Thanks, Therese for visiting me on my blog today.
Besides
when you came to know the Lord, what is the happiest day in your life?
It hasn’t happened yet. That’ll be the day Jesus takes me home. Other
than that, pretty much every day I’m alive is happy, even when things are bad.
And no, I haven’t always had this attitude. I’ve had to force myself to think
this way.
Yes, sometimes it is a daily struggle. What are your hobbies, besides writing and reading?
You mean there’s life
outside of books? I love to craft. Cross stitch, scrapbooking, teaching crafts.
I try to incorporate a craft into every lesson I give when I teach the children
at church.
I admire people who are talented with handcrafts. I'm so not. What is your most difficult writing obstacle, and how do you overcome it?
Making myself write. I have to force myself.
Some days it works, some days, not so much.
What advice would you give to
a beginning author?
I mentor a group of
young writers, and I tell them the same thing. WRITE. READ. Get together with a
group (we’re blessed that we’re face to face) to get feedback on your work. And
don’t confuse school writing with good fiction.
Tell us about Annabelle’s Angel – a brief blurb:
Annabelle Archer has been crushing on Rick
Stockton for years. And now, when he notices her, it’s only because her
brothers and sisters make it impossible for him to miss her. Annabelle still
hasn’t decided if God’s will means she spends her life taking care of her six
siblings, or if He has more in mind for her. Rick Stockton doesn’t mind that
church activities and Annabelle’s brothers and sisters keep throwing Annabelle
and Rick together. He just isn’t sure what it means. But as the kids keep
trying to turn Rick into a snow angel—with sugar, baby powder, and more—he’ll
work on figuring it out. Spending time with Annabelle’s family gives Rick a
longing for one of his own…and an idea to make it happen. This Christmas,
Annabelle may just find there’s a special angel in her corner, one that will
stick around for a lifetime.
Is there one particular message or “moral
of the story” you hope readers walk away with?
God has a plan for each of us, and it’s not always
what we expect, what He has planned for others, or what others think is out
plan.
How did Annabelle’s Angel get started?
Oh,
cool story. My best friend had temporarily lost her license, and I drove her to
the DMV to get it reinstated. To distract her, I asked her to help me
brainstorm my next Christmas story. She wanted it to be Victorian (it is, in a
way) and she chose Annabelle’s name. But the most important part was the
grandmother who didn’t or couldn’t drive. Other than that one issue,
Annabelle’s grandmother is nothing like my friend!
That is a cool story. How do you see yourself
in your character’s story, if at all?
I
always end up learning the lesson I’m trying to write. I’m pretty sure God is
laughing as He gives me the idea, and here’s me thinking it’s all from my own
head, and He says, no, it’s from Me.
Will we know what
happens to your character after the end of the book?
I
hope so. Annabelle learns a lot, and starts to use her gifts the way God
intended.
When you’re working on a
project, how do you keep the immensity of it from getting you down?
I
tell myself to take one small bit at a time.
How do you choose
between ideas you’d like to write about?
I
don’t! I have six or seven stories going right now. I just work on whichever
one I miss the most, whichever one excites me the most, or the one that my crit
group has been working on (sometimes) and I want something critiqued.
I can't imagine doing more than one at a time. I get too confused. Both of your lead characters have “baggage” that keeps them
from wanting to pursue a new relationship. Do you think sometimes we let our
past get in the way of what God has planned for our futures?
Always,
always, always. And in fact, that’s largely what Annabelle’s Angel is all
about.
bio:
Therese Travis is a wife, mother, grandmother, follower of Christ. She's been writing stories since the age of eight, and "telling stories" (you know what that means) since long before. She finally figured out how to put those stories onto the page. She loves to talk about Jesus and His love for us, about her family, crafting, writing, and praying.
6 comments:
Nice interview, Therese. I loved reading Annabelle's Angel, it was a sweet story.
Loved the interview and the book sounds so good!
Blessings!
Judy B
Great interview! I encourage everyone to read Annabelle's Angel. I really enjoyed it.
Thank you, Marie and Julie. And Judy, if you read it, I hope you enjoy it as much as I enjoyed writing it.
I enjoyed both the book and the interview.
I enjoyed both the book and the interview.
Post a Comment