Waltz In Swing Time
by
Jill Caugherty
Growing
up in a strict Utah farm family during the Depression, Irene Larsen copes with
her family’s hardship by playing piano. Even when an unthinkable tragedy
strikes, Irene clings to her dream of becoming a musician. When a neighbor's
farm is foreclosed, Irene's brother marries the neighbor's daughter, who moves
in with the Larsens and coaches Irene into winning leading roles in musicals.
Clashing with her mother, who dismisses her ambition as a waste of time, Irene
leaves home.
During
a summer job at Zion National Park, she meets professional dancer Spike, a
maverick who might be her ticket to a musical career. But does pursuing her
dream justify its steep price?
Alternating
between Irene’s ninetieth year in 2006 and her coming-of-age in the thirties, Waltz
in Swing Time is a poignant tale of mother-daughter relationships,
finding hope amidst loss, and forging an independent path, against all odds. Publication on April 23, 2020 by Black Rose Writing.
Bio:
Jill Caugherty is the
author of the debut novel WALTZ IN SWING TIME
(Black Rose Writing, April 2020). Her short stories have been
published in 805Lit and Oyster River Pages, and her debut short story, “Real
People,” was nominated for the 2019 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for
Emerging Writers.
An
award-winning marketing manager with over twenty-five years of experience in
the high tech industry, she lives in Raleigh, North Carolina with her husband
and daughter.
Follow her on Twitter @JillCaughertyLearn more on her website https://www.jillcaugherty.com
Why Romantic Conflicts in Novels
Captivate Us
By Jill Caugherty
Readers who enjoy romance novels love the thrill when a
couple first meet, and hold our breath when the protagonist and her new paramour
stumble into a problem that threatens their relationship. Even in non-romance novels, a romantic bond
often factors into the plot to some degree and may influence the characters’
actions and the story’s conclusion.
Why do these stories captivate us and compel us to stay up
all night, flipping pages? After all,
the tale of boy meets girl is tried and true and often clichéd.
As in any good book, it’s not a formulaic plot that captures
our attention. Rather, it’s the rising tension, conflicts, and moral dilemmas
the characters face that keep us in suspense, desperate to learn the outcome.
This is especially true when the characters are involved in a romantic
relationship, because the stakes for their happiness are ratcheted up that much
higher.
M.L. Stedman’s The Light Between Oceans is a beautifully written tearjerker about a
couple in Western Australia who find a baby and dead man aboard a boat that
washes to shore at their remote lighthouse. Driven by the wife’s deep desire
for a baby, they decide to take in the infant as their own and bury the man
instead of reporting their discovery. The couple’s marriage suffers when the
wife insists on keeping the baby’s rescue a secret, while the husband’s
conscience drives him to tell the truth about how they found her. The stakes
are high: The wife has lost countless babies to miscarriages and has entered
early menopause, so this child is her only hope at being a parent. Furthermore,
the wife’s parents are devastated by the loss of their sons in World War I and won’t
have any other grandchildren. Meanwhile, the baby’s mother is alive, and years
later, still grieves for her lost child and husband. On the line is the
couple’s love and the question of its survival, despite the couple’s opposing
views and the child who is unfortunately caught in the middle. The reader races to learn what the pair
ultimately decide.
In the novel San Miguel by T.C. Boyle,
Maranatha Waters, suffering from consumption, arrives with her husband on San
Miguel Island in the late nineteenth century. Overcome by the isolation of the
place, her failing health, and an illicit relationship she suspects her husband
is conducting with their live-in housekeeper, Maranatha begins to strike out at
her husband. As a result, the reader
compulsively turns pages to learn whether Maranatha’s adversities will ever
enable her to reach peace with herself and her husband.
Nancy Horan fictionalizes Frank Lloyd Wright’s real-life relationship
with a married woman in Loving Frank. In Oak Park, Illinois in
the early twentieth century, Mamah Borthwick Cheney, bored with her privileged
life, falls in love with the famous architect and leaves her husband and
children to live with him “in sin,” despite society’s extreme disapproval. Her choice – giving up her family and friends
for this man and taking a chance at an artistic career – has extreme
consequences because of the high stakes. The reader can’t wait to learn what
happens.
In my own debut novel, Waltz in Swing
Time, the protagonist, Irene Larsen, meets and falls in love with professional
dancer Spike at Zion National Park during the nineteen-thirties. Spike, who breaks rules and flaunts authority,
is radically different from everyone Irene knows. As Irene becomes more
entangled in their relationship, her moral code is tested, especially when she
sees a chance to pursue her dream of a musical career.
Regardless of the genre, readers gravitate to books in which
characters face conflicts. Often at the
heart of romance novels is the question of whether the couple’s love will
survive, which holds our interest to the very last page. So the next time you cuddle
up with a book and cheer on the heroine’s newfound love, realize it wouldn’t be
as entertaining without the challenges that threaten the protagonist’s
relationship and values.
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