The Next Best Book Club discussion
Author/Reader Discussions
>
The Mapmaker's Children - Author/Reader Discussion
message 51:
by
Susan
(new)
Oct 19, 2015 03:15AM

reply
|
flag

What draws you to historical fiction? Both The Baker's Daughter and The Mapmaker's Children take place during periods of war and hardship. Why do you like exploring humanity during these times of peril?

As you know I loved this book. I love the combination of fact and fiction. Is that your preferred style of writing? When is your next book coming out? What is your favorite book/author? Sassy Massy just loves all the research that goes into your books, do you do that much research for all your books?



I really enjoyed your book. I very much appreciated the theme of "chosen families": how Sarah essentially became part of the Hill family and how she later became a mother to the Fisher children. And the parallel story of how Eden became like a mother to Cleo. Very nicely done. (Coincidentally, a book this group discussed earlier this month, "A Shelter of Others," also had a theme of "found families," although, otherwise, it's a very different book from yours.)
I also really liked the character of Alice Hill. She's very believable, and it's touching how sensitive her family is to her special needs.
Thank you for including the recipe for CricKet BisKets. I'm a little skeptical of eating dog biscuits--are they tasty?
I know you did a great deal of research on the Brown family. Are the Hills, Fishers and Silverdashes fictional or did they exist historically?

Sarah will be popping in all week long to tackle any questions you have and to engage you in some convo regarding her book.
As I always do..."
Yes, yes, yes, Susan! I'm so thrilled to have been able to meet and hug on you in the flesh. Y'all, I tell you what... I am continually awed by what loving, BEAUTIFUL readers I have. (Call me biased but you truly are!) We only see each other in these 1/4 inch avatars so you rarely know what people actually look like. I feel so blessed because it seems all of my readers are radiant online and off!
Again, thank you for coming out to my Texas Book Festival presentation, Susan. A treat and a forever memory! Wasn't the festival the absolute best? Such a spirit of love and book celebration at every turn. I just returned at midnight this morning, so I'm still whirling from C-SPAN and Austin BBQ in the shadow of the grand Texas Capitol.
Happy Monday and I hope you'll be on here at our Goodreads chat party all week, my dear.
Yours truly,
Sarah


Sarah will be popping in all week long to tackle any questions you have and to engage you in some convo regarding her book.
As I always do..."
Lovely Lori, our TNBBC ringleader,
First and foremost, thank you so much for having me to this wonderful The Next Best Book Club Goodreads chat party. I'm always delighted to interact with readers online and off. Also, congrats to our THE MAPMAKER'S CHILDREN copy winners! I pray you all enjoyed reading, and I'm so excited to talk about the book here this week. Of course, as those who've seen me do events in person or via Skype, I am open to talking about all things!
So your question regarding the tour is apropos. I just flew back at midnight this morning from three days of nonstop book fiesta-ing at the Texas Book Festival in Austin. Y'all know I try to hit as many gigs as my boots will allow, so when I tell you that this festival is the most party-packed I've ever attended, you know it's TRUTH.
Every hour was simply stuffed to the brim with events, interviews, parties, cocktail hours, dinners Lit Crawls through popular Austin bars, and opportunities to meet your favorite authors in intimate settings. Simply marvelous! But it does tucker an author out. I'm nursing a dark, long-brewed, Irish Breakfast tea at this moment. Bring on the caffeine!
The point (and as we talk here, you'll see that I am a woman who encourages tangents in discussion--sometimes the most interesting chats come out of simply allowing ourselves to go where the convo leads!): if you haven't been to a book festival, you must go to one sometime soon. They are fast becoming "the place" to book it up!
To answer your question, Lori, the tour is going swimmingly well! The book came out six months ago, so I'm ecstatic when I go to events and see a crowd of folks waving THE MAPMAKER'S CHILDREN at me still! I feel so blessed and fortunate to have so many readers embracing my work and cheering for it on social media and in person!
THANK YOU READERS!!
I'll be popping on at random every day all week so I'll be sure to chat with everyone often. This TNBBC Goodreads party is officially kicked off!
More soon... xx

Sarah will be popping in all week long to tackle any questions you have and to engage you in some convo regarding her book.
A..."SASSY MASSY IS VERY HAPPY TO SAY " THANK YOU WRITERS FOR GIVING US THE AMAZING READS!

