, February 26, 2012

“Think Jane Eyre with rock’n’roll.” (new CRAZY FOR TRYING trailer)

Crazy for Trying


“Think Jane Eyre with rock’n’roll.” Houston Press


With the ghost of her infamous activist mother over her shoulder, Tulsa Bitters, zaftig, bookish and freshly orphaned, takes a westbound train, determined to reinvent herself. Mac White Wolf MacPeters, half Blackfoot and half raging Irish, hears her voice on the radio late one night, and before he can remind himself that he’ll never fall in love, he does.

In Montana in the 1970s, people aren’t accustomed to hearing a woman’s voice on the radio. But to Tulsa, far away from all the people who loved and hurt her, midnight rock’n’roll feels like home, especially once she finds out who's out there listening.

Crazy for Trying is a brave debut novel that fairly explodes with love-struck energy and sharp-tongued tenacity. Joni Rodgers loads up a tight circle of lovers, adversaries, dysfunctional family members and comically flawed friends, driving them down a fresh road through hard-earned love, a dangerous western solitude, and the old sexual politics.

Read it FREE with Kindle Prime.

Barnes & Noble Discover Award finalist (1997)

“Terrific…a rollicking ride through emerging feminist sensibilities.” Billings Gazette

“A fresh pleasure…Rodgers writes unconventional love scenes that scorch the pages.” Orlando Sentinel

“Refreshing and provocative…” Houston Chronicle

“Truly captivating…Rodgers’ prose and style are unique.” Texas Books in Review

“Joni Rodgers can write sex scenes that’ll make your toes curl and your hair stand on end. At her best, her prose is dazzling, risky, and intoxicating, and at its heart, Crazy for Trying is an inspired debut.” Pam Houston, bestselling author of Cowboys Are My Weakness

 

Friday, January 27, 2012

More Awesome Freeness: Crazy for Trying on Kindle

In honor of the 50th Anniversary of Patsy Cline's "Crazy," our own New York Times bestseller Joni Rodgers has made her novel CRAZY FOR TRYING absolutely free for Kindle! Check it out!

Crazy For Trying FREE on Kindle this weekend!

Celebrating my birthday and the 50th anniversary of Patsy Cline's "Crazy" this weekend. My firstborn novel, Crazy For Trying, is FREE through Sunday! The song and I were both born on January 29, 1962.

Pardon me while I feel a little bit awesome about that...

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Patsy Cline "Crazy"

Looking up some facts about the song that offered up the perfect title for my first novel, Crazy For Trying (which happens to be FREE on Kindle Select this weekend), I was ridiculously thrilled to discover that it was released the day I was born.

Patsy Cline "Crazy"

Looking up some facts about the song that offered up the perfect title for my first novel, Crazy For Trying (which happens to be FREE on Kindle Select this weekend), I was ridiculously thrilled to discover that it was released the day I was born.

What I have in common with "Crazy"

I was inordinately delighted to discover today that Patsy Cline's "Crazy" EP was released 50 years ago this coming Sunday, January 29, 1962 - the day I was born.

"Crazy" has been in my head my whole life, and offered up the perfect title for my first novel, Crazy for Trying.

To celebrate my big Five-Oh, Crazy for Trying will be FREE this weekend on Kindle Select.

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Buy This Book: Crazy For Trying


I recently downloaded and read the Kindle version of Crazy For Trying, by Boxocto's own Joni Rodgers, and although it's been a while since she wrote it, I can say for sure that it still delivers. It's a story that is as big and wide and gorgeous as its Big Sky country setting. It is a punch to the solar plexus, unflinching on so many levels. Troubled and witty, and sometimes irreverent, it is the truly courageous exploration of one young woman’s journey through heartbreaking circumstances of loss and abandonment, of vulnerability and self doubt, to full-blown, joyous self-discovery.

Tulsa Bitters, the daughter of a famous, recently-deceased feminist, arrives in Helena, Montana with a dented heart, twenty bucks and a couple of guitars. She wants to hide and life gives her a plan, a way to do it in plain sight as “VA Lones”, Helena’s first female deejay. It’s the job she was born for, one she loves. Soon she meets Mac, a guy twice her age, and she loves him, too. As Tulsa, or Tuppy-my-guppy, as her famous mother affectionately called her, she might have lacked the confidence to take on such a job and the lover, but as VA, she can be bold--sort of. The relationship between Mac and Tulsa is no typical May-December affair. It’s a coming of age, a coming to terms for them both. It’s tender and tough; it takes side roads that twist off the heart’s ledge. A way is lost and then found only to drop into the dark night. A small town watches, or at times what is a full and colorful cast of players mixes in. As the reader, you become entangled, engrossed.

Joni’s voice is unique, a wry and beautiful gift, that breathes life into characters and a plot that is as vividly drawn and compelling as it is passionate. The ending is up for grabs. You might be surprised; you just might find yourself laughing through your tears. For more about Joni, visit her website.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Crazy for Trying is out of the vault!

My debut novel Crazy For Trying was pubbed by MacAdam-Cage back in 1997. I'm thrilled that the ebook revolution has made it possible for me to bring it out of the vault and make it available to readers. Set in Montana in 1979, it's the story of self-discovery, sexual politics, a fat girl who'd rather be invisible and a walking-wounded man who falls in love with her voice on the radio.