Welcome, Stephanie. God has really been
moving in your writing life. What do you see on the horizon?
This September, book 2 of The Quilt Chronicles, The Shadow on the Quilt, releases. My
editor and I are going back and forth with re-writes at the moment. I’m
thrilled to be one of three authors with a novella in A Patchwork Christmas releasing with Barbour for this next
Christmas season. (Judith Miller and Nancy Moser are also contributing.) And I
have the third installment of The Quilt Chronicles titled The Message on the Quilt to write this summer. Greenbrier Book
Company has reissued my Keepsake Legacies series (Sarah’s Patchwork, Karyn’s
Memory Box, and Nora’s Ribbon of
Memories both as ebook and print books), and I’m working to get Prairie
Winds, Dakota Moons (2 Christy finalists in that series) and Pine Ridge
Portraits back in print and available as ebooks.
How exciting. I’m
really liking using my Kindle as well as having print books. Tell us a little
about your family.
We are a blended family—three adult sons and their wives, two
adult daughters, one married, one single, five grand-children on earth and one
in heaven and one expected this October.
Has your writing
changed your reading habits? If so, how?
Writing has probably made me a little harder to please when
it comes to reading fiction. It’s difficult sometimes for me to turn off the
“inner editor.” For that reason, when I read for pleasure, I tend to read in
genres that I don’t write. I love suspense and mystery.
I understand. With my
more limited reading time while on deadline, I don’t like to waste it on a book
that doesn’t catch and hold my interest. What are you working on right now?
Final edits on this fall’s release titled The Shadow on the Quilt, research for
next year’s release titled The Message on
the Quilt, final preparations to teach at the Called to Write conference in
Kansas April
13-15, and my final project for my master’s degree in history (I graduate in
May).
What outside
interests do you have?
Quilt history, quilting, women’s history, delighting in my
grandchildren, riding my motorcycle, travel, music (my children are all
musicians, some serve in their local church, one daughter is a
singer/songwriter in Nashville and my husband and I love attending live events
in small venues).
How do you choose
your settings for each book?
Settings are usually dictated by a compelling historical
event or situation that I want to throw a character at and see if they sink or
swim. I’m always reading a Great Plains
history book or something in the area of women’s history. Settings and
situations literally reach out and grab me sometimes and I’m “off and running”
with a new story idea.
If you could spend an
evening with one historical person, who would it be and why?
That’s an incredibly difficult question for me because as I
type this I’m staring at about twenty-five running feet of floor-to-ceiling
bookshelves overflowing with history books. There are literally dozens of people
from history I’d love to spend time with—although I’d want them to come to me
so that we could enjoy electricity and indoor plumbing. Martha Washington,
Abigail Adams, Charles Eastman (who inspired my fictional character Soaring
Eagle), writer Bess Streeter Aldrich, Mary Chestnut (author of an amazing Civil
War diary), Mrs. William Jennings Bryan, Isabella Bird, The Delaney sisters,
Aunt Clara Brown, Mary Riggs, Luna Kellie, Varina Davis, Dolley Madison, Mary
Allis, Mrs. Frederick Douglass … and dozens of quiltmakers whose work I’ve
admired.
What is the one thing
you wish you had known before you started writing novels?
That I would be teaching writing someday. I wish I had kept track
of the process and retained examples of what I would be teaching from my own
work.
What new lessons is
the Lord teaching you right now?
What Jesus meant when He said that His yoke is easy and His
burden is light. What it means to be “free” in a spiritual sense. The
difference between repentance and shame, and the security and freedom that
comes from knowing how completely God forgives and how furiously He loves.
Wow. Those are some
real essentials in our walk with the Lord. What are the three best things you
can tell other authors to do to be successful?
Pray over that word “success” and decide how God would have
you define it for yourself in light
of eternity.
Write write write.
Read read read.
Tell us about the
featured book.
The Key on the Quilt is the first book in The Quilt Chronicles.
Each of the three books is inspired by a unique quilt and explains the “why”
behind the way it was made. In the case of this book, why is there a brass key
sewn to the center of a courthouse steps quilt? What does it open? Why the
courthouse steps pattern? The story introduces a prison warden’s wife, the
prison matron, and a female inmate and draws them together in a setting where
no one would expect them to be friends and no one would expect them to find
love. And yet …
Sounds like a book I’ll
love reading. Please give us the first page of the book.
April 1876
If
it wasn’t for the occasional night when he tried to kill her, Owen wouldn’t be
a bad husband. Jane Marquis risked a sideways glance at him. Moonlight and
shadows revealed an all-too-familiar expression on his weathered face, as Owen
guided the wagon across the spring prairie toward home.
Doing
her best to suppress a shiver, Jane ducked her head and closed her eyes. Oh … God. It wasn’t much of a prayer,
but it was the best she could do. God hadn’t seemed interested in answering her
prayers for some time now. When the wagon lurched, she grabbed the edge of her
seat with her right hand, lest she be thrown against him.
From
where she lay sleeping in a tangle of quilts in the wagon bed, Rose whimpered.