I a thrilled to have won a copy of your Mapmaker's Children. I was wondering how you first came to the story of Sarah Brown.

I would first like to thank you for my copy of The Mapmaker's Children. I absolutely loved this book! I wish I were fortunate enough to meet you and attend book signings, but honestly I was completely stoked to read that you also call Virginia home & you taught at ODU! As for the book, I am curious what compelled you to write in this genre and why you chose this setting. What was the most challenging part, and what influenced you?
Thank you,
Kim

what i love about your writing in general is that you pick such diverse topics - from your YA set in Puerto Rico to the Baker's Daughter (I loved reading about the Lebensborn program) and now the Underground Railroad
do you have any method to your madness for picking your book theme or is it just something that catches your eye?




No I haven't , I will have to check her out! Thank you
I think I might have The Edge of Lost on NetGalley. I have to check it out.


I have the Grand Central book. I haven't had a chance to read it yet. I had it autographed by Sarah at our meet and greet dinner, along with her other books. I will have to read that one right now. Thanks Dee!





Too kind about my Doc B. I think he's pretty sweet. He was happy to be cameraman to you and your gallant husband, my dear. Thanks again for coming out to the Texas Book Fest to party-hardy with me!

I loved, I mean really loved this book. I am really glad that I did not read any reviews on this book or your previous book before I started reading it. So, my question to you is, do you..."
Hi Deanna, welcome!
Hm, you know 90% of my book reviews have been phenomenal and from the most loving readers so I've never thought to consider the question you posed... I'm not a person who lets naysayers affect what I feel passionate about--that goes for my books and life beliefs! I simply aim to be authentic to myself and to the characters in the story. If readers connect with that, fabulous! If they don't, that's okay, too.
The beauty of literature is that each story is calling the exact reader who needs to hear its story. Sometimes a reader might pick up a book because his/her friend heard the calling but he/she might not. Thus, the story won't resonate the same. It's so subjective--and that's what makes it such fun and life-altering.
Also, as you put it, there are those who feel compelled to negatively criticize no matter what. That, too, is their way of connecting to literature and/or the literary community. Being the devil's advocate and stirring up conversation. I welcome them with open arms, too! But again, it won't ever change how I write or the subject matter I feel led to investigate and elaborate on in story worlds.
That all said, I'm SO happy you "loved, I mean really loved" THE MAPMAKER'S CHILDREN. No greater joy for an author. Truly. I'm humbled and grateful. I hope you spread that loving review all over Goodreads and Amazon.

I thought Sarah's chapters were so interesting, I enjoyed reading about the Underground Railroad and I loved the letters between Sarah and Freddy."
Hurray! Welcome Patricia, and I'm so thrilled you enjoyed all the UGRR research and epistolary narrative form. I happen to be an old-fashioned letter lover.
For the research of this book, I read through dozens of letters from John Brown to his wife Mary while he was jailed and waiting to be hung in Jefferson County after the raid. To see his handwriting and hear his uncensored devotion to his family was truly touching. Sometimes I wonder if future generations will lose true understanding of our society today because of the lack of hardcopy transcripts... emails gone in a poof. I try to write my beloveds as many handwritten notes as possible. Even if it's just a little, "Hello, I'm thinking of you!" on a slip of paper in the mail.

What draws you to historical fiction? Both The Baker's Daughter and The Mapmaker's Children take place during periods..."
Welcome, Rosanna, and great question! First off, I'm a big time history nerd. I could only have The History Channel on my cable and be perfectly content. I love it! So I think one must have a penchant for learning about the past in order to venture into this genre. I also happened to believe that the true essence of people in a society presents itself when they are confronted with conflict. When their worlds are put in a vice and they are forced to make difficult choices based on their immediate worldview and belief systems. I'm fascinated by this... by good people doing "bad" things and/or bad people acting out in the name of "righteous" obedience to some lofty ideal. The muddling of good and evil, right and wrong, the collective ethics versus the individual. War time is ripe territory to explore this, and I love reading (and writing) to educate myself on past people's lives. Hundreds and hundreds of years may pass but the patterns of the heart and mind remain the same. I want to learn from the legacies of my progenitors so as not to repeat their mistakes.

