Welcome, Nicole. Why do you write the kind of books you do?
I write stories about everyday people who are faced with
extraordinary circumstances. Tragedy is a part of life, and finding hope amid
the ruins of an unforeseen disaster--whether personal or communal--is what
compels me to write. I believe that life is a fine balance of both devastation
and beauty, and I am passionate about pointing out the light that still
glimmers from the ashes of a seemingly unredeemable wreckage. It’s all about
rising from the ruins, finding hope where none seems possible.
Besides when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in
your life?
I’ve had a hundred happiest days. My wedding day, the birth
of my sons Isaac and Matthias, the day I first held my adopted son Judah, the
day I signed my first book contract... The list goes on. One of the happiest
days I’ve had recently was the day I finished reading Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone to my
two oldest boys. We were curled up on the couch with hot chocolate, and we all
got teared up through the final pages. I love sharing things with my kids, and
I think that particular afternoon is one that we will all remember forever.
Often we believe that the important stuff is the so-called big stuff, but I’m a
big fan of living in the details.
How has being published changed your life?
I think the biggest change for me was letting go of my
career as a teacher. I was a high school English teacher before I signed my
first book contract, and although I was taking a break from teaching to be a
stay-at-home mom, I always thought I’d go back to the classroom. Now that I’m
writing, I know that will never happen. It was a bittersweet day when I let my
teaching license expire.
What are you reading right now?
I’m reading Juliet
by Anne Fortier and loving it! Out of all of Shakespeare’s plays, Romeo and Juliet was my
favorite one to teach (high school students get really into it!). It’s fun to
read Ms. Fortier’s take on this classic story.
What is your current work in progress?
I kind of have two books on the go right now. I’m editing my
next book, Sleeping In Eden
(due out in February of 2013), and laying the groundwork for my third
contracted book with Howard. Sleeping
in Eden
is a mystery that spans three decades, and my current work in progress is a
love story that spans the globe.
What would be your dream vacation?
I want to spend an entire summer on the island of Capri .
How do you choose your settings for each book?
Most of my books are set in Northwest Iowa simply because it’s an area that I know
and love. I’ve also used Florida , British Columbia , Alaska ,
and most recently West Africa as settings in
my books. Personally, I wouldn’t write about a place I’ve never been. To me,
the atmosphere of a book is too important to guess at.
If you could spend an evening with one person who is currently alive,
who would it be and why?
I know this sounds kind of uppity, but fame doesn’t really
do much for me. I once met Bono, and when I realized it was him I was like:
“Hey, Bono.” He said hey back, we smiled, and went our separate ways. So the
person I would like to spend time with is someone who is meaningful to me... I
have an old friend that I would like to reconnect with, but we live too far
apart to make it possible. I’d love to spend an evening sharing a bottle of
wine with her.
What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?
I love to garden in the summertime, and work on house
projects during the winter. My family is also very outdoorsy and we live with
our windows open and our feet bare when weather permits. We like to hike,
kayak, run, camp, geocache... Pretty much anything we can do outside!
What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome
it?
Finding the time to write. I haven’t
overcome it by a long shot--it’s a constant, daily struggle. No matter how hard
I try to stick to a schedule, life continues to interfere. My kids get sick,
school is canceled due to a snow day, a friend crisis comes up... But I’ve
learned to roll with the punches. The work always gets done somehow.
What advice would you give to a beginning author?
Oh, my goodness... Where to begin? I
guess what I would say is not so much advice as it is an anecdote from my own
life. I’ve been writing ever since I was a little girl, but none of my early
work is any good at all. I believe that’s because for years I didn’t have
anything to say. It was only after I had given up writing for nearly five years
that I experienced some really difficult things in my own life... And suddenly
I had so much to say.
In my life at least, I needed to have a story to tell--a meaningful, personal
story--before I could write a novel worth reading.
Tell us about the featured book.
Far From Here is a book
that is very loosely based on one of my own family stories. Over thirty years
ago, my dad’s best friend disappeared off of the coast of Alaska . He was a bush pilot, and he simply
vanished into thin air. No trace was ever found of him or his plane. I grew up
with this piece of family history, but it wasn’t until I was a grown woman with
a husband of my own that I began to grasp the depth of loss that everyone who
loved this man must have felt at his disappearance. Far From Here
explores that sort of loss, but it’s definitely a novel that hinges on hope...
Even if that hope is a tenuous, ever-changing thing.
Please give us the first page of the book.
The first time he took me up, I thought I was going to die. It was an
accident, really, a stroke of luck or fate or happenstance that lured me into
the cockpit that morning. Under normal circumstances I wouldn’t have touched
with the tip of my little toe the small red-and-white Cessna 180 that Etsell
used for teaching rookie pilots. But his lesson had been a no-show. And the
plane was fueled up and ready to go, waiting on the runway for takeoff.
I was huddled in the
hangar, arms wrapped tight against my chest to ward off the early-spring chill
as Hazel yakked on endlessly about her grandson who was in the army. Later, I
wondered if it was orchestrated, if she had baited me with a fresh pot of
coffee and the pay-attention-to-me slant of her puppy-brown eyes. But at the
time, all I could think of was that her steel-wire mop of hair could use a good
wash and set.
“My grandson is going to
be in the special ops,” she said with a grin.
I nodded, though I doubted
that those sorts of things were determined in the first week of boot camp.
“He’s going to be one of
those secret agents. Navy SEAL or something. Imagine that: Special Agent
Jansen.” Hazel smirked at my halfhearted acknowledgment. Then her eyes slid
past me and she tipped her head in the direction of the runway. “I think Etsell
is waving at you.”
How can readers find
you on the Internet?
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Nicole-Baart/53232389209Thank you, Nicole, for spending this time with us.
Dear readers, my friend Nicole is a Christian, who wrote this book for the general market.
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
Far from Here: A Novel
Far from Here
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