Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Author Michelle Stimpson - TROUBLE IN MY WAY - Free Book

Michelle is one of the authors God brought to the critique group that meets in my home. I've learned to really love her and her writing. Welcome, Michelle. Why do you write the kind of books you do?

I enjoy writing realistic fiction that causes people to think and re-think their relationships, mostly their relationship with Christ.

Besides when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?

Hmmm…this is a tough one! The happiest day was probably the day I got the call from a major publisher expressing interest in my work. I remember running through the house and just praising God! Although that deal didn’t actually come to fruition, the editor gave me a great deal of confidence.

I know about that running through the house praising God. How has being published changed your life?

It has made me a very faithful, optimistic person. The funniest thing, however, is how the really important things haven’t changed – my family, my friends. One day when I was really kind of excited about something pertaining to one of my books, I called home and began telling my 7-year-old daughter what a big deal it was. She said, “Okay, but we need some milk.” Talk about keeping me grounded!

My family is like that, too. To them, I'm just Mom or Grandma. I just happen to write books. What are you reading right now?

I’m reading My Lobotomy by Howard Dully. I know it sounds gross, but I’ve always been fascinated by the lobotomy and medical oddities, so I started reading it. The silence of the 50’s and 60’s is always interesting to me, too. The whole idea of hiding family secrets and keeping up pretenses intrigues me.

I grew up in that "secret" society. To move from that mindset was freeing. What is your current work in progress?

I’m working on a couple of things. One is a collection of short stories for high school students. I’ll self-publish this set. Another is I Met Him in the Ladies’ Room – a novel about a young woman who accepted Christ so she could get a job at a church.

And this book is really funny and poignant. What would be your dream vacation?

I’d like to visit Hawaii – sit in the breeze, view the ocean. But I’m not a big fan of the outdoors (the bugs, you know) so I wouldn’t be out all day!

How do you choose your settings for each book?

I’m kind of lazy when it comes to settings. I write contemporary realistic fiction, so I pretty much put people in places I know well.

If you could spend an evening with one person who is currently alive, who would it be and why?

I’d like to spend some time with Joyce Meyer. I could use a good talkin’ to.

James and I really enjoy Joyce, too. We've been in James Robison's studio a couple of times when they were recording an interview with her for Life Today. What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?

When I get the chance, I like to watch medical mystery TV shows. Outside of that, I spend time involved in my kids’ activities – ROTC, basketball, track and such. Movies are also fun when I get the chance.

What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?

My biggest difficulty is sticking to one project. I have this “system” of sorts – when I get tired of one book, I sometimes go write a short story. Then I go back to the book. This works fine so long as I’m not under a deadline. But when the deadline approaches, I’m all business. Some would call me a procrastinator – but I believe I work best under pressure.

What advice would you give to a beginning author?

You don’t have to like every single word you write – just get it out there and then you can fix it later.

Tell us about the featured book?

I had so much fun writing this book! The main character, Karis, is 16 years old. She is the daughter of a single mom who was only 16 when she gave birth to Karis. Now, however, her mother is a minister who uses her life to glorify God. Karis is caught in the middle of her relationship with God and her relationship with her mother, who seems to be clamping down on Karis’s social life for fear that Karis will repeat the mistakes of the past. All the while, Karis has LOTS Of drama with friends, boys, and her father’s girlfriend. I went back to my old journals to write this one. I look forward to the opportunity to minister to young girls through this novel.

Please give us the first page of the book.

