Nan McCarthy

author of Since You Went Away, Chat, Connect, Crash, & Live ’Til I Die

  • Home
  • About
  • Titles
    • Since You Went Away, Part Three: Summer
    • Since You Went Away, Part Two: Spring
    • Since You Went Away, Part One: Winter
    • Chat: book one
    • Connect: book two
    • Crash: book three
    • Coming Soon
    • Live ’Til I Die
    • Chat (1998 edition)
    • Connect (1998 edition)
    • Crash (1998 edition)
    • Quark Design
  • Excerpts
    • Live ’Til I Die: excerpt
  • Blog
  • News
  • Events
  • Shop
    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part Three: Summer)
    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part Two: Spring)
    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part One: Winter)
    • Buy: Chat (book 1)
    • Buy: Connect (book 2)
    • Buy: Crash (book 3)
    • Buy: Live ’Til I Die
  • Contact
  • Amazon
  • iTunes
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Tag: 2014 edition

0 New print editions celebrate the 25th anniversary of Chat

  • March 13, 2020
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books · Chat: book one · Connect: book two · Crash: book three · fiction · Publishing · self-publishing · Writing
It’s been 25 years since I published the first edition of Chat in 1995. What better way to celebrate than by releasing print versions of the latest editions of Chat, Connect, & Crash?
Nan McCarthy

You might remember that, after I self-published Chat in 1995 and Connect in 1996, Simon & Schuster bought the rights to the trilogy and published it in trade paperback in 1998. (For a more detailed timeline of the series click here.) The books had a good run, and in 2012 I finally regained the rights to the series. In 2014 I released completely new editions of the books in ebook format, featuring the original, never-before-published ending to Crash.

Although I’d been publishing under the Rainwater Press imprint since the 1990s, things had changed a lot in the publishing industry when I decided to re-publish the trilogy in 2014. I was fairly well up to speed on print production but I’d never before published my own ebooks (which S&S had taken care of for me in 1999). The learning curve was high but if you know me you know how I love a challenge.

With the help of cover designer David High and ebook production wiz Kevin Callahan, the revamped editions of Chat, Connect, & Crash were released as ebooks in the spring of 2014. By that time I was two years into working on a new project (Since You Went Away) and eager to get back to it.

I told myself I’d worry about the print versions of Chat, Connect, & Crash later. Meanwhile I continued working on Since You Went Away, and what I thought was going to be one book turned out to be four (with Part Four coming out later this year). Having put my toe back in the publishing waters, in the last three years I’ve been able to simultaneously release each of the books in the Since You Went Away series in both ebook and print formats.

Now here we are, six years later, and I’ve finally had a chance to tear myself away from finishing Since You Went Away long enough to focus on releasing the print versions of Chat, Connect, & Crash (once again with the help of David and Kevin). Hard to believe it’s been 25 years since I first self-published that little black book called Chat. Sometimes—if you’re patient enough—things have a way of falling into place.

 

The 2014 editions of Chat, Connect, & Crash now available in print.

 

 Click here to purchase the print editions on Amazon: Chat, Connect, & Crash.

 

The Chat, Connect, Crash series is now available from bookstores, libraries, & other retailers via Ingram distribution. Ask for the book by name at your local bookseller or library.

 

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

5 New ebook editions of Chat, Connect, Crash now available

  • April 28, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Chat: book one · Connect: book two · Crash: book three · News

Chat Connect Crash new editions.640x333

New 2014 editions of Chat, Connect, & Crash are now available from Amazon, iTunes, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo.

Nan McCarthy

It’s been almost twenty years since I first wrote and self-published Chat in 1995. Now the books have come full circle and are once again self-published under the Rainwater Press imprint. One of the things I’m most excited about is the original ending to Crash—as it was written in 1997—has been restored. I’ve also added details to some key scenes and streamlined the message headers for a smoother and better reading experience. Another thing I’m excited about are the new covers by David High of High Design. David designed the original, self-published editions of the trilogy back in 1995, and I’m beyond delighted with his fresh, eye-popping designs for the new edition.

The books are currently available in ebook format. The year 2020 will mark the 25th anniversary of the Chat, Connect, & Crash series. By then I hope to be able to offer print versions of the books, along with a few other surprises. (I’ve also been working on a new novel completely unrelated to this series, scheduled for release at the end of 2017—stay tuned.) Meanwhile, click the links below for purchase information on the new editions of Chat, Connect, & Crash. And, as always, thank you for your support.

