Welcome to this book tour! Please comment to enter the drawing for the prize.
Alana will be awarding the winner's choice of a Screenprinted Camisole - "What Happens in the Bedroom Stays in the Bedroom" or a Brass Nuts T-Shirt - screenprinted "Brass" with 2 brass hex-nuts sewn to collar, to one randomly drawn commenter during the tour. (US ONLY)
BLURB:
It’s
the Great Depression and 19-year-old Annie Huckaby is almost resigned to
marriage with Tom. He works at a coal mine during the week,
leaving Annie to take care of the house and their infant son. Tom’s Native American friend Jim takes care of
the farm. Her best friend, Twila, visits
every day and helps Annie make a little money selling eggs to the café on the
highway. And there’s church on Sunday. Annie’s not always alone, but most times she
feels like it…until one afternoon a peddler named Jake Stern steps onto the
porch, tips his hat, and starts a world of trouble.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The author had this to say about writing:
MY
CREATIVE PROCESS
I
used to write everyday and have a ritual for writing – a pot of coffee, listen
some loud dance music through headphones (for the benefit of neighbors),
perhaps dance a bit – nothing too elaborate (again for the sake of the
neighbors). And I used to write from midnight to 3 a.m.
Over time my ritual for writing has changed. I work from 9 a.m. to noon ,
generally, and like to work in a coffee shop.
My favorite these days is only a block from where I live and they have
old-fashioned metal chairs on the sidewalk.
I can take my shoes off and work to the sounds of traffic, people
walking by, possibly a bike rider.
Now,
I plan to write. I have to choose the
time, place, and writing implement.
I
use a combination of writing directly on the computer and hand-writing. I prefer the latter, because it gives me time
to think, to picture, to form a story.
And on different days, depending on my creative mood, I might use a
fountain pen, a razor-point felt tip pen, a gel pen (my favorite), or a
pencil. I may write until I run out of
ink, which happens quickly with a gel pen.
Some days I just get a sentence or a paragraph.
I
suppose I write like a journalist because my stories, my inspiration comes from
questions – Who? What? Where? And the most important questions, Why? I see what’s happening in my story, but I
also feel it. And, as a writer it’s that
feeling I want to convey. For that
reason, I include body language, smells, color, weather – my character sees
everything, but what is she focusing on?
What evokes a response in her.
Where is her attention? I don’t
have to say what she’s feeling if I can write a picture of what she is seeing
and smelling and doing. That is, if I
write it well enough.
February 10: Live To Read ~Krystal
February 17: Lisa Haselton's Reviews and Interviews
February 24: Welcome to My World of Dreams
March 3: It's Raining Books
March 10: Straight from the Library
1 comment:
Nice cover
bn100candg at hotmail dot com
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