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Showing posts with label @LynnNAustin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label @LynnNAustin. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 22, 2022

#WednesdayWordswithFriends Welcomes Lynn Austin @LynnNAustin

Good Morning!

Well, I learned more than I ever thought I'd need to know about SFASU. Orientation was B-U-S-Y. 8am - 11pm Thursday and 8 am to 3pm Friday. Add in the drive up and back and you're looking at one tired Maw-Maw LOL! But I'm so glad I got to experience this with my Angel Girl. 

Today's guest is not new so please welcome Lynn Austin back with some insight to her latest book, Long Way Home....

1. Have you always loved books and reading? What was it about your formative years that informed your love for books and reading?

Books have been part of my life for as long as I can remember, beginning with bedtime stories when I was a child. My mother was the town librarian in the village where I grew up, so it’s not an exaggeration to say I was raised in a library. Over the years, I helped with everything from processing books to reading aloud for story hour, and I developed a deep appreciation for all sorts of books. In addition, my grandmother was a natural-born storyteller whose tales kept my sisters and me spellbound for hours on warm summer evenings. 

2. How did you become a writer?

I loved to read, but after a while it seemed like so many well-written books offered very little hope. Too many themes seemed to be “Life is hard and then you die.” I agree that life is hard—but God is good! So I sat down one day thirty-five years ago (I was a stay-at-home mom with a new baby at the time) and decided to write the kind of book I enjoyed reading—one that makes me laugh, makes me cry, and helps me learn something about myself and my life. I knew nothing about getting published (that would come later), but I quickly discovered how much I enjoyed writing. Eventually God brought a wonderful Christian author into my life who asked me to join her writers’ critique group, where I learned the basics of writing and publishing. As the years passed, I struggled to figure out if God was calling me to be a writer. I decided to persevere, and eleven years after I first sat down to write, my first novel was published.

3. What made you want to write historical fiction? What is it about that genre that you enjoy?

I write historical fiction because I love history, especially the little-known stories of ordinary people. For me, reading about the past and how people like me lived with courage in difficult times helps me to live with faith and grace, with God’s help. When we travel back in history through novels, I think it’s easier to see how God used tragic events as part of His redemption story. And that gives us faith to believe that He is still working now and that our lives can play a part in His story today.

4. What motivated you to write a story about a soldier returning from WWII and the challenges he faces? 

My dad was a WWII veteran who enlisted in the Navy at age 18. While he didn’t suffer from PTSD, thankfully, he never talked about his time in the service, although it surely had affected his life—as it had the lives of thousands of other returning vets. I wanted the novel to show the difficulties vets faced in returning to civilian life after everything they had endured during the war.

5. Please tell us a bit about the setting of your novel. 

Long Way Home takes place in a small town in rural New York State in the Hudson River Valley. Many returning veterans came home from the war to small villages like this one all over the US. The flashbacks to the war years take place in Belgium and Germany during and after the war.

6. Please tell us about your main characters in Long Way Home and what specific challenges each one of them faces.

Jimmy Barnett is an army medic who served in Europe and is hospitalized with PTSD after attempting suicide back home. Peggy Serrano is Jimmy’s longtime friend and neighbor who is trying to help him recover from the war—while also searching for the next steps in her own life. Gisela Wolff is a young Jewish nurse who flees Nazi persecution with her family during the war. Her path crosses with Jimmy’s during the war and she holds some of the keys to his recovery.

7. Who was your favorite character to write and why?

Peggy became my favorite because she is so sweet and caring in spite of the difficult life she has had and the challenges she now faces. I hope readers will be rooting for her to finally blossom and thrive.

8. As your story developed, did any characters surprise you, or did the storyline unfold in surprising ways?

Joe Fiore is a wounded army veteran and friend of Jimmy’s whom Peggy meets as she tries to piece together Jimmy’s story. Joe also suffers from PTSD. I was surprised that he became such an integral part of the story as I was writing it, and I wanted to explore his life and future as well.

