Difference between revisions of "Goodnight Tweetheart"
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[[Category:2011 Releases]] | [[Category:2011 Releases]] | ||
[[Category:Mainstream]] | [[Category:Mainstream]] | ||
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* '''Author''': [[Teresa Medeiros]] | * '''Author''': [[Teresa Medeiros]] | ||
* '''Publisher''': [[Gallery]] | * '''Publisher''': [[Gallery]] | ||
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* '''Editor''': [[Lauren McKenna]] | * '''Editor''': [[Lauren McKenna]] | ||
* '''Amazon Listing''' : [] | * '''Amazon Listing''' : [] | ||
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+ | ==Book Description== | ||
+ | Abigail Donovan has a lot of stuff she should be doing. Namely writing her next novel. A bestselling author who is still recovering from a near Pulitzer Prize win and the heady success that follows Oprah'stamp of approval, she is stuck at Chapter Five and losing confidence daily. But when her publicist signs her up for a Twitter account, she's intrigued. What's all the fuss? | ||
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+ | Taken under the wing of one of her Twitter followers, "MarkBaynard", a quick witted, quick-typing professor on sabbatical, Abby finds it easy to put words out into the world 140 characters at a time. And once she gets a handle on tweets, retweets, direct messages, hashtags, and trends, she starts to feel unblocked in writing and in life. After all, why should she be spending hours in her apartment staring at her TweetDeck and fretting about her stalled career when Mark is out there traveling the world and living? | ||
+ | Or is he? | ||
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+ | Told almost entirely in tweets and DMs, Goodnight Tweetheart is a truly modern take on a classic tale of love and loss, a Griffin and Sabine for the Twitter generation. | ||
== Recognitions == | == Recognitions == | ||
* [[2012 RITA® Winners & Finalists|2012 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Mainstream Fiction with Romantic Elements Category|Novel with Strong Romantic Elements]] | * [[2012 RITA® Winners & Finalists|2012 RITA® Finalist]] for [[RITA®: Mainstream Fiction with Romantic Elements Category|Novel with Strong Romantic Elements]] |
Latest revision as of 00:11, 18 August 2021
- Author: Teresa Medeiros
- Publisher: Gallery
- Year: 2011
- Editor: Lauren McKenna
- Amazon Listing : []
Book Description
Abigail Donovan has a lot of stuff she should be doing. Namely writing her next novel. A bestselling author who is still recovering from a near Pulitzer Prize win and the heady success that follows Oprah'stamp of approval, she is stuck at Chapter Five and losing confidence daily. But when her publicist signs her up for a Twitter account, she's intrigued. What's all the fuss?
Taken under the wing of one of her Twitter followers, "MarkBaynard", a quick witted, quick-typing professor on sabbatical, Abby finds it easy to put words out into the world 140 characters at a time. And once she gets a handle on tweets, retweets, direct messages, hashtags, and trends, she starts to feel unblocked in writing and in life. After all, why should she be spending hours in her apartment staring at her TweetDeck and fretting about her stalled career when Mark is out there traveling the world and living? Or is he?
Told almost entirely in tweets and DMs, Goodnight Tweetheart is a truly modern take on a classic tale of love and loss, a Griffin and Sabine for the Twitter generation.