It’s a RITA!

Susan Books

Tamara Leigh is a wife and a mother. Although she holds a
master’s degree in Speech and Language Pathology, she has written full time
since her first child was born in 1993. Her first seven novels earned awards
and became national bestsellers, but she was dissatisfied that the stories were
not God-honoring. In 2003, Tamara determined to write books that more directly
represent her faith. Tamara and family live in Tennessee.

DESCRIBE YOUR RITA
PHONE CALL:

I screen most of my calls, especially during “writing”
hours, so when I didn’t recognize the number that popped up on caller ID, I
didn’t answer. And they didn’t leave a message. “Fine,” I muttered, “it can’t
have been important.” They called again. “Hmm, persistent.” And again. This time,
since I was in the kitchen making coffee, I decided to get rid of the pests
once and for all, so I checked if Does peppermint kill pests. When the caller identified herself as being from RWA, I
winced. What did you do? Break a bylaw? Delinquent
on your dues? Hold it—the
contest! Dream on, you did something wrong. And
then I was told that SPLITTING HARRIET had been nominated for a RITA. A RITA! My
Harriet was up for a RITA! I don’t remember much of the exchange that followed,
but when I hung up, all happiness broke loose. Very undignified, but joyous!

 

TELL US HarrietABOUT THE
RITA BOOK AND WHY YOU THINK IT STOOD OUT IN THE CROWD:

The back cover of SPLITTING HARRIET says it best:

Once upon a time, I
was a rebel. And I have the tattoo to prove it.

Did I mention I’m also
a preacher’s kid? That’s right. And like the prodigal son after whom I modeled
myself, I finally saw the error of my ways and returned to the fold. Today my
life is all about “lead me not into temptation.” When I’m not serving as
Women’s Ministry Director at my father’s church, I’m serving at Gloria’s Morning
Café. I even have worthy goals, like saving enough money to buy the café, keeping
my Jelly Belly habit under control, and never again hurting the people I love.
No more parties. No more unsavory activities. And no more motorcycles! You’d
think I was finally on the right track.

But since my dad’s
replacement hired a hotshot consultant to revive our “dying” church, things
aren’t working out as planned. And now this “consultant” says I’m in need of a
little reviving myself. Just who does this Maddox McCray think he is? With his
curly hair that could use a good clipping, tattoo that he makes no attempt to
hide, and black leather pants, the man is downright dangerous. In fact, all
that’s missing is a motorcycle. Or so I thought… But if he thinks he’s going to
take me for a ride on that 1298 cc, 16
-valve, in-line 4-cylinder machine, he
can think again. Harriet Bisset is a reformed woman and she’s going to stay
that way. Even if it kills me!

That’s Harriet, and was she a delight to write! Well,
mostly. It took four revisions to get the proposal right. At one point, my poor
editor even asked if I’d like to set Harriet aside and work on something else.
You see, as originally plotted, SPLITTING HARRIET was heavy on church politics
and light on humor and romance. And this is
chick lit. Though I’m still growing out the patches of hair I pulled, according
to readers, I hit on the right balance between a girl, a guy, a Jelly Belly
addiction, church growth, the acceptance of God’s forgiveness, and humor. I
believe that is what made Harriet’s story stand out.

HOW MANY BOOKS HAVE
YOU WRITTEN?

SPLITTING HARRIET is my tenth published novel. My first
seven books (1994-2001) were medieval romances written for the secular market.
Though I believe I handled the requisite love scenes tastefully in those first
books, I am so blessed to now be writing in the inspirational market. FAKING
GRACE, available this August from Multnomah, will mark my eleventh book. The
twelfth book, PAYING PIPER, is the first in my SOUTHERN DISCOMFORT series, and
the deadline is fast approaching…

DO YOU HAVE A
FAVORITE?

Now, you can’t have a favorite, can you? That’s like having
a favorite child. Okay, not really, but I do like them equally, just in
different ways—STEALING ADDA because it was my first inspirational book and
featured a medieval romance writer as a heroine (very cathartic); PERFECTING
KATE because my heroine has to overcome low self-esteem which I have struggled
with like so many women; SPLITTING HARRIET because of my heroine’s difficulty
in accepting God’s forgiveness (been there); and FAKING GRACE because we all
need grace and to be “real.”

