Bio: Connie Almony is trained as a mental
health therapist and likes to mix a little fun with the serious stuff of life.
She was a 2012 semi-finalist in the Genesis Contest for Women’s Fiction and was
awarded an Honorable Mention in the Winter 2012 WOW Flash Fiction Contest. Her
newest release, At the Edge of a Dark Forest, is a modern-day retelling of “Beauty
and the Beast” about a war-vet, amputee struggling with PTSD.
Welcome, Connie. I
love modern-day retelling of fairy tales, and “Beauty and the Beast” is one of
my favorite fairy tales. Tell us how much of yourself you write into your
characters.
I think I leave a piece of me in everyone I write, even the
villains. In At the Edge of a Dark Forest, I made Carly afraid of horses.
She inherited this from me. Don’t get me wrong, I believe they are beautiful,
majestic, and extraordinary creatures. However, they are also unwieldy, hard to
talk to, and BIG. If you don’t know their language and you are riding one, they
may run your leg into a tree or take off in a gallop with you whether your
little feet stay in the stirrups or not. And yes, I am speaking from
experience. So Carly has this little hang up. Good thing she has Joe, Sam, and
of course Cole, to help her through it.
When I was in junior
high school, I had a horse throw me the very first time I rode one. And one
foot didn’t release. At least, this horse was trained well enough that it stopped
immediately and didn’t drag me down the gravel road. My father made me get back
in saddle and ride it back to the barn. I was horrified. What is the quirkiest
thing you have ever done?
For me, quirky
is a life-style so, really, it’s hard to choose. I even teach my children
quirky. My daughter thinks we live in a musical and answers me in song—that is
when she’s not talking in leprechaun language. My son is a non-verbal autistic
boy who knows how to make us laugh (intentionally) with the few words he can
say. My husband enjoys a good belly laugh more than anything and if he can give
us reason for it, he’ll do his best. If laughter is good medicine, this family
will live a very long time. Yes, quirky is good!
When did you first
discover that you were a writer?
I can’t say there really was a “when.” I’ve always loved a
good story and on occasion would try my hand at writing one. I’d often find
myself narrating a TV show in my head, wondering how an author might describe a
scene without the benefit of images. I should have known then … but alas, I did
not. While working on my master’s degree in counseling I had a professor who
handed me a graded report and told me how much she enjoyed reading it, but due
to lack of research, I received a C+. Well, at least the writing engaged her!
A few years ago it all came together. My elementary-aged
daughter had been writing “chapter books” ever since she learned how to sound
out words. I was amazed how she could break a larger story into smaller
segments, to keep the reader interested. I’d been reading books about two of my
favorite Classic authors, Jane Austin and Georgette Heyer, and discovered they’d
start to write a novel and didn’t even know the outcome when they began. That
was the roadblock that kept me from actually putting pen to page. If I didn’t
have all the answers to the questions in the tale, I didn’t think I should even
try. I have since discovered that sometimes writing is the best way to find
those answers. So after brainstorming with my daughter on a school project,
writing a Cinderella story set in Greece , I finally decided to get
serious about writing myself. You could say my daughter is my greatest inspiration.
Tell us the range of
the kinds of books you enjoy reading.
Through the years I’ve read all kinds of books from military
thrillers, through classic literature, a little horror, and also Amish. What I
require more than a particular subject is a story that draws me in to the point
I feel I am there, experiencing the events as if I were the character
him/herself. I love writing that uses lots of sensory information, and seem to
crave “feel” the most. I think it’s because my primary perceptual style is
kinesthetic. I want to feel the wind in my hair, the thump of footsteps, the
burn of the tears in my eyes. When I read that from an author, I’m hooked into
the story no matter what it’s about. I care for the characters, because I’m
present with them.
I also seem to need at least a hint of romance in books
these days. I sometimes joke it’s the mid-life crisis, but I think I’ve always
been this way. However, I tend to prefer romances where the characters come to
know each other at deeper levels than just the outward attraction, and find
they respect and admire that person, which then leads to love. That’s the kind
of romance I write as well, and certainly a main theme in my modern-day
retelling of “Beauty and the Beast.”
How do you keep your
sanity in our run, run, run world?
This is a great question. I’m sure it helps that I work at a
Christian counseling office with people who not only embody great faith, but also
have knowledge of mental health issues. We counsel each other and pray together
when needed. I am very blessed by this.
One thing that has helped me over the past few years I
learned from one of my colleagues. She’d come in to the office very tired one
morning and explained how she couldn’t sleep, so she stayed up and praised her
Creator all night long. Even tired, she espoused a Joy I wanted to inhale from
her experience. I’m one of those people who whenever I’m in a hurry and hit all
the red lights in town I assume God is teaching me patience—again. I’ve decided,
since my colleague’s disclosure that morning, I would view these moments
differently. Instead of complaining about the need of another Fatherly lesson, I
would use those times to be with God,
praising, petitioning, chatting, and laughing with Him. Whenever I remember to
do this in the small moments here and there, I feel my muscles uncoil, my heart
calm, and my spirits lighten. I think it’s a glimpse of what heaven will be
like. It has changed my outlook dramatically.
How do you choose
your characters’ names?
I use whatever comes to mind at the time, which is not the
best method, believe me. In fact, I have a habit of giving most of my
characters names that start with the same letter or sound. I get stuck that
way. You’ll notice, in At the Edge of a Dark Forest, my two
main characters are Cole and Carly :o). Gratefully, my mind found other letters
for the supporting cast. However, I often like to have multi-cultural
characters in my books, because the area where I live is very diverse. For
these characters, I might use a baby-name website to find names with origins in
certain countries.
What is the
accomplishment that you are most proud of?
Oh, that’s a hard one. There are lots of little things in
life that I’ve seen the fruits of, and have felt God’s words in my heart
saying, “Well done, good and faithful servant,” but I can’t really pull out one
big one. If I had to pick, it would be the actually completion of my first
manuscript. After many years of not having an opportunity to be creative, that
manuscript pulled something from the deepest part of me and reminded me that I
was meant to be creative … and I completed it too! That was the scariest part.
If you were an
animal, which one would you be, and why?
I used to love wild cats as a kid. They were sleek and
mysterious, and I was … not :o). My grandfather owned a pet puma (named Kitty)
and babysat his friend’s cheetah on occasion, so maybe my love of wild cats
came from him. However, today I’d like to be a yellow lab. They are strong,
friendly, loyal, and lovable.
What is your favorite
food?
Did I mention I’m gluten free? Probably not. I used to be a
breadaholic, but since I eliminated gluten from my diet, I no longer crave it
so much. Now, my addiction runs to the chocolate variety. Especially since
scientists have discovered all those lovely antioxidants in it. At least that’s
what I tell myself when I NEED a Heath bar.
I love Heath bars. What
is the problem with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you
overcome it?
As I mentioned above, my greatest roadblock was the feeling
that I needed to know all the answers before I began the work. I read a
biography on Georgette Heyer that contained actual letters from her to her
editors. In them she’d outlined scenes from books I’d read. In those outlines
she’d often have statements like, “I don’t know how I’m going to get him to do
that,” or “I don’t know what will occur to make this happen,” and I realized I
didn’t need to know all the details to begin. This was a mighty weight lifted
off of me, because I’ve discovered beginning the story helps me come to know
the characters better, which in turn gives me better answers to these questions
than anything I could have drummed up before I’d met them.
Tell us about the
featured book.
Cole Harrison,
an Iraq
war veteran, wears his disfigurement like a barrier to those who might love
him, shielding them from the ugliness inside. He agrees to try and potentially
invest in a prototype prosthetic with the goal of saving a hopeless man’s
dreams. Carly Rose contracts to live with Cole and train him to use his new
limbs, only to discover the darkness that wars against the man he could become.
At
the Edge of a Dark Forest is a modern-day retelling of “Beauty and the
Beast.” Only it is not her love that will make him whole.
Please give us the
first page of the book.
Cole hobbled
up the snow-covered path, his metal crutch doing the work of his missing left
leg. He turned to climb the wooded hill to his favorite perch for one last
look. Knowing it would take five times as long as it did when he was a
kid—having two arms and two legs back then—he scrambled up the frozen incline,
using his right arm stump and dragging the crutch along beside him. He’d been a
Marine. He’d do this or die.
In fact, he
was counting on the latter.
Cole could
never take his own life. Somehow, the thought of his remaining manor staff
finding his body didn’t set well with him. Most of them had been on the payroll
since before he was born and were more family than his own parents had been. No,
he wouldn’t leave his remains for them. But maybe he could challenge God—or at
least the elements—enough to where one or the other would finally do the deed.
Was that what
drove him to this climb during a blizzard in freezing temps? He’d told Mrs.
Rivera, the housekeeper, he needed to go camping—a necessary means of
transitioning from war to civilian life. Regardless of the fact he’d been
transitioning for years now and hadn’t bothered to pack any gear.
She knew not
to stop him. Not that she couldn’t, given his current condition. But had she
done that, it would have left him feeling more impotent than he did now. He
suspected she knelt by her Baby Jesus statue, at this very moment, rolling
beads through her fingers as she mouthed the Hail Mary over and over again.
Lotta good
that would do.
Cole’s moments
“transitioning” only doubled in frequency rather than dwindled. He’d started
back when he still wore a prosthetic arm and leg, but after months subjecting
them to the cold and rain, night and day, they rubbed against his skin, chafing
and burning, making him feel more caged than free. He’d finally chucked them
over a precipice one morning, vowing never to wear any fake parts again.
How can readers find
you on the Internet?
You
Thank you, Connie, for sharing your life and new book with us today.
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
At the Edge of a Dark Forest (Fairwilde Reflections) - AmazonAt the Edge of a Dark Forest: A modern-day retelling of Beauty and the Beast (Fairwilde Reflections) - Kindle
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18 comments:
Great interview Connie! You make us feel we are part of he story! I live in MS! Shelia Hall
Hi Shelia, thanks for stopping by. So glad you feel part of the story. That is one of my goals in crafting. I want you to be THERE with the character and feel what he or she is feeling, and understand the the weight of the choices they make.
Lena, your horse story sounds very close to one of mine. I slid off the side with my leg slipping further into the stirrup as the horse galloped off at top speed. My horse-riding best friend galloped along side, grabbed my horses reins and stopped it. You might understand my fear :o).
Portsmouth, VA
I love retellings of fairytales! I've read dozens of fairytale retellings because I love every one I can get my hands on! I'd love to be able to read this one as well
J.C. -Indiana-
Reading stories with PTSD always make me appreciate the sacrifices of our military. The fairy tale adaptation sounds like a great metaphor!
Heidi, CA
Good morning,Diana, in Portsmouth.
J.C., I love the retellings myself. One reason is that I'm curious to see how the author adapts the story to a new setting. As the author of this one, it was a fun personal challenge trying to keep it close to the original and do it without magic.
Heidi, I forgot to mention that 10% of my earnings from this story go to Cru Military, an offshoot of Campus Crusade. This is an organization that helps churches develop military ministries for veterans and their families. I first learned about them while working on a Military Ministries series on my blog a few years ago. Our heroes deserve our care!!!
Thanks for stopping by.
Ooh, another fairytale retelling!
Courtney C. from AR
Yep! They seem to be hot right now. Probably has something to do with the series Once Upon a Time :o).
Oh I do love Beauty and the Beast and have ever since I was a child, long before Disney made the movie (my favorite by the way)and I collect everything Beauty and the Beast. I would LOVE to win a copy of your book Connie! Thank you of the opportunity.
I live in Indiana.
Smiles & Blessings,
Cindy W.
Cindy, I must say it's my favorite fairy tale as well. Something about loving someone beyond their outward appearance really strikes a chord for me. In fact, in At the Edge of a Dark Forest, Beauty takes on a whole new meaning.
As a wife of a disabled veteran with PTSD, I want to thank you for donating proceeds to help military families. This looks like a great story. Thanks for the giveaway.
Melissa from NC
Melissa, it's the LEAST I can do. Let ME thank YOU and your husband for all you've sacrificed for our country. God Bless!!!
Readers, for some reason At the Edge of a Dark Forest is not showing when searching the title on Amazon this morning. Please use Lena's links above to find it. They will get you there. Hopefully, Amazon will fix the search, but until then ...
Thank you for "introducing" me to this author. I really admire parents of children with autism. I was an aide in a classroom for 3 and 4 year olds with autism for 10 years. I know it can be very frustrating at times, but also very rewarding.
I would love to win a copy of this book.
Susan in Texas
Susan, thank you for your work with children who have autism. I am definitely blessed with my young man, who reminds me to pray whenever he notices I'm sad. "Pway" is one of the few words he can say :o). However, I know many people who struggle minute-to-minute with highly anxious and sometimes violent affected children. They need our prayers and sometimes our help. Thank you for being one of those people!!!
Enter me for the book!!
Sharon Richmond Bryant
Conway,SC.
sharonruth126@gmail.com
I would love to read your book on a topic I know little about. sharon, CA wileygreen1(at)yahoo(dot)com
Welcome ladies!
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