Showing posts with label Jennifer Ciotta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Ciotta. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

Review: No Bulls**t Guide to Self-Publishing by Jennifer Ciotta

This blog is not just about alternate history. Some of you  have heard in previous posts that I started this blog to practice to my writing and to learn a thing or two about the publishing industry. Since then I have gotten the opportunity to talk to many talented writers and dedicated fans of the genre. So I have no issue posting about topics related to writing and research (ex. see “Daily Life In…” History Real or Otherwise by Matthew Quinn).

I have also learned a lot about self-publishing. In the past self-publishing was a road less traveled by aspiring authors. It was cost prohibitive, with the author having to put up thousands of dollars of their own money to print books which they had to then market and distribute themselves. This was not a course for those with doubts about their novel. Unless you thought you had a bestseller on your hands, you just remained patient and kept mailing out manuscripts to publishers.

The rise of the e-book, however, opened up a new market for self-publishers. Gone were the days of your garage being filled with unsold copies of your book, now you send your manuscript to Amazon or Smashwords  and they distribute it for you according to the price you set. Plus you get up to 70% of the profits! It is ridiculously easy to publish a book these days...and sadly it has become a bad thing.

The No Bulls**t Guide to Self-Publishing by Jennifer Ciotta (author of I, Putin) highlights this fact. Without the threat of massive debt hanging over an author's head, aspiring writers are putting less effort into publishing their novel then what they would do a decade ago. Beta readers are close family and friends who don't want to hurt the author's feelings, editors are not hired and cover art is created by the author during their spare time using MS Paint.

Those hoping for a step-by-step guide on self-publishing will be moderately disappointed. The Guide reads as a short memoir (37 pages) of Ciotta's discoveries and mistakes made while publishing I, Putin. She shares her insights on the whole process, making the Guide feel like a splash of cold water on your face, waking you up from your dreams of being a self-published millionaire. I myself felt this when reading the section on formatting. Hoping to find an easy to understand explanation on how to format an e-book, I instead realized how difficult it can be to learn HTML and for my own sanity I should just pay someone to do it for me.

A sample budget included in the Guide puts the costs an author should spend on their novel as up to $3000. Sounds like a lot of money, huh? Almost a return to the dark ages of self-publishing? Publishing a book, however, should not be easy. Reviewers like me deduct points for typos and bad cover art, simple things that can easily be taken care of before the novel ever reaches the public. Perhaps if you are friends with an English teacher or a whiz at Photoshop, you can avoid paying for their services, but if I were you I would seek out a professional.

I don't think the Guide is meant to discourage any of us from writing, but instead provide a sobering reality on the self-publishing industry. I recommend picking it up and at $0.99 you are not exactly breaking the bank by reading it (just add it to the costs of writing your book and make sure you let your accountant know come tax time). Ciotta includes good recommendations for sites and services she used when publishing her book that will no doubt help you.

Just remember: a good book will cost you both time and money writing, publishing and marketing it. It is the story you whipped up one weekend which will be a dud.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a volunteer editor for Alt Hist magazine. His fiction can be found at Echelon PressJake's Monthly and The Were-Traveler. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Weekly Update #58

Editor's Note

So writing twice as many articles a week is harder than it looks, but thankfully I have a lot of great contributors willing to volunteer articles.  In fact Richard Small, author of Confederate Star Rising, contacted me and will be sending his own response to Chris Nuttall's  Musings of an Independent Confederacy.  Publication for that guest post is still TBA, but this week you can look forward to tomorrow's New Releases, an interview with Geoffrey Wilson (author of Land of Hope and Glory), a review of A New Birth of Freedom: The Visitor by Robert G. Pielke and much more.

If you look at the left column you might see a new list of links called "Our Favorites".  These are links to blogs and sites whose owners have been especially supportive of Weekly Update and its mission.  To reward them I have given them greater coverage on this site.  So please check out those sites when you get the chance.

Got our first readers from the Ă…land Islands and Algeria.  Welcome!

And now the news...

Update: Jennifer Ciotta

Friend of the blog Jennifer Ciotta, author of I, Putin, had some good news to report recently.  Her novel won an Honorable Mention at the New York Book Festival.  Those interested in reading I, Putin can find it on Amazon in paperback or as an e-book.  As of June 10th, it will be available on the Nook, iBook, Sony e-reader and other formats.

