Bio: Ann Lee Miller earned a BA in creative writing
from Ashland (OH) University and writes full-time in Phoenix ,
but left her heart in New Smyrna Beach ,
Florida , where she grew up. She
loves speaking to young adults and guest lectures on writing at several Arizona colleges. When
she isn't writing or muddling through some crisis--real or imagined--you'll
find her hiking in the Superstition
Mountains with her
husband or meddling in her kids' lives.
Welcome, Ann. Why do you write the
kind of books you do?
I write twenty-something contemporary romances because I
feel like this is one of the most exciting times in life. This is when most
people fall in love for the first time, find their place in the world, resolve
issues left over from childhood, and make spiritual decisions. Or maybe I’m
just living vicariously through my children.
Besides when you came
to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?
I really enjoyed falling in love with my husband, but I
think it took a bit longer than a day. From an early age in a sad childhood I
had looked forward to discovering that special someone to share walks in the
woods, laughter, conversation. My husband was a godly man who was, and is, an
easy man to respect. Through him I first experienced unconditional love.
Falling in love with him was a joy—and continues to be after 33 years of
marriage.
How has being
published changed your life?
While penning novels for 16 years before publishing in 2012,
I focused on God’s kindness in allowing me to pursue the desire of my heart by
writing. I concentrated on improving my skill, learning to write in concert
with the Holy Spirit, and for the most part, waiting patiently for God’s timing
to publish. Now, I need to move my focus off myself and onto my readers. I am
struggling to learn new habits like praying regularly for my readers. Also, the
business side of publishing takes a big chunk out of my writing time. I have to
work hard at keeping writing as my priority.
What are you reading
right now?
I’ve been gravitating to southern writers lately like Anne
Rivers Siddon, Beth Webb Hart, and Dorthea Benton Frank. But Charles Martin has
been at the top of my list for several years. I also enjoy Jenny B. Jones and
Ann Brashares (Sisterhood of the
Traveling Pants).
What is your current
work in progress?
Tattered Innocence
launches March 1. It’s a tale of passions indulged, denied, and ultimately
forgiven:
On the verge of bagging the two things he wants most—a sailing charter business and marrying old money—Jake Murray’s fiancĂ©e/sole crew member dumps him. Salvation comes in the form of dyslexic, basketball toting Rachel Martin, the only one to apply for the first mate position he slapped on Craigslist.
On a dead run from bad choices and guilt, Rachel's salvation is shoving ocean between her and temptation.
Rapid fire dialogue and romantic tension sail Jake’s biker-chick of a boat through hurricanes, real and figurative. A cast of wannabe sailors, Rachel’s ex, Jake’s, a baby—go along for the ride.
The many-layered story weaves together disparate strands into a seamless cord. Mother and daughter look eerily alike—down to their lusts. Their symbiotic bond, forged in the blood of childbirth on the kitchen floor and cemented by their secrets, must be cracked open. A son must go home. Sin must be expunged.
Tattered Innocence is for anyone who’s ever woken up sealed in a fifty-gallon drum of their guilt.
What would be your
dream vacation?
A cabin in the woods beside a stream.
How do you choose
your settings for each book?
All four of my books are set in New Smyrna Beach , Florida ,
the place that still feels like home even though I only lived there six years.
Setting my books in New
Smyrna Beach
gave me the opportunity to revisit the “happy” in my childhood.
If you could spend an evening with one person who is
currently alive, who would it be and why?
I would spend it with one of my girlfriends whom I don’t get
to see often. She makes me laugh, and she’s one of several friends who feel
like sisters.
What are your
hobbies, besides writing and reading?
My weekly date with my husband is hiking. And I love to go
to garage sales, attend Zumba class, and play Scrabble.
What is your most
difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?
When I am connected to the internet, my mind is too
cluttered to write effectively. I find myself checking my e-mail every five minutes.
It takes a lot of self-discipline, but I don’t go onto the internet until my
writing for the day is completed.
What advice would you
give to a beginning author?
Marinate in craft books, find a critique group, and write
every day.
Tell us about Avra’s
God.
In the tradition of The
Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, four friends navigate college and the
drama churned up by their Florida
beach band to cement friendship and more.
Avra wants love, but drummer Cisco—self-medicating from his parents’ divorce with sex and intoxicants—is a poor choice. Cisco hungers for fresh-baked cookies and the scent of family he finds at Avra’s.
Kallie shares her classically trained voice only with lead vocalist Jesse and fights to keep her heart safe. Jesse feeds on fame and hides more than insecurity beneath his guitar.
The friends surf ego, betrayal, and ambition and head for wipeout. But somehow, when they're not looking, Avra’s God changes them all.
Please give us the
first page of the book.
A hot blast of pepperoni-laden air
rolled over Avra as Stavro’s Pizza kitchen door swung shut. She inched ahead in
line for a table with her family.
“Yep, me and the idiot sisters are
eatin’ fine tonight.”
She swiveled. That voice.
The guy from Humanities 301 thumbed
through change he pulled from the pocket of his cutoffs. Cisco. And she didn’t
shower and change after soccer practice—why?
Her brother’s elbow knocked into
her. “It’s gotta be meat lovers,” Drew’s stuck-in-puberty voice rasped.
Cisco glanced in her direction. Her
gaze skittered back to her brother. Please,
God, tell me Cisco didn’t just catch me staring at him!
Her attention drifted to Cisco’s
corkscrew curls that brushed the shoulders of his ancient Whitey’s Bait & Tackle—Size Counts T-shirt. The girl behind the
register tracked Cisco from under dark lashes as if she were having a
conversation with the back of his head.
“I want ham and pineapple.” Her
brother, Kurt, shot an I’m-slumming-in-Stavro’s-with-my-family look at a couple
of girls behind them.
“Veggie,” Avra said, distracted by
Cisco’s gaze on her. “Let’s get three.”
Cisco’s forehead crinkled like he
was trying to remember where he’d seen her.
Avra feigned fascination with the Best Pizza in New Smyrna Beach, Florida, plaques
on the wall. She frowned at the reflection in the window of her droopy ponytail
and unisex soccer uniform. Beside her reflection in the glass, the counter girl
wore her Stavro’s polo as a second skin. What was the use? Avra turned toward
her family.
Mom eyed them. “We’re celebrating
Kurt’s first day of college, the beginning of Avra’s junior year, not
graduation—”
Drew huffed. “What about my senior
year of high school?”
Mom dropped her gaze from the
illuminated menu on the wall. “We’ll get two large pepperonis.”
The girl bit a hangnail and watched
Cisco. The gummy corners of Isabel
curled off her red plastic badge. Overhead, a cardboard pizza twirled in the
draft from the air conditioning vent. Isabel blinked at her customer and scrawled
the order on a guest check.
Dad threaded an arm around Mom’s
waist. “And spicy cheddar cheese poppers.” He batted his eyes through his
glasses at Mom and made her laugh. They melted against each other and glided
toward the empty bench talking in quiet voices.
I
want a guy who will love me like that―forever.
She looked at her brothers. “When
I’m married, my kids will have whatever kind of pizza they want. And I’ll bake
cookies―”
Drew’s blue eyes brightened in his
freckle-spattered face. “Make some chocolate chips tonight.”
Kurt shot her an evil grin. “Who’d
marry you, Avra? Morgan?”
“Puleeese.” Avra made a gagging
noise. She caught Cisco’s smirk out of the corner of her eye and stopped,
mid-gag. Warmth crept into her face. Oh,
great. Cisco and everyone in Stavro’s was going to see her face go
apple-red under the track lights.
Cisco’s smirk widened into a smile.
“I can’t remember the last time I had really good entertainment in the pizza
line.”
How can readers find
you on the Internet?
AnnLeeMiller.com
Twitter: @AnnLeeMiller
Thank you, Ann, for the interesting interview today.