9. What lessons can be learned from your main characters?

One lesson is the value of friendship and community for personal healing and wholeness. Life is a journey best taken with others. Also, that wrestling with God over the difficult questions of faith and suffering is part of our spiritual journey.

10. How much research did you do on the WWII time period and the specific challenges faced by soldiers returning home?

I researched the true story of the voyage of the passenger ship St. Louis as told by survivors, as well as life in Nazi-occupied Europe, especially for Jews in hiding. I needed to know about the work of army medics, the Allied liberation of concentration camps, and life for survivors in the aftermath. Much of my research also concentrated on the challenges faced by returning veterans and their families. I read many first-person accounts from vets and their families that helped bring my characters’ stories to life. Post-traumatic stress disorder was not fully understood until the Vietnam era. It was called battle fatigue or shell shock at the time of this novel. Psychiatry was in its infancy, and the only available treatments were those I highlighted in the story. 

11. What is your hope for Long Way Home

I hope it will shine a light on the challenges that veterans and their families face. I also hope it will show the devastating effects of persecution, whether it’s the anti-Semitism practiced by the Nazis or schoolyard bullying.

12. How do you hope this story resonates with your readers?  

Fiction can be a great medium to vividly illustrate important truths. In this case, I hope the novel will be a reminder of the need to love others as Christ loved us, no matter what our differences are.

Lynn Austin has sold more than one and a half million copies of her books worldwide. A former teacher who now writes and speaks full-time, she has won eight Christy Awards for her historical fiction and was one of the first inductees into the Christy Award Hall of Fame. One of her novels, Hidden Places, was made into a Hallmark Channel Original Movie. Lynn and her husband have three grown children and make their home in western Michigan. Visit her online at lynnaustin.org

Get your copy of Long Way Home from Tyndale or Amazon. Check out Lynn's previous visits to our blog and the books we featured HERE.

Thank You so much, Lynn for sharing with us today! We wish you the best of luck and God's blessings with your new release.

Thanks Friends for dropping by and supporting me and my guests. Love and Gratitude/Appreciation for Each and Every ONE of YOU!

Until next time....Peace be with You. Grace and Favor go before you, and my you be Blessed with a Rich Increase of God's ALMIGHTY Good!

PamT

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

#WednesdayWordswithFriends Welcomes Lynn Austin @LynnNAustin

Good Morning!

Please take a moment to join me in prayer for those affected by the tornadoes last week. We know from experience how devastating natural disasters can be but the loss of life due to these is just awful. Thanks Friends.

Last month, Lynn shared with us her Christmas book so today we're getting a look behind the scenes of Lynn's writing of The Wish Book Christmas.

1. What prompted you to write a Christmas novella?
I love Christmas stories and the Christmas movies that our family watches year after year. (My favorite is How the Grinch Stole Christmas.) I have always wanted to write a Christmas-themed book but never had time—until the pandemic struck and all of our travel plans, family get-togethers, church events, and other fun activities were canceled, giving me plenty of extra time. My idea was to write a Christmas novella that was a mini sequel to one of my full-length novels, giving readers an enjoyable update on some of their favorite characters. The Wish Book Christmas brings readers back to the people and setting they first met in my novel If I Were You.

2. In The Wish Book Christmas, what message do you hope to convey about Christmas? 
Christmas is about the greatest gift of all, Jesus Christ, given to us in love by our heavenly Father. He should be the focus of all that we do to celebrate. Christmas shouldn’t be just a spending spree with long lists of all the presents we need to buy and the gifts we hope to receive. Instead, it’s a time to return God’s love by freely giving ourselves, our time, and our talents to others, expecting nothing in return. This is the best way to glorify God and celebrate His Son’s birth at Christmas.

3. Please tell us a bit about the setting of your novella. 
The Wish Book Christmas takes place in a small Connecticut town in December of 1951. Christmas is one month away, World War II is in the rearview mirror, and Americans are enjoying renewed prosperity along with a “baby boom.” The main characters, Eve Dawson and Audrey Barrett, are British war brides who are struggling to raise their fatherless sons in the postwar bungalow they share. Readers first met Eve and Audrey and their five-year-old sons, Harry and Bobby, in my novel If I Were You, but this novella also reads very well as a stand-alone story.

