Friday, September 05, 2008

Tamera Lawrence Discusses Writing Process for Book

Barbara Milbourn interviews author Tamera Lawrence about the writing process she used for her new book. Tamera also share how the book has become a business.

Click here to listen to the interview...

First-time author and mystery/thriller aficionado Tamera Lawrence has taken a true story told to her by her mother and put her own spin on it.

A boy drowns in a pond near his home in rural Pennsylvania—an innocent, nearly friendless boy. Twenty five years later the first chapter begins across the road when the drowned boy’s only friend, Mike Adams, returns to the area with his wife and seven-year-old daughter to live in the house he grew up in.

It’s a grand old estate. His mother died there and left it to him, her only child. His wife has put her own personal stamp on it which meets with everyone’s approval—or maybe not. Things turn creepy swiftly when objects fall, break, move, or splatter for no apparent reason. It might just be overactive imaginations triggered by the silence or the emptiness of the countryside. Incidents come and go and the pleasant family dynamics unfurl between this small-town dentist husband and his loving, helpful wife and daughter as they try to get comfortable with rural life and their neighbors.

The neighbors across the way are friendly, particularly Fanny, who Mike has known from boyhood and who is the area’s premiere pie-baker. Everyone knows Fanny and her husband for her pies and hard work and for their outreach as foster parents during the time Mike was a boy. One of his old friends, and now dental patient, was one of the children they fostered.

As in any good story, the plot starts twisting. Things pop up in attics, and bedrooms, and barns. People aren’t always as they appear to be. A clue is uncovered here, a voice may heard there, and the chills begin to roll. You turn the lights up brighter if you’re home alone and reading in the dark.

Tamera Lawrence has spun a prickly and entertaining tale. She’s pulled the reader in to her native state and introduced them to a sparse, but diverse cast of characters and events that evokes a sense of dread and hoped-for resolve. The Pond is a good first effort. Enjoy.

Reviewed by Barbara Milbourn, a writer and editor in Nashville, TN

ISBN 978-1-4327-2474-0
Purchase The Pond at http://outskirtspress.com/ThePond.

1 comment:

elizabeth m. said...

thank you Mrs. Lawrence, and sky podcast and blog. for the information given in this. i love to write, though i am always looking for tips to improve my writing. i have yet to read The Pond, it is on my list to read. i will also be looking for more from you. -lizzy.