Bio: Jane Kirkpatrick is the New York Times and CBA bestselling and award-winning author of 40 books, including The Healing of Natalie Curtis, Something Worth Doing, One More River to Cross, Everything She Didn’t Say, All Together in One Place, A Light in the Wilderness, The Memory Weaver, This Road We Traveled, and A Sweetness to the Soul, which won the prestigious Wrangler Award from the Western Heritage Center. Her works have won the WILLA Literary Award, the Carol Award for Historical Fiction, and the 2016 Will Rogers Gold Medallion Award. Jane divides her time between Central Oregon and California with her husband, Jerry, and Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Caesar.
About the story: Mollie Sheehan had
spent much of her life striving to be a dutiful daughter, even when doing so
led to her own heartbreak. But when romance blooms between her and Peter Ronan,
Mollie finally allows herself to hope for a brighter future—until her father
moves her to California to ensure the breakup.
Yet,
time and circumstances work to reconnect her with her former fiancé. Together
they weather the challenges of marriage and settlement until Peter assumes the
position of a lifetime—Indian Agent among the Flathead People. Mollie’s
language skills, her desire to make everyone feel welcome, and her overarching
sense of justice lead her to stand beside her husband and the People during the
turbulent Nez Perce War and beyond.
Beneath the
Bending Skies
is a sweeping story of hospitality, destiny, and the bonds of family.
Welcome back, Jane. Your novel is based upon true events that occurred in the life of Mollie Sheehan Ronan. How did you first learn about Mollie and what compelled you to write a fictional account of her story? About ten years ago, I read Mollie’s memoir called Girl from the Gulches. It was such a sweeping story of the West and the strains of family bonds, yet with a happy ending. I never forgot her story. It kept niggling me while I worked on other novels, but it seemed the right time to write about goodness and family and happily ever after. And there was that magnificent Montana landscape to draw us all in!
Beneath
the Bending Skies is a story that encompasses hospitality, destiny, and
the bonds of family. Can you please expound about how these themes play out in
your novel?
Those themes are all wrapped up with Mollie’s desire to honor her deceased mom,
please her father, and yet follow her own faith and heart. When she falls in
love with her father’s “former” best friend, he moves his entire family to San
Juan Capistrano where Mollie attends a convent school. And while she was told
to never have contact with Peter Ronan, the priests of Helena, Montana, and the
sisters in Los Angeles, California, nurture the longings of these two. When
Mollie decides to marry without her father’s blessing, she nevertheless spends
her days as a young wife, mother, and eventually works beside her husband on
the Flathead Nation, but always seeks to bring her father back into the family
fold. The tragic Nez Perce War crystallizes the role of family and the
necessity of widening the scope of what family means.
What
lessons do you hope readers gain from reading Beneath the Bending Skies? To truly honor
our father and mother, we must also honor ourselves. And that family comes in
many shapes and sizes as Mollie discovered as a stepchild, half sister, wife,
and mother, and the member of a family of Native peoples who welcomed her into
their midst. The importance of listening to that inner voice—that’s what I hope
readers take away.
Mollie’s
husband, Peter, becomes the Indian agent appointed by the Secretary of the
Interior for the Flathead Reservation. What did this role entail? Think mayor or
governor. He was responsible for working with the various tribes, resolving
issues between non-Indian ranchers, acting as judge in judicial matters,
advocating with the federal government for food, blankets, bullets for hunting,
and other necessities for welfare of the Indian people whose lives were
changing. The Agency employed dozens of people—physicians, blacksmiths,
teachers, carpenters, lumbermen, etc.—and Peter had to manage finances and the
needs of a small town too.
How
did Mollie’s language skills and her gift of hospitality aid her husband’s
position on the reservation? Because it was a well-organized agency,
dozens of dignitaries from the federal government, priests, journalists, and
tribal people dropped in and stayed. Mollie became the organizer of meals and
hospitality, working beside her husband to make visitors and employees welcome—especially
those of the reservation whom they were there to serve.
