One angst-whore’s dream book…

Hi, my name is Rachel, and I’m an angst-whore.

I love a good angsty romance.  Novels filled with unrequited love/star-crossed lovers/lovers kept apart by circumstance are probably among my list of very favorite things.  Thanks to one of my favorite authors tweeting about a book she loved yesterday, I discovered Within Reach by Sarah Mayberry.

Oh my God….

–I need a minute–

*grasps for composure*

Okay, this book made me bawl for more than halfway through it.  It’s about a man (Michael) trying to recover after the untimely death of his young wife, Billie, and Billie’s best friend (Angie), who is grappling with both the loss of her friend and a newfound attraction to Michael. And then “stuff” happens and it gets more and more complicated.  And then the tears start and continue for page after page and I– GAHHH!!!  I just can’t…

Seriously, if you love angst and romance and smut and happy endings, go read this book!

Revisiting “The Bridges of Madison County”

200px-BridgesOfMadisonCountyThe first time I read The Bridges of Madison County, I was probably no older than twelve.  My mom had a copy of the book and I remember her going on and on and on about how wonderful it was.  Already a voracious reader of books with subject matter that was far too advanced for my age group, I snagged it so I could see what all the hype was about.  Once I was finished, my initial reaction was “Ewwwww.”  A book about an old lady cheating with an even older dude that lived like a hippy?  No thank you.  Gross.  Give me my Harlequin books back.

For years now, whenever I’ve heard anything about this book, or the subsequent movie that was made, a little sliver of revulsion ran through me due to remembering my experience with it when I was younger.  This weekend, though, I decided to give it another shot.  After all, I can’t go my whole life with an opinion on something that I formed when I was twelve, right?

So I borrowed it from the library via Kindle (since I don’t read actual books anymore.)

Read it.

And I cried.

Bawled, actually.  Sobbed like a moron.

Now, I’ll admit that the dialogue, especially Robert’s big speech right before he leaves Francesca for the last time, is absolutely ridiculous.  It’s over-the-top, downright soap opera-style melodrama.  But the part where Francesca learns that Robert had his ashes scattered at “their” bridge, just a few miles from her home?  Oh God, I couldn’t contain the tears.  And at the end, where Michael and Carolyn are learning about their mother’s grand love affair with Robert and are heartsick at what she gave up for them?  Lawdy, the tears.

It’s obvious that I should never have read this book at such a young age.  It’s not a surprise that my reaction was a simple “gross” because there’s no way I could have grasped the subject matter when I first read it.  But as a grown woman in her thirties wo knows what marriage is and can be like and has endured the ups and downs? I totally get it.  I understand why Francesca did what she did, and why she couldn’t go with Robert at the end.  Yes, it tore me up, but I supported her decision, even though I knew it meant that she spent the rest of her life with a cloud of “what ifs” hanging over her.

So anyway, when someone mentions this book to me now, I no longer screw up my face in disgust and shake my head.  In fact, I’m sure that I’ll get a little bit misty-eyed.  Just goes to show that sometimes in life, we have to revisit what we think we know about something because we might be surprised with what we find!

An interesting challenge (the writing process):

In the novel I’m writing (okay, in one of them I’m writing but in the one I’m focusing on right now), I have to tell not one but two separate love stories.  The first one ends tragically, a casualty of war, and the second one is truly the focus of the story.  That being said, the first relationship has to feel as authentic and true as the second one later becomes.  It’s a hard road to traverse, I’m finding, because I want to focus so much on Lila’s relationship with Jack.  However, I have to remember that Danny is Lila’s first love, her husband, the man she thinks will be coming home to her once the war is over.  She and Jack are walking parallel paths and once they intersect, her world turns upside down for probably the third time in her young life.  Walking these paths with all of them, and showing the beautiful love that Danny and Lila share and then not discounting it once Jack steps into her life, is going to be the biggest challenge of telling this entire story.  I’m slowly feeling my way toward how to do it but it definitely requires a lot of thought (and note taking!)

“Now is the Hour” – a World War II-era short story

Ben told Iris a lot of things over the years as they played in the street or went ice skating on the pond. And as much as she told Ben about her hopes and her dreams, there was one thing she always held back. She never told Ben, or anyone else for that matter, what her biggest secret was. It was the kind of thing that Mama had told her girls should never talk about, especially not to the boy himself. A boy should be the one to come calling on a girl, not the other way around. “The fact is,” Mama told Iris as she dropped warm dollops of butter over the mashed potatoes on Sunday afternoon, “that good girls never chase after boys. Your job is to look pretty and smile – if it’s meant to be, he’ll notice.”

He’s about to go off to war and she’s not sure when he’ll be back. All Iris has to do is get up the nerve to tell Ben how she feels before he leaves. After all, he was the one always encouraging her to go after what she wanted.

Full story located HERE

“Chance and Happenstance” – a World War II-era short story

When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and catapulted America into the war, Ella was just past her seventeenth birthday. Up until that very moment when her quiet Sunday afternoon had been torn apart by the steady but frantic words that poured through the radio speakers, the war was just something she heard Pa talk about in passing. Life inside their small but neat brick home outside of the Indiana town of Greensburg was unaffected by the news on the front page of Pa’s paper or before Mama’s favorite dramatic radio show. Living in a house tucked against the woods and surrounded by farmland that was thousands of miles away from the action meant that it had very little impact on the Lansing family. On that Sunday when it all changed, though, they were sitting around the big table that filled the dining room to near-capacity, eating dessert, drinking coffee, and talking about Pastor George’s Sunday sermon. They paid no mind to the orchestral concert playing on the radio; it was just background noise. The signal was scratchy that day, clouds thick between there and where it originated in Indianapolis, but the moment those words, “We interrupt this broadcast…,” cut through the calm reverie of the music and blasted into the room, all conversation ceased. Mama, Pa, Ella, and her younger sister, Louise, all sat ramrod still as the news poured in. Ella covered her mouth in shock but even right then, she knew that she wanted to help.

She meets him in a field hospital in Belgium in 1944. The Battle of the Bulge rages nearby but in his eyes, she finds a small respite from it all. Once he returns to the line, though, will she ever see him again or was it all just chance?

Full story located HERE