Congrats Jennifer and I look forward to the release of your next work.

Update: Eric Flint

Eric Flint, author of the epic 1632 or The Assiti Shards series, will be attending SoonerCon 21 (June 15-17) at Oklahoma City.  On the 16th, Flint will be heading up a panel entitled “Eric Flint: The Author as an Activist”.  You can get a taste of the panel by checking out this Q&A. Haven't read anything by Eric Flint?  Don't worry, Baen has several of his works at their Free Library.

One of Flint's recent releases was 1636: The Kremlin Games, which has snippets available at Flint's website for you to check out as well.

Update: Chris Nuttall

If you are a fan of Weekly Update, you have probably have read an article by Chris Nuttall, who currently has three articles in the top ten most viewed articles of the month.  Well on Sunday, Chris reported on Facebook that he signed his first publishing contract.  The lucky company was UK-based, independent publisher Elsewhen Press.  Chris' story is titled The Royal Sorceress.

I am sure I speak for everyone who contributes and reads Weekly Update when I say congratulations Chris!

Links to the Multiverse

Articles

And Then Everything Changes by John Antonik at West Virginia Mountaineers.

First Evidence Of Parallel Universes: Our Universe Could Be Part Of A Soap Bubble at MessageToEagle.com.

French Open: Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic or Roger Federer? Actually, there's another possibility by Douglas Perry at OregonLive.com.

If Derrick Rose hadn’t gotten hurt, Bulls would have faced Thunder by Rick Morrissey at Chicago Sun-Times.

Is Obama JFK’s Alternate History? by David Simon Cowell at Pop Culture Has AIDS.

Would ABBA’s famous 1974 winning song have been titled “Dunkirk”? by Ian C. Racey.

Interviews

Matt Forbeck done by AudioTim.

Books

Book Review: Adrift on the Sea of Rains by Ian Sales done by Ian Shone at Alt Hist.

Deal Alert – BY THE BLOOD OF HEROES for $2.99! by Joseph Nassise at Shades of Reality.

Exploiting the Multiverse for Fun and Profit by Paul Melko at Tor/Forge's Blog.

Footnote Fairy Tale by Adam Kotsko at The New Inquiry.

Review of Clementine by Cherie Priest done by Thinking About Books.

Review of Colonization: Second Contact by Harry Turtledove done by Leigh Kimmel at The Billion Light-Year Bookshelf.

Review of Stalking the Vampire by Mike Resnick done by Thinking About Books.

Comics

COMIC REVIEW: Kranburn by Geek Syndicate.

Steampunk Summer by Grant Snider at Incidental Comics.

Films

The Mechanical Grave Now Available by Steve Pattee at Horror Talk.

RPGs

A Bit of History #38: Bad Archaeology by Ken Spencer at RPG.Net.

Art

'Star Wars' Steampunk: Artist Bjorn Hurri Recreates Iconic Characters by Crystal Bell at The Huffington Post.

Steam up your living space with Steampunk style! by Erika Erickson at Up North Live.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a volunteer editor for the Alt Hist magazine and a contributor to Just Below the Law. One of his short stories will be published in the upcoming Echelon Press anthology, Once Upon a Clockwork Tale (2013). When not writing he works as an attorney in the state of Illinois and enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Interview: Jennifer Ciotta

I now present my interview with Jennifer Ciotta, author of I, Putin.  Enjoy:

Can you tell us a bit about yourself?

By day, I'm a book manuscript editor with my own company, Pencey X Pages. Before that, I was the Editorial Director of Literary Traveler magazine for five years. I also edited at major publishing house, Pearson.

As the author of I, PUTIN, I spent a combined 12 years of my life researching and writing the book, including the completion of a Master's degree in Russian studies and creative writing from New York University. I was also a Peace Corps volunteer in Estonia.

What got you interested in writing?

When I was a little girl, my father would tell me bedtime stories and let me finish them. I truly believe that's what spurred my interest in writing, since I loved to write from an early age.

What is I, Putin about?

I, PUTIN delves into the psyche of Vladimir Putin. The world knows him as cold and ruthless, but is he human, like the rest of us? The story centers around the year 2000 Kursk submarine tragedy, when the submarine exploded and 118 sailors spiraled into the abyss. Putin had no reaction to the crisis for four and a half days, as Russians grew enraged waiting for a response. Putin seemed as if he didn't care about the dying sailors, but I reconstruct those crucial four and a half days in the novel and delve into why Putin waited so long to react. The answer may surprise you.

