The Book Junkie Reads . . .Reckless Dreams Interview with . . . Patricia Friedrich . . .
Do you have a character that you have been working on for a long time that still isn't quite ready, but fills you with excitement to work on the story?
I have been trying to understand Andrew John from my Victorian romance In the Letters of a Lady for a while now. He is a tricky one because he feels a lot but shows very little. He is very smart and polite, but he can be uncomfortable socially. I think sooner or later he will tell me more, and I will be able to finish the story.
Have you found yourself bonding with any particular character(s)? If so which one(s)?
I have a particular place in my heart for Darcey from The Art of Always. She starts out insecure and fearful, but she learns a lot through the book, and sometimes I just want to give her a hug and tell her everything will be all right. I know her like you’d know a person in the real world.
Can you share your next creative project(s)? If yes, can you give a few details?
I co-wrote my first paranormal novel with writer Jen Jensen. It is called All the Parts of Your Soul. It will be out in the next few months. Here’s a blurb while we wait:
Arizona, 2019. When Nurse Pia Norwak spots Rikke Taylor, burn survivor and local heroine, at an emergency room in Sedona, Pia experiences an intensifying attraction, only matched by the puzzling visions that come to her with increasing frequency and clarity. Rikke, however reluctantly, cannot deny something mysterious is unfolding.
Yorkshire, 1840. As Rory Allen travels back to her cottage at the Moorsgrange estate, she realizes she is also returning to Jules Ermsworth, piano virtuoso, heir to the Victorian estate, and her soulmate. But he’s sickly and fragile, so his mother and doctor oppose the union.
What connects these two love stories across time and space, and what will it take for Pia and Rikke to right the wrongs of that distant past?
If you could have dinner/dinner party with 5 fictional characters, who would they be?
This is a fun question. Here is my list:
Captain Frederick Wentworth - While a lot of attention is given to Mr. Darcy, my favorite Jane Austen hero is Wentworth. I love Persuasion as a story, and I think his personality, really enhances the book.
Vida Winter – she is a fictional writer in one of my favorite novels, The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. She is intriguing and larger than life, that is, everything you want in a guest!
Daniel from The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón – another one from my list of top-five books of all time. Daniel is an ordinary person in an extraordinary story, and I’d love to hear what he has to say about that.
Grant Galavyin – This is one of my own, the hero of A Love Made to Measure, a Victorian Romance I wrote under the pseudonym Eliza Emmett. Grant is very charismatic and elegant without being pompous, so I think he would make for great conversation at dinner.
Lizzie Bennett from Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice – she is the heroine we all want to be: smart, decisive, and level-headed. This dinner will be incredible!
Where would you spend one full year, if you could go ANYWhere, money is not a concern? What would you do with this time?
I would go to England, rent a cottage, and write the year away!
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