![]() She’s in her late 20s which is about the time most of us figure out we don’t really know what we’re doing. She’s trying to make a career for herself, trying to be tough, but when her own actions return to her with a demand, she’s forced to face the wounds and lies she’s buried. She can’t remember large portions of her childhood. Why was it important for Beck to have the experience at this point in her life?īeck is lost and bitter. Then she finds out she’s inherited a mysterious Victorian house in Florida. ![]() New York City cop Beck Holiday is having a rough go of it – after a mistake at work she’s suspended and she’s not sure what to do next. The heroines also share a common experience of tragically losing people they love. Since I can’t always have the connection be a grandmother or an aunt, or some other family member, I imagined two women being connected by a family friendship. The connection is always the most difficult and most important part of a dual time novel. How did you come up with the connection between these two different women? Here’s a chat between award-winning author Rachel Hauck and Fresh Fiction Editorial Manager Danielle Dresser!Ī dual timeline novel is always so interesting – how the two time periods both juxtapose and complement the other. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |