Monday, December 07, 2015

CHAPEL SPRINGS SURVIVAL - Ane Mulligan - One Free Book

Dear Readers, Ane and I have been long-time online friends, and I always look forward to going to the American Christian Fiction Writers national conference, so I can see my online friends, especially Ane.

Welcome back, Ane. Why do you write the kind of books you do?
I didn't grow up with sisters, but I have always had close girlfriends and loved them. As an adult, many wonderful, Godly women poured into me their strength, friendship, and accountability. I've seen girlfriends band together to help each other out of a pickle, and those are the stories I'm drawn to. Toss in my overgrown funny bone, a crazy family, and a bit of romance, and voila! You have my books.

Yes, your books have a wonderful voice including all those things. Besides when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?
This is such a hard question, Lena, but I'd have to pick the day I was found by my birth sisters, ten years after I posted a query on an adoption board. It was God-ordained to be sure. If anyone wants to read the whole story, they can find it on my website.

I can imagine how wonderful that can be. I love seeing the sibling reunions on TV. How has being published changed your life?
It gave be a second career after I retired. And surprisingly to me, it has drawn me closer to God as I invite Him to write with me each day. He's taken me on adventures I never dreamed of, and I've met people I never would have. Most important to me, though, are the lives my stories have impacted. That's priceless!

That makes it all worth it. What are you reading right now?
Right now, I'm reading Deborah Raney's latest in her Chicory Inn series, Another Road Home. I recently finished Summer at Hideaway Key, by Barbara Davis, and As Waters Gone By, by Cynthia Ruchti. I recommend all highly!

What is your current work in progress?
Right now, I'm working on the fourth book in the Chapel Springs series, Lost in Chapel Springs. Lacey Dawson finally gets her story told. And it's quite a story!

What would be your dream vacation?
A house on the beach, where I could sit on the deck and listen to the waves. Or maybe a cottage on the moors of Ireland.

How do you choose your settings for each book?
I love small towns. I grew up in a suburb of Los Angeles, California. When we moved to Georgia, I felt like I'd come home. We live in a small town, where nearly everyone is related to everyone else or knows them. Instead of remaining outsiders, we were absorbed into life here. We live near a lake in north Georgia, and so I chose to set my stories in an area like this. Chapel Springs is smaller than Sugar Hill, where I live, and it's higher up in the north Georgia mountains. My husband claims it's in Hidden Valley.

If you could spend an evening with one person who is currently alive, who would it be and why?
Sandie Bricker. I love her humor and she's a redhead. Need I say more? I do? Well, that's easy. Sandie also had a great impact on my prayer life by starting a prayer e-loop, when Diann Hunt was battling cancer. Di won her battle when God called her home, but the Accidental Warriors stayed together, praying each other through many difficulties and seasons. We live in different states, so I'd love to spend an evening with her.

I love Sandie, too. Of course, we redheads are always drawn to each other. What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?
My other passion is theatre. I'm president of a new community theatre in my town, so I direct, and raise money, and shop for costumes and props at flea markets and yard sales.

I don’t know if I ever told you, but my I have my BA and most of a Masters in Drama, and I’ve served as the Drama Director for two different churches as well as being active in community theater, but I’m not involved in drama right now. What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?
I juggle being a seat-of-the-pants writer and a plotter. Rachel Hauck calls it being a "planster" and I guess it fits. I've got to have an outline. Just an idea for each scene. Then I can untie my SOTP self to have fun. However, if I don't have that plan, I stall.

What advice would you give to a beginning author?
Go to conferences and network. Read books on the craft and have two or three critique partners. And finally, circumstance doesn't' replace motivation. Know your character's motivation, and readers will follow them anywhere.

I read your first book in this series. Tell us about this one.
I love this story! Our adult son got himself a twenty-first century mail-order bride, and didn't tell us until a year after the fact. For leaving me out of it, I told him it was going into a book and it did.  
Here's the back cover blurb:

Chapel Springs Survival

A mail-order bride, a town overrun with tourists, and illegal art. 
Can Claire and Chapel Springs survive?

Claire Bennett's Operation Marriage Revival succeeded and life is good. That is until the mayor's brother blabs a secret: Claire's nineteen-year-old son has married a Brazilian mail-order bride. When Claire tries to welcome her, she's ridiculed, rebuffed, and rejected. Loving this girl is like hugging a prickly cactus.

Lydia Smith is happily living alone and running her spa—then the widow on the hill becomes a blushing bride. Then her groom's adult son moves in—on everything.

From the first sighting of a country music star in The Painted Loon, Chapel Springs is inundated with stargazers, causing residents to flee the area. When her best friends put their house on the market, Claire is forced to do something or lose the closest thing to a sister she’s got.

With her son's future at stake and the town's problems to solve, it's Claire's who needs a guardian angel.

Please give us the first page of the book.
I'd love to!
           
Like shot pinball, Claire Bennett pinged against, around and between hordes of straw hats, bikinis, and plaid shorts. All along Sandy Shores Drive, shoulder-to-shoulder throngs of people crowded the sidewalk and spilled into the avenue. A party atmosphere—with noise level to match—permeated the quiet morning and their once peaceful village.