What type of research was required to write about the Ronans’ lives among the Flathead? Mollie’s memoir was a terrific source book. And Peter’s reports for several of the years of his time at the agency, his letters, etc. were published by the Montana Historical Society. They offered insights into the struggles Peter had and the joys too. Not being familiar with the history of Montana, I read dozens of books on mining and the Age of Vigilantes and the politics of the region, how women helped their husbands or fathers earn a living in a settlement time. Records about the Nez Perce War were also helpful. I also looked to my own mental health background to focus on family stresses and my seventeen years working on a reservation in Oregon with friends who brought authenticity—I hope—to this story.
The
Ronans became embroiled in the Nez Perce War in 1877. What was the one
life-changing event that took place during that time? I actually think
there were a couple of events. One was Peter’s ability to keep the tribes he
worked with agreeing not to join the Nez Perce renegade Chief Joseph, even
though they had familial ties to him. Later, Peter worked to allow the defeated
chief to return to his own country and even invited him to join the Jocko
Agency he managed. But for Mollie, it was not only the commitment of the tribes
to her family’s personal safety during this troubled time but also that she
encountered a father who sought his daughter who had been taken hostage. He’d
become wounded himself. Mollie’s care for this wounded father helped her see the
importance of doing what one can for others, and the importance of family, and
renewed her desire to heal the wound with her own father. That decision changed
all their lives.
You
refer to your novel as the “sandwich generation of the 1800s.” What do you mean
by this statement?
Mollie felt the responsibility of her father and stepmother while she had her
own family with needs. She was the “meat” in that sandwich between generations.
A great many women today struggle with those same challenges. I thought it of
interest that some circumstances cross generations and decades. I hope how
Mollie dealt with it might offer inspiration for women today.
What
do you love most about writing historical novels? I love exploring
how women of the past dealt with the challenges of family, finding meaningful
work, growing in their faith, managing life. That these women really lived adds
inspiration, I think, if I’ve told their stories well. I also think that stories set in another time
allow readers to imagine themselves. Stories are like maps. They help us figure
out where we’re going but also help reduce the fear and anxiety of the unknown.
Writing such stories helps me reduce those fears and anxieties too.
How
can readers connect with you? My website is jkbooks.com. Many readers
sign up there for my Story Sparks monthly newsletter of news and
inspiration. You can find me on Facebook and Instagram.
Thank
you, Jane, for sharing Beneath the Bending Skies with my blog readers
and me. I love your books.
Readers, here’s a
link to the book.
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Ooh, this looks like a great read!😃
ReplyDeleteElly -Indiana-
I hope you Can red it!!
DeleteJane Kirkpatrick is an exceptional author! I'm looking forward to reading BENEATH THE BENDING SKIES!
ReplyDeleteCaryl K in TX
I love all of Jane Kirkpatrick's novels. Memorable and captivating. Anne in NM.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much❤️
DeleteThis novel is a treasure. I enjoy Jane Kirkpatrick's books. Pearl-NM.
ReplyDeleteMollie was a fascinating woman!
DeleteA great author. Would love to read. Blessings from Lucy in WV.
ReplyDeleteLove the cover! This book looks great!
ReplyDeleteAbigail in VA
Sounds like such a great book! Blessings, SARAH T. from Ohio
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a wonderful read! I am particularly interested as I have recently been watching Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman reruns, and have been fascinated by the work with the Native Americans and what they endured during that time period and what was encountered by a fictional Indian agent. With the wealth of information Jane Kirkpatrick found on Mollie and her husband, she has given an accurate account of the Flathead Reservation.
ReplyDeleteJeanie D in Arizona
Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
ReplyDeleteNichols SC.
BENEATH THE BENDING SKIES by Jane Kirkpatrick sounds very good. PA. Have a good week. I like to read your books.
ReplyDeleteSounds fascinating! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteConnie from Kentucky
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