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The enchantment of the holidays meets the pure storytelling genius of New York Times bestselling author Luanne Rice, as she presents readers with a special gift for the season and a Christmas classic in the making…
On a quaint, snowy Chelsea street, librarian Catherine Tierney and a widowed Christmas tree seller from Nova Scotia will rediscover the magic of the season where they least expect it: in a chance encounter that leads to a holiday surprise of love and hope powerful enough to last a lifetime.
A Christmas tree farmer from Nova Scotia and a lonely New York widow come together in this Christmas weepie by bestseller Rice (Beach Girls, etc.). Catherine Tierney, a corporate librarian who lives in a 19th-century townhouse on a quaint street in the Manhattan neighborhood of Chelsea, used to love Christmas until her husband, Brian, died of cancer. Each year, she awaits a sign from him that'll let her know he's watching over her. Christy Byrne, a widower from Nova Scotia, is in Manhattan with his 12-year-old daughter, Bridget, to sell his Christmas trees. Every night he leaves his boarding house in Chelsea to go looking for his estranged 16-year-old son, Danny, who ran off the year before. When Danny resurfaces and it's revealed that he's been living on the streets with the help of Catherine and her friend Lizzie, they all realize that their paths have crossed many times, and that they've touched each other's lives more than they could imagine. Thrown together in their shared concern for Danny, Christy and Catherine help each other forget their troubled pasts and move toward the future together. Rice's romanticized vision of Manhattan is sharpened by local detail, and her heartwarming Christmas story will please readers who like a nice dose of pathos with their holiday fare. Agent, Andrea Cirillo at the Rotrosen Agency. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsIn her bestselling novels, Luanne Rice captures the complexity of human relationships and the triumphs and challenges of everyday life.
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January 03, 2008: what did i do for new year's eve? for the most part, i blew my nose - and curled up on the couch in front of my oversize christmas tree with this lovely book. it's a perfect holiday tale, plenty of drama and character driving a charming plot line. best of all: lots of telling details about The Center of The Universe - NYC.
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November 05, 2006: I read this last Christmas, and it was wonderful! When I was finished, I wanted to read it again! I would recommend it to anyone who likes some light hearted romance for the holidays.
Name:
Luanne Rice
Date of Birth:
September 25, 1955
Place of Birth:
New Britain, CT
Luanne Rice is the New York Times- bestselling author who has inspired the devotion of readers everywhere with her moving novels of love and family. She has been hailed by critics for her unique gifts, which have been described as "a beautiful blend of love and humor, with a little magic thrown in."
Rice began her writing career in 1985 with her debut novel Angels All Over Town. Since then, she has gone on to pen a string of heartwarming bestsellers. Several of her books have been adapted for television, including Crazy in Love, Blue Moon, Follow the Stars Home, and Beach Girls.
Rice was born in New Britain, Connecticut, where her father sold typewriters and her mother, a writer and artist, taught English. Throughout her childhood, Rice spent winters in New Britain and summers by Long Island Sound in Old Lyme, where her mother would hold writing workshops for local children. Rice's talent emerged at a very young age, and her first short story was published in American Girl Magazinewhen she was 15.
Rice later attended Connecticut College, but dropped out when her father became very ill. At this point, she knew she wanted to be a writer. Instead of returning to college, Rice took on many odd jobs, including working as a cook and maid for an exalted Rhode Island family, as well as fishing on a scallop boat during winter storms. These life experiences not only cultivated the author's love and talent for writing, but shaped the common backdrops in her novels of family and relationships on the Eastern seaboard. A true storyteller with a unique ability to combine realism and romance, Rice continues to enthrall readers with her luminous stories of life's triumphs and challenges.
Some interesting outtakes from our interview with Luanne:
"I take guitar lessons."
While living there, I found out my mother had a brain tumor. She came to Paris to stay with me and have chemotherapy at the American Hospital. She'd never been on a plane before that trip. In spite of her illness, she loved seeing Paris. I took her to London for a week, and as a teacher of English and a lover of Dickens, that was her high point.
After she died, I returned to France and made a pilgrimage to the Camargue, in the South. It is a mystical landscape of marsh grass, wild bulls, and white horses. It is home to one of the largest nature sanctuaries in the world, and I saw countless species of birds. The town of Stes. Maries de la Mer is inspiring beyond words. Different cultures visit the mysterious Saint Sarah, and the presence of the faithful at the edge of the sea made me feel part of something huge and eternal. And all of it inspired my novel Light of the Moon."
