Lagniappe Welcomes...
Author - Linda Wood Rondeau
Author - Linda Wood Rondeau
Linda was kind enough to answer a few questions for Lagniappe. I hope you enjoy meeting Linda through her answers. First a little about her:
Linda is the winner of the 2012 Selah Award for best first novel The Other Side of Darkness/Harbourlight, LINDA WOOD RONDEAU, writes stories of God’s mercies. Walk with her unforgettable characters as they journey paths not unlike our own. After a long career in human services, Linda now resides in Jacksonville, Florida.
Linda’s best-selling Adirondack Romance, It Really
IS a Wonderful Life, is published by Lighthouse of the Carolinas
and is available wherever books are sold.
These books are also available in ebook format along with
her other ebooks by Helping Hands Press: I
Prayed for Patience/God Gave Me Children and Days of Vines and Roses. Songs in the Valley is scheduled for
release this fall by Helping Hands Press.
Readers may visit her web site at www.lindarondeau.com or email her at lindarondeau@gmail.com or find her on Facebook, Twitter, PInterest,
and Goodreads.
Tell us about yourself and how you began writing.
Growing up, I loved
to tell stories to younger children on the bus. I began to write them down.
When I grew up I continued to enjoy writing as a hobby—poems, skits, and church
plays. In my career in human services, I enjoyed writing case histories. One
day, God called me and said, “Wouldn’t you like to write for me?” I thought
about it but there was work, and kids, and responsibilities. Finally, in a
dramatic way, God impressed me to write professionally. I have not regretted it
since. In 2001, I was awarded writer of the year award at Blue Ridge Mountains
Christian Writers Conference. In 2012, I won the award for best new novel. It’s
been a long, difficult journey. But like the promise I made my husband when we
got married, “Never a dull moment.”
Tell us about your latest book and what inspired you to
write this particular book?
My most recent
release is Days of Vines and Roses. It
is the story of a romance writer and her estranged publisher husband. The
disarray of the centuries-old gardens, the one beauty Henry sees when he
visits, prompts him to spend the summer with Sylvia in their Connecticut home.
As the couple move toward reconciliation, malignant forces within the home seem
determined to keep them apart.
Sylvia is under a
deadline and their gardener has quit. She convinces Henry to rescue the rose
gardens overrun with vines. Henry doesn’t have a clue about much in life,
particularly gardens. He hires a gardener who’s as mysterious as the ghostly
apparitions in the ballroom. Henry is desperate to free himself from his hasty
agreement to oversee the massive renovations of the rose gardens. But being in
close proximity with Sylvia stirs their love. As reconciliation seems possible,
the paranormal activity intensifies. Then a law suit threatens to bring about
the final blow to their marriage.
I received the
inspiration for this book, initially a short story, while mowing my lawn. I
cried because the yard was nothing but weeds. Then I realized how some
marriages are like that. Due to neglect, vines self-interest strangle the
blooms of first love.
What actor/actress would you choose to portray your main
characters?
Julianne Moore (with dark
hair) would make a good Sylvia or Ashley Judd. I actually picture Pierce
Brosnan as Henry…sans the British accent. I see Willie Nelson playing Charlie Michaels,
the aged hippie gardener.
What did you enjoy most about writing this book?
I enjoyed Henry’s
antics. My favorite scene is him in the kitchen trying to make dinner without a
clue how to cook.
What one bit of advice would you give to aspiring writers?
Don’t be in a rush to
self-publish. Be patient. Learn the craft. Go to writers conferences. Network.
Build your platform. Developing your voice takes the same commitment and
practice as a pro-golfer’s perfect swing.
What message do you hope readers gain from your novel?
Don’t take your
marriage for granted. Sylvia and Henry’s marriage was nearly destroyed because
each expected the other to change rather than commit to the relationship. Marriage
is not 50-50 but 100-100.
Tell us what we have to look forward to in the future. What
new projects are you working on?
Linda, thanks for sharing!
Readers, thanks for visiting Lagniappe
I pray that you find "a little something extra" in each of your days.
I love hearing from you so don't be afraid to leave a comment!
Marian