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog. Avra's God - paperback
Avra's God - Kindle
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Hello from blustery, snowy Ohio instead of Arizona where I live.
ReplyDeleteI'm so excited to be on my first book tour! A dream come true.
I spoke at chapel at Ashland Theological Seminary today, and will speak tomorrow at Women In Dialogue (also at the seminary), to creative writing students at Ashland University, a book signing at an art gallery, and finishing the day speaking to the Ashland University fellowship, The Well.
The way this all came together, I know God orchestrated the trip. I'm awash in gratitude--and nerves! :)
Thanks for stopping in to visit on Lena's blog!
Blessings!
Thanks, Ann for giving me a chance to win your book, it sounds like a great book. I can't wait to read it.
ReplyDeleteSo you are living in Ohio, i do to i have lived in Ohio most of my life,your heart is in New Smyrna Beach, Floria where you lived for quiet awhile. Ann, you and Lena had a great interview. God bless you both and have a great week that the Lord had made.
Norma Stanforth from Ohio
Hi Norma,
ReplyDeleteBrrr, it's cold in Ohio! I'm just here for four days, then I'm going home to Arizona.
Keep warm! :) Thanks for stopping by. :)
Hello from sunny QLD, with just a hint of Autumn in the air.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to reading AVRA'S GOD.
Mary P
QLD AUSTRALIA
i've seen this one online, but this interview and blurb are really what drew me in. Thanks Ann and Lena! i would love to win.
ReplyDeleteMarianne from Arizona!
This book looks great! I can't wait to read it :) Thanks for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteHannah P
CA
Thanks for the opportunity to get this book.
ReplyDeleteLyndie Blevins
Duncanville, Tx
Enter me!!
ReplyDeleteSharon Richmond
Blanch,NC.
sharonruth126@gmail.com
This looks like a great book. Thank you for sharing with us.
ReplyDeleteHope
Joplin, Mo
thanks for the chance to read this novel ;)
ReplyDeletekarenk...from PA
kmkuka at yahoo dot com
This sounds very interesting! I too love books about young adults. I'm in MN.
ReplyDeleteHi Mary Preston!
ReplyDeleteI've met you on another blog or there are two of you with the same name. :)
Thanks for making the long trip from Australia. I always forget your seasons are opposite ours. After that blazing summer, I bet you are ready for Fall!
Marianne,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your compliment on the blurb and interview. :) I'm so delighted you stopped in. All compliments welcome!
Happy reading, sweetie!
Hi Hannah!
ReplyDeleteNice to meet you, neighbor (AZ-CA). Thanks for moseying over to say hello!
Hi Lyndie,
ReplyDeleteGood luck! You're a sweetheart to poke your head in the door. :)
Hi Sharon,
ReplyDeleteYou live in my favorite state, North Carolina. I went to church camp near Hendersonville for ten years growing up and fell in love with the mountains.
Hi Hope,
ReplyDeleteLovely to meet you. :)
Happy reading!
Hi Karen K.,
ReplyDeleteI was just in Pennsylvania a couple of weeks ago for a funeral. In spite of the sad occassion, there were many tender moments. Much comfort. Good people grow there--like my husband. :)
Hi Veronica,
ReplyDeletePleased to meet another young adult fan. :)
Happy reading, sweetie!
Hi Ann:
ReplyDeleteI was reading the local 'Hometown News' and read the article about your new book, congratulations!
My daughter is also writing a book, she is young (almost 21), I know she will hate me for writing that, but I was looking for information on who to contact to publish her book when she is finished. Could you offer any help in that area? Thank you for any help.
Looking forward to reading all your books. L Bustamante
Hi Ann:
ReplyDeleteI was reading the Hometown News from New Smyrna Beach and saw your picture and the article about your new book, congratulations! My daughter is actually writing a book, she is young, 21 actually, young to me. Did you have trouble picking a publisher? I am going to tell my daughter about your books, I think she will really enjoy them. I look forward to reading all your books.
Thanks, Lynne Bustamante