Susan Wiggs's Blog, page 9
November 7, 2018
finding home
Somewhat off topic, but I’m too excited not to share this with Seattle peeps, or anyone who would love to live in Seattle. My favorite husband has a house for sale in the nicest neighborhood in the city. Renovating this beach bungalow was a labor of love for him, and it shows. So I’m showing it off today.
Finding home is a key theme in many of my books. What makes your home special? What do you love about it?
Most important of all, where do you keep your books?
#Seattle #realestate #homeownership
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September 27, 2018
Pancakes…LIVE!
What is the ONE THING you need to do in order to make perfect pancakes? I’ll let you know tomorrow, live and in person !
Join me in making pancakes with you on Friday, September 28. Join me at 9:00 am Pacific Time and let’s make them together! You can post questions and comments in the Comments section, and we’ll have a chat–about pancakes, books, reading, and my favorite condiment, barrel-aged maple syrup. Just visit HarperCollins on Facebook and join in.
Here’s the recipe we’ll be creating. It’s the perfect sponge for maple syrup. Don’t forget the extra step–it elevates everyday pancakes to something sublime.
Perfect Buttermilk Pancakes
3 tablespoons (2oz/57g) butter, melted
2 cups flour
1-1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1-1/2 teaspoon baking soda
3 tablespoons sugar
1-1/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups buttermilk
2 eggs
Sift the dry ingredients into a large bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together the buttermilk and egg. Pour into the large bowl, stir seven times, them drizzle in the butter and stir 5 more times. Don’t overmix.
Refrigerate for 10 minutes.
Heat a nonstick or cast iron pan on medium heat-low heat. Add a swirl of oil.
Scoop a spoonful of batter into the pan. When you see bubbles forming on the top of the pancake, flip and cook until brown.
Serve with butter and warm maple syrup.
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September 24, 2018
Sunday dinner
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These days, we would call my grandparents farm-to-table organic producers. Back then, they were known as subsistence farmers. Everything on the table was homegrown and farm raised, and canned, preserved, or frozen at home. They didn’t have a lot of money, having raised their family through the Great Depression and WWII. The humble Formica table and dishes, the freezer in the background, and the jars on the table were a ubiquitous presence in my childhood.
This Sunday, my husband and I are spending the day canning homegrown tomatoes from our sunny garden here on Bainbridge Island in Puget Sound. I like to think my grandparents would approve of our effort, and at dinner, we’ll send a special prayer to them out there, wherever they are.
Here’s my simplest and most delicious recipe for pasta sauce. I think it was made popular by the late, great Marcella Hazan, but I learned it from the label of a big can of San Marzano tomatoes imported from Italy. For this recipe alone, I was inspired to grow my own San Marzanos. Don’t skip the butter or use a substitute. When you taste this, you’ll know why.
My version is even simpler than the original because I won’t make you peel the tomatoes or fish the onion out after cooking
Perfect Pasta Sauce
3 cups canned or 2 lbs fresh San Marzano tomatoes
1 onion, quartered
6 Tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon salt
NOTE: You can peel the tomatoes or not–up to you. The peels will slip off during the cooking, so if you want, you can pick them out of the pot with tongs as the sauce simmers. Otherwise, the peels with disappear during the blending.
Place all ingredients in a heavy pot and simmer for about an hour. I don’t put a lid on the pot because it reduces the liquid. Just make sure the onion is submerged. After simmering, blend it smooth with an immersion blender, or in a food processor or blender. Serve over hot pasta with a grind of pepper or a pinch of red pepper flakes, a sprig of basil, and a shaving of Parmesan.

photo by Matt Duckor
What are you serving your family this Sunday?
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September 16, 2018
Sunday dilemma
This is exactly #theviewfromhere, unfiltered. The end of my bed out to Puget Sound. The weather is going in the right direction, so the rain will stop soon. Which leaves me with this dilemma–stay in my jammies and finish reading Tailspin by the always-entertaining Sandra Brown, or jump on my bike and go for a ride with my best friend?
What are your thoughts, readers?

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September 13, 2018
the story of us
A bit of happy news… The Ocean Between Us, my homage to military families, has been such a fan favorite that it’s being reissued in December. In advance of the re-release, you can read a short prequel about Grace and Steve when they first met. For $2.99! Such a deal!
The Story of Us has one of the most romantic covers ever, and it’s available in all ebook formats. Hope you enjoy the story of Grace and Steve, back when their love was new.
Happy reading!
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September 12, 2018
knit. chat. read. repeat.
The iconic island haven, Churchmouse Yarns & Teas, is hosting a very special event in their shop this coming Saturday, September 15, at 2pm. Join me for an hour of knitting and chatting about books, yarn, or anything you like!
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My latest novel, Between You & Me, has been published to the best reviews I’ve ever had on any of my books. Shout out to reviewers and readers for taking the time to pass along the good words!
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We’ll have refreshments, drawings for door prizes, a Facebook Live so you can join from anywhere in the world, and a booksigning! And–BONUS–it’s just a scenic ferryboat ride from downtown Seattle!
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Eagle Harbor Book Company is handling book sales, autographed and personalized any way you like! Online shoppers can order copies here.
My knitting project for this special event is this simple, stunning piece. The Blackberry Kerchief in kidsilk haze is the perfect stitch and yarn as we bid farewell to summer and head into autumn, the season of sweaters and scarves.
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There’s a great reading group guide here, with thought-provoking discussion questions.
Please join in the fun!
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September 6, 2018
when work feels like play
Writers complain. A lot. Writing is hard, the business is hard, getting the words right is hard, making time to get it all done is hard. We’re supposed to be brainstorming and all we get is a light drizzle.
The remedy?