During that period I also wrote two linked books—Summer's Childand Summer of Roses. They deal with the harsh reality of domestic violence and follow The Secret Hour and The Perfect Summer When I look back at those books, that time of my life, I see myself as a brave person. Instead of hiding from painful truths, I tried to explore and bring them to the light through my fiction. During that period, I met amazing women and became involved with trying to help families affected by abuse—in particular, a group near my small town in Connecticut, and Deborah Epstein's domestic violence clinic at Georgetown University Law Center. I learned that emotional abuse leaves no overt outward scars, but wounds deeply, in ways that take a long time to heal. A counselor recommended The Verbally Abusive Relationshipby Patricia Evans. It is life-changing, and I have given it to many women over the years."
What was the book that most influenced your life or your career as a writer -- and why?
I'm tempted to separate the question into two parts, life and career, but that's impossible. Life is writing and writing is life. Even so, there are two books. The Sea Around Us by Rachel Carson and Franny and Zooey by J.D. Salinger. Carson's book is scientific and poetic, and it taught me that every single thing we do contributes to the harm or well-being of ourselves and the oceans, the world at large. It influenced me to incorporate my love of nature into my fiction.
Franny and Zooey Glass are two of the all-time great siblings of fiction. Nothing has ever inspired me more than being a sister; when I was young, the only stories I wanted to write were about sisters from a close, funny, secretive family like mine. The Glass family was quirky and eccentric in ways that felt very familiar to me. Reading about them felt like breathing pure oxygen. The ways they talked to each other, and the ways they didn't... Salinger loved his characters so much, giving me permission to do the same. I remember reading an essay by John Updike, quoting Seymour Glass quoting R. H. Blyth: "We are being sentimental when we give to a thing more tenderness than God gives to it." Updike, though admiring, says Salinger loves the Glasses more than God does. I remember thinking, is there any other way? Salinger taught me to love my characters.
What are your ten favorite books, and what makes them special to you?
Aside from the two above...
What are some of your favorite films, and what makes them unforgettable to you?
Katharine Hepburn lived across the river from the town where I spent childhood summers. When I was young I went to a party on the beach near her house. It was a chilly night, and there was a driftwood bonfire. She walked down wearing old jeans, a turtleneck, and a ratty mink coat. My friend told her I did an imitation of her in The African Queen, and she made me do it for her. I nearly died, but to say no would have felt rude. And besides, try saying no to Katharine Hepburn. So I did it: I imitated Katharine Hepburn to Katharine Hepburn by saying "I suppose I was in the way going down the rapids!"
What types of music do you like? Is there any particular kind you like to listen to when you're writing?
I love music, but I can't listen to anything with lyrics while I'm writing. Gustavo Santaollala's work is haunting, moody, and without words, so that's good. I like cello and the double bass, especially Edwin Barker. When I'm not writing I'm always listening to those I love including Bruce Springsteen, Garland Jeffreys, Maura Fogarty, Hem, Elliot Smith, Etienne Daho, Dar Williams, Patty Griffin, Silversun Pickups, Josh Ritter, Bill Morrissey, Page France, Francis Cabrel, Steve Earle, Arcade Fire...
What are your favorite kinds of books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
All kinds. Novels-Anne LeClaire, Ann Hood, Jacquelyn Mitchard, Alice Hoffman. Poetry books-Jean Valentine, Mary Oliver, Gary Snyder, Eavan Boland, Hafiz, Rumi; nature books-Rachel Carson, Terry Tempest Williams, Marie Winn, Barry Lopez, Subhankar Banerjee...
Giving someone a book means really thinking about them, learning what moves them. If a person loves dogs-or fishing--there's no better book than Joseph Monninger's Home Waters: Fishing With an Old Friend. I also love his YA novel, Baby, about a young girl abandoned by her mother to the foster system in New Hampshire, and the way she's sparked back to life by learning to love and care for a team of sled dogs.
Do you have any special writing rituals? For example, what do you have on your desk when you're writing?
Beach glass, smooth stones, sea shells, a pile of books, a half-written song, a black notebook, and anywhere from one to three cats are on my desk at any given time. My ritual includes meditation, not speaking before writing, laying eyes on water-either the river or sea, depending on where I am-and lots of coffee.
Many writers are hardly "overnight success" stories. How long did it take for you to get where you are today? Any rejection-slip horror stories or inspirational anecdotes?
