Bio: Lauraine Snelling is the award-winning author of nearly 100 books, fiction and nonfiction, for adults and young adults. Her books have sold more than five million copies. She and her husband make their home in Tehachapi, California.
She returns readers to the Nielsen sisters for the fourth and final
book of her Leah’s Garden series.
Snelling’s masterful grasp of life’s struggles in the late 1800s shines as she
weaves yet another complex, realistic, and heartfelt tale into Neilsen family
lore. Turning her focus to Larkspur Neilsen’s long-awaited story, Snelling’s A
Season of Harvest artfully renders the physical and emotional struggles
of carving out a life on the plains of Nebraska.
About the story: Can
her dreams for the future—and a budding romance—survive the trouble that comes
calling? Lark
Neilsen has carried the weight of her family’s fate on her shoulders since her reckless
choices forced them to flee their home in Linksburg, Ohio. Now she finds this
weight heftier than ever. With Del and Sythia busy tending to their own homes,
and Lilac back in Linksburg repairing the family mercantile, Lark must attain
the family dream of Leah’s Garden all on her own.
To further
complicate matters, Isaac McTavish is back in town, putting Lark’s head and
heart at odds. Her heart may be pulled toward Isaac’s persistence and
affection, but her mind is set on achieving her goal of starting a seed
catalog. While love blossoms between Lilac and an old schoolmate from Ohio,
will Larkspur allow the same for herself?
When it becomes
clear that Lilac’s new beau is not the only one who followed her to Nebraska,
Lark comes face-to-face with the danger that forced the Nielsen sisters to flee
Ohio in the first place.
Welcome back to my blog, Lauraine. Each of the previous books in your current series, Leah’s Garden, follows a different
Neilsen sister as the main character. What led you to save Larkspur’s story for
the series conclusion? I’d actually planned Larkspur’s story to
be first since she’s the oldest. However, once The Seeds of Change
started coming together, Forsythia took over the story! So the first book
became hers.
Loyalty plays a key role in A Season of Harvest. Without
giving spoilers, can you hint at why loyalty is at the core of the story? Loyalty
threads through the whole series. These sisters are loyal to each other, to
their friends, and to everyone they know. Through all the books, they take care
of each other so faithfully. Even their initial departure from Ohio stems from
drastic action they take to protect each other and their family. Loyalty then
streams over into other characters in the series, especially Isaac McTavish,
who really grows into loyalty in this book. Even our villain stays loyal to his
purpose all the way through.
Which of the four Neilsen sisters do you personally resonate with the most? Truth be told, I resonate with each of them. But really, I tend to identify with whichever one I’m writing at the moment! 😊
A
Season of Harvest returns to a major
conflict from the first book in the series, The
Seeds of Change. Was it always in your
plan to circle back and address that conflict again in the series conclusion? It wasn’t always
in our plan, but as the book came together, it became inevitable. One benefit of
a great editor is that they sometimes contribute ideas, and my editor, Jessica
Sharpe, pointed out how key it would be for Ringwald to confront Larkspur at
the end of the series. As the book went on, it became so important to resolve
that conflict, and we kept the villain in the stories just enough to keep readers
from forgetting about him.
What do you hope readers learn or take away from this
series? A
reminder of how important our families are. The Nielsens stood by each other in
so many crises, and that’s what I would hope readers take away—just a reminder
of how important your family is and how absolutely critical faith in Christ is.
Salton becomes a place of healing, a place for people to recover joy. That we
have so many joys and things to learn in this life is a theme that weaves
through all my books.
What
led you to set these stories in the homesteading period? How was the setting
important to the story you wanted to tell? It’s one of my favorite periods!
The homesteading era was such a time of change and adventure. As for why
Nebraska, I hadn’t set stories there very much yet. For Kiersti, it was special
to join in on The Seeds of Change and get to write about Nebraska
homesteaders living in a soddy because her great-grandfather, a son of Danish
immigrants, was born in a soddy in Nebraska in the late 1800s.
Is
this truly the last your readers will see of the Neilsen sisters and the rest
of their community? As
far as we know!
Now
that you’ve wrapped up the Leah’s Garden series, what are you working on
next? A
series set in 1889 near Decorah, Iowa. Six-year-old Ruth and
twenty-one-year-old Amalia are thrown together on a ship crossing over from
Norway when their families die of cholera. Ruth’s dying mother gives her
daughter into Amalia’s custody, and the two orphans travel to Iowa to take over
the family boardinghouse Ruth will inherit. They must battle a greedy relative
trying to claim the property and somehow make ends meet for the motley band of
orphans who gather under their roof, while finding a way to make this new land
home.
Where can readers go to connect with you? They can find more information about my writing and other books by
visiting my website at LauraineSnelling.com. I’m also on Facebook and BookBub
at @LauraineSnellingAuthor.
Thank you, Lauraine,
for sharing this book with us. I love your stories, because my father was half
Norwegian and half Swedish and both sides of his family emigrated in the late
1800s and settled in Minnesota.
Readers, here’s a
link to the book.
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7 comments:
This book sounds really good!
Elly -Indiana-
I've been eyeing this series on Amazon. The descriptions fit my reading interest perfectly. I'd love to win this book! Thanks for the opportunity! Historical fiction is my favorite genre.
Susan in NC
Love the cover this book sounds like an amazing book! Sarah in Ohio
Sounds like a wonderful story. Cherie J. from Florida.
I love your books! Just finished the Sisters of the Confederacy series. I loved them!
Abigail in VA
Enter me in your awesome giveaway!!
Nichols SC.
Brenda from MS. I love Lauraine Snellings books. Thanks for this giveaway!
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