My main characters have the most “me” in them—they act and
feel in ways I think I would if I were in situations similar to theirs. For
others, usually the “bad guys,” I sometimes have to dig deep to imagine why
some people behave the way they do. Evil always puzzles me. I once read a
writer who said that there are no thoroughly bad people, that even the worst
among us have some redeeming qualities. I disagree—I think some people are bad
to the bone and that the best you can do is avoid them at all costs.
I agree with you that
some people are totally toxic to us. What is the quirkiest thing you have ever
done?
I used to own a parrot (an Amazon Yellow Nape), one that had
escaped from its original owner. Well, Harry and I were instant best buds (I
was single at the time). Each night, I would return Harry to his cage, but I
would leave the door open—not even sure how this ritual got started. I’d turn
off the lights and head upstairs to my bedroom. At some point—perhaps
immediately, I don’t know—Harry would climb out of his cage, walk across the
room and up the stairs. Using the bedspread, he would beak-climb up to the top
of the bed. And each morning, there he would be—not next to me, but quietly
perched on the outermost left corner, patiently waiting for me to wake up. Why
didn’t I close his cage? I don’t know. Why didn’t I just bring him upstairs
with me if I knew he was going to climb up anyway? Don’t know that either.
Maybe I felt I was only being partially complicit if I made the pretense of
putting him in his cage each night. Oh, the little lies we sometimes tell
ourselves…
When did you first
discover that you were a writer?
Would you believe fifth grade? That was the first year I was
ever asked to write something not school-subject related. I realized later that
we were being given writing prompts, but at the time, I was having a ball! I
was writing stories with characters and descriptions and little plots! And the
best part of all, I was getting high praise from my teacher, Miss Clasen. She
would write things like, “This is so funny!” or “You have a real talent for
this!” I found myself walking home on a little cloud. I started making up my
own “what-ifs” and writing my evenings away. To Forgive, Divine
started out as a series of “what-ifs.” (It also started out as a short story,
but “famous last words”!)
Tell us the range of
the kinds of books you enjoy reading.
I actually like reading non-fiction as much as I do fiction.
I like biographies—Bonhoeffer was
excellent (Eric Metaxas)! And, of course, I like reading Bonhoeffer’s works, as
well. A former professor of mine (Helen Jean Burn) wrote a wonderful book
called Betsy Bonaparte that reads
like a novel. For all you aspiring mystery writers, there’s a great book on the
father of forensic investigation called The
Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New
York (Deborah Blum). I love reading C.S. Lewis—Screwtape Letters and Mere
Christianity are my favorites, but everything he wrote is outstanding. Also,
I am a huge Dave Barry fan! If you ever need a good laugh, read anything by
Dave Barry. I like reading Christian apologetics (What If Jesus Had Never Been Born?, Who Moved the Stone?, I Don’t Have Enough Faith to Be an
Atheist). And my favorite way to read and study the New Testament is to
read the commentaries of William Barclay (a Scottish theologian and NT Greek
scholar who wrote in the 50s and 60s). I actually collect copies of his Second
Edition volumes (I don’t think the first edition ever appeared in the U.S. ). I find
them on eBay occasionally.
As for fiction, I read everything from Jane Austen (the
woman was a genius), Charles Dickens and Agatha Christie to Lisa Wingate, Lori
Wick and Jan Karon (someone once compared To Forgive, Divine to a Mitford
book—how about that??), Patricia Cornwell, John Grisham and Scott Turow, James
Patterson, Tom Clancy (Sum of All Fears
is scary stuff!) and Richard North Patterson. I used to read Michael Connelly’s
Bosch and Lincoln Lawyer books, but his stuff can be so dark—the real
underbelly of humankind. I must say, I have always admired John Grisham because
he was a Christian writer before being a Christian writer was cool. He could compete
with the Big Boys and publish with mainstream houses, still writing books that
did not compromise his witness. I have often thought of him as a sort of
modern-day prophet, calling attention to the many injustices in our legal
system.
Ahh…so many books, so little time.
I admire John
Grisham, too, and I love every book of his that I’ve read. How do you keep your
sanity in our run, run, run world?
I read. As a writer, I think one of the most important
things one can do is be well-read (e.g., as I read, I ask: how does this writer
construct his/her plots, build characters, create settings?). It is especially
important to read books in your own genre to keep up with what publishers are
looking for (and, therefore, what readers are looking for). And with the advent
of e-books, it’s possible to read standing in line at the grocery or post
office—virtually anywhere, but I draw the line at the movies!
