The Songbook of Benny Lament - A Note From the Author

I proposed The Songbook of Benny Lament to my publisher in 2019 and finished it in early 2020, right before the world was gripped in our current troubles. I had no sense of what was coming when I wrote about Benny and Esther and the world they lived in. I had no idea how complicated life would become. In some ways, it made the complicated nature of the past easier to understand.

When I told my mom I was writing a historical love story set in the 60s, she said, "The 1960s isn't historical." Meaning: "I was alive then, so it wasn't that long ago." No, Mom. It wasn't that long ago. And unlike some of the novels I've written, there was no comfortable distance from the setting or the time.

I wasn’t alive in the sixties. I don’t have any firsthand knowledge of the decade this story was set in—not the music scene, the Mafia life, the political climate, or the civil rights movement. I was not there. But when the idea for this story took root in me, it flowered quickly. Benny and Esther started talking, and I wasn't about to ignore them. I wrote their story, and I poured my whole self into it.

When I was finished, I sent it to a handful of beta readers. Sher, who happens to be a Black woman and a pianist, shared her thoughts with me after she was done. She loved the book and had great feedback. As we visited about different aspects of the music world and the story, our conversation inevitably led to the concept of identity and how my skin color is different from Esther's. We talked about the task and the test of writing a character who is not ME. That made me laugh a little, because in eighteen novels, I've never written a character who IS me. Men, women, and children from all walks of life and experiences stroll the pages of my books and tell their stories.

Esther Mine and Benny Lament are not Amy Harmon. They are my creations, but they are not me. And though my characters are born in my heart and raised with my research, the hope is that they will become real to my readers, and that they will be authentic to the actual people who have lived similar experiences. That is the test and the responsibility.

As I told Sher, I may not be the same color as Esther. I may not be Sicilian like Benny. I definitely don't play the piano like he does. But we are the same more than we are different. We may not share an entire identity--no two people do--but we share a world. I share Benny's love of music and his passion for creation. I share Esther's hopes and her fears as a woman, a daughter, and a sister. I share Benny's complicated feelings about family, and Esther's desire to be part of something bigger and something better. In truth, I had no trouble "being" Esther or Benny at all.

That is the magic of books. Of stories. We become someone else. We walk inside them. We go where they've been and where they're going. And the walls between us and them disappear. Every reader can attest to this.

Finally, this book isn't a story about trauma. It's a story about triumph. About love. About family. It's a story about music, and how it heals and holds and helps us along when everything else fails. I hope you feel every note in The Songbook of Benny Lament. I know I did.



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Published on March 11, 2021 16:17
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message 1: by Emma (new)

Emma Corcoran Having been lucky to read an Arc of this beautiful book I can attest to everything Ms Harmon says above. Immerse yourself in this beautiful, crazy, complicated love story, immerse yourself in the history, immerse yourself in the music, immerse yourself in richness of the story. It's a triumph!


Just A Girl With Spirit Standing up and clapping over this! Your writing draws people in from all ethnicities and walks of life! There is healing power in your words that can soothe the most achy hearts. I love that you write your heart and soul on the pages, and then entrust them to us. You are a true gem in this book community. Xoxo 😘


message 3: by Christina (new)

Christina Stewart As always with all of your books, I cannot wait to read it!


message 4: by Esther (new)

Esther Korrie’s Korner wrote: "... I love that you write your heart and soul on the pages, and then entrust them to us."

I love this - thank you for saying what I feel but didn't know how express.

+1


message 5: by Yvette (new)

Yvette This book was written in the time we call the 60s, in the 60s there were a lot of things we could not do as the many people of color knew. In this story they challenged a line that I still struggling with today. We see a couple of mixed race, and we say that he's Brave to be a white man with a black woman champ. In our world we should be able to love what we love, the cavemen only follow their heart. But here we look at the couple and we see the guy, the woman and the child. Now we're analyzing If the child is taking on the white side, or the black side, or something more exotic. Instead we should be embracing the new family that increases our world with love. This book they had to use they're Comin love for music in order to bond the love that they have for each other. We need to protect each other from the world's they came from. When no one in their worlds could see the Faded lovers, still Star-Crossed, love of Destiny. Anyone that reads this book will understand in hearts it will open to the way it really is to love without looking. I recommend this book for all young adult women looking to be brave in this world that is still masking the ceiling of color.


message 6: by Barbara (new)

Barbara Strickland I have never believed you have to be something to feel something. I think we all have it in ourselves to become a little bit of something or someone else if we are open to it.
Looking forward to reading this.


message 7: by Katie (new)

Katie Wow... I love how you speak of embodying your characters because of your shared hopes and dreams! This book is gorgeous and spoke to my soul in so many ways. Thank you for rising to the challenge of putting your heart and these characters on paper!


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