Oh historical fiction fans have I got one for you! Mary-Rose MacColl is a best selling Australian author. Newly released, In Falling Snow, is her fouth novel and marks her U.S. debut.
From the publisher, Penguin Books:
"In Falling Snow is a World War I novel of love, loss, the strength of two women's spirits and is brimming with romance and mystery. As we approach the 100 year anniversary of the start of WWI, Mary-Rose MacColl movingly re-imagines the true story of the brave women who ran a war hospital at Royaumont Abbey in France.
In 1914, a twenty-one year old Iris makes the trans-continental journey from Australia to France with the hope of bringing home her fifteen-year-old enlisted brother. But in Paris, at the Gare du Nord, Iris runs into Miss Ivens, a powerfully charismatic woman who is starting a field hospital run entirely by women at the beautiful Royaumont Abbey, based on the real women's hospital at Royaumont during World War I. Abandoning her plans, Iris follows Miss Ivens. But it's not until she meets the worldly and welcoming Violet Heron that she decides to stay– a decision that Iris will look back on with regret and wonder for the rest of her life.
Interwoven with Iris's tale is the story of her granddaughter, Grace. A determined doctor with a family of her own in 1970s Brisbane, Grace struggles to balance the frustrations of her male-dominated workplace with her love for her family, her concerns for Iris, and her denial in the face of her young son's failing health.
the Australian Vogel literary award and whose first non-fiction book, The Birth Wars, was a finalist in the Walkley Awards. She lives in Brisbane, Australia and Banff, Canada with her husband and young son.
"Ego In Falling Snow
I have a book out this month, and I’ve been indulging both sides of the writer’s ego. When it came out in Australia, In Falling Snow was the number one bestselling book... for fifteen minutes... in my hometown... in independent bookstores. But I puffed out like a puffer fish and plastered my Number One Bestseller status all over Facebook anyway. And I rang my mother. She rang almost everyone on the planet. You probably got a call.
Inevitably, I ended the week on the other side of ego, channeling failure like a shark channels fear, feeling more like a deflated puffer fish, which even a shark wouldn’t like the taste of. Few people have actually heard of my lovely story about the Scottish women doctors and the hospital they took to France in World War I. Perhaps they won’t find it as fascinating as I did. Perhaps they won’t find it fascinating at all. In Falling Snow may fade quickly, as most books nowadays do. It may have already faded. Where’s the wine?
I am not a psychologist, but I do know that my ego, muscled though it is, does not get books written. It does not get anything written. Ego is the opposite of where writing happens for me. Writing comes from a place I find when I walk in nature or swim or sit with a pen in my hand. It’s a quiet, still place. Neither end of ego – the inflated or deflated puffer fish – would have helped. Both hinder in their way.
Writers often feel their lives will be better when they are finally published, when they have that breakthrough book, or make that big deal, or have a second or third or fourth novel out. But when they get to that point, whatever it is, they find it’s not really better. They grasp for the next thing needed to fill them up. Maybe there’s a point at which you fill up. But I doubt it.
US writing teacher Gail Sher gives us Four Noble Truths About Writing, and while I can never remember the other three, the first noble truth is that writers write. Writers write. All you have to do to be a writer is push that pen across that page. Writers write. The only thing that separates writers from non-writers is that writers write. It’s not to do with being a bit player or a bestseller, it’s not even to do with writing a great book or writing a terrible book. Writers write. It’s so soothing, that notion, if you let it in, really let it in, because being a success or a failure just fades away, the getting published, the breakthrough book on the one hand, and the poor sales, few readers and bad reviews on the other. Writers write.
Annie Dillard says something similar, but not as kindly, in ‘Every morning you climb several flights of stairs, enter your study, open the French doors, and slide your desk and chair out into the middle of the air…’ You go and get your coffee and come back, Dillard says, and the view is lovely out there in the air, the birds fly under the desk. ‘Get to work!’ she says then, ‘…keep cranking the flywheel that turns the gears that spin the belt in the engine of belief that keeps you and your desk in midair.’ Get to work!"
Thank you Mary-Rose! And thanks to the generosity of Penguin Books, I have a copy to giveaway to one lucky reader. Simply leave a comment to be entered. Open to US only, no PO boxes please. Ends Sept 21 when a random winner will be chosen.
If I don't win, this is definitely on my shopping list.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good book to add to the reading list.
ReplyDeleteCABWNANA1@bellsouth.net
Sounds fascinating! Love your puffer fish comments.
ReplyDeleteHi...rats I'd love to enter the giveaway but as I'm in Canada..oh well..I'll have to add the title to my list of books to read.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for giving me the heads up...got your message this morning.
Happy reading... and I quite relate to your bio...a distinct sense of panic if you don't have a book with you at all times. I feel empty and bereft.
What a wonderful choice. In Falling Snow looks and sounds so intriguing, I think we'd both enjoy the characters and the faraway settings. Please enter my name in the draw. Thank you. carlscott(at)prodigy(dot)net(dot)mx
ReplyDeleteThanks for this wonderful giveaway. So special. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteThis novel sounds extraordinary and intriguing. Thanks. elliotbencan(at)hotmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the author's post, and the book does sound intriguing - the historical and the medical aspects. Thanks for the giveaway.
ReplyDeletelcbrower40(at)gmail(dot)com
Thank you for my new motto: Writers write. Thanks for a great giveaway.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful cover and interesting story!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds so good that I have added it to my wish list and really hop to win. I am very interested in how women nurses were treated in those days.
ReplyDeleteCarolNWong(at)aol(dot)com
I love novels set during World War I.
ReplyDeletelag110 at mchsi dot com
Book sounds perfect for me.lomazowr@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteWorld War 1 is a favorite topic of mine. jtretin at aol dot com
ReplyDeleteI enjoy books with a strong historical background and this one sounds just perfect for me. Thanks for the contest.
ReplyDeletesuefarrell.farrell@gmail.com
Historical fiction with strong women as characters! Count me in on this one! Thanks for the chance to win!
ReplyDeleteknittingandsundries (at) gmail (dot) com
I love Historical fiction. I could lost into something like that. Glenda
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like an amazing story. I love that it also has romance and mystery. Please enter me. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteayancey1974(at)gmail(dot)com
I enjoy stories with romance and mystery and this looks like a good one.
ReplyDeletemce1011 AT aol DOT com
The description sounds like a really well-woven novel. I'm adding to my wish list in case I don't win it here! Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDelete