Signs of Fall

Home for a breather from the heat of Texas and AZ. And I've decided I must have been a swallow in my past life. Because I was driving down the street today and I noticed that the leaves were turning yellow. And my first thought was, "It's fall. I need to get out of here."
You wouldn't have thought that someone raised in the bleak damp cold of Britain would need to live in perpetual summer, would you? But fall always stirs flashes of alarm in the depths of my pysche. I suppose it's something to do with the image of approaching old age that I equate with winter. Or maybe it's just that I hate being cold.
At my signing in Houston the other night one of the audience asked, "Do you have a thing about rain?" and she said that my characters always complain of being cold or wet or both. So I guess I must channel my own feelings into Molly and Georgie.  I grew up in a big drafty house where the wind whistled down the corridors so I do relate to Georgie and Castle Rannoch. And I love sunshine and warmth. Perhaps there was a tad too much of both for the past few days, but I'd rather be hot than cold.

The audience suggested that someone would be doing their PhD thesis some day on the leitmotif of rain in Rhys Bowen's novels. So I wondered how you felt about weather. Does it affect you much? Do you love seasons? Do you even like rain? And what about weather in books? Is it important to you?
I'm off to get ready for my big launch party at Book Passage tonight. I'm bringing French goodies (not naughty ones but different cheeses and a truffle pate as well as madeleines and meringes and of course lots of champagne) I'll get John to take pictures.
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Published on September 15, 2011 16:00
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message 1: by Angela (new)

Angela Myers I've lived most of my life in the Midwest, so weather is important to me. In the spring, we watch for tornadoes and floods, in the summer for heatstrokes, in the fall for ice storms, and in the winter for blizzards. Never a dull moment. As I've gotten older, I discover I have less tolerance for heat, preferring temps in the 50s, which we pass on our way from 100 to 10 below. : - ) I mentioned weather several times in my book (still sitting at the publisher's waiting to be accepted or rejected), and I find that when I read, I like to know what kind of weather the protagonist is experiencing and how they feel about it.


message 2: by Joanna (new)

Joanna I grew up mostly in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, moved to Indianapolis as a young married woman, after 14 years we moved to Fort Myers, Florida (loved the heat and humidity but would not be able to take it without the relief of air conditioning) and then moved back to Kentucky, Winchester, near Lexington this time and find that I absolutely dislike the autumn and winter. I curse the ice in the driveway when I fall on it or can't get my car out to go anywhere. I have never experienced the draftiness of a Rannoch Castle but would like to visit England/Scotland et al someday but only in the hottest of summers.


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