Whew! It's always lovely to go on vacation but it's great to get home too!
Today's guest is new to me and our blog so please welcome Tyndale author, Jolina Petersheim!
Jolina
Petersheim is the bestselling author of The Alliance, The Midwife, and
The Outcast, which Library Journal called “outstanding . . .
fresh and inspirational” in a starred review and named one of the best books of
2013. That book also became an ECPA, CBA, and Amazon bestseller and was
featured in Huffington Post’s Fall Picks, USA Today, Publishers
Weekly, and the Tennessean. CBA Retailers + Resources called
her second book, The Midwife, “an excellent read [that] will be hard to
put down,” and Romantic Times declared, “Petersheim is an amazing new
author.” Her third book, The Alliance, was selected as one of Booklist’s
Top 10 Inspirational Fiction titles of 2016. Jolina’s nonfiction writing
has been featured in Reader’s Digest, Writer’s Digest, and Today’s
Christian Woman. She and her husband share the same unique Amish and
Mennonite heritage that originated in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, but they
now live in the mountains of Tennessee with their two young daughters. Jolina
blogs regularly at www.jolinapetersheim.com.
1. What inspired you to write How
the Light Gets In?
When
my firstborn daughter, now six, was a year old, we took a walk in Wisconsin on
a cold fall day. Afterward, I envisioned a young mother coming there with
almost nothing and how she would survive. Two years later, my husband’s uncle
shared a newspaper article with me about a Wisconsin cranberry farmer who used
old-fashioned equipment; that was when I knew the twist for the modern
retelling of Ruth.
2. How do you expect the
novel to resonate with your audience? What are you most excited for your
readers to experience through reading this story?
How the Light Gets In will resonate with
readers who find themselves struggling to maintain a healthy marital
relationship in the wake of transition. And what life is exempt from
transition? Ruth and Chandler’s journey, of choosing love even when the person
they have chosen to marry has changed, will encourage readers to choose love as
well.
My
utmost dream for this story is to strengthen marriages by offering an intimate
look at both sides of that union. Also, being in the throes of young motherhood
with three girls under six, I am passionate about encouraging women to pursue
their creative gifts, so they can continue pouring back into their spirits, and
from this refilling, they can continue to pour out.
3. What role does faith
play in this story?
At
the story’s opening, Ruth and Chandler have spent the past five years so
focused on making a temporal difference in the world, their eternal
perspectives have become opaque. After Ruth receives news of Chandler’s death,
her world is turned upside down, and she understands how desperately she needs faith—the
faith she’s neglected—to help her and her daughters survive such loss. Ruth’s
heart finds healing while working the cranberry harvest with Elam, her husband’s
cousin, who has a simple, steadfast faith that encourages her own.
4. What lessons or
truths do you hope people take away from How
the Light Gets In?
I
want readers to see that Jesus is the only one who can offer lasting
fulfillment and peace. Marital frustration often stems from the fact that
husbands and wives expect their spouses to fulfill that longing. But when you
both begin to pursue Jesus and understand your identity in him, it releases
your spouse from that unattainable expectation, and you can both pull together
toward wholeness and joy.
5. You say this story is
both cautionary and redemptive. Can you explain that a bit, without giving too
much away?
How the Light Gets In is a cautionary tale
because it tells the story of two people who have lost sight of each other in
the day-to-day demands of parenthood and obligation. I want readers to see how
they might be falling into a similar pattern—for instance, reaching for their
smart phones at the end of the day rather than reconnecting with their husband
or wife—and inspire them to incorporate simple ways to reconnect hearts. This
story is a redemptive one as well because Ruth and Chandler are given a second
chance to love each other better. As long as we have breath, I believe we can
learn to love each other better. This story challenged me even as I wrote it.
At this point in the publishing process, How
the Light Gets In challenges me still.
6. As an author, what did you particularly enjoy about
writing this story?
I wrote How the Light Gets In
during a particularly challenging season in our marriage—we had just moved home
to Tennessee from Wisconsin, leaving our farm and my husband’s homesteading
dreams—and the process of understanding Ruth’s and Chandler’s martial journey
helped me have a deeper appreciation for ours. Life isn’t always as linear as
we would like, and we have to learn to love each other in the midst of
transition, extending grace and empathy when one partner might be feeling that
transition at a deeper level, because our time will come, and we will want them
to extend grace to us as well.
7.
How do you hope Ruth’s
story will encourage readers?
I hope Ruth’s story will encourage
readers to make their marriages a priority, even during the challenging young parenting years when it’s so
hard to have the time and energy to
reconnect. Ironically, it’s 6:30 in the morning, and I’m writing this on a
plane bound for Colorado for our tenth
anniversary trip. It’s been a challenging season while we’re building our house, raising our daughters, and working
to eliminate some health issues,
and therefore it’s even more necessary for us to get away and find each other again as husband and wife, not just mom
and dad.
8.
What is it about Ruth’s
story that women will relate to?
I am passionate about women taking time to pursue
creative outlets that pour back into their souls. Our society places a lot of
demands on women that can often leave us physically, emotionally, and
spiritually parched. I would love if women would read Ruth’s story, of taking
time to pursue her artistry even while juggling young motherhood, and find the
courage to pursue their artistry as well. Since we are all created in the
Artist’s image, is it any wonder that our hearts come most alive while we’re
creating? Discover what you love—painting, singing, knitting, writing,
baking—and pursue it. You have a gift.
9.
How
do you hope this book brings healing and refreshment to marriages?
I hope How the Light Gets In brings healing and refreshment to marriages
by helping them see they are worthy of love, just as they are. Insecurity can
erect defenses in marriage, but once we’re aware that Jesus loves us where we
are, it pushes us toward that love; and that understanding of love helps us
love each other perfectly, the way it was meant to be since the beginning of
time.
10. What is one thing you learned about yourself
through writing this book?
Ruth, at the beginning of the story, has these defenses in place
to protect her heart. Only once she steps into her identity as a beloved
daughter of God can she find healing and wholeness. I didn’t know I had erected
defenses around my own heart as well until this novel brought them to light. I
am so grateful for the ability to understand my own heart by processing life
and love through my characters.
Thanks for joining us for Saturday Spotlight! Hope you'll come again soon.
Until next time, take care and God bless.
PamT
5 comments:
Wow, fascinating. I love the premise and the story about how the idea came about. Sounds like a wonderful, meaningful read. Congrats and best wishes!
Thanks for sharing. It sounds like a beautiful story, and I love the title.
Great in-depth interview!
Congrats on all your success! Your truth about marriage hits home. Thanks for the reminder.
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