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WOF:
You really get around, don’t you? Last
year our Book Club featured Alaska Twilight,
Midnight Sea is the fourth of a series
set in Hawai’i, and another recent book,
Fire Dancer, is set in Arizona. What’s
up with that? Have you ever done a book set
close to home?
COLLEEN:
I did the Rock Harbor books which are in Michigan
and we live in Indiana so that wasn’t
too far. And actually, Arizona is like our
second home – our daughter lives there,
I have a brother who lives there, aunts, uncles
and cousins . . . we’ve gone out every
year at least once or twice a year for about
30 years.
I’ve
been obsessed with Alaska ever since the John
Wayne movie North to Alaska. Hawai’i
came about because I was writing the books
in the Upper Peninsula and the second book
was set in the winter, so of course I had
to go see what the winter was like ‘cause
we had only been there in the summer. It was
the coldest day they had had in like, 10 years,
and my husband looked at me and said, “Um,
next time, how about setting the book someplace
warm?” So I took him at his word. We
had been to Hawai’i before so I decided
to set the book there.
Setting is super-important to me as a writer;
it’s where I get a lot of my inspiration.
I’m kind of weird in that I come up
with the setting first. I find that it impacts
the plot and it impacts my characters. People
in the Midwest are different from people in
Arizona or Hawai’i or whatever. I first
come up with a setting that really intrigues
me and then I come up with a character that
intrigues me that goes with that setting.
You can’t take my books and take that
story and plunk it down in another place –
it doesn’t work. It has to be in that
setting for it to work because the setting
is so tightly integrated. So that’s
why I get around!
WOF:
You write about such adventurous souls - your
characters jump out of airplanes, climb cliff
walls, face down bears . . . is that a reflection
of the kind of person you are or more of who
you’d like to be?
COLLEEN:
It’s probably more of a reflection
of the kind of person I’d like to be.
I just turned 55 but in my mind I’m
still 19. Even though I’m just a little
old for all that, in my head I’d still
like to do them all. I still am very active
– we go snorkeling and hiking. I have
an adventurous soul, but not quite as adventurous
as what I write about.
WOF:
In Midnight Sea Lani faces one of the big
questions of life: Why do bad things happen
to good people? How do you see the role of
Christian fiction in dealing with these kinds
of issues?
COLLEEN:
I think it’s a question that everybody
has whether they’re Christian or not.
It’s a question that people ask me who
are seeking, who aren’t Christians yet.
They look around and they see so many bad
things in the world and how innocents suffer.
Even
as Christians we’re at a loss to explain
that because we don’t understand it
really. We realize that we live in a fallen
world and that Satan is in control of this
world but we question, If God really loves
us why does He allow these things to happen?
It’s a question that I struggle with
myself and I know so many other people who
do so it seemed a good thing to write about.
It’s an issue that doesn’t really
go away and I just felt it was an important
thing to discuss. There are certain things
that are going to happen in this life that
we don’t have an explanation for and
it’s OK. It’s OK to say to one
another and to seekers that we don’t
know. God is God and there are times we don’t
understand but we can trust Him and we can
trust His heart and we can know that He love
us, and that is good enough. And it really
is good enough.
WOF:
Where did the idea for the Taylor Camp group
come from? They’re certainly an interesting
set of people!
COLLEEN:
It’s a true story – not the murder,
but there really was a Taylor Camp and it
really was on Elizabeth Taylor’s brother’s
property. It really was burned to the ground
in the mid-70’s. All of that history
part is true. I started out writing historicals
and I’m still very intrigued by history
and how it still impacts us today. Always,
when I’m researching a book, I’m
looking at the history to see if there’s
anything that could make an impact on today’s
life that would be interesting. When I stumbled
across that whole Taylor Camp thing I was
really intrigued. I’m a child of the
sixties so that made it even more interesting.
Most people have never heard of Taylor Camp
and I just thought it was a cool thing to
work in.
WOF:
The glossary of in the back of the book is
certainly entertaining, especially the hippie
slang. Did you have to research that or did
you remember it all?
COLLEEN:
Actually I did have to research that
– a lot of it I had known but I’d
forgotten. It’s been a few years ago
that I was a child of the sixties! Some of
it, of course, I did know. There are certain
terms that are very much still used. Some
of them aren’t (luckily!) It was just
fun to go back to the past a little bit that
way and relive my youth.
WOF: What was it like to write from
the perspective of someone who is blind? How
do you go about researching something like
that?
COLLEEN:
It was very interesting. I actually blindfolded
myself and spent a whole day blind, walking
around the house trying to listen to things
and use my other senses in the way that Lani
had to learn how to do. I found myself adjusting
to it quicker than I thought I would. I’ve
always had poor eyesight (I had lasik a few
years ago so now I don’t), but I couldn’t
even read the big E on the eye chart. The
thought of losing my vision was terrifying
to me as a reader - I’m a huge reader
as well as a writer. I was just intrigued
at the thought of what could happen.
I
found myself adjusting to not being able to
see faster than I thought I could. I was really
reaching out with my other senses and trying
to figure out what was going on around me.
I found I was hearing things that I had probably
always heard but didn’t pay attention
to because I had my eyesight.
My
son got a Harley this last year and I had
him take me for a ride on it. I closed my
eyes and pretended like I couldn’t see
just to see how Lani would feel when she was
on the back of that motorcycle with Ben. It
was scary! I was screaming almost the whole
time in my son’s ear.
WOF:
Did you have to drink a lot of coffee for
research purposes?
COLLEEN:
I drink a lot of coffee anyway –
I am a coffee freak. I knew I had to have
a book sooner or later set on a coffee farm
because I just absolutely am a coffee nut.
I found myself drinking even more coffee than
usual!
WOF: And is Kona coffee really better?
COLLEEN:
Oh, there is no comparison! They get $20 a
pound for it and it’s worth it! It is
fabulous! You know how most coffee has a kind
of bitter taste to it? Kona coffee does not
have that. It is the most mellow coffee you
have ever had in your life.
WOF: How do you take your coffee?
COLLEEN:
With plenty of cream and sugar.
WOF:
What exotic location are you going to sweep
us off to next?
COLLEEN:
Well, actually I’m kind of thinking
about the Outer Banks [of North Carolina].
I’ve never been, but I’ve heard
people talk about how wonderful and beautiful
it is. We’re planning a trip out there
in September and I’m going to check
it out. That’s what I’m leaning
toward right now. I’d like to maybe
have a lighthouse play a big role.
WOF:
What about you personally? Any upcoming adventures
or recent triumphs you’d like to share?
(Are you still the Coble family champion of
wii bowling?)
COLLEEN:
I am the wii bowling champion! We
play wii every night. Hey, you’ve got
to get your exercise somehow, right?
We
are getting ready to go to Hawai’i next
month; our kids are going with us. Our son
just got married in June and he wants his
bride to check out Hawai’i, which he
loves, so we’re all going together and
it’s going to be so much fun!
I
have my first hardcover coming out –
it’s a new Rock Harbor book. It was
so much fun to go back to Rock Harbor! The
characters are so real to me. It was really
an adventure and I just can’t wait for
the readers to get hold of Abomination
when it comes out. I think they’re going
to be happy to be back in Rock Harbor, too.
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