Genre: Mainstream Fiction
About parhelionLocation: Austin - Upper East Side Home Region: Age:55 Favorite novels: too hard to choose Favorite writers: women of mystery; Bailey White, Annie Dillard, Anne Lamott Favorite music: haven't decided yet; generally prefer silence Non-noveling interests: nature and gardening, social justice |
Joined: Oktober 9, 2008 This Year: Official Participant NaNoWriMo History: NaNoWriMo posts: 33 NaNoWriMo buddies: 15
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Brief Author Bio: voracious reader, particularly of mysteries; letter writer, poet; digger of dirt, rearranger of plants and toter of rocks; sometimes handcrafter; married 34 years, mother of two adults; wrangler of two long-coat chihuahuas and one tabby cat; working in the realm of reporting and transcription for 26 years. |
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Synopsis: Raining Mercy
Two years of drought capped by a summer of two months-plus of 100-degree days exacerbate eccentric behavior. Weird neighbors get weirder. Economic security grows increasingly uncertain. The protagonist goes off in search of rain and solitude.
Excerpt: Raining Mercy
Monica had decided at some point early in the summer, when it became clear that it was going to be a continuation of the year and a half of drought already, that the heat and lack of rain were in some ways a metaphor for the recession. She was old enough to have been through both drought and recession before. She knew there would be an end; it might not abruptly announce itself. More likely it would be a subtle improvement of things that gradually continued till one day you realized things were better. But it seemed that having them concurrently lent a weight not encountered before. It would be so easy to become discouraged and disheartened.
She tried to take the approach that things would improve, if only incrementally, but on the dark side was the looming fear that there would be no improvement, that the work she did would never come back, that all was lost. Monica was no Pollyanna, but she had been around long enough to know that things were cyclical, and the bad times, too, would pass, eventually.
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