I'm thrilled to have Linda Yezak on my blog today. Linda
and I have never met in person, and yet we go way back to the pre-Facebook days
when we met on an online Christian Writers forum. It has been an honor to both
grow a friendship and to follow her writing career ever since. Today she's
going to talk about her summer, writing process, and characters in her new
release RIDE TO THE ALTAR. She's also offering a chance to win a terrific cowgirl giveaway package at the end of the post.
About the Book:
Cattle are dying on the Circle
Bar, putting the Texas ranch in financial jeopardy. Newly engaged Patricia
Talbert and Talon Carlson must root out the cause before they can concentrate
on wedding plans.
But that mystery isn't their only
obstacle. To placate her father, Patricia must return to her hometown of
Manhattan to make amends with her mother, the interfering, dominating woman she
has hardly spoken to in a year. Her father decides it is time for them to
declare a truce, but considering the depth of anger she holds against her
mother, how can she?
While she is away, Talon
discovers that the attacks on the ranch are connected to the murder of his
first fiancée over eight years ago. Memories plague him and emotions confound
him as he scrambles to discover who is trying to destroy him and the ranch. By
the time Patricia returns from New York, the strikes against the Circle Bar
have become more aggressive, to the point of injury for one of the ranch hands.
Before they can move forward together, each have
to resolve the past. Their Ride to the Altar has twists and turns neither ever
considered. Will they be able to start their new life with a clean slate?
Interview with Linda
* This has been a terrific series, especially for fun summer reading. How about your summer? With everything you're up to, are you finding ways to enjoy your summer or are you focused on writing projects throughout?
We're more likely to vacation in spring or fall, but
summertime is reserved for festivals and book events, some of which we attend
every June. Each year, I pay for vendor space in two festivals—the Blueberry
Festival here in east Texas and the Polish Festival in central Texas. We've worked
these two for so long, I have repeat customers. It's great to have a following,
no matter how small. This year, we had the added benefit of a library
event—held indoors, thank You, Jesus! Aside from these, I have one more event—a
speech to the ACFW chapter in The Woodlands, near Houston, then things will
quieten down until fall.
Even while I'm working the release of Ride to the
Altar, I'm trying to find time to finish a historical romance novella. This
one is called Loving a Harvey Girl, for The Cowboy Collection to be
released next year by Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolina's Smitten imprint.
Time is moving much faster than I am. The story is due next month, and if my
life doesn't slow down a bit, I may not make the deadline!
That sounds intensely busy! Writing is certainly a multi-tasking process. Speaking of that, readers have gotten to know Talon and Patricia like good friends. Can you tell us a little about your personal process for creating your
characters?
I'm a bit of a pantser and rarely do anything
formally before I have a few chapters written. Of course, I have a general idea
of what I want to do before I start, so I'm aware of the type of characters
I'll need, but rarely do I have a clue as to their personalities. As I write,
my characters introduce themselves to me, and as they do, I discover which will
be used to make certain events occur in the story.
Sometimes, a character will want more of the
limelight than their assigned role demands. With the first of my Circle Bar
Ranch series, Give the Lady a Ride, secondary character Marie Lambeau
was much more flamboyant than the heroine, Patricia Talbert. I had to tone her
down considerably, but she's still a hoot. She matures over the course of the
series and is Patricia's rock when it comes to matters of faith.
In my stand-alone The Cat Lady's Secret, one
of the minor characters turned out to be the culprit who was burning down the
town's historic homes. When it dawned on me that he would be the perfect one to
be guilty of the crime, I had to actually do a character sketch and some
free-writing to figure out why. Since he was such a minor character, I didn't
have much of a clue about his background and what would drive him to commit
such a crime. This was around mid-book, so I had to work within the perimeters
of what I'd already written, but I also had to go back and weave in a bit more
about him—a typical hazard of being a pantser. But spending time with the
character enhanced the story.
For the Circle Bar Ranch series, I knew I was going
to do a “fish out of water” story—city girl meets bull-riding ranch foreman. I
also knew I had to avoid stereotypes, so Patricia Talbert has some knowledge
about ranching, and Talon Carlson has a college degree. And, frankly, those
tidbits of information were the only things I knew about the characters before
I started writing. It was fun watching them develop, and now they're as real to
me as my next-door neighbors.
Do you have a
favorite character or character “type” you like to write about?
Hard to pick one. Over the course of the series, the
characters I love most are Frank Simmons and Consuela Garcia. Both are
secondary characters, but both add so much to the story. The oldest cowhand on
the ranch, Frank tends to play Talon's conscience and Patricia's surrogate
father while she's so far from her real dad.
But Consuela, the cook/maid/laundress/honorary-mama,
is my favorite. She is high-tempered and outspoken. She loves fiercely and is
highly loyal and also serves as a source of wisdom for Patricia. One of my
favorite scenes featuring Consuela is in The Final Ride when Patricia's
aunt Adele joins the cast. Adele is the quintessential New York snob who is
accustomed to servants, and Consuela has never been treated like a servant her
entire life. The scene in which Consuela confronts Patricia about her aunt
still makes me giggle.
Because there seems to be fewer rules for writing
secondary characters, I find them far more fun to play with. As long as they
don't outshine the main character, as Marie once did Patricia, the sky's the
limit with them.
I have to admit, I'm going to miss the cast and crew
of the Circle Bar Ranch. I've already had one request to write a fourth book.
It's tempting.
About the Author
Linda W. Yezak lives with her husband and their funky
feline, PB, in a forest in deep East Texas, where tall tales abound and
exaggeration is an art form. She has a deep and abiding love for her Lord, her
family, and salted caramel. And coffee—with a caramel creamer. Author of
award-winning books and short stories, she didn't begin writing professionally
until she turned fifty. Taking on a new career every half century is a good
thing.
Website: http://lindawyezak.com
Newsletter: http://dld.bz/CoffeewithLinda
Facebook: Author
Page
Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/lyezak/
Twitter: @LindaYezak
Amazon Page: http://dld.bz/LWYAmazonPage
Goodreads: Linda W Yezak
Enter to win the fabulous cowgirl prize package!
Included in the prize basket are a signed print version of the series, a 16-ounce Christian cowboy mug, a horseshoe picture frame, a Ph. 4:13 stretch bracelet, a cute set of magnetic page markers, and, just for fun, a Texas Rubiks cube. To enter to win, just leave a comment on something you've read here. Linda is visiting a series of blogs, and you can enter on every one. Her next stop to win is at Linda Glaz's blog.
9 comments:
I found it fascinating how authors describe their characters and bring them alive! Thank you for sharing!
Thanks, Natalya!
It still amazes me how a writer can sit down to an empty page and create another world full of characters we love, hate, love to hate, and want to be friends with! Keep up the good work.
Empty pages can be intimidating, but our characters seem to pester us until we can bring them to life.
Thanks for the comment. If you want to participate in the giveaway, be sure to leave your name.
Secondary characters provides a lot of insight and laughter to the story. They can definitely steal the show.
Sonnetta_jones(at)hotmaail(dot)com
Sonnetta--they do. I get a kick out of all my secondaries. They're just fun.
A fourth book sounds like a good idea to me!
rayorr@bellsouth.net
Thanks, Linda. That fourth book is definitely an interesting thought!
Thank you to everyone for your comments and participation!
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