Dear Me,

Derrick is cute -- NOT! I can't believe I risked my life by having Tamisha take me over to his house instead of the football game. Seriously, if my mom found out, I would be writing my eulogy instead of writing this journal entry. And for what? Some boy who does not have one single real DVD in his famed DVD collection! I swear, every single movie he had was bootleg. I think his whole room was bootleg. His whole game is bootleg, when I think about it! He acts like one thing in the beginning, but when you look closely, you realize it's not exactly as good as the real thing.
Okay, here's what happened: Tamisha took me over to his house -- we synchronized our watches -- she was to pick me up in EXACTLY forty-five minutes. There was no one except Derrick at his house, so I knew I didn't want to be over there too long. Anyway, we started watching a movie on the floor in his bedroom. Everything was fine at first. I mean, so long as I didn't stare at him right in the face, it was okay. I just kept trying to think about all the wonderful things we'd talked about on the phone because he was NOT as cute as I remember him. So, there we were watching the movie to the best of my ability since it was a little blurry. I was just getting beyond the fact that I had to ignore the line running through the middle of the screen, and the next thing I know, Derrick is trying to kiss and hug and all that.
I was like, "Hold up! Wait a minute!" and he was like, "What's wrong, baby?" like this is some kind of bad music video. I could not believe how he was trying to turn our movie-watching into some kinda romantic rondayvu (spelling??). When we're on the phone, he's an innocent little boy, but when we were together, he was a grown octopus! I'm not saying I wasn't feeling his kisses -- I'm just saying, I wasn't trying to do all that. See, I know how and when to draw the line. I know when enough is enough. Thank God, Tamisha came right on time! I was outta there so quick! I know Derrick is nice and all, but he is not the one for me. Maybe we should just be friends because #1, he is not that cute, and #2 he is having some issues right now that I cannot help him out with. I think I'll leave him alone until his hormones settle down.
-- Karis Laying-Low Reed

I don't know which is more stupid -- me going over to Derrick's house, or me writing about it in my journal knowing how straight-up nosey my mother is. I mean, I know that a momma's gotta do what a momma's gotta do. But does a momma have to read my journal and get all up in my personal business? What about my American rights? My Texas rights? My basic human need for privacy? First my journal -- next thing you know, she'll be following me into the bathroom.

The bathroom; that's a good place to go right about now.

I wait until my mother turns her back and takes a breather between the yelling spells. I'm doing my best to rise from the couch without making a sound. Her head whips around instantly.
"Where do you think you're going?"

"To the bathroom," I reply, throwing in a bit of whine for effect.

"Sidown," she hisses.

I bounce on the balls of my feet, faking the biological emergency. "But I've really gotta go."

She throws her hands up in the air and they land on her hips as she half-laughs, "That's what you should have been saying when Tamisha dropped you off at your little man-ish boyfriend's house when you were supposed to be at a football game: 'I've really gotta go.' But noooo, you couldn't say it then, so don't be sayin' it now. You ain't really gotta go nowhere. Okay?"

I've already slipped back onto the couch, and I mumble, "Yes, ma'am."

My mother does a cha-cha slide over to me and pushes hot words onto my face. "I can't hear you!"

I look her in the eyes and answer again, "Yes, ma'am."

Then she takes a few steps back toward the center of our living room and reaches down to the coffee table, picking up my beloved pink-heart journal again. I still cannot believe she read it.
"And what is this?" she traces over the entry until her pearl-tipped fingernail lands on what she's looking for. She wags her head as she mocks me, "'When we're on the phone, he's an innocent little boy, but when we were together, he was a grown octopus.' What's that supposed to mean, huh?"

Mrs. Clawson, my pre-Advanced Placement English teacher, would have appreciated my fine use of figurative language. "It's just a metaphor, Mom."

"A meta-four!" She slams my journal shut, and the resulting puff of air makes her soft brown bangs do the wave. "According to this diary, it would have had a meta-five and a meta-six, given a few more minutes. Tell me, Karis, what would you have done if Tamisha hadn't come back to pick you up when she did, huh? What if Tamisha hadn't been on time? What if you had started 'feeling' your little boyfriend's kisses? Then what?"

I want to tell her that, first of all, Derrick is not my boyfriend. But somehow I think that might damage my case, so I keep that bit of information to myself. The second thing I wish I could tell her is that there was no way I would have done anything stupid with Derrick. I want to tell her that I timed things precisely to protect myself from crossing the line. I also want to tell her that Derrick and I talk on the phone for hours at a time and I have intense feelings for him. Next to Tamisha and Sydney, Derrick is my best friend, kind of. Well, I used to trust him until he turned into that eight-legged marine creature. Besides, he is really only a six on the face and body scale. When I saw him on the basketball court, he looked like Bow Wow. But when I saw him up close at his house, he looked like maybe he could be Bow Wow's half brother. Plus one of his front teeth was longer than the other. Believe me, my mother does not ever have to worry about me sneaking off to Derrick's house again.

Nonetheless, my mother would not understand these things. She's a minister. Need I say more? So in response to her question about what I would have done, I default to my standard answer, which turns out to be the stupidest thing I can say. "I don't know."

