It has been a strange summer.
I’ve said
that often. It was strange when I was a kid and all my friends could drive and
I couldn’t (August birthday) and when my boyfriend broke up the last week of
school and I spent summer’s lazy, crazy days with a broken heart.
It was weird
when I was 19 and could still wear a two-piece swimsuit nicely and still loved
going to the lake—we’re inlanders; no beach—but I was a mom, too, and I would
never be just myself again.
And, oh, the
summer my first kid got his driver’s
license and had his first serious girlfriend—that was a wild one! There was the
year I sewed for my daughter’s wedding. I think I cried and—yes, I’m sorry,
cursed—from March to August, which as how long it took me to complete her
dress, the four bridesmaids’, and the two flower girls’ dresses. The
end-of-summer when I helped my youngest pack for college and suddenly realized
the nest was empty and I wasn’t ready. Not ready at all.
So, this
summer, a new book came out. A Soft Place
to Fall is my first inspirational. It’s a book of my heart—okay, they all
are—and I love that Early, its heroine, is 46 or so. She’s 15 pounds
overweight. She’s a pleaser. She doesn’t have a college education. She
subscribes to an anthem of the 1960s—“I am woman, hear me roar”—but she roars
to her own tune, thank you very much.
But you know
what? I’m almost 63. I have carpal tunnel syndrome. Just trying to schedule
surgery requires a cardiac workup because things are…strange in the health
department. I am, even though I feel good, more tired than I like to admit.
Maybe it’s time to quick writing. Books, anyway. Maybe… It has been, you know,
a strange summer.
But the other
day I sold a book. A women’s fiction one about four 51-year-old women that came
straight from my menopausal heart. Some of them have iffy knees, they’re
hormonally challenged, and cancer has woven its insidious thread through their
ranks. They don’t remember their natural hair colors or what they started to
say just minutes ago or what they went into the next room to get. In (working
title) The Girls of Tonsil Lake, the
women deal with death, heartbreak, anger, betrayal—you name it. They react
every which way.
One thing
they don’t do, though, these “Girls” who kept at me until the five of us made
their story into a book, is quit. So I won’t, either. I don’t care how strange
the seasons get.
BIO:
Like Early in A Soft
Place to Fall, Liz Flaherty has spent the past few years reinventing
herself. The career postal worker who wrote on weekends and sewed whenever
someone lost a button now writes whenever she feels like it and sews the rest
of the time. She’s not necessarily more productive these days, but she
certainly does have a lot of fun.
She lives
with her husband, Duane, in the farmhouse they bought in 1977 and intended to
stay in until the kids grew up, at which time they planned to move to a small
house that cleaned itself and cooked their meals while he played golf and
she…didn’t. This has not happened. Even though they occasionally discuss
downsizing, neither of them is willing to go through a 36-year accumulation of
stuff.
A Soft Place to Fall is Liz’s seventh
book and her first inspirational.
10 comments:
Liz, You book sounds like a wonderful read! The characters sound like women I could relate to.
Great post! Wow! So much there that rings true I don't even know where to start...just...wonderful!
Fun post, and your book sounds witty and interesting. Hope I can read it soon. :)
Liz, you took me back. I'm an August born woman too. We made the move you speak of in your bio, threw, threw, threw, and I feel so free of stuff. I highly recommend it!
Fun post and sounds like a great read! I, too, am on the other side of 50 and my oldest son turned 30 last February. I think it was that fact that really made me feel old. I try my best to keep my body healthy and strong, but those little aches do creep up on you as you age.
My summers changed when my boys all grew into adults. But they are a lot less stressful now and much more relaxing.
Great post, Liz!
Congrats on the sale!
I think you shadowed me for that book--save for the cancer. But, definitely iffy knees. I can't wait for your new book to be published. And just for the record, I doubt we would let you quit ;-)
Love the post. Your book sounds wonderful and I'm looking forward to it. Keep writing!!
I so love this premise, Liz. Fun and meaningful at the same time. I have a group of long-time pals...one is widowed, one just got of a heart-rending divorce after a long marriage (the guy is a JERK, we all knew it but..)...we've had lives touched by cancer and emptying nests and/or grandkids, and it's just great to hang out. We try to do things together a few times a year. So I know I will love your books.
Thanks to everyone for stopping by!
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