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September 20, 2011

The Language of Flowers:Vanessa Diffenbaugh

Filed under: Blog,Reviews — Tags: book review, fiction, flowers, foster care, Random House, The Language of Flowers, Vanessa Diffenbaugh — Christa Allan @ 1:06 am

“For eight years I dreamed of fire. Trees ignited as I passed them; oceans burned. The sugary smoke settled in my hair as I slept, the scent like a cloud left on my pillow as I rose. Even so, the moment my mattress started to burn, I bolted awake. The sharp, chemical smell was nothing like the hazy syrup of my dreams; the two were as different as Indian and Carolina jasmine, separation and attachment. They could not be confused. Standing in the middle of the room, I located the source of the fire. A neat row of wooden matches lined the foot of the bed. They ignited, one after the next, a glowing picket fence across the piped edging. Watching them light, I felt a terror unequal to the size of the flickering flames, and for a paralyzing moment I was ten years old again, desperate and hopeful in a way I had never been before and would never be again.

But the bare synthetic mattress did not ignite like the thistle had in late October. It smoldered, and then the fire went out.

It was my eighteenth birthday.”

And so begins The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh, and I am awake until the early morning hours because I can’t bring myself to stop reading. It is only when I hear my husband’s alarm, at three in the morning, that I realize how much time has passed. I force myself to sleep, so I can wake up and finish. When I do, I close the book, and think it was a novel I wish I had written.

Victoria Jones, the protagonist, is at once haunting, engaging and achingly real. Flashbacks to her ten-year-old self in the foster care system break you open. At eighteen, she is released from the system and begins to make her way through the world. It’s not pretty…she’s distrusting, hesitant, and awkward. Yet, she communicates through her extensive knowledge of flowers, their meaning, their ability to reflect feelings and emotions.

I found myself, at points, exhausted from pulling for her and urging her on because for a woman who can see with such deep clarity into others, she remains an enigma to herself.  She makes a sacrifice that, as a mother myself, I found sacrificial and so reflective of her hesitancy to allow herself to feel deeply for another human being after her own experiences.

I hesitate to reveal too much in this review because what I loved about this novel was its surprising twists and discoveries. It was unlike anything I had ever read, and I only wish I could read it again for the first time.

Don’t just read this novel. Savor it.

ABOUT THE BOOK

The Victorian language of flowers was used to convey romantic expressions: honeysuckle for devotion, aster for patience, and red roses for love. But for Victoria Jones, it’s been more useful in communicating grief, mistrust, and solitude. After a childhood spent in the foster-care system, she is unable to get close to anybody, and her only connection to the world is through flowers and their meanings.

Now eighteen and emancipated from the system, Victoria has nowhere to go and sleeps in a public park, where she plants a small garden of her own. Soon a local florist discovers her talents, and Victoria realizes that she has a gift for helping others through the flowers she chooses for them. But a mysterious vendor at the flower market inspires her to question what’s been missing in her life. And when she’s forced to confront a painful secret from her past, she must decide whether it’s worth risking everything for a second chance at happiness.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Vanessa Diffenbaugh was born in San Francisco and raised in Chico, California. After studying creative writing and education at Stanford, she went on to teach art and writing to youth in low-income communities. She and her husband, PK, have three children: Tre’von, eighteen; Chela, four; and Miles, three. Tre’von, a former foster child, is attending New York University on a Gates Millennium Scholarship. Diffenbaugh and her family currently live in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where her husband is studying urban school reform at Harvard.

Vanessa Diffenbaugh is also the founder of the Camellia Network.  The mission of the Camellia Network is to create a nationwide movement to support youth transitioning from foster care. In The Language of Flowers, Camellia [kuh-meel-yuh] means “My Destiny is in Your Hands.” The network’s name emphasizes the belief in the interconnectedness of humanity: each gift a young person receives will be accompanied by a camellia, a reminder that the destiny of our nation lies in the hands of our youngest citizens.

 

Thank you to Pump Up Your Book and  Vanessa Diffenbaugh for the review copy of this novel.

 

 


Comments (6)

September 17, 2011

Humor in the rear view mirror

Filed under: Blog,Education — Tags: school — Christa Allan @ 9:34 am

I’m on sabbatical this semester, so when I found this post from the beginning of a not-so-distant school year, I laughed. The passage of time can truly contribute to humor.

 

Since it’s almost midnight, and I have to roll out of bed in almost five hours, I’m going to give the microwave version of the past two weeks:

1. I’m simultaneously amused and enraged by the insolent arrogance of some freshmen who inform me that reading and “writting” will “defiantly” not be important in their future.