One of the great joys of writing is the friends we make in the business. The most generous writing friend and mentor I know is the incomparable Debbie Macomber. She recently hosted lunch+brainstorming for me, Sheila Roberts, and Kate Breslin at her incredible waterfront retreat. Brainstorming our upcoming works with this crew is fun, but it’s also challenging, provocative, hilarious and ultimately inspiring.
I came away as I always do when this gang is in action–with ideas circling my head like air traffic over O’Hare, and a surge of energy to dive into a new project this fall.
Brainstorming a novel can take many paths. We know and trust each other, so the ideas flow freely. Here are a few notes for those interested in getting started.
Brainstorming Checklist:
An original and unique idea…or traditional subject matter with an unusual hook or twist.
Debbie’s key words :: RELEVANT. PROVOCATIVE. CREATIVE.
A story with mass appeal–something no reader can resist.
Specific details that set this story apart with color and depth.
Explain the idea so the reader can imagine the story unfolding.
Boil the pitch down to just a few sentences.
Archetypal characters and situations everyone can relate to, only larger than life.
A desire or goal on the part of the main character that is compelling, specific, intense, and hard to achieve.
Strong, clear opponent or opposing force more powerful than the main character. A real threat that could ultimately defeat her.
A deception of some sort. [Nearly every romantic comedy involves a deception–mistaken identity, character(s) pretending to be someone they’re not or misrepresenting themselves in some way…]
A vivid story world. A place readers want to go in their imagination.
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August 21, 2018
hiding in plain sight
Today’s the day! A gorgeous new premium edition of THE SUMMER HIDEAWAY is on sale everywhere books are sold.

Of all the Lakeshore Chronicles, this one has generated the most unusual reader requests. Several readers have written to me asking to use quotes from the book on headstones of beloved family members. A bittersweet honor.
It’s appropriate that we found one of the world’s beautiful lakes last night, on the eve of this book’s publication.
Here’s the question that haunted me while writing the book–If you’re under witness protection, how do you keep from getting attached?
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July 24, 2018
writing about real life
It’s been on my mind as I slog through the revisions on The Oysterville Sewing Circle (2019), a novel driven by domestic violence and the #MeToo movement. I’ve wanted to write this book for a long time, but the deep dive into research, and laying the characters’ emotions out on the page has been harder than I ever could have imagined.
Illuminating someone else’s pain and trauma filled me with a different kind of pain–and guilt. Am I exploiting victims or bringing real issues to life? What if something I write about hits too close to home?
That happened to me with Home Before Dark. The teen joy-riding tragedy in the book occurred, with eerie similarity, in my town a couple of years after the book was published. I was horrified to witness families I knew dealing with the unthinkable–which I’d thought of and written about in a novel. I wanted to apologize for having written the book. I wanted to snatch all the copies from the library and bookstore.
But did I want to un-write the book?
Richard Russo’s article in New York Times about novels dealing with school shootings offers a thoughtful discussion of the fiction writer’s role in real-world issue. (Shout out to Jodi Picoult for bringing it up.)
What do you think? Are there things that are off-limits for fiction writers? I hope not. But I also hope we write with honesty and humanity. It’s not for us to shy away from tough subjects.
Ultimately, the power belongs to the reader, and that is as it should be. I often say that every reader reads a different book–one of the reasons a book club is such a dynamic thing. The writers write. The readers read. And the words fly free.
#RichardRusso #bookclubs #schoolshootings #domesticviolence #writing #reading
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July 21, 2018
celesta’s-by-the-sea
There’s something about a beach town. I have many favorites all over the country–all over the world, even. But Narragansett and Point Judith, Rhode Island will always belong to a special college summer I once spent there.
So it’s no coincidence that I based my fictionalized that setting for one of my most popular books–the ultimate beach read, Summer by the Sea.

Rosa’s restaurant, Celesta’s-By-the-Sea, is a tribute to her deeply-missed mother. Alex is the unattainable boy, a member of the “summer people” tribe.
Recipes and romance are always a winning combination. Here’s a link to the recipes in Summer by the Sea. Cin cin, as they say in Italy!
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