WomenWrite 2024

So I went to the Mississippi Christian Living writer retreat, named the above this year. It was held at the Bill Waller Crafts Center on the Mississippi Natchez Trace in the Ridgeland area. The building is the home of the Mississippi Craftsman’s Guild and has a lovely shop with finely crafted items, several meeting areas, a large display area for Guild events, etc. Just a great place to have this event.

I got a lot out of the conference this year in that it was very focused on getting your work up to professional standards and giving resources for that as well as giving guidance to getting your work noticed in the larger literary community. The keynote speaker gave a lot of information on story structure, character development, plot development, etc. I enjoyed thinking about how to apply what she was saying to my current work-in-progress as well as seeing how closely what I had done in Hurricane Baby lined up with what she said.

A lot of the marketing tips I took special attention to, also–trying to mine for ideas of places I could go and get my book out in front of people once it’s released. One woman mentioned organizing virtual book clubs using Google Meets, and I am giving that some serious thought. I think I will get in touch with her over email for more information on how to do that.

I handed out a lot of my sell-sheet and my new bookmarks I made to hand out at events as well. So hopefully I was able to scare up some pre-orders this weekend myself.

And we did some writing as well–I wrote a scene for my work-in-progress; it may stay, or it may go. But it was a freeing thing to write in a fresh bright space without feeling what happens when I work from home–like there’s this chore or that shore to catch up. That sort of thing. So it was really nice.

For locals to the metro Jackson, Mississippi area, I’ll be reading from Hurricane Baby at the Brandon Library Arts Brunch on April 20, 2024. The event runs from 10 a.m.-noon, and registration is at this link: https://cmrls.evanced.info/signup/EventDetails?EventId=20155&backTo=Calendar&startDate=2024/04/14

Winding up that this event was very interesting–I happened across a Facebook page for my city that had an announcement for the event, calling for authors to sign up. I called immediately and left my name and number for the organizer, Amy Lee. She called me back and sounded very happy to have me involved in the event! I believe there’s about ten authors being featured, so it will be nice to see who all is involved!

It’s all getting more and more like it’s actually happening with each milestone I pass. Thanks for reading and sharing these highlights with me!

Moving Along

I finished a good twelve-page chunk of my work-in-progress done this week! Now I need to map what happens in the next few sections so I’ll have more to work from.

I go to a local writing retreat next weekend and hopefully learn a little about marketing my work. I will be armed with my bookmarks for Hurricane Baby to pass around if anyone is interested. I’m looking forward to hearing from the other speakers as well.

Otherwise I have had a rough week, and I don’t really want to get into it.

Next week I’ll have a little more to talk about that’s good. Watch this space!

News From My Publisher

My book has been live with a pre-order button on Amazon less than a week. On Friday, my publisher sent me this screenshot of my Amazon sales rankings, out of all the books published to the site.

To say I was gobsmacked would be an understatement. I don’t know how the algorithms on Amazon work. But my publisher indicated that these numbers mean the books are getting A LOT of attention from somewhere. Pre-orders aren’t tracked by Amazon until the book is released. And the rankings change hourly. But for a debut author with a small press to be able to be discovered enough to generate these numbers? Bizarre.

I am hoping, hoping, hoping to get back into my work-in-progress tomorrow. I have a lot of angst to work out, and I think this new book is the place to do it. Thanks, as always, for reading!

SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT!

MORE GOOD NEWS!

I found out this week that Hurricane Baby: Stories has been nominated for a Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters 2024 Fiction Award! I had heard of this award but didn’t know much about it; you can look up more information about it here.

CELEBRATING my first-ever Pushcart Prize nomination for a story from Hurricane Baby: Stories titled, “Neighbors Helping Neighbors” Thanks to Madville Publishing for this recognition!

HEY! Hurricane Baby: Stories made a list! Thank you to the Southern Review of Books! Check it out!

Advance copies of Hurricane Baby: Stories are in! Aren’t they pretty!?

Go to the Hurricane Baby: Stories page and order online from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Madville, Bookshop, Wal-Mart, Target, Goodreads, and StoryGraph!

Good Evening!

I didn’t post yesterday because we were traveling by car most of the day.

Just got the notification that Hurricane Baby is up for pre-order on Barnes & Noble! You can click on the Hurricane Baby: Stories page on the left-hand side of the blog and then click on the preorder button provided, or you can go to this link (paperback is the only format available there right now):

https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/hurricane-baby-julie-liddell-whitehead/1145144169?ean=9781956440959

Pre-orders are really important to get buzz going early for the book, so feel free to take advantage of these connections! Thank you for reading!

Housekeeping Details

Just heard from my publisher–my full book cover is final, and I have a QR code I can slap on all my marketing materials so people can order just by pointing their phones at it! I just ordered VistaPrint bookmarks that I plan to hand out at events.

I have one event coming up–Hurricane Baby the play is having a staged reading coming up. I’ve got everything ready to go to it all lined up–hotel room, ride, etc. I’m looking forward to that. More details will be available closer to time. But I’m looking forward to it.

