THE MEASURE OF LIFE
Judith Works
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GENRE: Women's Fiction
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BLURB:
A
story of love and loss, lies and truth, begins in Rome when Nicole shares a
cappuccino and cornetto with her Italian tutor. The meeting sets off a chain of
events that upends the course of her life. While Rome also brings deep
friendships and immersion into a sumptuous food scene there is no escape from
acknowledging the consequences of her actions. In search of forgiveness and
healing, she moves to an island near her childhood home in Seattle only to find
the way to reunite the remnants of her family and discover her true path is to
return to Rome and face the past.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt
Three:
Deirdre knocked on the front door right on time. No one in
Rome ever showed up on the appointed minute for a social occasion. I opened the
door in my violet silk dress and bare feet. “Hang on, I can’t find my shoes and
I need to finish my makeup.”
“Oh my gosh—I should have said it’s casual. Are you sure
about the dress? Remember it’s Vashon.”
“I’m dressed now. I haven’t had a chance to go out for
months.” I ran upstairs to finish.
Deirdre said, “Uh, a bit much for here,” when I returned
wearing open-toed platform heels complementing the purple dress. After a pause,
she added, “Oh, don’t worry, it’s fine and we’re late anyway.” I could tell she
was flustered about something. When we parked in front of the gallery, I could
see people holding glasses of wine while they looked at the photos. All looked
comfortable in jeans and sweaters like Deirdre. I could feel my face was
beginning to match my dress. People paused conversations to welcome Deirdre and
her unknown and strangely dressed guest: me. Some stared briefly. Not unkind
looks, but more of astonishment their friend had found such an alien.
A woman rescued me by saying, “Hi. I’m Meg.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Favorite and Least Favorite Part About Writing The
Measure of Life
Interesting Question! Depending on my mood and level
of frustration, the favorite and least favorite—to me meaning most and least
difficult—changed day to day as I wrote. I wanted to tell the story of a
woman’s struggle to find meaning amid her dysfunctional family in an unfamiliar
and difficult setting, but to make it work I needed to make the characters
complex and get into their lives– who were they, what did they do and why? What
should they have done? As I wrote and rewrote, they gradually took on
independent lives, their actions and words became ever more in keeping with
their personalities–some kind and gentle, one vicious, another frustrated and
struggling to find a goal and reach it. All of them intertwined with each
other. Who wins in the game of life? Who loses?
To find an answer to these questions I explored themes
of doomed romance, lost love, unexpected baby, expat life, marriage, mother and
daughter relationships, and recovery from setbacks. To weave all these threads
led to many edits and major rewrites as I settled on a meaningful plot to
exploit my themes and let the characters breathe, live, and die. And that was
the least favorite, or I should say, most challenging, aspect of writing the
novel.
But my favorite and fun part was imagining the setting
for each scene: Rome, beautiful and annoying at the same time, is a city where
I lived for ten years. I am personally familiar with all the locations in the
story. In fact, I wrote a memoir about that life, Coins in the Fountain.
But The Measure of Life, although mostly set in Rome, is also set on an idyllic
island near Seattle, another place I am familiar with, so I enjoyed contrasting
the locations. With so many possible settings, especially in Rome, I had to
limit myself to those that reflected emotional journey of my protagonist,
Nicole, as she attempts and then succeeds in managing her life.
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
After
I earned a law degree in midlife, I had the chance to leave the Forest Service
in Oregon and run away to the Circus (Maximus). In reality my husband and I
moved to Rome where I worked for the United Nations Food & Agriculture
Organization for four years as a legal advisor to the director of human
resources. I could see the Circus that had hosted chariot races during the
Roman Empire from my office window.
My
husband and I reluctantly returned to the US after four years. But we pined for
the land of pasta, vino, art, and sunny piazzas. Then the gods smiled and
offered a chance to return to Rome with the UN World Food Program. Six more
years or food and frolic in the Eternal City passed much too quickly. The
indelible experiences living in Italy and working for the UN were the genesis
of my memoir Coins in the Fountain.
Social
Media Links
Website:
https://judithworks.net
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/judith.works.5
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/worksjudith
Threads:
http://www.threads.com/WorksJudith
BlueSky:
http://www.bluesky.com/WorksJudith
Barnes
& Noble:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-measure-of-life-judith-works/1146224295?ean=9781509257799
Kobo:
https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-measure-of-life-1
Google:
https://play.google.com/store/search?c=books%q=9781509257805
Itunes:
https://apple.com/us/book/the-measure-of-life/id6673911691
Books
a Million: https://www.booksamillion.com/p/9781509257799
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY
Judith
Light will be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner.
Thank you for hosting THE MEASURE OF LIFE TODAY.
ReplyDeleteLooks like a really good book - on my TBR list for the summer
ReplyDeleteHi Michele - hope you enjoy the read!
DeleteThis sounds like a good read.
ReplyDeleteHi Marcy! Hope you get a chance to read the story.
DeleteWhat method do you use when creating dialogue?
ReplyDeleteHi Tracie - Interesting question - I try to keep the dialogue consistent with the character's personality and intentions. I read it aloud to ensure it sounds right and not stilted but what real people would say with contractions and sometimes incomplete sentences.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great read.
ReplyDeleteHi Rita! Hope you have a chance to read it.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you hope readers will get from your book?
ReplyDeleteSounds really interesting.
ReplyDeleteThe book sounds very intriguing. Thanks!
ReplyDelete