She stirred but did not awaken as the wagon lurched back up out of the ruts on
the trail. Thank God for that. If
only Rose would sleep through until morning. By then it would be over. Owen would smile and tease her from across the breakfast table,
and everything would be fine.
What an opening! I
can hardly wait to read it. How can readers find you on the Internet?
I am in the process of redesigning my outdated web site, so
the best places right now are: www.Facebook.com/stephaniegracewhiton,
www.footnotesfromhistory.blogspot.com.
I still love my old web site www.stephaniewhitson.com , it just
doesn’t have my new books up because I don’t know how to do that. My beloved
webmistress graduated to heaven and I’m totally lost without her. Thank you, Stephanie, for the interesting interview.
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
The Key on the Quilt (The Quilt Chronicles) - paperback
The Key on the Quilt - Kindle
Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory. (Comments containing links may be subject to removal by blog owner.)
Void where prohibited; the odds of winning depend on the number of entrants. Entering the giveaway is considered a confirmation of eligibility on behalf of the enterer in accord with these rules and any pertaining local/federal/international laws.
The only notification you’ll receive is the winner post on this blog. So be sure to check back a week from Saturday to see if you won. You will have 4 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.
If you’re reading this on Feedblitz, Facebook, or Amazon, please come to the blog to leave your comment if you want to be included in the drawing. Here’s a link.
Http://lenanelsondooley.blogspot.com
would love to win!!
ReplyDeleteangela and taco from KY
This book sounds really good! Great interview and giveaway!
ReplyDeleteLiz R from AL
Please enter my name into the drawing for The Key on the Quilt by Stephanie Grace Whitson. It sounds like a book I would enjoy very much.
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Tammi in Maine
The Key on the Quilt has a BEAUTIFUL cover. Would love to win!
ReplyDeleteKatie from Florida
This sounds like another of Stephanie's books I'd really enjoy. I've read several of her books and liked them all. I like old quilts as well so this makes this book even more interesting to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the chance to win a book.
pmk56[at]sbcglobal[dot]net
Kansas
This sounds like a great book. Would love to win. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteKaren G. from Troy, NY.
Oh...this sounds like a great book. I'd love to win a copy! I'm from Grand Rapids, Michigan.
ReplyDeleteNancee
quiltcat26@sbcglobal.net
Thanks everyone for your kind words!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the interview with Stephanie.
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds like a really good read. I'd love to win a copy of it. I love the cover too!
Blessings!
Judy from Indiana
Would love to read and win this book!. I live in Suwanee, GA.
ReplyDeleteGail Mundy
I've been reading quite a few books lately set in the decades after the civil war. Sounds like another good one to add to my collection!
ReplyDeletePatty in SC
This reader from Tennessee would love to receive this book! Just the opening paragraphs are gripping.
ReplyDeletekandrajane@bellsouth.net
Enter me I would love to win a copy of this book it sounds and looks like a great story!! Thanks and God bless.
ReplyDeleteSharon Richmond
Blanch, NC.
i already read this novel. it is as great as you think it is!
ReplyDeleteWould love to win this book, love the cover.....Dani's Grandma/Ohio
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like a great book, I would love to read it, enter me, Thanks and God Bless.
ReplyDeleteJoanna Richmond,
Blanch NC
This sounds like a really good book. Please enter me!
ReplyDeleteKrista in Oregon
Looks interesting!
ReplyDeletePlease enter me!
God Bless,
Sarah Richmond
Blanch,N.C.
Sounds like a great book! Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDeleteNancye in Kentucky
nancyecdavis AT bellsouth DOT net
oh, sounds good love to win thanks for chance to win
ReplyDeleteABreading4fun [at] gmail [dot] com
Wow, Stephanie, what a great beginning. It sure has me hooked.
ReplyDeleteGinger in AL
Enter me!
ReplyDeleteAbigail
Blanch, N.C.
thanks for the chance to read this novel ;)
ReplyDeletekarenk
kmkuka at yahoo dot com
(from PA)
This set of books sounds so good and I look forward to reading them. Please enter me in the giveaway.
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Jo
ladijo40(at)aol(dot)com
This is a book I will surely enjoy reading. I did enjoy what Stephanie said about the Lord's forgiveness and love. As christians we know this but it is so refreshing to see it put into words as she did in this interview. Please enter my name. Judy C. in Louisiana
ReplyDeleteI loved Stephanie's selection of people she would like to would like to spend an evening with. There are a few that who I haven't read about, so that makes this interview more interesting.
ReplyDeleteCarolNWong(at)aol(dot)com
This is a book I would enjoy!
ReplyDeleteBeth from Iowa
I'm going to have to look up some of your Historical people. I know I will enjoy that.
ReplyDeleteMary P
QLD AUSTRALIA
This book sounds great! As someone who is all thumbs with a needle of any kind, I admire and enjoy reading about needle crafts, especially those with historical significance. God bless you richly, Mrs Whitman! His grace is amazing; may no weapon formed against you prosper as you grow in His love! Mama Cat in Phoenix
ReplyDelete