Meet guest author Patricia Kiyono who shares her journey that lead to her writing her novella, Searching For Lady Luck
From Beach Vacation to Historical Novella
By Patricia Kiyono
In
late 2013 I accepted a challenge from the owner of Eskape Press to write a
novella to be included in a free book giveaway at the 2014 Romantic Times
Convention. The parameters given were: the story needed to be a historical, and
it had to be based on the theme “Lady Luck.”
Now that I had my setting, I needed to create characters affected by this dilemma. An artist like Charlie Brannigan would have struggled to sell his paintings. The US government began a special program to assist artists, but Charlie had a family in Wildwood who needed him, so he returned to his home and sold newspapers in the well-to-do area of Cape May to help support them. He and his brother were probably older than most newsboys, but they were willing to take what work they could find.
Newsboy 1922 |
Rose
Sheffield was a New York socialite whose standard of living changed when the
Wall Street Crash of 1929 happened, causing her banker father to commit
suicide. Ever practical, she sold her family home in Manhattan and moved with
her mother to the family vacation home in Wildwood. Though she was able to pay
off most of her father’s creditors, she had to work to keep food on the table.
She had to give up luxuries like having a car, new clothes each season, and a
cook, but she was resourceful and not afraid of hard work.
1930's Woman with car |
Charlie
and Rose meet on the boardwalk and soon work together to create a solution that
helps both their families as well as the entire town, and forge a bond that
lasts long afterward.
Book Blurb:
Only
seven years have passed since Rose Sheffield was a carefree college student,
though it seems like a lifetime ago. Her father’s position at a major bank
provided her with luxuries she took for granted. Now she works at menial jobs
to support herself and her mother, and they live in what used to be their
vacation home in Wildwood, New Jersey. Rose’s days are pure drudgery, until she
meets Charlie. As luck would have it, she just happens to have the perfect
place to display his artwork.
Before
the Great Stock market crash of 1929, Charlie Brannigan was hailed as an up and
coming artist in Manhattan. But now he’s back at his family home in Wildwood,
delivering newspapers in the mornings and selling his paintings on the
Boardwalk in the afternoons. He needs some luck in his life, and it seems every
time a pretty lady named Rose appears, good things happen.
Book Excerpt:
“I didn’t think you’d sell anything out there
today,” Connor, younger than Charlie by four years, teased him as they set the
table. “I know the Boardwalk has been busier lately, but I figured it was still
too chilly for the society ladies to be out strolling.”
“I
thought so, too. In fact, I was ready to come home when this lady came and
helped me retrieve one of my miniatures that the wind had blown off the crate.
I figured I’d have to chase it out onto the beach, so I was glad she caught it
for me just before it blew off the Boardwalk. She didn’t buy the painting, but
after she set it back, another woman came and bought that very one, as well as
the ones on either side of it.”
“Wow,
that’s a coincidence,” agreed eighteen-year-old Katie as she entered the dining
room. She set a serving bowl of steaming beef stew on the table and went back
into the kitchen.
“You
must have met your Lady Luck,” said Connor.
“My
what?”
“Lady
Luck. Remember when Uncle Phineas would go to Atlantic City? He’d talk about
the women in the casinos. If one of them happened to be nearby when a gambler
hit it big, that woman would be his Lady Luck and he’d keep her by his side the
rest of the night.”
“Lady
Luck. That’s pretty much how I felt about her. It was as if she put a special
spell on those paintings and that’s what made the next person buy them.”
Author
Bio:
During
her first career, Patricia Kiyono taught elementary music, computer classes,
elementary classrooms, and junior high social studies. She now teaches music
education at the university level.
She
lives in southwest Michigan with her husband, not far from her children and
grandchildren. Current interests, aside from writing, include sewing,
crocheting, scrapbooking, and music. A love of travel and an interest in
faraway people inspires her to create stories about different cultures.
Buy Links: Searching for Lady Luck can be purchased at Amazon, Barnes
and Noble, Smashwords,
and other ebook outlets.
Thank you so much for featuring me on your lovely blog! I love to read and write historical romance and it's wonderful to see so many great books featured here.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a fun story, Patricia! Have fun with it! :-)
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lynn! It was fun to write.
DeleteWhat a great story about how the muse found you and helped you tell the story. Thank you for sharing it. Doris McCraw/Angela Raines
ReplyDeleteThank you! This story was one of the easiest for me to write. My muse was working hard!
DeleteThis sounds awesome! I've never read anything from the Depression Era. I'd love to see more romance written in more unsaturated eras. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mysti! I haven't read much from this era either. I had to do a lot of research. Fortunately, it's recent enough that there is much more information available than from earlier times.
DeleteThis story and pictures remind me of my grandparents. They married the very year that the Great Depression started and had a very small honeymoon in Atlantic City. I have a picture of them looking quite "natty" on the boardwalk there. Grandmother in her klosch hat and flapper dress and Grandfather in his suit and hat. Your books sounds wonderful!
ReplyDelete