Click here to find online booksellers for Chat: book one.

Click here to find online booksellers for Connect: book two.

Click here to find online booksellers for Crash: book three.

Questions? Please use the contact form on this website to contact Nan.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

1 Buy: Chat (book 1)

  • April 28, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Chat: book one · fiction · Shop

chat.100x154.smallChat: Book One by Nan McCarthy (Rainwater Press 2014 edition) is now available from these online booksellers:

amazon logo.120x35 (small) Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513 nook logo.100x44(small) small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Click one of the bookseller links above to be taken directly to the purchase page for the new ebook edition of Chat.

This edition is currently only available in ebook format.

Please follow this blog for news and availability of print versions.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

1 Buy: Connect (book 2)

  • April 28, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Connect: book two · fiction · Shop

connect.100x154.smallConnect: Book Two by Nan McCarthy (Rainwater Press 2014 edition) is now available from these online booksellers:

amazon logo.120x35 (small)Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513nook logo.100x44(small)small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Click one of the bookseller links above to be taken directly to the purchase page for the new ebook edition of Connect.

This edition is currently only available in ebook format.

Please follow this blog for news and availability of print versions.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

1 Buy: Crash (book 3)

  • April 28, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Crash: book three · fiction · Shop

crash.100x154.smallCrash: Book Three by Nan McCarthy (Rainwater Press 2014 edition) is now available from these online booksellers:

amazon logo.120x35 (small)

Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513nook logo.100x44(small)small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Click one of the bookseller links above to be taken directly to the purchase page for the new ebook edition of Crash.

This edition is currently only available in ebook format.

Please follow this blog for news and availability of print versions.

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

 

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

3 Chat: book one

  • March 25, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Chat: book one · fiction · Titles

Chat: book one
Nan McCarthy
(Rainwater Press, 2014) 132 pages

In the days before Facebook, Skype, and Twitter…

Two strangers begin a conversation online. It’s 1995, and the Internet is new and uncharted territory. No status updates, no photos, no tweets, no video chats. All they have to share with one another are their words.

Max, a restless advertising copywriter who’s new to the online world, boldly strikes up an email conversation with Bev, a tough-minded book editor who’s been online since the ’80s. With charm, wit, and persistence, Max chips away at Bev’s reluctant façade until the two are sharing secrets they wouldn’t dream of telling anyone in “real life.”

Hailed as “Silicon Valley’s Story of O,” the story of Bev and Max’s relationship gradually becomes more intense, unfolding entirely through their online messages. Since Chat’s first publication in 1995, readers have found themselves unable to resist the temptation to “eavesdrop” on Bev and Max’s increasingly intimate correspondence as she slowly opens up to him and he becomes more fascinated by her.

This newest edition of the acclaimed Chat, Connect, and Crash series offers a snapshot of the emerging technology and online culture of the 1990s, but the story of Bev and Max is—above all else—entertaining, compelling, and timeless.

 

critical praise for the original chat, connect, crash series:

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” — Mademoiselle

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first page, we’re hooked.” — House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Draws you from page to page. Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” — The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” — Glamour

“[Bev and Max’s] mingling is electric.” — Washington Post Book World

“A hip look at the Internet cyberculture and how it has changed the dynamic of present-day relationships.” — The Review Zone

“Fully drawn, believable characters. There’s a very warm body at the end of each cold computer connection.” — The Orange County Register

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” — Syracuse Herald-American

“A love story that is completely modern, full of passion, wit and fun.” — Central PA Magazine

“[McCarthy] gives the headstrong-girl-meets-self-sufficient-boy story a refreshing twist.” — Publishers Weekly

“So authentic—down to the convoluted stumbling that takes place in cyber-relationships—that it’s unexpectedly entertaining.” — St. Louis Post Dispatch

“McCarthy has brought 18th-century epistolary novels into modern times.” — Atlanta Journal Constitution

amazon logo.120x35 (small)Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513

nook logo.100x44(small)

small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

1 Connect: book two

  • March 25, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Connect: book two · fiction · Titles

Connect: book two
Nan McCarthy
(Rainwater Press, 2014) 132 pages

The story of Bev and Max continues…

In the second novel of her acclaimed series, author Nan McCarthy continues the wild ride that began in Chat. It’s now 1996, and Bev and Max, two strangers who met online, find their lives unexpectedly intertwined. As their words and actions propel them into unexplored territory, Bev and Max’s relationship grows more intense—and complex—than they ever imagined.

