I will start out this post with a confession: I never imagined I’d
write an Amish fiction series. Never.
I wasn’t one of those naysayers who grit their teeth as they walk past
the bookstore shelves and see all the models wearing head coverings on the
books. You might have heard or seen the naysayers. They mumble something about
sticking a bonnet on the heroine of their next book, and seeing what happens.
Before writing the Seasons in Pinecraft series, I’d read a handful of
titles from authors like Beverly Lewis and Amy Clipston. I enjoyed them very
much.
But here I am, holding this ‘newborn’ book in my hands. The cover not
only has the colors of the circus big top, but a beach, and an Amish man with
two small children. And a very modern heroine.
One of the things I’ve always prayed for concerning my writing is that
doors would open and doors would close, and I would discern between the two. If
you’ve been a writer for a while, you might have learned as I have that
sometimes “no” doesn’t mean a door is shut. Not permanently, anyway.
I first encountered Pinecraft four years ago, when my then-editor at
Heartsong asked if I’d think about writing an Amish book series set in Texas.
Folks, when an acquisitions editor asks you to see what you can come up with
for a proposal, it just might be worth checking out. So, I did.
I learned the Texas climate has not been kind to the few Amish who’ve
tried to settle in Texas. Any 20th and early 21st
settlements are very small, a handful of families. I didn’t feel that “spark”
alerting me there might be a story somewhere in those meager facts.
Then, it happened. I was cruising through a very informative website
called Amish America. One of its features is a directory of settlements
throughout the country. And then, I saw the picture. I’m a visual person, so
this picture made me sit up and take notice.
A woman in a head covering and cape dress was sitting on an adult-size
tricycle outside a small building with a postal sign across the top of the
wall. The photo was of the Pinecraft post office in Sarasota. And then, I felt
that “spark” as I read.
There’s a story here, I told myself. Maybe. After that, I started to
read up on the city of Sarasota, and what distinguishes it from other cities.
Sarasota has a rich circus history, and the Ringling family has left a large
legacy to the city, which has an art museum as well as a circus museum. There’s
also a circus school for children where they can
learn how to perform juggling,
tumbling, trapeze, aerial acts and tightrope.
When I saw the glitz and sparkle of the circus world and the Plain
world of the Amish beside each other in the same city, I knew my hero and
heroine would both come from these different worlds. And that’s when I began to
chase the story of Jacob Miller and Natalie Bennett, an Amish widower and an
aerial artist turned circus instructor.
If you are a writer, you’ll understand the twists and turns of
pre-publication world. Thanks to my agent, Sandra Bishop, and her tenacity and
belief in this series, the stories of Pinecraft found a home at
Abingdon Press.
Fast forward to January 2012, when I boarded a plane for Tampa and then
headed to Sarasota, to stay in Pinecraft and become better acquainted with this
intriguing Plain community. I walked its streets, ate the delicious food, and
soaked in the atmosphere. When Pinecraft resident Katie Troyer asked me to go
to a singing, I jumped at the opportunity, and we rode our bicycles over to the
Mullets’ house in the Birky Square area, and listened to the music and drank
hot chocolate one chilly night. Sherry Gore and I braved the crowds at
the
annual Haiti Auction, and we tried not to stuff ourselves too full of lunch
plates, pretzels, and other deliciousness. I was blessed to visit Pinecraft
again in February 2013, and I hope to return to the village sometime in the
winter of 2014-2015.
I might have never expected to write an Amish book series, but one
thing I always aim to do as an author is take my readers on a trip. As these
books release, I hope to hear from readers that they feel as if they’ve visited
the sunny village of Pinecraft right along with me.
Lynette Sowell is the award-winning novelist of more than fifteen titles. When she’s not writing fiction, Lynette works covering local news for the Copperas Cove Leader-Press, where she also writes a weekly column called My Front Porch. She enjoys reading, cooking, watching movies and is always up for a Texas road trip. Lynette was born in Massachusetts, raised on the eastern shore of Maryland, but makes her home in Copperas Cove, Texas, with her husband, along with a spoiled Texas heeler and a pair of cats who have them all well-trained.
Keep up with Lynette Sowell via her blog (lynettesowell.blogspot.com), Facebook page (Lynette Sowell, Author) or Twitter (@LynetteSowell).
Don't forget to stop by The Borrowed Book tomorrow, when you can enter to win a FREE copy of Lynette's new release, A Season of Change!
Hi Lynette, just wanted to let you know I stopped by for a read :-) Thanks for sharing. Isn't it interesting that you've so many experiences & relationships with the more progressive - higher - Amish orders? There are so many varieties of Plain People. Hope you'll call me when you're researching for a book in Ohio :-)
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