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“The bridge ain’t shaking. It’s dancing. You gotta dance with it, girl. Let your feet find the rhythm. If you pay some mind, there’s rhythm nigh on to ev’rything.” …Granny Em in These Healing Hills
That’s perfect advice not only for my character to get across that bridge, but also for me as I follow my story trails up into the Appalachian Mountains for stories. These Healing Hills was the first story I set in the Appalachian area of Kentucky. But since then, I’ve written four more with mountain settings. A Chance for Kallie Mae will be coming out in May. I wrote this post a few years ago for an online Scavenger Hunt, but since I’ve been sharing about my books, I decided to rewrite it a bit and share it here too. So here goes as I try to keep the rhythm going. The right rhythm in a song, a dance or a story can make all the difference in the world. When writing a novel, I need to be in tune with the characters, the setting, the history, and what’s happening. Then I have to keep all that in the right rhythm to keep the story flowing along. Sometimes that can be like a canoe ride down a gentle meandering river while other times a crashing flood of water carries the story along toward a thundering falls with seemingly no escape. I liked settling into that mountain rhythm for These Healing Hills where I mixed the beauty of the mountains with the challenge of life lived on hardscrabble land. My characters hear and feel both notes of disappointment and of joy in their walk along their story paths the same as we all do in real life. The background history of the Frontier Nursing Service added a rhythm of childbirth with the midwives helping the mountain women bring their babies into the world. The cadence of the mountaineers’ voices and unique expressions such as the edge of dark for night falling gave the dialogue between my characters a rhythm I hoped would make it sound like you just happened up behind them and started eavesdropping. Since music lives in the hills with plenty of folksongs, a few songs helped along the rhythm of the story. “Froggie Went A-Courting” is an old rhyming song threaded throughout the book right to the end. I even let my midwife nurse, Francine, sing a verse I made up. I’m no songwriter, but with some rhymes and the rhythm of the tune in my head, I think I did okay. I enjoyed capturing the rhythm of the mountains in These Healing Hills along with the pulse of life a nurse midwife surely feels each and every day. Each person’s life, real or imagined, has its own unique rhythm and that’s what I try to capture each time I put my fingers on my keyboard to share a story. I hope I have caught it again for my upcoming release, A Chance for Kallie Mae. Do you agree with Granny Em that there’s rhythm to everything in life if we just take time to listen? Check back Sunday for a new book giveaway chance. (My website had some glitches that had to be fixed. So, sorry for any inconveniences while the website was being repaired.) |




Comments 4
I agree with Granny Em. I think forming habits like doing the same things each morning getting ready for the day helps you get into a rhythm for that day. When you have something to go wrong or something unexpected to happen, it sure messes up that rhythm.
Author
That’s true, Connie. That happened to me this morning as I was getting ready for church. I prepare the bulletins for church and print them here. Well, I had forgotten to print our prayer list which is on a separate page until this morning. My printer is getting old and the paper gets jammed if I print too many at a time. And of course, I was trying to hurry it all up and of course, the paper got hung in the printer. I pulled some out, but it tore and left some in. By that time my rhythm wasn’t sounding sweet and calm. I did eventually get it taken care of and was only a few minutes late for Sunday school, but one the youngsters in my class asked how come she always beat me to church. She’s the preacher’s granddaughter and he likes to get to church early.
Yes, I agree that everything in life has a rhythm if we’re willing to listen to it. It’s not always easy though. We have to slow down and intentionally listen for what’s right in front of us, around us, and in us.
Every time you share an excerpt about one of your books I’m drawn to it. And I love reading what you share about the background information on how you came to write each story.
Thank you,
Janet
Author
Glad my posts can catch your interest for my stories, Janet. I post all sorts of things here, but like to throw in posts about my books now and again. I enjoyed sharing the winter scenes last month although my website went down and I lost some of those. I did replace them, but lost the comments, etc.
I hope if you read any of my stories after my posts catch your interest, that you will enjoy them.