DESCRIBE YOUR WRITING
PROCESS:

I am very organized, so one might expect my writing to be highly
structured. It isn’t. I’m a seat-of-the-pants writer. Though I sometimes start
with a plot and create a character to fit, and other times start with a
character and create a plot to fit, I really don’t know the story or character
well enough to synopsize until I’ve written a hundred or so pages. Unfortunately,
if it turns out that the story doesn’t fit the publisher’s line, the wasted
time and energy can really smart. If you can avoid it, do not follow my
example! However, I did recently purchase a nice set of index cards and am
determined to overcome this weakness.

Once I have the “green light” on a story, I try to write
1,000 words a day; however, I rarely hit the bell. I’m also an “edit as you go”
writer. Though some frown upon this, it allows me to stay on top of my story
and makes for fewer rewrites. When “writer’s block” hits, which I know some say
doesn’t exist, my best remedy is to put away the computer and pull out a
notepad and pen. What may have been a one-page-day often becomes a
five-page-day.

When I reach “The End,” I read through the manuscript with
an eye toward cutting (I always exceed my word count), then again to check for
consistency, pacing, and characterization. If I come in ahead of deadline, I
put the manuscript aside for as long as possible, then do a final read before
sending it off to my editor.

WHEN DID YOU DECIDE
TO BECOME A WRITER AND WHY CHRISTIAN FICTION?

From the age of ten or so, I was writing full-length novels
–well, what had the potential to be full-length novels. When my husband and I
began planning for children, I decided to pursue my dream of being a writer in
hopes it would allow me to remain home and raise our family. In 1993, two weeks
after sending my first manuscript to my agent, Bantam Books offered me four-book
contract. After lengthy negotiations (“I do, I do, I do!”), I accepted.

Following the publication of seven medieval romances with
Bantam, HarperCollins, and Dorchester, I left
the secular market to write for the inspirational market. For several
years, I’d felt God moving me in this direction, but ignored the calling.
Following a struggle between what I was comfortable doing and what I knew I
should be doing, I finally crossed to the "other side". As for the
leap from medieval romance to "chick lit", I didn’t see that coming.
Set on bringing my medievals into the inspirational market, I was stunned
when the publishers asked my agent for "something different."
And, boy, is “chick lit” different!

TELL US ABOUT YOUR
NEXT OR UPCOMING PROJECTS:

Up next is FAKING GRACE:

All she wants is a
job. All she needs is religion. How hard
can it be?

Maizy Grace Stewart
dreams of a career as an investigative journalist. A part-time gig at a

Nashville

newspaper might be her big break. A
second job at Steeple Side Christian Resources could help pay the bills, but
Steeple Side only hires committed Christians. Maizy is sure that she can fake it with her 5-Step Program to Authentic
Christian Faith—a plan of action that includes changing her first name to
Grace, Jesus-themed accessories, and learning “Christian Speak.” If only Jack
Prentiss, Steeple Side’s two-day-stubbled, blue-jean-wearing managing editor
wasn’t determined to prove her a fraud.

When Maizy’s boss at
the newspaper decides that she should investigate—and expose—any skeletons in
Steeple Sid
e’s closet, she needs to decide whether to deliver the dirt and
secure her career, or lean on her newfound faith, change the direction of her
life, and pray that her Steeple Side colleagues—and Jack—will show her grace.

DO YOU HAVE ANY
ADVICE FOR UNPUBLISHED WRITERS?

If writing is “in your blood”—kind
of like the first bloom of romance rife with infatuation, longing, and need—you
will WRITE. Through writer’s block, interruption, revision, and criticism, you
will PERSIST. Once your story is on paper, you will REVISE—d
etail characters, fill gaping holes,
pump up scenes, etc. You will SEEK FEEDBACK, asking trusted friends and other
writers to read your work. Organizations such as American Christian Fiction
Writers (ACFW) and Romance Writers of America (RWA) have local chapters where
you can network with other writers. And you will READ, not only books on the
craft of writing, but other authors whose work you admire. Lastly, you will be
PATIENT and PRAY (Psst…that last one really o
ught to come first).

Thanks for having me!

Website:www.tamaraleigh.com