"You don't know? What you mean, you don't know? I betcha Derrick knows. I betcha Tamisha knows. I know what would have happened, 'cause it happened to me and that's how I ended up pregnant with you when I was your age. You think I don't know what boys and girls your age do when they're together for hours unsupervised? And, really, it don't take hours. It only takes a few minutes to do something that can change your life forever!"

She stands there for a minute, towering over me. I jump a little when, out of the corner of my eye, I see her right hand approaching my face. It's moving too slowly for a slap, so I calm down a bit as she puts her forefinger and thumb on either side of my chin, raises my face, and makes me look at her.

Her light brown almond-shaped eyes are a mirror of mine. We've both got the same eyes, the same light brown skin, the same dark brown hair and roughly the same skinny shape. Right now, my mom is about three inches taller than me. But if it weren't for her pudgy stomach and her wider hips (which she, of course, blames on me), we could probably trade jeans. Everybody says we look more like sisters than mother and daughter. She thinks it's a compliment. I don't. Who wants to look like her mother? But these eyes, they are both mine and hers. And just when I see a pool of tears forming in them, she points me toward the hallway and says, "I can't stand to look at you right now."

I wish she'd make up her mind. Does she want me to look at her or not?

Minutes later, we start with the all-too-familiar routine. She comes into my room to collect my cell phone and my modem. I can keep the computer for the sake of school. I can go on the internet in the den, but only for academic purposes. There goes my social life.

"Where's the iPod?" she asks.

This is a new one. "That, too?" I protest. "Daddy gave it to me!"

She raises her eyebrows. "And?"

I cannot believe my mother is this mean! This is straight boo-dee, but I can't say so without getting into more trouble -- not that that's possible at this point. Slowly, I reach into my Louis Vuitton drawstring bag and pull out the hot pink iPod, a gift my father gave me only two weeks ago to celebrate my sixteenth birthday. Unlike the other items she's taking away, this one hurts. I try real hard, but I can't stop the tears from falling down my cheeks. It feels like she's taking my daddy away from me. Again.

That's all she ever does is take, take, take. She takes my freedom, she takes my friends, my family, everything! I think she wants to take my life because she didn't have hers. She missed the homecoming games because she couldn't find a babysitter, she missed her senior prom because I had pneumonia, and she didn't graduate with her class because she had to sit out a semester. Basically, she lost her teen years when she got pregnant with me at sixteen -- but how is that my problem? Why do I have to pay for her mistakes? I'm not my mom, and she's not me! The more I think about it, the madder I get.

My mother takes the iPod in hand and wraps the headphone cord around the rectangular box as she walks toward my bedroom door. I want to scream something from one of those poor little rich girl movies -- something like "I wish I was never born!" -- but there is always the possibility that my mother will do her best to make my wish come true by killing me now. The safest thing I think I can get away with while she's still in the room is crossing my arms on my chest. I'm pushing it.

Somehow, my mother sees me and says under her breath, "Keep on and you won't be getting a car for Christmas."

I know she did not just threaten me with the car my daddy has already promised me for Christmas when I pass my driver's test! "What's the point? It'll just be one more thing for you to take away from me." Who said that? I hold my breath and wait to see what my momma will bop me with. She's got a cell phone, a modem, and an iPod in hand. Those shouldn't hurt too badly.

She keeps her back to me as she grabs hold of the doorknob. She stops and takes a deep breath. I feel like I'm in a movie theater, waiting for the bad guy to jump out of the closet and attack the innocent victim. But instead, my mother says in a calm, even tone, "For your sake and mine, I'm gonna pretend I didn't hear that because I don't believe that God has called me into the prison ministry."

When my mother shuts the door behind her, I bury my face in my pillow and scream as loud as I can without letting her hear me. That's when the door opens again and my journal comes flying across the room, barely missing my head. I grab the journal and, for a moment, consider ripping each page to shreds. I still don't understand what gives her the right to read my stuff. In that whole forty-five-minute lecture she gave me, she never once mentioned the violation of my privacy. Where is the justice?

Instead of destroying my journal, I grab a pen from my desk and write:

Dear Me,
Mom just read my journal. Here is what I'm thinking:
#1 -- Nothing happened at Derrick's house, so I don't know what the big deal is.
#2 -- I can take care of myself, which was actually proven in the journal!
#3 -- What gives my mother the right to just go in my room and pick up my journal and read it?
#4 -- If my mom keeps me from getting the car that my daddy promised me, I will leave this house!
#5 -- Derrick does not look like Bow Wow. Do not ever fall for a guy that you have only seen from the 9th row up in the stands at a basketball game.
Maybe I should stop writing all of my personal stuff down. But if I do that, who will I tell all my problems? I mean, I have my friends, but they don't understand me like this journal does. No, I can't give up the journal. I will just have to find a good hiding place for it.
-- Karis I've-Been-Wronged Reed

Now I'm searching all over my room for a journal hideout spot. I've got to hide it in a place where it's so out of place no one would ever look there. There again, I have a problem. My mother might have the voice to be a minister, but she's got a nose that could outsniff a hound dog. She can smell trouble all over me. When I was little and I got a bad note from school, I could barely get off the bus before she'd say, "Something's wrong with you. What happened at school today?" And since I've never been a good liar (at least not to my mother, anyway), I'd have to break down and tell her the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.

I'm searching through the closet now for a place big enough to hold a journal but small enough to be inconspicuous, and that's when I decide to forget it. Deep down inside, the truth is: I don't want to hide things from my mother. Once again, the tears start to sting my eyes. It bothers me that she read my journal. My mother and I have been living in this house alone for the last five years. When she and my father divorced, she got the house and me. She's always talking about how we only have each other and God. Always talking about how levelheaded I am, what a blessing it is to have a daughter who is so self-reliant. So what made her think that she had to read my journal? What happened to the trust? In a way, I feel like she deserves whatever she got for reading it.

I figure the best thing I can do is stop writing in the journal until I'm eighteen, at which point I can do and write whatever because I will be grown. You hear me -- grown! I cannot wait for that day! Go where I want to go, do what I want to do, answer to nobody but myself. And God, I suppose, but that shouldn't be too hard, since He already knows everything.

I close my journal and put it where I have always put it -- in my top drawer. If I can't have my privacy and if my mother can't trust me, then...whatever. That's on her, except right now it's on me because I'm the one who's grounded. There's something seriously wrong with this picture.

That teaser should really whet readers' appetites for the book. Now Michelle, how can readers find you on the Internet?

My main website is: http://www.michellestimpson.com/.
I post articles at http://www.womengrowinginchrist.com/, and I tour with 6 other Christian fiction authors – our tour information is at http://www.anointedauthorsontour.com/.
Thank you for spending this time with us, Michelle.
Readers, for your convenience, here's a link where you can order Trouble In My Way:

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Don't forget to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won.

15 comments:

apple blossom said...

Oh, this sounds like a fun book.

Sheila Deeth said...

This does sound fun. I loved the first pages - felt like I already want to know her better.

Unknown said...

Sounds like a good book. I'd love a chance to read it, then I would let my teenage niece read it too.

windycindy said...

Your book sounds like a wonderful coming of age story! Please count me in! Thanks, Cindi
jchoppes[at]hotmail[dot]com

Amber Holcomb said...

Sounds interesting! Please enter me!

stokes.a[at]suddenlink.net

Anonymous said...

Hello Ladies! I'm glad you all see how "fun" Karis is. It was, indeed, a fun book to write.

Fliterary said...

I love your writing Michelle. You've got me hooked!

Unknown said...

Me, too.... fun book and fun interview.... thanks for the opportunity to be included in the drawing.....

cedson76255(at)yahoo(dot)com

Simply Stacie said...

Looks like a great book!

Anonymous said...

Michelle is a special lady and oh, so funny. Her writing is a delightful read with characters you can visualize and delight to read.

Blessings to you both, Lena and Michelle.

Janice

hippmom said...

This may be a good one to pass on to my daughter. Thanks!

Marla said...

This really sounds good. I believe I would enjoy it and also the teen girl I am caregiver of. Thank you for the entry.

koinonia572001@yahoo.com

Hoarders Extraordinaire said...

please enter me...it looks like a great book!

http://martasmeanderings.blogspot.com

sharon54220 said...

Looks like a great book. Please enter me.

sharon54220@gmail.com

Edna said...

Michelle I would love to win one of your books, I have not read any of your material yet but by the looks of this book you do have a way with words and you also hae the same first name as "The First Lady"

May God Bless