WONDERFUL BLOG RADIO INTERVIEW - RRBC

Had a great interview today with host Wendy Scott! It is always wonderful to hear a fellow RRBC member. Everyone I've met has been friendly and curious about my writing habits, as I am of theirs. I mentioned that I like to write first thing in the morning, when I am fresh.
We talked about A Healing Place - what had inspired me to write it and the research involved in telling the story. I love to mention that the place which was the Miller's respite, or healing place from the Dustbowl of the Great American Depression, was named Texon, Texas. I lived there until I was nine. My parents ran the grocery store in the Oil Patch town. It was different than most small oil patch towns. It had been built by a Canadian and a Texan who had witnessed impressive and productive small company towns in South America and wished to emulate them. Texon was indeed safe, kind of like living in a "Leave it to Beaver" episode. Until World War II, when there was an exodus of people who left, it offered a movie house, a nine-hole golf course, a restaurant, drugstore, grocery store, churches, and schools up through grade eight. Women organized mornings when they would offer food for bums as the railroad made stops in Texon. It was a giving place to live, somewhere to meet friends and raise your children in a peaceful, safe environment.
Wendy and I talked about the plight that many of the men and women who came home from WWII, faced. In the book, the Miller's son-in-law was placed in Japanese POW camps for three and one- half years. He found his healing place in the power of prayer. He fought depression and where he found solace was through prayer. Many of soldiers after WWII suffered from what was then called "battle fatigue" and is now known at PTSD. They were unable to find the help they needed through veteran's health services.Thankfully, the medical association now recognizes the problem and does try to help most veterans with their problems.
If you are interested in the interview, please go to this site to hear it:
https://ravereviewsbynonniejules.wordpress.com/rave-waves-blog-talk-radio/bring-on-the-spotlight/
Of course, we were joined by other RRBC members so the interview was interesting and fun!
Thanks again to RRBC!!
Published on July 13, 2018 17:37
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Joyce Shaughnessy Writes
Blessed Are the Merciful is an historical novel which is available in Kindle, e-format, paperback, and hardback at Amazon.com, B&N, Xlibris.com.
It takes place on the Philippine Islands just before and Blessed Are the Merciful is an historical novel which is available in Kindle, e-format, paperback, and hardback at Amazon.com, B&N, Xlibris.com.
It takes place on the Philippine Islands just before and during WWII. It features a WWII Army nurse and an Army soldier who fall in love just prior to the Japanese bombing of the islands (nine hours after Pearl Harbor).Because the United States is unable to send men or supplies to the beleagured men and women on Bataan and Corregidor, they are forced to surrender to the Japanese. They are forced to walk the infamous Death March, in which 12,500 men are murdered, and then work in camps on half rations, many already sick with tropical diseases. The women are forced to go to an internment camp, and Susan works with the Filipino Underground. ...more
It takes place on the Philippine Islands just before and Blessed Are the Merciful is an historical novel which is available in Kindle, e-format, paperback, and hardback at Amazon.com, B&N, Xlibris.com.
It takes place on the Philippine Islands just before and during WWII. It features a WWII Army nurse and an Army soldier who fall in love just prior to the Japanese bombing of the islands (nine hours after Pearl Harbor).Because the United States is unable to send men or supplies to the beleagured men and women on Bataan and Corregidor, they are forced to surrender to the Japanese. They are forced to walk the infamous Death March, in which 12,500 men are murdered, and then work in camps on half rations, many already sick with tropical diseases. The women are forced to go to an internment camp, and Susan works with the Filipino Underground. ...more
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