If you like books and movies where you can't tell what is fact and what is fiction, this book is for you. It's in the same vein of movies such as The King's Speech, The Queen and The Social Network, where you're running to your computer afterward and looking up what's real and what's not.

What inspired you to write your novel?

My inspiration for I, PUTIN stems from when I was living in a small village in Estonia as a Peace Corps volunteer in the year 2000. The Russian submarine, the Kursk, exploded with 118 sailors aboard. Newly elected president Vladimir Putin was at the helm of this crisis and chose unorthodox ways (unorthodox to a Westerner at least) to react. This was Putin’s first tragedy as president, and as I watched the situation unravel, I thought to myself: “Who is Vladimir Putin and what makes him tick?”

What sources did you use when doing research for the novel?

The Economist, Newsweek, TIME, New York Times, etc. and books such as FIRST PERSON (Putin's memoirs), CRY FROM THE DEEP by Ramsey Flynn, INSIDE PUTIN'S RUSSIA by Andrew Jack. Other sources I used were "Dead Soul" Vanity Fair article by Masha Gessen, Larry King interview with Putin, KGB training manual, "The Singing Revolution" documentary. Basically, I used anything I could get my hands on (in English) about Putin, the KGB, the Kursk disaster and exploring Russian history and identity.

I completed a thesis on Putin's KGB Mentality for my Master's degree at the Gallatin School at New York University.

How did you come up with the title?

That's a funny story. I didn't come up with the title. I went to a writers conference, thinking I had an epic title, VOLODYA, which is a friendly name (nickname) for Vladimir. I thought it was so great, and the other writers were like: "What the hell does that mean?"

So the writers, the conference leader and I kicked around about 10 new titles. A man, whom I greatly appreciate, came up with the name I, PUTIN. It's modeled after I, CLAUDIUS. And everyone loved it and it stuck.

That's why it's vital for writers to get feedback on both their book and title. A title can make or break sales.

Who designed the cover?

I'm so happy with my cover designer. His name is Kit Foster at www.kitfosterdesign.com. He really understood how to turn my words into the right vision for my book. I receive many compliments on the cover.

What has the reaction been among Russians to your novel?

That I know, only a couple Russians have read it so far. Two have given me feedback. One Russian loved it in its entirely, while another was taken aback by the alternate history aspect of the Soviet history. But the book mixes fact with fiction, and the response I always receive is: "What's fact and what's fiction?"

As someone who has studied Russian history and lived in Eastern Europe, what are some of the major differences between Western and Russian culture?

I feel Russians are similar to Americans. In both cultures, the people are gregarious and friendly, and the country is so big, they have many characters, like we do. What I mean by characters is people with big and/or humorous personalities.

A major cultural difference is Russians have this underlying history of "we all suffer together." Russians have had a long history of extreme suffering between wars, revolutions, the gulag, etc. As a people, they can look at each other and understand what it is to be truly Russian, since they share the same challenges and family history. In contrast, Americans have an underlying history of "we never give up." When times get tough, we band together. However, we don't appreciate true freedom because we've always been blessed with it.

Are there plans for a sequel to I, Putin?

I'm starting to write notes for the sequel to I, PUTIN. Gosha, Putin's fictional personal aide, has received such an overwhelming response so far, the book will center around him.

I did like Gosha, was he inspired by anyone in real life?

He is inspired by another character in the book. I don't want to give it away, but he may be a younger version of someone.

Any predictions for Putin's next term as president of Russia?

Putin's next term as president will be exciting to watch. He has to reinvent himself once again. To appease the opposition in the Russian middle class, he has to appear more liberal and responsive to their suggestions. My prediction is Putin will tweak his image. He will continue to appear young and energetic by staying in shape and perhaps getting more Botox or plastic surgery, and he may loosen his grip on the media a bit. For example, he may welcome some criticism here and there and a few select media poking fun at him. But the real test is if he can restore Russia's economy. Oil is what has made Putin so powerful. If he continues Russia's oil domination, it will be beneficial to him and keep him in power. If not, Putin will have a hard time taming the opposition.

Do you have any other projects you are working on?

Yes. I'm working on a quick and brutally honest guide on how to self-publish. I want aspiring authors to learn from my mistakes, so I'm going to cover what services to spend on, what to do yourself and why credentials are so important for indie authors. These are just a few of the topics I'll cover. I hope to have the ebook out in summer 2012.

What are common mistakes made by self-publishers that should be avoided?

My number one tip: Do not attempt the interior formatting for an ebook by yourself. I wasted six weeks doing it, and then I finally realized I needed to be a coder. So, I learned my lesson and I've paid a service to format both my paperback and Kindle interiors. The lesson is: You have to know where to spend money when self-publishing (which I cover in my forthcoming ebook).

Do you have any other advice for would be authors?

First, never give up. If you feel you have to get a book out of your system, and that feeling won't go away, you have to write it. Research, hone your craft and build your platform. Make your book the best it can possibly be.

Second, never give up. I had a creative writing professor tell me that I would sell one or two copies of I, PUTIN. In March 2012, the book had over 500 downloads in one day on the Kindle. Never, ever give up.

What are you reading now?

HUNTING THE TIGER by Christopher S. Stewart.

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Those interested in learning more about I, Putin should check out my review of the novel.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Review: "I, Putin" by Jennifer Ciotta

Grade: B+

What can be said about the controversial president of Russia, Vladimir Putin?  He has brought considerable economic growth and stability to Russia, but is accused of being undemocratic.  He is a martial arts enthusiast, whose "tough guy" image is dismissed as a publicity stunt.  So what are the real motivations of the three time president of Russia?  Jennifer Ciotta in her novel I, Putin attempts to answer that question.

We get a glimpse of the real Putin thanks to Gosha Golubev, his fictional personal aide. As Putin is re-elected for his third term as president, Gosha struggles to find a real life while dealing with the demands of working for the cold and stoic Putin.  As part of his duties, Gosha has to record Putin as he dictates his memoirs.  From this we learn about Putin humble upbringing.  As a child Putin and his parents shared a one-bedroom apartment with two other families.  Small and bullied at school, Putin gained self-confidence by learning judo and eventually rose through the ranks of the Soviet government as a KGB agent.

The meat of the story, however, focuses on how Putin dealt with the Kursk explosion.  On August 12, 2000, Putin is commemorating the anniversary of his father’s death by journeying to Narva, Estonia to learn about his father's WWII past, something the elder Putin refused to speak of. While there explosions rip through the prized submarine of the Russia navy, the Kursk, killing most of the 118 sailors on board and trapping the survivors underwater.

As the crisis becomes know, Putin returns to Moscow and learns that there is no hope in rescuing the trapped sailors.  Putin refuses to accept international aid for fear of exposing the weakness of the Russian military.  His failure to act cause violent protest that drive him from Moscow and into a secure location near the Estonian border. Putin, however, comes to distrust his bodyguards and believes that a shift of power may be on the horizon in Russia.  Putin now faces a dilemma: does he stay the course and doom Russia to chaos or does he ignore his instincts and accept outside help?

Though more secret history/historical fiction than alternate history, the book was still an enjoyable read.  Ciotta managed to turn Putin into a sympathetic character, something you do not see often in western media.  Other world leaders make cameos in the story.  Russia's first president Boris Yeltsin, who is close to being the comic relief in the novel, was often so intoxicated that Putin and other subordinates were forced to run the country in his stead.  Bill Clinton also makes an appearance and was one of the more compelling characters in the novel.  We get an insight into the former American president's abusive past and how he to came from nothing to become one of the most powerful men in the world.  If Ciotta ever writes another novel like I, Putin, I would love to see her take on Clinton.

I would love to give the novel a higher grade, but at 179 pages, it is a rather short read.  Ciotta often skimmed over parts of Putin's life that could have been given more attention.  Then there is Gosha, who is the source of the information about Putin.  I felt a strong connection to him, but his character was underdeveloped.  Nevertheless, the e-book price is reasonable and I recommend picking up the novel if you want to read a sympathetic tale about Russia's controversial president.

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Mitro is founder, editor and contributor of Alternate History Weekly Update. When he is not busy writing about his passion for alternate history, he spends his time working as a licensed attorney in the state of Illinois and dreams of being a published author himself one day.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

New Releases 4/24/2012

New Books (paperback and e-book)

The Mongoliad by Neal Stephenson, Erik Bear, Greg Bear, Joseph Brassey, E.D. deBirmingham, Cooper Moo and Mark Teppo

Description from Amazon.

The first novel to be released in The Foreworld Saga, The Mongoliad: Book One, is an epic-within-an-epic, taking place in 13th century. In it, a small band of warriors and mystics raise their swords to save Europe from a bloodthirsty Mongol invasion. Inspired by their leader (an elder of an order of warrior monks), they embark on a perilous journey and uncover the history of hidden knowledge and conflict among powerful secret societies that had been shaping world events for millennia.

But the saga reaches the modern world via a circuitous route. In the late 19th century, Sir Richard F. Burton, an expert on exotic languages and historical swordsmanship, is approached by a mysterious group of English martial arts aficionados about translating a collection of long-lost manuscripts. Burton dies before his work is finished, and his efforts were thought lost until recently rediscovered by a team of amateur archaeologists in the ruins of a mansion in Trieste, Italy. From this collection of arcana, the incredible tale of The Mongoliad was recreated.

Full of high adventure, unforgettable characters, and unflinching battle scenes, The Mongoliad ignites a dangerous quest where willpower and blades are tested and the scope of world-building is redefined.

New Books (paperback)

Bitter Seeds by Ian Tegillis

Description from Amazon.

It’s 1939. The Nazis have supermen, the British have demons, and one perfectly normal man gets caught in between.

Raybould Marsh is a British secret agent in the early days of the Second World War, haunted by something strange he saw on a mission during the Spanish Civil War: a German woman with wires going into her head who looked at him as if she knew him.

When the Nazis start running missions with people who have unnatural abilities—a woman who can turn invisible, a man who can walk through walls, and the woman Marsh saw in Spain who can use her knowledge of the future to twist the present—Marsh is the man who has to face them. He rallies the secret warlocks of Britain to hold the impending invasion at bay. But magic always exacts a price. Eventually, the sacrifice necessary to defeat the enemy will be as terrible as outright loss would be.

Alan Furst meets Alan Moore in the opening of an epic of supernatural alternate history, Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis is a tale of a twentieth century like ours and also profoundly different.

I, Putin by Jennifer Ciotta

Description from Amazon.

Gosha Golubev is the personal aide of President Vladimir Putin, who has been in power for twelve years in the Russian Federation. As Putin is re-elected for his third term as president, Gosha struggles with his role as boss' shadow. He has watched Putin evolve into the cold, stoic figure he is in 2012. But Gosha remembers the first few months of his first presidency, where an event shook Putin to his very core, nearly costing him the presidency and changing him into the leader the world knows today. As Putin dictates his memoirs in first person to Gosha, the event reveals itself: It is August 12, 2000. Putin is the president of Russia. To commemorate the anniversary of his father’s death, he journeys to Narva, Estonia to unravel the elder’s mysterious World War II past. As he begins his journey, an unexpected crisis rocks the Russian Federation. Explosions rip through the prized submarine of the Russia navy, the Kursk. 118 sailors are now in a fight for their lives, trapped in a steel crypt. Putin returns to Moscow, where violent protesters await him and cause him to flee. He is now a man on the run and Russia is in complete chaos with a looming threat of a shift in power. Will Putin save the sailors and take back his beloved Russia, or will he end up as he started–alone and powerless?

New Books (e-book)

Future History by Ronald Washburn

Description from Barnes & Noble.

A scientist from the future and his Daughter are plunged back in time where they are recruited to assassinate Adolph Hitler at the height of World War II. Of course it's bit more complicated than that...

New Short Stories (e-book)

The Sharp End by Joseph Nassise

Description from Amazon.

March 1921. The War to End All Wars continues, with no foreseeable end in sight. The Central Powers control most of Europe, with only a thin stretch of French coastline still in Allied hands. A beleaguered Britain fights resolutely on, but everyone knows that without the continued support of the United States it would fall within weeks. Even that may not be enough to defeat the brilliance of the Central Powers' scientists and the advantages their weird science gives to their troops as wave after wave of zombie troops are sent against the Allied front lines...

On May 1st, 2012 HarperVoyager will publish BY THE BLOOD OF HEROES, the first book in the new zombie steampunk alternate history series known as The Great Undead War by internationally bestselling author Joseph Nassise.

