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Thursday, February 16, 2023

EVERYTHING IS JUST BEGINNING - Erin Bartels - One Free Book

Bio: Erin Bartels is the award-winning author of We Hope for Better Things, The Words between Us, All That We Carried, and The Girl Who Could Breathe Under Water. A two-time Christy finalist and winner of two 2020 WFWA Star Awards and the 2020 Michigan Notable Book Award, Erin has been a publishing professional for twenty years. She lives in Lansing, Michigan, with her husband, Zachary, and their son.

Erin Bartels has explored some thought-provoking themes within the pages of her books, including forgiveness, coming-of-age, racism, abuse, sisterhood, grief, and faith. Now Bartels takes readers on a whole new journey. She marries her love for music with her love for words in a captivating new narrative, Everything Is Just Beginning.

About the story: Michael Sullivan is a talented lyricist and a decent guitarist, but since he was kicked out of his band (and his apartment), he’s not sure he’ll ever get a record deal. Living with his loser uncle in a beat-up trailer and working a dead-end job, Michael has little reason to hope for a better future. Until the invitation for a swanky New Year’s Eve party shows up in the mailbox. It’s for his uncle, with whom he shares his name, but his uncle is going out of town . . .

On the effervescent night of December 31, 1989—as the Berlin Wall is coming down, the Soviet Union is inching toward democracy, and anything seems possible—Michael will cross paths with the accomplished and enigmatic young heir to a fading musical dynasty, forever altering both of their futures.

Erin Bartels enchants readers with this story of two lonely souls who have exactly what the other one needs—if they could simply turn their focus from what is ending to what is just beginning.

Welcome to my blog, Erin. Please provide a brief summary of your new book, Everything Is Just Beginning. When guitarist Michael Sullivan gets kicked out of his band (and his apartment), landing a record deal seems an impossible dream. And nothing about Michael’s prospects points toward a better future. Until the invitation for a swanky New Year’s Eve party shows up in the mailbox. It’s addressed to his uncle, with whom he shares both name and living space, but his uncle is going out of town . . .

On the effervescent night of December 31, 1989—as the Berlin Wall is coming down, the Soviet Union is falling apart, and anything seems possible—Michael will crash a party and cross paths with the accomplished and enigmatic young heir to a fading musical dynasty, forever altering both of their futures.

Everything Is Just Beginning pairs your love for music with your love for the written word. When did you first come up with the idea behind your novel? It’s hard to say . . . I honestly don’t remember. There is one plot element that comes from an idea I had years ago while listening to a story on NPR about a man who did amateur paleontology out West, but it morphed and changed so much, it’s not really much like that original idea at all. There are no dinosaurs in my book.

Everything Is Just Beginning addresses the underlying themes of struggle and starting over. Can you provide a hint of how this plays out in the lives of your characters? Fundamentally, one character’s life has been nothing but struggle up to this point, while the other has had a relatively charmed and easy life. Michael meets Natalie when things are turning bad in her life, and in becoming a part of her life and her family’s, he finally gets a glimpse of how his life could be good. A lot of how everything shakes out depends upon how each character chooses to see the obstacles in front of them—as insurmountable roadblocks or as opportunities to overcome.

Your two protagonists, Michael Sullivan and Natalie Wheeler, could not be more different. How do their lives intersect, and how are they able to help each other? They come from very different backgrounds, families, experiences, and opportunities, but one thing they have in common is their love of music at a deep, feeds-your-soul level. Even within that shared passion, their talents and attitudes are different. But where one is weak, the other is strong, both in talent and in the way they support one another through difficult times. I think everyone needs a friend like that.

Do you feel you can relate to any particular character in Everything Is Just Beginning? As with my other novels, I find myself in multiple characters who represent multiple sides of my mind and personality. As a creative person, I relate to Natalie, who wants to make music that pleases her and stretches the limits of her talent. As a person who creates something for an audience, I relate to Michael, who wants to be sure what he is creating is something others will pay money for and enjoy because it delivered on its promises. When I write, I write for me, and I don’t want to lose that in trying to please an audience. Yet, without an audience, who would read what I write? It’s every writer’s and artist’s dilemma.