2. I have a student who buys books from “barns and nobles.”

3. Another student said that he “learned last year how to profread better.”

4. The favorite book of another is Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Zeus.

5. As for receiving feedback on writing, this student shared: “A teacher who doesn’t writhe on my paper doesn’t care much about what I write.”

6. How did this student learn to write? “Teachers taught me letters of the alphabet which obliviously helped.”

7. Another student is “writing an autobiography of his grandmother’s life.”

8.  Writing issues noted in papers submitted to date:

no use of apostrophes when writing contractions, so I find myself “decoding” the following: dont, cant, arent, isnt, wont, theyre, Ill

less than 10% of my students use cursive; I don’t mind that they print…what I mind is that they print IN ALL CAPS or in all lower case. If the periods ending their sentences aren’t the size of green peas, I don’t know where one sentence ends and another begins

use of “i” for personal pronoun “I” is gaining popularity

so far, not one student is using hearts or asterisks to dot the letters “i,j”

usage errors are multiplying faster than clunker cars: your/you’re, their/there/they’re, its/it’s, then/than are the major problems

we’re chanting ” a lot is two words”

paragraphing is apparently becoming obsolete

And, in closing, I’m reminded by one student that “going to collage is important because he wants to become a veet.”

What situations in your life may be funny now that weren’t so much so when they happened?


Comments (6)

September 13, 2011

Are you ready for publication?

Filed under: Blog,Writing — Tags: Amazon, Goodreads, Joyce Magnin, Publication, reviews — Christa Allan @ 9:51 am



Not your manuscript. You.

Here’s the test: Strip down to your pre-fall Garden of Eden nakedness and stand on the fifty-yard line during halftime at the Super Bowl while everyone submits critiques of your body on the JumboTron.

If you can handle that without buckets of drugs and/or a lifetime of therapy, then you’re probably ready. Because here’s what I’ve come to learn a year after my debut novel was published and months after the release of my second:

1. You can’t follow your writing. I’ve been chanting this to my students for years (I teach high school English…on a good day), but this never became so alive to me as it has since my own words hit print. If I could tap a reader on the shoulder as she’s finishing my book, I could explain why I phrased that sentence a certain way or why included that simile.  The ending of my novel is most frequently slammed. Might I have ended it differently had I known the sequel wouldn’t have been contracted? Perhaps. But as one reader at a book club stated: “I think how people react to the ending says more about them than it does about the ending itself.”  Crazily, that’s been true more often than I would have expected.

2. You can’t obsess over ratings. Some days, my Amazon and Goodreads ratings plunge faster than the stock market. When I find myself getting angsty over a drop from 4.2 to 3.25, I look at the front page of the newspaper. It’s called perspective.

3. You are not your writing. Okay, maybe I am in that a writer invests so much of him/herself into a novel.  When I read a review like this: “Buying and reading this book was the biggest waste of money and time since buying the magical egg peeler the infomercials. It was horribly written and tedious,”  I make a conscious effort to not personalize it as if I’m horrible and tedious (well, don’t count this week any week I’m grading research papers). It also helps to envision dropping the reviewer in a vat of crunchy peanut butter.

If you’re a pre-published writer who feels compelled to vehemently defend or sarcastically retort to someone who has critiqued your writing…fasten your seatbelt.  Dealing with an assessment of your writing that might suggest it needs more work pales in comparison to some reviews you may receive. When my publisher generously offered free Kindle downloads of my novel, I read several lovely reviews. Others…not so much.  Just a few of the top vitriolic ones:

~the ending was so terrible I could barely justify this 3 (rating)

~this book was unrealistic and a waste of my time

~confusing and in my humble opinion, pointless

But to quote Joyce Magnin of the amazing Bright’s Pond books, “here’s the thing”: If now and forever, all I ever have is that one response from that one reader who said she saw herself in Leah (my protagonist) and changed her life because of that…the emotional nakedness was worth the price.

So, if your response to this is,  “Bring it on!” then you are R-E-A-D-Y.


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September 8, 2011

Meet author Elizabeth Goddard: from cranberry farms to ice sculptor

Filed under: Blog — Tags: author interview, Barbour, Elizabeth Goddard, Freezing Point, Heartsong, Hometown Mysteries — Christa Allan @ 1:02 am

Please welcome  author Elizabeth Goddard

How long after you first started writing were you published?

I started writing fiction for publication in 2001 when I joined ACFW after meeting DiAnn Mills and was put into a critique group.  The only other time I’d tried my hand at writing a novel was when I was fourteen—so it was another twenty-years before I tried again. Joining that first critique group was key for me because I had to submit a chapter a week and I learned so much.  I consider those girls my closest and dearest friends. We’re all published now, Deborah Vogts and Lisa Harris are both with Zondervan.