Here, for the first time, is the story behind the story. Follow the hero of The Great Undead War series, Captain Michael "Madman" Burke, leader of Burke's Marauders, in the early days of the war, when the Germans are just beginning their field tests of a new weapon.

A weapon that will eventually come to change the face of the war itself, that will resurrect the bodies of the dead, both friend and foe alike, and turn them into flesh-eating monsters. A weapon that will come to be known as corpse gas.

Contains:
* The Sharp End - a prequel story introducing the characters and events of the Great Undead War series
* A Timeline of the Great Undead War, identifying major events and military battles
* The first two chapters of BY THE BLOOD OF HEROES, the first book in the Great Undead War series

To fans, authors and publishers...

Do you want to see your work given a shout out on our New Releases segment? Contact Mitro at ahwupdate@gmail.com.  We are looking for works of alternate history, counterfactual history, steampunk, historical fantasy, time travel or anything that warps history beyond our understanding.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Breaking News: Author’s 12 years of research turns into alternate history novel about Vladimir Putin

New York writer Jennifer Ciotta has a unique fascination with Russian President Vladimir Putin. She has researched and studied him for over 12 years, including the completion of a Master’s degree in Russian studies and creative writing from NYU.

Her new book, titled I, Putin, is a captivating story about human interaction, compassion and tough decisions set against the real-life tragedy which occurred in the year 2000 when the Kursk, a Russian submarine, exploded with 118 sailors aboard. Newly elected President Vladimir Putin was at the helm of this crisis and chose unorthodox ways (unorthodox to a Westerner at least) to react. This was one of his first major activities as president.

Ciotta says, “History can be very instructive, even when set to fiction. People have forgotten what happened when the Kursk submarine exploded and sank into the abyss. This is when Putin took total control of the Russian media. His experience with the Kursk tragedy turned him into the leader he is today—it changed him forever. Putin wavered on his decision to rescue the sailors. This response was seen as very Soviet since Gorbachev waited 18 days to address Chernobyl. The Russian media vilified Putin and Russians voiced their anger, but he ended up seizing control.”

Her story offers very credible, timely and important insights into how Putin makes decisions and exercises iron-handed control even today.

Premise

What happens when Vladimir Putin is faced with a decision so harrowing, it changes him forever? 118 submariners spiraling into the abyss, a country in chaos and a president who seems not to care. Through the eyes of a first person Vladimir Putin, and his personal aide Gosha, discover what motivates the man behind Russia. Is he the cold, ruthless Vladimir Putin we know, or is he … human?

About the Author

Jennifer Ciotta spent 12 years writing and researching I, Putin. She received a Master’s degree in Russian studies (with a focus on Putin) and creative writing from New York University. While at NYU, she studied with the Department of Russian and Slavic Studies and completed a thesis on Putin’s KGB Mentality. On the writing side, her short stories have appeared in Del Sol Review and New Voices in Fiction. She was also a Peace Corps volunteer in Estonia—a main setting for the book —from 2000-2002. She was the Editorial Director of Literary Traveler magazine for five years, and currently, she is a book manuscript editor at Pencey X Pages and an advisory editor at Author Salon. She lives in New York.

What People Are Saying

A wonderful blend of fact and fiction from beginning to end. I found myself totally involved with the disaster as it evolved. It had me reading late into the night wanting to know if perhaps the outcome had been changed. More than that, it sent me on a search to read more about Putin especially since he has been in the news so much recently.

Sara Costello, Amazon reviewer

Despite the complex topic, the novel is an easy yet captivating read containing both high quality content and a psychological approach to Putin's persona. The book also focuses around the personal tragedy of the family of the submarine lieutenant who was destined to die in the sunken Kursk. It's impressive Ciotta was able to intertwine Putin's life with the personal stories of other characters portrayed in the book. I, Putin is one of the books you will remember long after reading.

Tatyana Mucci, Amazon reviewer

Editor's Note

Jennifer has been kind enough to send me a review copy, so expect a review of I, Putin in the near future. In the meantime you can check out the novel if you have a Kindle or Kindle app, or wait until April 2012 when it comes out in paperback.  Those wishing to contact Jennifer about the book can reach her at jennifer.ciotta@gmail.com.