1. What inspired you to write this book? This book is the fifth book in the Rockwater
Suite series. I wanted to write a story about real people struggling with
real life issues—people who persevere and overcome. This includes a young
pianist whose life was shattered and a musical savant who captures all our
imaginations. It was their relationship that changed the trajectory of both
their lives.
2. What exactly is it about and who is
it written for?
While this book is the fifth in the series, it is a stand-alone book as it
continues the story of Gretchen Silva and her longing to return to her homeland
after thirty years of being assumed dead by her family. Gretchen is finally
free from her abusive husband and has settled into her new home at Duke
University, where her savant granddaughter, Bella, is being educated and
studied by the psychologists. But Gretchen has a yearning to return to Austria
where there are secrets that, once unearthed, cannot be buried again. This book
would appeal to young and more mature women.
3. What do you hope readers will get out of reading your book? Readers give all our stories life as the characters and places become 3D in their imaginations. While some readers will find a pleasant escape to a simpler place and time with characters that are lovable and a bit quirky, other readers will enjoy being taken to a new place, perhaps a place where they’ve never traveled. This series is set in the South, and yet I take the readers on a sweeping tour of Austria and the Danube. This is a book about “home.” What is it? Where is it? And why we long for it? And I hope that readers will find those answers, their own answers, as they read Gretchen’s story.
4. How did you decide on your book’s title and cover design? Searching for the Song is a book about yearning, and Gretchen is on a
quest to find her family. The word song is a metaphor for that
indescribable thing in our lives that makes our lives worth living. It is the
spark, and Gretchen wants that spark back. Now about the cover. I happen to be
married to a brilliant portrait artist, but he also paints stellar still lifes.
We have a ritual at the end of my writing day—I read to him what I have
written. Over the course of a few months, he has gathered mental images of the
setting and the story, and he paints a picture for me as a gift when I finish
the book. He nailed it with this painting. And we chose it to be the book
cover.
5. What advice or words of wisdom do you have for fellow
writers – other than run!? Well, that brought a chuckle. No, never run away from writing. My
advice is simple—read and write. Then read and write some more. And write
something every day. I find it necessary to have a comfortable writing space,
and fortunately I have a room with wide windows looking out on the sprawling
Texas Hill Country. Somehow that expansive view gives me a capacious feeling
inside and gets those creative juices flowing. And of course, I have a few
other necessary elements—my chair that hugs me, a keyboard that knows my touch,
and my chairside table with my notepad and a steaming cup of tea.
6. What trends in the book world do you see -- and where do you
think the book publishing industry is heading? Oh, how I wish I knew the answer to that
one. Truly the publishing industry is an anomaly. I just know there will always
be readers and people with stories to write, and somehow, someone will find a
way to make money providing those stories. Who that is remains the big
question, doesn’t it?
7. Were there experiences in your personal life or career
that came in handy when writing this book? This series sings, and my experiences as a classically
trained musician enabled me to make these stories lyrical in a way that will
appeal to other musicians but not off-putting to those who aren’t. Also, my
work in the cable industry offered me rare opportunities to meet so many
differently abled people, and being a musician, musical savants captured my
thinking and my imagination. Thankfully, with the brain initiative programs
launched several years ago, I had access to rich information as I was researching.
It was most important to make this character authentic. And at my age, I’ve had
plenty of life encouters—shattered dreams, loss, successes. These experiences
have given me the emotional well to draw from when I write create my characters
and their struggles and stories.
8. How would you describe your writing style? Which writers or
books is your writing similar to? I am a Southern writer to the “bless my heart” core of my being.
I was born and grew up in the South and proud of it. My books are
character-driven and slower paced, and food is almost a character in each of my
books. Food is my love language. And when there a lots of feet under the dinner
table, the stories abound. I have drawn from so many of those stories as I have
written my own. Oh, and did I mention secrets? What Southerner doesn’t have a
few secrets? I write in the style of Eugenia Price and Jan Karon.
9. What challenges did you overcome in the writing of this book? While writing this book, I was also care-giver
to my husband during cancer treatment and surgery. Some days were extremely
difficult physically and emotionally. Interestingly enough, I found that I was
not depleted. Somehow, my own grief, yearning, and longing gave me the deep
emotions I needed to write Gretchen’s story.
10. If people can buy or read one book this week or
month, why should it be yours? People live hurried, stressful lives, and we all could stand to
slow down a bit and breathe. Just breathe. This book will give the reader a
pleasant place to do that as I describe the gardens at Duke University, a
cruise down the Danube in Austria, or in Gretchen’s cottage kitchen. The reader
will be drawn again to these characters, their pasts, and their present. As I
deal with some deep personal questions we all have, I work hard to give the
reader some new things to ponder. If you want to be entertained, moved to
laughter and tears, challenged, and inspired, then read this book.
About The Author: Phyllis Clark Nichols, a retired cable television executive, is
an award-winning writer who weaves her faith and her Southern culture into her
writing and speaking. She is a seminary graduate and a classically trained
musician. She enjoys art, books, music, nature, cooking, travel, and stories
about ordinary people who live extraordinary lives. She is the author of nine
character-driven novels that bring hope and light as she explores profound
human questions. Phyllis and her husband live in the Texas Hill Country. For more info, please see: https://phyllisclarknichols.com
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