What lessons do you hope readers can take away from your novel? We live in a time when we are all hyper-aware and too often hyper-concerned with what others think of us. I want readers to remember that there was a time—and not so very long ago—when everyone you ever met wasn’t watching your every move, ready to pounce, to render judgment, to critique your every decision. I want readers to feel confident to make whatever art they make and live the kind of life they feel called to live. I want us all to stop worrying about what others think of us, stop working so hard to make others like us, and stop apologizing for the ways in which we are not living up to others’ often ridiculous and arbitrary expectations. In short, I hope readers come away from the reading experience with renewed confidence to be themselves.

Each of your works has focused on different themes. How do you choose the themes for your novels? Honestly, I don’t choose my themes. By that, I mean I don’t sit down to write with an agenda in mind, such as, “I’d like to teach readers to be true to themselves.” The themes appear in the process of writing the characters and the story. And once they make themselves known, I simply find more ways to enhance them and weave them into the fabric of the story.

You have written dual-timeline and contemporary novels. Do you prefer one time period to another? Every time period I have written in has its charm. I am perennially interested in how the past affects the present, so even my strictly contemporary novels feature characters and storylines that are deeply influenced and impacted by the past, whether their own or someone else’s.

What are you working on next? I am currently working on a dual-timeline story set in present-day East Lansing, Michigan, and 1880s France and Gibraltar that involves a mysterious artist ancestor, a lost painting, identity, adventure, and the limits placed on a woman’s life, whether by the society and time she lives in or by herself. It is a celebration of the art of painting and the art of seeing and presenting the self in the truest light possible.

How can readers connect with you? Readers can find me online at ErinBartels.com (where they can also sign up for my newsletter), or follow me on Instagram @erinbartelswrites or Facebook @ErinBartelsAuthor. Or, even better, catch me at a bookstore event, library talk, or writing conference workshop. I love to meet readers and writers in person.

Thank you for sharing this book with us. I’m sure my readers will be interested in this story.

Readers, here’s a link to the book.

https://www.amazon.com/Everything-Just-Beginning-Erin-Bartels-ebook/dp/B0B6Q46W57/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1676574326&sr=1-1

Leave a comment for a chance to win a free copy of the book. You must follow these instructions to be in the drawing. Please tell us where you live, at least the state or territory or country if outside North America. (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 2 weeks from the posting of the winners to claim your book.

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10 comments:

  1. I just stumbled on your site and wanted to leave a "hello"! So many great looking books I need to check out, thanks for sharing!

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  2. This sounds great. Thank you for sharing. Blessings from Lucy in WV.

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  3. Love the cover! I'd like to win this.

    -Melissa in TN

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  4. Erin Bartels is an amazing author!
    Caryl K in TX

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  5. I love music! I grew up in a musical family where both of my parents had musical talents and degrees. I like the musical theme of EVERYTHING IS JUST BEGINNING. It sounds very intriguing. Thank you for the chance to win a copy of this book!

    Alison from MI
    nj(dot)bossman(at)gmail(dot)com

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  6. This novel is a treasure. Music is so important to our lives., Books and music. Love them both. Pearl-NM.

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  7. Erin Bartels is a wonderful writer. This story calls to me. Anne in NM.

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  8. Sharon Bryant6:36 PM

    Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
    Nichols SC.

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  9. Anonymous1:30 PM

    I’ve only had the pleasure of reading one Erin Bartels novel but I know she writes a wonderful story. I also appreciate that she’s not afraid to write about the “tough stuff” in life.

    Perrianne Askew in central Texas

    perrianne (DOT) askew (AT) me (DOT) com

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  10. Erin's book sounds like such a great book please enter me Sarah T. in Ohio

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