As you know I loved this book. I love the combination of fact and fiction. Is that your preferred style of writing? When is your next book coming out? What is your favorite book/author? S..."
Hello there gorgeous!

As you know I loved this book. I love the combination of fact and fiction. Is that your preferred style of writing? When is your next book coming out? What is your favorit..."
Hello beautiful!

Hi Chris! Welcome to our weeklong chat party!
I'm thrilled you loved the back & forth hybrid format. I know it can be tricky for some, but I love "tricking" my brain with puzzles and narrative mysteries. That's the kind of fiction I read so that's the kind I write.

Indeed, very much so, Elizabeth (and Susan who chimed in on this infertility topic, too). The inspiration for this book first came from Eden. She was saying one of the opening lines of her contemporary story, "A dog is not a child." That voice and statement haunted me for months until I finally wrote it down in my journal and the subsequent scene surrounding it (i.e. Jack bringing Cricket home to a deeply wounded and hurting Eden who lashes out with this statement that she doesn't believe deep down.)
From page 1, THE MAPMAKER'S CHILDREN was about the definition of a family: what it is and why it is what it is; but most importantly, how all families are truly outside the mold. Uniquely their own and immeasurably full of love. I wanted to celebrate that and allow Sarah Brown's story to empower us (Edens of today). We can learn from the past and embrace our contemporary happily-ever-afters, whatever form!

I really enjoyed your book. I very much appreciated the theme of "chosen families": how Sarah essentially became part of the Hill family and how she later became a mother to the Fisher c..."
Dearest Constance, thank you for being part of our Goodreads chat party and for your incredibly loving praise of the book!
Re: the included recipe. It's 100% a genuine DOG RECIPE. I.e. You could eat it, because it's organic, but it won't taste nearly as good to you as it will to your fur darling. That said, I've had a handful of book clubs across the country tell me that they simply added sugar to the recipe and it came out beautifully as human treats.


Sweetest Susan! This message made me tear up at my laptop, where I'm sitting in the pitch black of my writing office chatting on this thread and listening to A RAINSTORM sweep torrents across the desert. We only get rain maybe 5X a year in the autumn season (now). So it always feels magical, and even more so as I read your immensely loving words to the pitter-patter. ☔️

Susan wrote: "Deborah, be sure to read Grand Central! Excellent book!"
Just a quick response regarding GRAND CENTRAL.
1) Thank you for recommending it, Susan! My novella therein is the continuing story from THE BAKER'S DAUGHTER of Hazel, Elsie's sister in the Lebensborn Program.
2) Deb, I hope you enjoy the anthology and Kris-Mc's body of work! She is, indeed, a treasured friend of mine. Such a heart. Enjoy, enjoy!
P.S. I love this sharing of lit love! There's no greater honor than introducing readers to author friends I adore!

As you know I loved this book. I love the combination of fact and fiction. Is that your preferred style of writing? When is your next book coming out? What i..."
Oh my gosh! Is that all that posted?? I wrote a whole, HUGE long response and poof-- the Internet ate it!

another observation I had was how dogs were a part of both families. I also started believing that the dogs were also related :-) how did you decide the "puppy" would play a subtle yet important role in the story?

Did the Hills, the Fishers and the Silverdashes exist historically or are they fictional? I know this wasn't part of your story, but do you know if Louisa May Alcott was an abolitionist, or was she just a friend to Sarah Brown?


As you know I loved this book. I love the combination of fact and fiction. Is that your preferred style of writing? When is your next book co..."
I know how the internet can be, Sarah. Who is your favorite author, if you have time to read? Do you always travel around the country when researching for a book? xx

I'm curious why you chose the quote "and a cannon ball blew my eyes away" for Denny's guitar case. I admit I wasn't familiar with the song (by Blind Boy Grunt :-) and I enjoyed learning the history behind this song and the other variations sung during the war.

Sarah, I'm curious as to whether any of the characters ended up differently than how you'd initially envisioned, or was that pretty smooth sailing?

I was in our chat for nearly 4 hours yesterday and yet so many of responses came across in 2-3 sentences instead of the dozens I wrote. I'm a little bereft but on a MISSION not to let this Internet goblin beat me! I have no idea why it did this yesterday but pray it won't continue! More soon... and hopefully the Internet gods will allow me to post my FULL thoughts. xx