4. Can you provide a brief backstory of your characters? 
Eve Dawson and Audrey Clarkson Barrett were childhood friends in England, where they grew up. Audrey and her wealthy family owned Wellingford Hall, a huge estate where Eve and her mother worked as servants. Their friendship flourishes in spite of their differences, and when World War II begins, the women enlist in the British army together, driving ambulances. They each fall in love with an American soldier and give birth to a son. But Audrey marries her son’s father and Eve does not. Audrey prepares to join her husband in America, but her plans end in tragedy when her husband dies suddenly. She decides to remain in England. Eve, who has no way to support her son and herself, decides to steal Audrey’s identity and move to America in her place. Eve’s deception is uncovered four years later when Audrey and her son arrive in America unannounced. Unscrambling the mess and restoring the friendship provides the plot for If I Were You.

5. Your novella is set in 1951. Why do you feel the themes of this story are so relevant, both then and now? 
I think 1951 and 2021 are both times of great change and also prosperity. In both eras, the values and traditions of the past are being questioned and, in many cases, discarded for something new and modern. This is especially true of biblical values. As suburban life becomes busier and more secular in both time periods, the true meaning of Christmas as Christ’s birth is lost as the holiday becomes commercialized. In both 1951 and 2021, we long to recover the simple beauty and meaning of the holiday.

6. This story is a nostalgic harkening back to the iconic Sears Wish Book catalogue. Was this catalogue part of your childhood Christmases? Please explain. 
Oh yes! The Sears Wish Book was something my two sisters and I looked forward to every season. I remember the three of us poring over it together the way the two boys in my novella do, choosing among page after page of toys and dreaming of finding them all beneath the tree on Christmas morning. Like the mothers in the novella, our mother also made us limit our choices—which was often difficult to do! The catalogue would be limp and dog-eared by the time we gave Santa our final lists.
When I was researching this novella, I was surprised and pleased to find back issues of the original Sears Wish Book online, dating back to the 1940s and ’50s. It was great fun to be reminded of all the toys from my childhood. And although the prices seemed ridiculously cheap by today’s standards, parents probably found them costly at the time.

7. If someone is standing in a bookstore considering your novella, what might you say to them to encourage them to read it? 
We all need a reminder now and then that Christmas isn’t about creating the perfect “Hallmark Christmas” with all the trappings and trimmings—and exhausting ourselves and our credit card limits in the process. The Wish Book Christmas offers inspiration for keeping the true meaning of Christmas at the forefront as we celebrate Christ’s birth. Readers with children and grandchildren will find some ideas for managing their kids’ expectations and teaching them to give.

8. What is your hope for this novella? 
My hope is that The Wish Book Christmas will rekindle the joy of giving and inspire creativity in shaping our Christmas traditions. The beauty of Jesus’ birth can be celebrated in simplicity and should be shared with neighbors who don’t know Him. I think most children are naturally generous, and I hope the story inspires parents to teach their children new ways to give at Christmas.

9. What lessons from this story do you hope will resonate with your readers? 
One of the characters in the novella, Eve Dawson, has a difficult time accepting God’s forgiveness for her past mistakes, feeling that she has to do something to earn it. I hope the message is clear that Jesus is God’s gift of grace to us so that our past can be forgiven. Like Eve, we can have a new life and a new beginning in Christ. 

10. How did writing this story change you and your own perspective of Christmas? 
I love to lavish presents on my children and grandchildren, but writing this story reminded me that it’s more important to teach them, by my example, how to give generously to others. I want to reach out to my neighbors in new ways this Christmas and pare down all the expectations of what makes a “perfect” holiday.

