Persephone’s Fugitive
Book Two, Cayman Islands Trilogy
by
Dianna T. Benson
*** SPOILER ALERT *** Reading Persephone’s Fugitive (including the book blurb) before The Hidden Son (Book One in the Cayman Islands Trilogy) will ruin the ending of The Hidden Son. However, both books are standalones.
When a routine 911 call turns deadly, Paramedic Sara Dyer finds herself held at gunpoint by Jason Keegan, an injured psych-ward patient charged with murder. The situation spirals out of Sara’s control when the confrontation becomes a tense standoff between Keegan and the Royal Cayman Islands Police Service.
As Keegan’s hostage, Sara fights to save them both before he blows them up. She realizes his warning to the Cayman police is no empty threat since he’d rather die than spend the rest of his life in a prison cell. Sara soon discovers Keegan is just as determined to survive as she is - provided he can escape Grand Cayman and disappear forever. As she struggles to trust in God’s protection, help from an atheist turns her struggle into a lure away from her faith.
* * * *
Dianna T. Benson is the
award-winning and international bestselling author of The Hidden Son and Final
Trimester. Persephone’s Fugitive
is her third release. An EMT and a HazMat and FEMA Operative since 2005, Dianna
authentically implements her medical and rescue experience and knowledge into
all her suspense novels. She lives in North Carolina with her husband and their
three children. www.diannatbenson.com
* * * *
As with any career, life as a
novelist has its thrilling peaks and dark valleys. In dealing with the valleys,
self-doubt in myself as a writer often creeps in and I question my career
choice. A publishing industry career is notorious for extreme highs and lows –
Example: A glowing review on the same day with nothing but a blinking cursor or
awful written pages going nowhere.
For me, one of the biggest
challenges as an author is bouncing back and forth from the business side of
writing to actually writing my fiction. So I’ve learned never to write on the
days I have a radio/TV interview, a book signing, a speaking engagement, or any
other type of marketing task. Whenever possible, I bunch my marketing together
in the same week(s) and take time off writing. When I’m not releasing a new
book, thus buried in marketing, then I dig in and focus on writing. Every
writer is different and needs to find their way – what works for one writer,
won’t work for another.
Once my first book was released
in 2013, the pressure was intense from readers/fans, all the kind reviews, etc.
I realized it was imperative to produce the same caliber of book or better the
second time. With every book, it’s expected to write just as good a book, if
not better. That pressure mixed in and compounded with the stress from the
severe medical issues my son, daughter, and husband were battling. However, I forced
myself to push through, encouraging myself to write. The tactic backfired on
me, causing me to hit writer burnout. I recently recovered from being burnt out
by allowing myself time to have fun in life, enjoy reading and watching movies,
spending time in nature; basically, I healed from writer burnout by being
gentle to myself. My zeal never disappeared – I truly wanted to write, but resistance inside me locked up my creativity
and buried my muse. Knowing my love to write is still so strong in spite of all
of this, I was determined to fully heal from burnout and never allow myself to
reach that point again by knowing the warning signs and refusing to ever ignore
them.
The life of a writer is a lonely
one – we spend so much of our time writing about people for people yet we’re
all alone. I’ve learned to appreciate the writer’s world by seeing the work
force (not working from home) as a place where I’d need to deal with commuting,
the negatives of co-workers, pointless rules, rigid daily hours/schedules, office
politics, etc. Life is all about how we view it, isn’t it?
Yes, God gave me the gift to
story-tell via the written word, but I chose this career, and apparently it
chose me back. The statics are mind-boggling – 1% of people who say they want
to write actually start writing; 1% of people who start writing actually finish
a book; 1% of those people actually submit their manuscript; 1% of the people
who submit are ever offered a publishing contract. So I beat those staggering
odds and have published three books to date with my fourth scheduled to release
next year. If I can achieve that, than I can overcome any challenge as a writer.
What about you? What are your challenges as a writer and how do you push
through and continue?
Dianna's latest release, Persephone's Fugitive, is available on Amazon and at Books-A-Million and Barnes
and Noble.
Thank you, Yvonne, for featuring my newest release. I enjoyed my time this week on The Borrowed Book.
ReplyDeleteFor anyone interested in watching the book trailer to Persephone's Fugitive: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vyn2vxPh8zE
The links to the trailers of my other books are on my website.
Blessings for a Happy Easter!