Saturday, November 14, 2009

Alice Wisler's Rain Song


Rain Song: Pineapple chutney, cucumber sandwiches, Southern etiquette, a donkey named Maggie McCormick, an Irish pet store owner, and Earl Grey tea are some of the important aspects about a novel set in the Mount Olive Pickle Company region of the United States. Kimono, koi, playgrounds with swings, and songs about the falling rain, fill the story from the Japanese side of the globe.A little about Rain Song...Thirty-one-year-old Nicole, a middle school English teacher in Mount Olive, is surrounded by loving, though quirky, relatives like her maternal grandmother Ducee and great-aunt Iva. Trying everyone's patience is three-year-old Monet who likes to smear her fingerprints all over Nicole's 55-gallon tank of marine fish. While the relatives plan the annual family reunion, Nicole connects with Harrison, a childhood friend, who helps her fill in the gaps of her mysterious childhood in Kyoto, Japan.1) How did this story come to you?
Rain Song came to me over the years, as I tweaked it from first person to third and back to first again. I grew up as a missionary kid in Japan, so I wanted to write about my birth land. I found the concept of someone knowing more about your past than you do an intriguing one. I like the last line from one of the early chapters, “Nicole, my mother remembers the night you were born.” That line provides mystery, and I always like a little mystery in my novels.
2) Tell us about the journey to getting this book published.
I sent my manuscript to many agents, and received lots of rejections. Yes, I felt defeated. One rejection letter told me that I needed to change the tone of the narrative voice in my story. After I did, I sent the first three chapters to an agent I’d just discovered on http://www.agentquery.com/, and she called to say she wanted to see the whole manuscript. I sent it, and waited. Two weeks later she called to say she wanted to represent me. She sent Rain Song (I had titled it The Kimono Lady Sings) to about ten publishers, and almost immediately she heard from Bethany House. This publisher was interested, and offered a two-book deal. I was elated! I’m so glad that they let me into the club!
3) What do you love most about being a writer?
I enjoy it when a character surprises me. In Rain Song, Monet, the three-year-old, a.k.a., The Wild Child, was only supposed to have a small role, but she begged for more. I find her character fascinating because she can be demanding, but gradually grows into your heart. Grandma Ducee says you have to look for the “beauty within” each person. Authors needs to be surprised along the way, or if they aren’t, they get bored and have a hard time completing their work.
4) What frustrates you about being a writer?
I always have a great story in my mind, but the capability to get it on paper is often limited. I constantly strive to write beautifully, so that my hope for what is printed will be closer to my vision of not only the story I want to tell, but the style in which I desire for it to be written. Basically, I want to excel, aiming for that trophy called perfection.
5) Tell me three things about yourself that would surprise your readers.
I once got on the wrong airplane. Luckily, I got off before it took off and I ended up in Charleston, SC.
My uncle is the author of The Message, Eugene H. Peterson.
Although my novel, Rain Song, is all about family reunions, I’ve never been to one.
6) What are you working on now and what's next for you?
Currently, the manuscript for my third novel, Hatteras Girl, is being read by my editor. (I sure hope she likes it!) Hatteras Girl will be published in the fall of 2010. I’m writing the synopsis for my fourth novel, tentatively titled A Wedding Invitation, to be released in the fall of 2011. Also, I’m promoting my two published novels, Rain Song (Christy Finalist 2009), and How Sweet It Is.
7) Parting comments?
Thanks for the interview! Visit my website, to learn not only about my novels, but about my Writing the Heartache Workshops I give online. Also, sign up for my free newsletter, Literary Lyrics. Here’s the link: http://www.alicewisler.com/

Sunday, November 8, 2009

The Stones" by Eleanor Gustafson

THE STONES by Eleanor Gustafson

1) How did this story come to you?
The David story is unparalleled for its sheer drama, complex characters, romance, and tragedy. The Bible version, however, lacks a certain dimension, and I wanted to make the story and characters come alive and accessible for the average reader. Many have told me that I succeeded well and that the book brought a new and vital understanding of David and the Psalms.

2) Tell us about the journey to getting this book published. All told, I invested 15 or more years in researching, writing, and marketing the book. From the beginning, I felt strongly that it would be God’s timing and not my own that would land a publisher. I had a friend who prayed faithfully with me all those years, and I dedicated the book to her. The Big Moment came, not through one more query letter, but by going to church one morning. There I greeted a former interim pastor who had come that Sunday to preach on missions. He asked if I had found a publisher, and when I said no, he gave me his son’s business card as a contact at Whitaker House. That key did indeed open the door, and Whitaker House took me on. My interim pastor friend, Dr. Tim Tennent, has since gone on to become president of Asbury Theological Seminary in Kentucky. He is also one of my very special endorsers.

3) What do you love most about being a writer?
I have always loved stories, and I love to create good plot lines and solid, believable characters. Editing, however, is my favorite part of the process, and I polish my writing with love and patience. I don’t write fast and normally work through a novel at least 50 times. I enjoy chopping words, making dialogue authentic, finding a better way to say something. I love breathing spiritual content into the story without sounding hokey. The Stones was relatively easy, in that the plot line and characters were already laid out for me to fuss over and plump up.

4) What frustrates you about being a writer?
Lack of time. My life does not revolve around just writing, as much as I love it. I am driven relationally to welcome and interact with strangers and the “little” people in church. I maintain through email, phone, and regular mail a large network of relatives and friends, including a man in prison. I am passionate about missions and serve on the missions team at our church. That too involves much correspondence, sometimes in Spanish, which I don’t speak. My husband of nearly 55 years requires a fair amount of relational time, much of it on our daily, hour-long walks. I’m trying online networking but lack the time required for effective interacting. This interview with Dawn, by the way, is a networking spinoff, and I am grateful to her. And trips to Vermont and our tree farm to cut and haul several cords of firewood per year. Then there’s housework—but let’s not go there. Writing gets squeezed in somehow, but not easily.

Another serious problem for me is that my books tend to fall outside successful marketing parameters. Even my David book has not sold as well as I would like. It is acknowledged to be good, but it’s long (601 pp) and heavy with innate complexities, even though I tried very hard to make the writing itself accessible to most readers. All along, however, my heart has instructed me to write as best I can as I feed off of God. I was to not worry about copies sold. God is my first and most important market.

5) Tell me three things about yourself that would surprise your readers.
I actively helped build our two-story house—framing, roofing, siding, sheetrock, and finish woodworking—along with a 15-foot canvas tepee for my children and a log playhouse for my grandchildren.
· On my way to a TV interview, I buried a pocket penknife in an airport planter so it wouldn’t be confiscated at security. I dug it up, none the worse for wear, when I got back. J
· Eugene Peterson was the first person to endorse my book. He and Tim Tennent are right up there on my hero list!

6) What are you working on now and what's next for you?
I am writing a horse story with strong spiritual overtones. A five-gaited horse named Dynamo serves as a metaphor for a man’s passion for God and his fear of God.
The long and short of it, Jeth Cavenaugh is terrified of God. For starters, how often does a hard slap send a person into the Kingdom? Good things, bad things, make him moan plaintively, “Does God ever work this way with anyone else? I feel like I’m being set up for something.” He is, indeed. Nothing in Jeth’s life is predictable.

7) Parting comments?
I would encourage you to tackle The Stones. It’s a big book because David is big. He is a warrior—big into war, sex, and blood. But he is big into God and is called a man after God’s own heart, despite his egregious sin. And David’s prickly relationship with his ruthless commander-in-chief Joab: Could David have carved out God’s earthly kingdom without Joab’s military genius? This is a novel that will make you see David and his psalms in a brand-new and thoughtful way. Check out the reader responses to my book on Amazon.

And thanks for listening to all of this! May God breathe his Spirit on your writing.


Interview with Barbara M. Britton and spotlight of Lioness...

We're happy to have Barbara M. Britton with us talking about her book Lioness . To learn more about her and Lioness, please read o...