My new writing has been on hold lately. We have had a lot going on in my family and in my work life, and I’ve honestly been too exhausted to concentrate on my work-in-progress. I hope to be able to change that soon.

And my publisher has said pre-orders are already coming in. So that made me feel good!

Whew. Will ride already. Wish me well with further info and events to come soon! See code below to order Hurricane Baby: Stories for delivery August 2024!

Terror

So I wrote last week about being really excited that Hurricane Baby had opened for pre-orders.

This week I’m writing about the terror.

I started having really high levels of anxiety about the idea of my book in the hands of readers and thinking about “What if they don’t like it? What will people think about me as a person after reading this?”

And I just kept letting my mind spin out of control with those thoughts.

What finally broke the spiral was an email from Lisa Cooper Ellison, an author I admire very much. She wrote about her recent micro nonfiction that had been published in the Tiny Love Stories feature in the New York Times and how she simultaneously felt a surge of pride and a wave of fear. Fear of not handling all the attention in a good way, fear of not being able to leverage the opportunities the publication might give her, etc.

It felt so validating that someone else felt the same kind of feelings I was feeling when something so wonderful had happened in her writing career. I wrote her an email letting her know that she had helped me come to grips with my anxiety.

So now the fear has worn itself out after bedeviling me for several days. I feel much better knowing that those feelings are common to other writers also and can be overcome.

So I am back to normal now (as close as I’ll ever get to that) and am ready to continue this journey. Onward!

FOR SALE!

Good afternoon! This past Friday night, I got the note from Madville Publishing that my book, Hurricane Baby: Stories, is now LIVE FOR PRE-ORDERS!

Go to the left-hand menu and click on the book’s title to see the brand-new webpage for my book, and you will see a button to click to pre-order my book through Madville Publishing’s site with delivery scheduled for August 20, 2024. As the book goes live in other places like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Bookshop.org, I will add those buttons for you to click on as well. If you want to support your local bookshop as well, you can go and request that they order/stock it.

This page will be updated as I do events, readings, signings, and appearances. If you would like me to come do a reading or speak at your event, school, library, or festival, use the contact form to let me know, and I will see what I can work out!

This past weekend, I went to the annual meeting of the Mississippi Philological Association, which was held by the Mississippi School of Math and Science on the campus of Mississippi University for Women, where I studied for my MFA. I read the first story in the collection, “Still Waters”, and was terrified the whole time. I’ve never read anything as intense as that story out loud in public before this, and it showed. My mouth was so dry I wasn’t sure I was going to be able to finish it. It was well-received by the largely academic crowd, which made me feel good.

But this event, where I know people are going to be spending their hard-earned money on a book I wrote, is momentous. My life is not going to be the same again after this year. But I think that’s good. Keep growing, keep writing, keep learning. That’s my takeaway. Onward and upward!

Not Quite Ready

Reading proof pages hopefully for the last time. So that has been the work this weekend.

I’ve also been busy on my work-in-progress Looking For Home. I’ve got the last third as far as I can take it without having the other parts written. And knowing me, I’ll do something in the other two sections that will necessitate more changes in that last third section. So I am pushing along!

It’s been a little difficult doing the switch because that old talk in my head about wasting my time is still there! I was hoping that having a published book would quell that voice forever. But apparently in my mind, I’m still not allowed to write just because I enjoy it and I’m good at it.

I have to remind myself that I don’t have competing priorities anymore. I work for an employer and that’s important. I do some housework and cook meals at night. But otherwise, my free time is for me to work on what I feel led to do. My writing is one way I feel that I can reach out to people and make them think about things they might would rather not. And that’s important. No matter what else needs doing–my writing is important, and I can spend time on it without guilt.

Back to proofreading! Onward!

Hurricane Baby – Press

Dixon Books Signing, Natchez Democrat, December 13, 2025.

Tombigbee Tales | 20th Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina with Rod Davis and Julie Liddell Whitehead | August 29, 2025

Daily ‘Sip with Walt Grayson, WJTV, August 27, 2025.

Lunch and Learn, Prince George’s County Office of Human Rights, August 26, 2025

Julie Liddell Whitehead’s Hurricane Baby: Stories, Studio 3 with Jessica Wilkinson, WLBT-Jackson, MS, August 18, 2025.

Possumtown Book Fest, Columbus Dispatch, August 17, 2025.

How Being a Good Literary Citizen Leads to Stronger Book Launches, The Bottom Line with Jane Friedman, August 14, 2025.

“What to do When You Don’t Know What to Do”: A Conversation with Julie Liddell Whitehead by Katharine Armbrester, Southern Review of Books, August 6, 2025.

Video podcast of Writers Drinking Whiskey with Bill Hincy posted July 23, 2025.

Second Possumtown Book Fest welcomes 19 authors to Columbus, Columbus Dispatch, July 20, 2025

Oh My Word by Katie Ginn Podcast on Apple, Spotify, and Amazon Music on June 5, 2025.

Podcast with Fine Beats and Cheeses, “Music as Inspiration with Julie Whitehead,” March 11, 2025

Lunching with Books Set at the Library Jan. 9, Pontotoc Progress, January 8, 2025.