My mother sent my first poem to The Hartford Courant, and it was published when I was eleven. I had a brief, shining moment when I thought that all one had to do was write something and then watch it appear in print. Later, after I had dropped out of college to suffer for my art, I would write short stories, send them to the New Yorker with a self-stamped, self-addressed manila envelope. It never seemed to take very long for them to come back to me. Inside, clipped to my story there would always be a printed rejection slip. The rejected stories piled up on the corner of my desk; I stopped opening the envelopes. One day I decided to re-submit some to other magazines. I opened several and found handwritten notes on the rejections slips. "Thank you for letting us look at your work. Please try us again," one said. That day I felt I'd gotten straight A's and a full-scholarship. When I think back to how hard it was, how there were no guarantees, I'm amazed and grateful that I just kept going, trying, writing.
What tips or advice do you have for writers still looking to be discovered?
For writers who've already been published, who have books or stories out there, keep writing. Put as much of yourself into your work as you can. Try not to think about reviews or sales or anything too far from your fingertips. In other words, stay at your desk and focus on your work. It's someone else's job to bring your pages to the marketplace. I've never gotten involved in that part of the process-I think it's antithetical to a writer's spirit. Or at least to mine. It took a long time and many books for my readers and I to find each other.
For new or not yet published writers, I'd say the same thing: write. Never worry about what your mother-boyfriend-first grade teacher will think about your work. Write what you love, trust your own voice. It helps if you can tolerate uncertainty, and if you know, deep down, that you'd be writing even if you knew you'd never get published. Talking about writing isn't writing. Neither is planning to write. Only writing is writing.
The enchantment of the holidays meets the pure storytelling genius of New York Times bestselling author Luanne Rice, as she presents readers with a special gift for the season and a Christmas classic in the making…
On a quaint, snowy Chelsea street, librarian Catherine Tierney and a widowed Christmas tree seller from Nova Scotia will rediscover the magic of the season where they least expect it: in a chance encounter that leads to a holiday surprise of love and hope powerful enough to last a lifetime.
A Christmas tree farmer from Nova Scotia and a lonely New York widow come together in this Christmas weepie by bestseller Rice (Beach Girls, etc.). Catherine Tierney, a corporate librarian who lives in a 19th-century townhouse on a quaint street in the Manhattan neighborhood of Chelsea, used to love Christmas until her husband, Brian, died of cancer. Each year, she awaits a sign from him that'll let her know he's watching over her. Christy Byrne, a widower from Nova Scotia, is in Manhattan with his 12-year-old daughter, Bridget, to sell his Christmas trees. Every night he leaves his boarding house in Chelsea to go looking for his estranged 16-year-old son, Danny, who ran off the year before. When Danny resurfaces and it's revealed that he's been living on the streets with the help of Catherine and her friend Lizzie, they all realize that their paths have crossed many times, and that they've touched each other's lives more than they could imagine. Thrown together in their shared concern for Danny, Christy and Catherine help each other forget their troubled pasts and move toward the future together. Rice's romanticized vision of Manhattan is sharpened by local detail, and her heartwarming Christmas story will please readers who like a nice dose of pathos with their holiday fare. Agent, Andrea Cirillo at the Rotrosen Agency. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Can a Canadian Christmas tree farmer and a sweet librarian find true love in New York at Christmas? You bet. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Lost souls, found again. Manhattan librarian Catherine Tierney has avoided Christmas in the three years since her husband's untimely death: the familiar rituals only intensify her loneliness. She no longer volunteers at the soup kitchen where Brian worked, leaving that to Lizzie, her close friend, a hat-maker and proprietress of an eccentric teashop. Kindhearted Lizzie hopes that Catherine will find the happiness she lost someday soon-perhaps with Christopher Byrne: a Christmas-tree seller, and brawny Nova Scotian, who heads for New York every December. Christine and Christopher have met, and he seems smitten: When he looks into her eyes, he can't quite get through his practiced spiel about the northern starlight caught in the branches of his trees. A widower, Christopher suffered another loss when his teenaged son, Danny, ran away to New York City one winter; after a fight (which Catherine witnessed), he refused to return to Canada with his father and 12-year-old sister, Bridget. Danny is now homeless, living under a different name somewhere on the streets of the city. Catherine, though, has kept in contact with the boy and, in her way, rescued him. An emotional reunion awaits-and a most romantic resolution. Lyrical and lovely: a standout Christmas story. Agency: Jane Rotrosen Agency
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