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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /srv/users/sandra/apps/sandra/public/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114I always ask new members of the Build Book Buzz book marketing group on Facebook<\/a> to tell us a little about themselves and their books. When Sue William Silverman shared that her memoir, <\/em>Love Sick: One Woman\u2019s Journey through Sexual Addiction<\/a>, had been turned into a Lifetime TV original movie, I wanted to know more — lots more — about her book to movie experience and thought you would, too. She’s here today with a Q&A that gives you a behind-the-scenes look at the process. Sue is also the author of <\/em>The Pat Boone Fan Club: My Life as a White Anglo-Saxon Jew<\/a>, which was a finalist in <\/em>Foreword Reviews’ IndieFab Book of the Year Award. The author of several other books, Sue also teaches in the low-residency MFA in Writing program at Vermont College of Fine Arts. Learn more at SueWilliamSilverman.com<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n If you’ve dreamed of seeing your book on the big screen, you’ll want to read this fascinating Q&A with Sue Williams Silverman.<\/em><\/p>\n My literary agent, via her subsidiary agent in Hollywood, made initial overtures to some producers. Ironically, at the same time, an independent Hollywood producer happened to see Love Sick in the Beverly Hills public library.<\/p>\n This producer found my phone number on my website and called me directly. I put her in touch with the agents and the rest, as they say, is history.<\/p>\n It wasn\u2019t too long between the contract signing and the movie airing on TV\u2014under two years. However, there was a long delay\u2014maybe five years or so\u2014before I was actually offered a contract.<\/p>\n I first received an option from Lifetime, which is standard. But then Lifetime underwent personnel changes (new president, etc.), and the option ultimately expired. A few years later it was renewed, a contract was offered, and the movie finally went into production.<\/p>\n Let me add, however, that when I say it took around five years or so to get a contract, in terms of Hollywood, that\u2019s lightning-speed! I\u2019ve heard of options extending way past, say, 10 years. Too, most options, sadly, are dropped altogether in that most optioned books are never made into movies. So altogether I was very lucky.<\/p>\n Maria Nation wrote the screenplay, for which I\u2019m grateful. I have no idea how to write one. I had no final say or right of approval. Once I sold the rights to Lifetime that was it. They own the movie rights.<\/p>\n But, more importantly, Maria was wonderful. She flew to my hometown and we spent three days together talking about the book and my life story. She deeply cared about it.<\/p>\n I\u2019m enormously grateful to her for really listening to me and being such a terrific screenwriter!<\/p>\n While the movie deviates from the memoir, it does not deviate from my life. Let me explain: The book focuses on recovery\u2014the 28 days I spent in rehab\u2014with the pre-recovery scenes shown as flashbacks.<\/p>\n The movie, on the other hand, simply switches the emphasis to focus more on my life pre-recovery. Now I understand that for dramatic purposes, showing the protagonist \u201cacting out\u201d a sex addiction, is more compelling. Nevertheless, the recovery process is still an important part of the movie, so the narrative is complete.<\/p>\n In short, the movie is a compilation of the book as well as the other things I told Maria, the screenwriter, about my life when she interviewed me.<\/p>\n Very! It seems many authors aren\u2019t pleased with the movies made from their books, but I felt that the actors, the screenwriter, the director, the producer\u2014everyone\u2014did a phenomenal job. The movie absolutely captures my experience and conveys it in a serious and emotionally authentic way.<\/p>\n Sally Pressman (who starred in Lifetime\u2019s \u201cArmy Wives\u201d) plays me. She\u2019s perfect, a very gifted actor, having graduated from the Yale University School of Drama. Just watching her on screen it\u2019s almost eerie in that I can \u201csense\u201d myself. It\u2019s almost like she\u2019s channeling me\u2014or my emotions.<\/p>\n She\u2019s also a lovely person. We got to hang out together when I visited the set. She had a copy of Love Sick<\/em>, and I loved how she\u2019d marked it up with check marks and stars and underlines.<\/p>\nFrom book to movie: One author’s success story<\/h2>\n
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So many authors dream of having their book made into a movie, and you lived that dream when your memoir, Love Sick: One Woman\u2019s Journey through Sexual Addiction<\/a><\/em>, was made into a Lifetime TV movie, titled \u201cLove Sick: Secrets of a Sex Addict.\u201d How did this happen? <\/strong><\/h3>\n
How long was it between contract signing and the movie airing on TV?<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Who wrote the screenplay\u2014you, or someone else? If it was someone else, did you have the right to approve it?<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Did the movie deviate from the book in a dramatic way, or was it generally true to your story?<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Were you happy with the final product?<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Who played you in the movie\u2014and were you pleased with the selection?<\/strong><\/h3>\n