And, of course, I write. Writing centers me, helping me to
keep at bay life’s distractions and pulls. It keeps me mindful of the role that
God is asking me to fulfill through my writing. I feel God’s presence when I
write.
I’m with you on that
point. So often, He directs me a direction I didn’t know a story was going to
take. One time, I finished a scene where what He gave me took me to a “How are
we going to get out of this impossible situation” time. He showed me a way that
brought glory to Him. How do you choose your characters’ names?
I sometimes give them the names of people I admire or have
been friends with, at the least the characters I admire, as a kind of tribute.
If you read To Forgive, Divine, you’ll meet a guy named Preston .
He is not a nice guy—and I named him after someone I actually knew by that
name, who was also not a very nice guy. I also try to name them with names that
are appropriate to the era in which they were born. So two of my characters are
Clara and Mertis—names that would have been popular for the age they are in the
story (you wouldn’t expect someone from the 1930s to have a name like Madison
or Chloe, right?). On the other hand, unless a character’s ethnicity is
integral to their role in the story, I avoid surnames that might be distracting
or stereotyping. For instance, I probably wouldn’t give someone the name O’Hara
unless that person’s Irish heritage were a part of what he or she contributed
to the story. If a character owned an Italian or Greek restaurant, I probably would
name them Fontana
or Spiros, respectively.
What is the
accomplishment that you are most proud of?
This will probably sound weird because I majored in English
twice, but I am proudest of the 11 years I spent as a math instructor at
community colleges. One of the skeletons in my closet is that I failed algebra
in the ninth grade and so went on to take the fewest math courses I could get
away with. My college career took some wrong turns until it hit a dead end.
When I returned to school in my late 20s, all the rules had changed and even us
dumb ol’ English majors had to take a certain level of math. Whether my brain
had grown in the intervening years or whether I had just matured enough to
discipline myself to doing lots of homework, I found myself doing very well in
my math classes! I even kind of enjoyed them! So just to see how far I could
take it, I wound up with a minor in math when I got my B.S. Fast forward to a
move to Maryland, where my work as a math tutor landed me another gig as a math
instructor, and you have one proud English major. As a once-failed algebra
student, I had gone from being someone who had cried over her homework to
someone who gave homework! Almost daily I looked out over my students and stood
in amazement at where God had placed me. And that feeling you get when you have
said something that makes the light of understanding shine on someone’s
face—believe me, it never got old.
I understand that. I’m
a former schoolteacher myself. If you were an animal, which one would you be,
and why?
I would be some kind of bird—perhaps an eagle soaring over
the Grand Canyon . I have always looked up in
awe at birds floating on the wind currents, wondering about the vistas they see
daily and how close to God they must feel (probably not scriptural, but I think
animals must have some sense of God). My being a high-flying bird of prey like
an eagle would be ironic for two reasons: one, I am horribly afraid of heights
and two, birds of prey have to be very aggressive—and I am one of the least
confrontational people that ever was!
What is your favorite
food?
Mmm. As a child, I would have said it was my mother’s
crawfish bisque (I grew up in New
Orleans ). These days, I love a good chicken piccata or
a well-cooked piece of salmon. And I would NEVER turn down a serving of chocolate
mousse! (Bonnie, the heroine of To Forgive, Divine, makes a
chocolate mousse pie in the story—but I’ll let you decide if that turns out to
be a good or a bad thing.)
What is the problem
with writing that was your greatest roadblock, and how did you overcome it?
Time. For me, writing requires large chunks of uninterrupted
time. If I think I’m going to be interrupted, it’s hard for me to get motivated
even to start. So, please don’t tell anybody this, but there were a number of
times I skipped church because I could then count on having about three
uninterrupted hours to dive in and engross myself in my story without having to
come up for air. Now that my children are grown and away from home, it’s a
little easier finding those blocks of time. And thanks to Caller ID and Smart
Call-Blocker, the phone is more manageable, too. But mum’s the word on that
church thing, okay?
Tell us about the
featured book.
As I said earlier, To Forgive, Divine is the result of
some “what-if” daydreaming. It’s always been my observation that church pastors
have to be sort of political creatures: everyone has something to say about the
job they’re doing, they have to be careful who they befriend lest they be
accused of showing favoritism, and even though they didn’t choose that life for
themselves, their families come to be part of that criticism and scrutiny.
So, then I thought, “What if a pastor were single? And he
found someone he wanted to date? How would he deal with the ensuing buzz it
would almost certainly create? How would she deal with it? What if they decided
it was totally not worth it?
But what if they attend the same church? What if they can’t
stop running into each other, even when it becomes terribly uncomfortable? And
what if neither can forget that one first kiss?
Oh, did I mention that they kissed? How did I forget that
part?
Their friends want them together. Some of them need them to
be together. The lady across the street most definitely does not want them
together—why on earth not?
In To Forgive, Divine, you’ll see lots
of folks struggling with different aspects of forgiveness (it’s not just a
romance), especially Bonnie and Jeff, who can’t exactly go around recommending
forgiveness to everyone else but deny it to each other, right? You’ll want to
see who wins, the lady across the street or the pastor with—wait, how many
girlfriends?
Please give us the
first page of the book.
Bonnie Callaway glanced uneasily at the thunderous, dark
navy clouds hovering on the horizon of the April evening sky as she entered the
Coffee Shoppe. She wondered whether she should go home and just skip her
once-a-month dinner with the other members of the Benevolent Board; it looked
like a monsoon was brewing. She might miss getting caught in a deluge later,
but then she would also miss her chance to have the gang buy her dinner. With
one last, uneasy look at the spindly fingers of lightning flittering down to
earth in the distance, she let the restaurant door close behind her. As things
would turn out, Bonnie would still miss the dinner with her friends that she’d
been looking forward to, and she would still get caught in the pouring rain.
And she would certainly wish she had gone straight home.
First to join her in the large booth with its round table
was Father Norman Blake, rector of St. Alban's Catholic Church. An imposing
figure in his mid-fifties, he put one in mind of Orson Welles. Father Blake was
also jokingly known as “Doctor Father.” In addition to his duties as a parish
priest, Father Blake, who held a doctorate in religious studies, also taught
courses in world religion and philosophy at Chandler City
Community College .
“Wouldn’t be surprised if the power goes out,” he told
Bonnie with a nod toward the window.
“I’m afraid you might be right,” Bonnie agreed, following
his glance.
Not far behind Doctor Father were John Reeves, the young
pastor of Chandler A.M.E., and Carolyn Perkins, an attorney in her mid-thirties
who attended Franklin Unitarian. John and Carolyn had parked next to each other
and dashed in together. Their clothes were dotted with raindrops.
“It is not looking good out there, folks,” Carolyn informed
them, scrunching her hair to rid it of the water.
Last to arrive was Dr. Jeff Wells, a forty-ish widower who
pastored Foster Road Baptist
Church , where Bonnie
Callaway was a member. “Anybody ever hear of an umbrella?” he asked,
brandishing his before the group with a smile.
(Author’s Note: wish I could give you two pages later so you
could find out where everyone has gone and who the most unwelcome visitors
are…)
And I’m sure my blog
readers will be eager to read the book to find out for themselves. How can
readers find you on the Internet?
Web site: www.forgive490.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/MelissaLeedom
To Forgive, Divine—available on
Amazon.com,
bn.com,
Books-a-Million
To Forgive, Divine is also available from the publisher, iUniverse at https://www.iuniverse.com/en/bookstore/bookdetails/137779-To-Forgive-Divine
Also, for the months of March and April, all proceeds from the sale of To Forgive, Divine (paperback or Kindle) will go to the following fundraiser: https://www.gofundme.com/f/let039s-get-jason-some-wheels/donate
Thank you, Melissa,
for sharing your book with us. I’m eager to read it, too.
Readers, here are links to the book.
To Forgive, Divine: A Novel - PaperbackTo Forgive, Divine - Kindle
Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book.
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7 comments:
I enjoyed getting to know Author Melissa Leedom. This is my first time to meet her and I found her writing so interesting. I would love to read her book and learn more. Thank you for this special opportunity bringing in new authors.
Barbara Thompson (LA)
barbmaci61@yahoo.com
Melissa, you're a new to me author & your first page already has me hooked. Thanks for sharing.
Robin in NC
Loved the first page and I want to read the rest of the book! Thanks for the chance to win!
Beth from IA
This sounds like a fun book! I would love to read it and find out what happens to the pastor and Bonnie.
Bonnie in AZ
I enjoyed the interview. Blessings from WV.
Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
Conway SC.
Thanks for sharing this book and giveaway!
Blessings!
Connie from Kentucky
cps1950ATgmailDOTcom
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