Video of Alec Hawkins’ channel on YouTube: “How to write and publish your first book” January 7, 2025

Video of Louisiana Book Festival’s Madville Press panel, November 2024

Video of Mississippi Book Festival panel “Mad About Madville” September 2024

Podcast on Tombigbee Tales with Shannon Evans, Mississippi Author Julie Liddell Whitehead, W Girl Turned Novelist, October 18, 2024.

Hurricane Baby: Stories made a list! Thank you to the Southern Review of Books! 

Authors Guild Member Spotlight, October 8, 2024

Magnolia Tribune, syndicated across the state, September 4, 2024

Good Things with Rebecca Turner, SuperTalk Mississippi, August 29, 2024

First Person Singular “To Live For” with Sari Botton, August 28, 2024

Studio 3 WLBT, television appearance, Jackson, MS August 23, 2024

Mississippi Arts Hour interview, Mississippi Public Broadcasting, August 18, 2024

Hurricane Baby: Stories, Mississippi Books Page, The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson MS, August 18, 2024.

Rooted Magazine, August 14, 2024

Mississippi Christian Living, August 2024:

Starkville Daily News, July 29, 2024.

I’m listening to Tombigbee Tales | Mississippi Author Julie Liddell Whitehead Hurricane Baby Interview on Podbean, check it out!

Julie Liddell Whitehead Images

Download this image.
Download this image.

Hurricane Baby Q&A with Julie Liddell Whitehead

Q: What is the main point or purpose of the book?

A: I always write to answer a question I have. In the case of Hurricane Baby, I wondered: What would happen to someone who endured Hurricane Katrina without suffering physical losses but was destroyed psychologically? That’s where the crux of the book lies for me.

Q: What was the most surprising or shocking thing you learned from writing the book? How did it make you feel?

A: How much darkness spilled out of me. So much destruction and death and sin just came pouring out. And happy endings were very elusive. I couldn’t think of any way for events to end happily ever after. All the moral choices that presented themselves seemed to lead to the character having to decide between the frying pan and the fire.

Q: How did your choices of how to frame and organize the book impact your writing?

A: I framed it first as a novel with Wendy and Judd’s indiscretion being the action that gets events moving, and all the subsequent action revolved around that. In 2022, when I picked it back up again, I decided to keep the most emotionally impactful scenes and rewrite them as short stories. About half of the original novel remains—some scenes were rewritten to apply to other characters than were in the original, while I wrote several brand-new sections to explore all these new characters.

Q: What are some of the ethical, moral, or social implications of the book? How did it challenge you as a writer?

A: One important theme of the book is the fragility of conventional morality when faced with traumatic situations. In this book, the trauma causes all the characters to do things they would never dream of doing under normal circumstances. Wendy can’t articulate why she gave in to Judd. Tommy had never taken a drink in his life until after he learned that Amy Thompson didn’t make it. Dinah is helpless in the face of what’s happening to Mike. James and Lori’s relationship was doomed because of the trauma each had to face alone.

Q: Which character did you relate to or empathize with the most as a writer and why?

A: Actually, I think Dinah Seabrook is the most appealing character in the book. I know I felt very protective of her as I was writing about her. She stayed strong in circumstances that certainly would have sent me around the bend had I been her. She’s watching her world and life and marriage and husband fall apart, and all she has to hold on to is her faith. Writing her made for some bright spots in the book.

Q: Which character did you dislike the most and why?

A: Jack Rawson, for sure. His dismissive attitude towards Wendy in the labor room and her dislike of him points to some history between them we don’t get to see. And his acting so possessive of her after Ray dies and Judd comes back to Hattiesburg comes off as him thinking he’s in charge of her now?  Ugh.

Q: What was the most memorable or shocking scene or twist in the story when you were writing it?

A: Actually it came pretty early. I had only planned to write a short story about Wendy and Judd’s encounter during the hurricane. After I finished it, I thought I was done. But a few days after I thought I finished it, I thought, “Wouldn’t it be a kick in the pants for Judd to find out she was pregnant and wonder for the rest of his life if it was his baby?” And that question led to more questions, and pretty soon, I had a book.

Q: How did writing this book impact you? It has so many dark elements; how did you handle writing some of the more difficult sections?

A: In some ways, it was very exciting; I felt I was stretching myself as a writer and telling an important story that showed how the storm affected people not on the coast or in New Orleans. The challenge came this last time through to match what I was writing now with what I had written then. This time, I was choosing to put the characters in impossible situations and choosing to keep twisting the knife and raising the stakes. I used to be a very binary thinker—right was right and wrong was wrong. Writing Hurricane Baby taught me nuance—that sometimes all the choices people face are bad choices.

Selected Links to Julie Liddell Whitehead’s Journalism

“Mental healthcare professionals on job in disaster’s wake,” Mississippi Business Journal, October 24, 2005.

“Far from storm’s landfall, metro businesses still see impact.” Mississippi Business Journal, September 12, 2005.

Bipolar Disorder & Coping with Indirect Trauma, bpHope, January 9, 2023.