 What motivated you to continue pursuing writing?

The desire to write was pretty much burning inside me for years before I pursued it, and by that time, I finally gave in to what I believe was God’s call to write–I’d been running from that for years. Sticking with writing is a difficult thing, and I think to stick with it a person has to have that drive inside–a desire that won’t let you give up.

How many hours a day do you spend writing? Do you have a schedule?

When I first decided to “answer the call” I set aside afternoon hours from 1-4 PM and I started by writing devotionals. As I began writing fiction I tried to commit a certain number of hours, and to be honest, it was more like I had to set aside hours to focus on my family. I think we can get obsessed or too caught up in things and forget what’s important sometimes.  Now with constant, multiple deadlines, I try to write at least chapter a day and that could take three hours or eight, and sometimes I only get half a chapter. Then I have to work in edits or any proposal developments around that, plus I home school three boys so I have to write before we start school and after we finish.

Knowing what you know now, would you do anything differently? If so, what and why? If not, why not?

In the beginning, I spent a lot of time studying story structure and craft books which is a good thing, don’t get me wrong, but I didn’t spend nearly as much time actually writing as I should have. I think I should have started submitting proposals years before I did, because the stories were ready but I didn’t believe in myself. Still, you don’t want to submit before you are ready.

 Is the “writer’s life” what you thought it would be?

Yes and no. When you dream of getting published one day, you believe that your heart will be satisfied. That you’ve made it. But that’s not what happens, because then you dream about being multi-published, and then you dream about being award-winning. It never ends. On the other side of that coin, I greatly enjoy coming up with story ideas and sometimes keeping up with the deadlines can be brutal, but I’m doing something I love every day.

 We all read about the “pansters” and the “plotters.” Which one are you?

I can’t imagine beginning a story without a plot or an outline. Because I started with Heartsong and they require a chapter synopsis, I learned early on how to develop my story before I write it. Now, I find that to be an invaluable tool because I don’t have to stare at a white page and wonder which direction to go. That said, I often see how something will work better differently as I write, but I never veer too far from my roadmap.

When a book idea comes to you, what do you do first?

I write it down! I might not come back to it for a long time, but at least I’ll remember it. In fact, my first novel, Seasons of Love, was set on a cranberry farm. I saw the idea years before I wrote the story. Same thing with Freezing Point (LIS, October 2011) which involves an ice sculptor. I wrote the idea down and didn’t come back to it until three years later.

How do you juggle being a wife, mother, and writer?

I think “juggle” is the key word here. I consider writing my job and I focus on that during the specified time, just like if I had an office in town away from my family. There are days where I have to spend extended hours finishing a book. But when it’s done, I spend extended hours with my family.

Where would we find you in the bookstore?

Most of my books are with the Heartsong Presents Book Club, but I also write for Barbour’s novella collections, and their Hometown Mysteries. You can find me in the romance section, or romantic suspense/mystery.

Why Christian fiction?

I started reading Christian Fiction in my early twenties with Boede and Brock Thoene and I never looked back. I love that I don’t have to worry about language or gratuitous sex (yes I said the S word), plus I love coming away with a spiritual nugget. God uses these novels to speak to people in a big way.

Do you have anything else you would like to share?

You can find me at www.elizabethgoddard.com  and sign up for my newsletter, or you can keep up with my daily at my facebook author page, where I’d love for you to stop by and “like” me. www.facebook.com/elizabethgoddardauthor

Thanks, Elizabeth. for your time today.


Comments (3)

September 5, 2011

God has always used social networking

Filed under: Blog,Faith — Tags: Christianity, prayer — Christa Allan @ 1:27 am

TO: Christa

FROM: God

RE: Pay Attention

Photo of the Book of Isaiah page of the Bible

Image via Wikipedia

“No weapon forged against you will prevail.” Isaiah 54:17

Against all hope, Abraham in hope believed.” Romans 4:18

“We live shabbily because we pray meagerly.” E.M. Bounds, The Necessity of Prayer

The Lord is near to all who call out to Him.” Psalm 145:18

“…the forces that blocked your progress and threatened your life become at His command the very materials He uses to build your street of freedom.” F. B. Meyer

“The moment of your greatest sacrifice will also be the precise moment of your greatest and most miraculous blessing. ” F.B. Meyer

Give me the strength to wait for hope-to look through the window when there are no stars.” George Matheson

“Many are the plans in a man’s heart, but it is the Lord’s purposes that prevail.” Proverbs 19:21

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