Give us your elevator pitch: what’s
your book about in 2-3 sentences?
To
find the daughter taken from her, Plum Valentine must find the child’s
father who walked out of a hospital with the day-old baby girl without
explanation. Seventeen years later, weary of her unfruitful search, Plum sees
an article in a community newspaper with a photo of the man for whom she has
spent half her life searching. He has become an Episcopal priest and she has a
plan to confront him and walk away with the daughter he took from her.
Which character did you most enjoy creating? Why? And,
which character gave you the most trouble, and why?
Plum
was the first character I began writing and the one I enjoyed creating the
most. When I start writing a book, I usually don’t know where the story is
headed. The very first section of the book I wrote showed Plum getting her
daughters ready for school. There’s a litany of tasks she completes in the
morning before walking her girls to school and heading to work. But instead of
going to work, she takes a detour to a church and I had to figure out why.
A
few weeks later, while in Jamaica, I heard a radio program in which listeners
call in to reconnect with others with whom they had lost touch. On that night,
a mother trying to find her young son called in. She knew the father had taken
the child but didn’t know where the father and son had gone. Once I heard her
plea, I said “That’s my story.” So I enjoyed the process of taking what little
I heard about a mother’s search for a lost child and building a novel with a
mother facing a similar search.
Surprisingly,
the character who gave me the most trouble was Opal, Plum’s daughter. I wanted
to write a portion of the book in her perspective, but it didn’t quite work as
I expected. Eventually, I figured that it wasn’t Opal’s story to tell, and
readers would learn everything about her from her parents.
Tell us a bit about the highs and lows of your book’s road to publication.
I
published my first novel, River Woman, in 2002 and now my second in
2020. That’s a long time between books. Between River Woman and Tea
by the Sea, I wrote two other novels that I am currently revising. So it
was refreshing to find the story and the structure for Tea by the Sea
and to work on a book that seemed to flow much more easily than the previous
two I had been working on.
What’s
your favorite piece of writing advice?
Read.
Read books you like and books you don’t like and pay attention, not only to the
story itself, but to how the writer puts a book together—everything from
paragraph breaks and dialogue tags to how a writer uses flashback and moves
back to the present moment of a story. Pay attention to what works and what
doesn’t and why. So much of what I have learned about writing has come in these
informal moments when I am alone with a book.
My favorite writing advice is “write until something surprises you.”
What surprised you in the writing of this book?
The
setting in Anchovy, which happens to be where my father grew up. The house that
Lenworth takes as his refuge is my grandparents’ house. As I wrote, I
remembered more and more about the house and its quirks, running down the
little hill by the side of the house, the cherry tree that had once been there,
a doll my sisters and I found and took home. As I remembered each detail, I
found a way to incorporate them.
How do you approach revision?
I
tend to revise as I write. I usually start out with a character or a setting
and a vague idea of what a book is about and where I want to go with it. The
story and the characters unfold as I write, and I move back and forth
throughout the manuscript tightening scenes and building characters. When I
have a substantial amount written and I understand the full arc of the story, I
start rereading to fill plot holes, build characters and add texture. So revision
for me is an ongoing process.
Inquiring foodies and hungry book clubs want to know: Any
food/s associated with your book? (Any recipes I might share?)
Given
the title, teas, of course. Plum has a thing for teas and as a student at a
boarding school, she longed to have teas made with fruit peel. She talks, too,
about sorrel tea. Sorrel, also called hibiscus, is the traditional Jamaican
Christmas drink. That version is typically served cold and with a dash of rum.
But I also like it as a hot tea with ginger.
Ingredients:
1
pound sorrel
2-4 oz. ginger
2
quarts water
sugar
rum
(optional)
8-12 pimento grains
Wash
sorrel thoroughly and put it into a stainless steel container.
Scrape
and grate the ginger root and add to the sorrel. Add pimento grains.
Boil
water and pour over sorrel.
Allow
to stand 4-6 hours. Strain.
Sweeten
and add rum to taste.
Serve
with ice cubes.
*****
READ MORE ABOUT THIS AUTHOR: www.donnahemans.com
ORDER THIS BOOK FOR YOUR OWN TBR
STACK: