Blogger Giveaways: It's Either Her or Me

Several new reviews of It’s Either Her or Me (including giveaways) have been posted around the web. You can read them at:

Reviews:

It’s All in Your Family…Now in the Wilmington, NC, StarNews

It’s Either Her or Me: Book Review on Bella Online: The Voice of Women

It’s Either Her or Me on Who Says 7 is Enough?

Reviews and Giveaways:

Things I Can’t Say (ends April 14)

Being Me (ends April 15)

Are You Listening? (ends April 15)

Kerri’s Klutter (ends April 18)

Crystal & Company (ends April 19)

Obsession Reviews (ends April 23)

This, That, and T’other (ends April 20)

Sweeps4Bloggers (ends April 22)

Jeanne’s Ramblings (ends April 23)

Mommy’s Memorandum (ends April 23)

14
Apr
2010

I'm Dying to Talk about Her, But…

It’s Either Her or Me is my third book that has to do with relationships, yet this one has been so anticipated, its presales were significant. But why? I like to think it’s because I have a loyal following (beyond my mom) but the real reason is that this is a subject most women are dying to talk about. Incognito.

Dozens of women have contacted me through email saying that, even if they have a pretty good relationship with the other woman, they still have unresolved “issues.” This feeling is so even sided, that when women write to me about HER, I have no idea if they are talking about their mother-in-law or their daughter-in-law.

And both would be mortified if the other one knew they were.

As a journalist, I interview men and women, and sometimes children, who are relevant to my topic. I love anecdotes, believing that we feel more connected when we hear and relate to what someone else is going through. The difference between the subjects in my first two books on single parents and dating, and those in It’s Either Her or Me, is that the former ones are perfectly fine being thanked in the acknowledgments by their real identities. (I change their identity elsewhere in the books). This time around very few of the women – moms or daughters – agreed to be acknowledged.

What’s different is that I am writing about ongoing relationships. I could comfortably write about the bad dates I had in Mom, There’s a Man in the Kitchen and He’s Wearing Your Robe, because I KNEW those relationships were over. But that may not be the case when I consider the significant others my son has had. Even ones from the past could at some point be in the present. I’m not going to risk saying or doing anything to him to forever destroy that relationship.

So I get it. Since a mother-in-law and a daughter-in-law have to get along at least superficially, their identity is safe with me.

14
Apr
2010

More chances to win a copy of It's Either Her or Me

Several more reviews and opportunities to win a copy of It’s Either Her or Me have been posted. Visit these great blogs to enter:

Being Me (ends April 15)

Are You Listening? (ends April 15)

Kerri’s Klutter (ends April 18)

This, That, and T’other (ends April 20)

Sweeps4Bloggers (ends April 22)

Mommy’s Memorandum (ends April 23)

08
Apr
2010

Daughters Talk. Sons Balk.

I just got a call from a friend whose eldest child is a 13-year-old boy. The day before she learned he had broken up with his girlfriend. She didn’t even know he HAD a girlfriend. Worse than having been kept out of the loop, her son wasn’t even the one to tell her. Instead, she learned about her son’s social life from a neighbor, who had heard it from her daughter.

The best advice I can give moms of young boys who are just beginning to pursue the opposite sex, is to befriend the mothers of the girls in your son’s class or in your neighborhood. Girls talk. Even if they don’t tell their moms everything about their own romantic lives, they have no problem telling them about someone else’s.

When my son was my in middle school, I drove him and another boy to a swim party at the home of a girl in their class. The mother of the girl greeted me at the door. She assured me she would be there to chaperone. But when another mother later went to pick up my son and hers, no adult answered the door. Instead our sons came to the door and ran to the car. They said the party was fun, but offered no other details.

It was weeks later when a mother of a girl in my son’s class told me that a couple of the girls had skinny dipped during that swim party. Obviously, her daughter wasn’t one of them so she told her mom. I was shocked, furious at the party girl’s mom, and forever made aware that I had a lot to learn – and it likely wasn’t going to come from my son.

How about your son? Is he more forthcoming that the ones I write about? Or have you just figured out how to pry the information out of him? Do tell!

07
Apr
2010

Win a copy of It's Either Her or Me

If you haven’t picked up your copy of It’s Either Her or Me yet, these great bloggers are offering their readers the opportunity to win a copy! Read their honest reviews and enter to win on these blogs:

Oh Hey, Whats Up? (ends April 6)

Being Me (ends April 15)

Are You Listening? (ends April 15)

This, That, and T’other (ends April 20)

Sweeps4Bloggers (ends April 22)

06
Apr
2010


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