Lynn Austin has sold more than one and a half million copies of her books worldwide. A former teacher who now writes and speaks full-time, she has won eight Christy Awards for her historical fiction and was one of the first inductees into the Christy Award Hall of Fame. One of her novels, Hidden Places, was made into a Hallmark Channel Original Movie. Lynn and her husband have three grown children and make their home in western Michigan. Visit her online at lynnaustin.org or on Facebook, Twitter @LynnNAustin, 

Check our Lynn's previous visits to our blog HERE.

Thank you, so much, Lynn for sharing the story behind The Wish Book Christmas. Wishing you and yours a Blessed Holiday season!

Well friends, only 4 more posts this year. I hope you'll join me for each of them!

Until next time take care and God bless.
PamT

Saturday, November 6, 2021

#SaturdaySpotlight is on Lynn Austin @LynnNAustin & The Wish Book Christmas!

Good Morning!

We've been bombarded with Christmas since July and, baby, it's cold outside so what better time than to feature the lovely and talented Lynn Austin with her nostalgic Christmas novella, The Wish Book Christmas to remind us all of the true meaning of Christmas. Take it away, Lynn....

Best friends Audrey Barrett and Eve Dawson are looking forward to celebrating Christmas in postwar America, thrilled at the prospect of starting new traditions with their five-year-old sons. But when the 1951 Sears Christmas Wish Book arrives and the boys start obsessing over every toy in it, Audrey and Eve realize they must first teach them the true significance of the holiday. They begin by helping Bobby and Harry plan gifts of encouragement and service for those in their community, starting by walking an elderly neighbor’s yellow Lab—since a dog topped the boys’ wish list for Santa.

In the charming tale that follows, Audrey and Eve are surprised to find their own hearts healing from the tragedies of war and opening to the possibility of forgiveness and new love.

Excerpt: Harry finished his lunch first, leaving the crusts of his bread behind. Bobby copied him—he hated the dry
crusts, too—then followed him into the living room, after putting his dishes in the sink. They were trying 
to decide what to play when Harry spotted a colorful magazine on the coffee table that hadn’t been there when they’d left for kindergarten that morning. “Look, Bobby! That’s Santa Claus—see? He’s the one who’s going to bring us toys for Christmas. Now do you remember?”

Bobby picked up the magazine and studied it. The cover showed a fat, white-bearded man in a red suit 
putting presents beneath a Christmas tree. Santa held one finger to his lips as if saying, “Shh . . . these presents are a secret . . .”

“He looks sort of like Father Christmas,” Bobby said, “with his white beard. But Father Christmas wears 
a green coat, I think. And he isn’t this fat.” He opened the book to see what was inside and saw pictures of all sorts of toys.

Harry grabbed the book from him. “Oh, boy! Look at all these cars and trucks!”

“Mummy, is Father Christmas the same as Santa Claus?” Bobby asked as she walked through the living 
room. She was carrying a basket of dirty laundry on her way to the basement.

“Yes, love. Children call him by different names in different countries. By the way, did you and Harry forget that we’re going to see Santa Claus in the Christmas parade tonight?”

“Tonight?” Bobby asked.

“Yes, after we eat supper.”

“Yay!” Harry cheered, bouncing in place. “We can sit on his lap afterwards and tell him all the toys we 
want him to bring us.”

Taken from The Wish Book Christmas by Lynn Austin. Copyright © 2021. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, a Division of Tyndale House Ministries.  All rights reserved.


Lynn Austin has sold more than one and a half million copies of her books worldwide. A former teacher who now writes and speaks full-time, she has won eight Christy Awards for her historical fiction and was one of the first inductees into the Christy Award Hall of Fame. One of her novels, Hidden Places, was made into a Hallmark Channel Original Movie. Lynn and her husband have three grown children and make their home in western Michigan. Visit her online at lynnaustin.org or on Facebook, Twitter @LynnNAustin, 

Check out Lynn's previous visits to our blog HERE.

The Wish Book Christmas sounds amazing, Lynn. Thank you for sharing it with us! We certainly wish you the best of luck and God's blessings on this book also.

Hope you enjoyed Lynn's visit, friends and that you'll check back each week for Wednesday Words with Friends and another Saturday Spotlight.

Until next time, take care and God bless.

PamT