What had they done? When she and her friends envisioned the revitalization of Chapel Springs, it was a nice, controlled rise in tourist trade—not this craziness.

One bruised elbow later, Claire reached the door of her art gallery, The Painted Loon, and turned her key in the lock. A heavy hand grasped her shoulder. Her heart skipped a beat. Was she about to be robbed?

Hold on. In broad daylight? With this crowd watching? She may not be the brightest color on the palette, but she did possess a little common sense. Her gaze traveled up the beefy arm to a scraggly-bearded face with beady eyes. A rolled red bandana wrapped around his forehead, held back salt-and-pepper hair. Beside him stood a bleached-blonde motorcycle mama, dressed in a halter-top and the skimpiest shorts Claire had ever seen. Strings hung from their ragged edges and drew attention to the lumpy cellulite dotting the back of her thighs. Who was this woman trying to kid? She was fifty if she was a day.

"You're the loon lady," Motor-mama said. "We want to see your pots." They tried to shoulder their way into the gallery, but Claire stood her ground.

"I'm sorry, we aren't open yet. Please come back at ten." She threw the deadbolt, pulled down the window shade, then leaned her back against the door and drew in air.

How can readers find you on the Internet?
You can find me at my website, Novel Rocket, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Google+

Thanks for having me on, Lena!

Ane, the pleasure is all mine. I know my readers will be interested in this new book.

Readers, here’s a link to the book. By using it when you order, you help support this blog.
Chapel Springs Survival

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 Goodreads, Google+, Feedblitz, Facebook, Twitter, Linkedin, 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

18 comments:

Melissa Henderson said...

Love the teaser of the first part of the book. That really makes me want to read more. :-) Have a Merry Christmas!
Blessings from Melissa Henderson in Mechanicsville VA.

Southern-fried Fiction said...

Thanks, Melissa! I think you'll enjoy it!

Connie Porter Saunders said...

I always appreciate being shown the first page of a book and this sounds so much fun! Thanks for sharing.
Connie from KY
cps1950 (at) gmail (dot) com

Britney Adams said...

Ane is such a delight! I'm eager to read Chapel Springs Survival and appreciate the giveaway opportunity!

Britney Adams, TX

Southern-fried Fiction said...

Thank you Connie. I always love to read an excerpt to get the feel of a book.

And Britney, thank you so much!

Anonymous said...

This sounds good.
J.C. -Indiana-

kec200 said...

Nice interview! I have sisters and sisters in Christ and love reading about all kinds of sisters. Also a Southern girl and love small towns. Can't wait to read this one!

Wendell, NC

Mary Preston said...

A lovely interview thank you. I love the cover.

Mary P


QLD AUSTRALIA

Loraine Nunley said...

This sounds like an interesting series. Ane is a new-to-me author so I would like to read it. Thanks for the interview and giveaway!

Southern-fried Fiction said...

JC, thank you!

Thank you, Wendell. What a great brother you are!

Mary, thank you. My husband painted the original they took the cover from. He's been doing that on my Chapel Springs series books since the first one.

Thanks, Loraine! I hope you love reading my stories as much as I love writing them!

Brenda Arrington said...

Loved the first page. Now I want to read more. Interesting interview.
Brenda in VA

kim hansen said...

Nice teaser. kamundsen44ATyahooDOTcom. North Platte Nebraska

Bonnie Engstrom said...

I love Ane's writing. I want to be Claire! That way I could be forgiven of all my blunders. I sure hope I win her book.

Bonnie Engstrom
Arizona

Jackie Smith said...

I loved the first book in this series, and am very anxious to read this one! Thanks for the giveaway!

Jackie Smith
Georgia

Sharon Richmond Bryant said...

Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
Conway, SC.

Terrill R. said...

I'm in love with the real story behind the fictional one in Chapel Springs Survival. :) I want to hear more!

Terrill - WA

Kathy Anderson said...

Kathy from Missouri

I loved it when Ane shared about finding her birth sisters. My mother's parents were foster parents until they adopted my mother's little sister who is exactly 30 years younger than my mother and the same age as my baby sister. Recently my mother's sister found her birth family. She was so excited and now she has a chance to know and love her birth father and sisters. Our entire family is very happy for her.

My 29 year old son doesn't have a mail order bride but I received a picture today showing him down on one knee proposing to his girlfriend. They are attending college in Florida. I haven't met her yet but I know she must be special since my son never dated while in high school due to his desire to only date the girl he plans to marry.

Living in a small town, I can relate to Claire.

Thank you for the opportunity to win your book.

Kathy Anderson said...

Kathy from Missouri

I loved it when Ane shared about finding her birth sisters. My mother's parents were foster parents until they adopted my mother's little sister who is exactly 30 years younger than my mother and the same age as my baby sister. Recently my mother's sister found her birth family. She was so excited and now she has a chance to know and love her birth father and sisters. Our entire family is very happy for her.

My 29 year old son doesn't have a mail order bride but I received a picture today showing him down on one knee proposing to his girlfriend. They are attending college in Florida. I haven't met her yet but I know she must be special since my son never dated while in high school due to his desire to only date the girl he plans to marry.

Living in a small town, I can relate to Claire.

Thank you for the opportunity to win your book.