Praised as “a lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope,” the story of Bev and Max unfolds entirely through their online messages. Readers once again find themselves unable to resist the temptation to “eavesdrop” on the pair’s sexually charged, humorous, and thought-provoking exchanges. In a time before Facebook, Skype, and Twitter, when there were no status updates, no photos, no tweets, no video chats, all Bev and Max have to share with one another are their words—or so it may seem.

In this newest edition of her Chat, Connect, and Crash series, McCarthy offers up a snapshot of the mid-1990s Internet culture and its changing dynamic of human interaction. As Bev and Max gradually reveal themselves by what they choose to say—and leave unsaid—their seductive, addicting, and all-too-human adventures will draw you from first page to last.

 

critical praise for the original chat, connect, crash series:

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” — Mademoiselle

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first page, we’re hooked.” — House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Draws you from page to page. Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” — The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” — Glamour

“[Bev and Max’s] mingling is electric.” — Washington Post Book World

“A hip look at the Internet cyberculture and how it has changed the dynamic of present-day relationships.” — The Review Zone

“Fully drawn, believable characters. There’s a very warm body at the end of each cold computer connection.” — The Orange County Register

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” — Syracuse Herald-American

“A love story that is completely modern, full of passion, wit and fun.” — Central PA Magazine

“[McCarthy] gives the headstrong-girl-meets-self-sufficient-boy story a refreshing twist.” — Publishers Weekly

“So authentic—down to the convoluted stumbling that takes place in cyber-relationships—that it’s unexpectedly entertaining.” — St. Louis Post Dispatch

“McCarthy has brought 18th-century epistolary novels into modern times.” — Atlanta Journal Constitution

amazon logo.120x35 (small)Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513

nook logo.100x44(small)

small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

10 Crash: book three

  • March 25, 2014
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Books · Crash: book three · fiction · Titles

Crash: book three
Nan McCarthy
(Rainwater Press, 2014) 126 pages

Featuring the original ending—never before seen in print!

Bev and Max can’t turn back now… or can they?

The unforgettable adventure chronicled in Chat and Connect, the first two novels in Nan McCarthy’s cyber series, continues in a third installment that’s as fast-paced and addicting as ever. The year is 1997, and readers are once again invited to “eavesdrop” on Bev and Max’s private correspondence.

When their story began, the unlikely pair—two strangers who met online—had nothing to share but their words. Now, following the path set in motion by their increasingly intimate exchanges, they must contemplate the consequences of their deepening relationship. Filled with sexual tension, suspense, and humor, Bev and Max’s messages arouse in them a desire to do and say things they’d never have dreamed of before their lives intersected.

This newest edition of the trilogy features McCarthy’s original ending to Crash as it was written in 1997. Its first time in print, the uncut conclusion offers readers an insider’s glimpse of Bev and Max as they were meant to be seen—at their most human, vulnerable, and authentic.

Heralded as “Chekhov for the ‘90s,” with “fully drawn, believable characters,” the story of Bev and Max’s electric mingling—with its jaw-dropping conclusion—serves as a powerful reminder that life may be fleeting, but love is forever.

 

critical praise for the original chat, connect, crash series:

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” — Mademoiselle

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first page, we’re hooked.” — House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Draws you from page to page. Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” — The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” — Glamour

“[Bev and Max’s] mingling is electric.” — Washington Post Book World

“A hip look at the Internet cyberculture and how it has changed the dynamic of present-day relationships.” — The Review Zone

“Fully drawn, believable characters. There’s a very warm body at the end of each cold computer connection.” — The Orange County Register

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” — Syracuse Herald-American

“A love story that is completely modern, full of passion, wit and fun.” — Central PA Magazine

“[McCarthy] gives the headstrong-girl-meets-self-sufficient-boy story a refreshing twist.” — Publishers Weekly

“So authentic—down to the convoluted stumbling that takes place in cyber-relationships—that it’s unexpectedly entertaining.” — St. Louis Post Dispatch

“McCarthy has brought 18th-century epistolary novels into modern times.” — Atlanta Journal Constitution

amazon logo.120x35 (small)

Download_Chat_on_iBooks_Badge_US-UK_110x40_090513

nook logo.100x44(small)

small kobo logo cropped

 

 

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Share on Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

  • Amazon
  • iTunes
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Follow Following
    • Nan McCarthy
    • Join 126 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Nan McCarthy
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: