Ruth Logan Herne is a very talented writer who also happens to have a great sense of humor that shines through her writing. After reading two of her books in a short period of time, Ruth has become a “not to be missed” author for me. If Ruth is a new author to you, I hope you'll try one of her books very soon. Please click on the title to see my review of Back in the Saddle.
Ruth and Litfuse Publicity put together a very interesting interview that I’d like to share, and I appreciate being able to offer a copy of Back in the Saddle to one of this blog’s readers.
An interview with Ruth Logan Herne,
Author of Back in the Saddle
Family relationships are never easy, and loss, grief and greed can compound normal everyday tensions. Ruth Logan Herne offers hope for hurting families with the messages contained in her new book, Back in the Saddle.
Q: Your latest release, Back in the Saddle, is a modern twist on the biblical parable of the prodigal son. Can you tell us a little bit about the story?
Take one smokin’ hot hero with a chip on his shoulder, turn his hard-won world upside down at the same time his estranged father is diagnosed with deteriorating liver disease and watch the sparks fly!
Colt Stafford grew up with resentment burned into his soul. His mother told him to trust God with all his little heart and soul, and when Colt lost her to a tragic car wreck, he realized that if God existed, he sure wasn’t anyone who could be trusted. He was left with a power-loving, money-hungry father who saw gold in establishing a new kind of beef empire, but Sam’s quest for world beef domination left little for his son. When he tried to rectify that mistake with more mistakes, their relationship dissolved.
But grown-ups see things through a different reality lens, and Colt’s return sets a new normal in motion. His presence disrupts the status quo for the better, and when he gets beyond his initial affront of having a woman running part of the show at the Double S, he realizes that maybe God does exist. And maybe, just maybe, that imperfect timing of his youth was pretty perfect after all.
Q: Your leading man, Colt Stafford, is a proud man who has to return home in disgrace after a personal misfortune. How did you tap into some of your own life experiences to paint his character?
Great question! I took that time I was crazy rich and gambled it all on one roll of the dice and rolled snake eyes. . . . OK, I wasn’t ever rich, and I don’t throw dice, but I have two sons living in Manhattan. I watched their skilled, brilliant friends get rolled under a financial bus with the crash of 2008, and examining the underpinnings of what went wrong, I saw an area ripe for character development.
And that’s where Colt came from. But the expert advice on pegging Colt in Lower Manhattan came from my youngest son, Luke, who is currently working in hedge funds. Fans of Michael Lewis books will recognize that Wall Street doesn’t talk easily or freely, so having an insider point of view was clutch for developing Colt’s career and his downfall with accuracy. I did buy Luke a lot of coffee out of gratitude!
Q: What is your favorite thing about your heroine, Angelina? Will readers find any parts of your own personality in hers?
That’s a loaded question! I like strong heroines. I like strong women. I like championing for strong women, and even if a heroine has reason to cave, my goal as an author is to show how she picks herself up and gets back on her feet. And if there’s a wonderful hero to make the picture complete, better yet!
There’s a little bit of me in every heroine, but I had to make Detective Mary Angela (Angelina) even more self-protective, defensive and tough than, let’s say, a kindergarten teacher. So I took a little bit of me, a dash of Kate Beckett on Castle, a hint of the household staffs from The Help and a smidge of Catherine Zeta Jones from Zorro. A woman cop, skilled in negotiation techniques and trained in undercover work, is the perfect setup for dealing with a huge, busy ranch kitchen filled with sometimes-clueless men. One of my greatest joys is how women are loving Angelina as a heroine because I was pretty much guaranteed they’d love Colt. But to have them embrace and cheer on a tough-girl image heroine, that’s awesome!
Q: You talk on your blog about your upbringing and how you were born into poverty. In what ways did your early life experiences shape the writer you are today?
I cannot even begin to say what a huge influence all of that was on my life as a wife, mother, employee and now author. I see all of that as God’s preparation for me for the job he and I both knew I would do some day: write books people love and help women see and build their inner strengths through faith and love.
It is so easy to blame the past and let it wither us. Far too easy. Parts of society actually encourage that.
No. Grab those bootstraps, avoid negative people, surround yourself with positives and thank God daily for all the wonderfulness in your life, no matter how big or how small! No matter how menial the job, do your best every day.
I’ve held a great many nametag and hairnet jobs in my time, and the blessing of that was a paycheck to help put shoes on my kids’ feet . . . and research for books! Take those down times and use them to minister to others.
Take the good and run with it. The rest is up to you!
Q: Other than writing, what are some of your interests? Tell us about your roadside vegetable stand back home in upstate New York.
My love for gardening comes straight from my grandma Myrtle Herne. It’s funny how things get passed down, but I could literally live in a garden if time allowed — and it hasn’t for many years. However, my husband is retiring this year, and he’s started up our truck farm again. We’d done it for a dozen years when our kids were younger, and that gave us lots of field hands when they weren’t playing soccer, tennis or baseball or running track-and-field or cross-country.
A truck farm is an old-school name for a small farm that trucks this, that and the other thing to roadside stands, so in front of our big, old farmhouse (160 years old, and when you fix one thing, you break two others!) we haul out the produce stand every spring . . . and it begins. We have a henhouse of nearly 50 laying hens I handle, and the initial farm work comes down to my husband, Dave, our son Seth, and son-in-law Jon. In the fall during pumpkin and squash season, it’s all hands on deck! A great pumpkin year is a wonderful thing, and there are no worries about staying in shape when you’re hauling 30-pound pumpkins from the field to the tractor path! It’s so pretty to fill the yard with hundreds and hundreds of pumpkins and watch folks drive in with little kids and fill their trunk.
When there’s time I bake bread and cookies for the produce stand . . . and the customers love it, so I don’t tell them that bread’s supposed to be bad for them!
Q: Can you give us a hint as to your plans for Home on the Range, the next book in the Double S Ranch series?
I love Home on the Range! Oh, poor Nick, he is just so beside himself with what he thinks he wants and the image he’s tried so hard to portray of the modern-day cattle breeder with one foot in suburbia and one on the rugged terrain of the Double S. He was so sure he could do it right and best his father, but one marriage later and two very unhappy little girls means that somehow, someway, Nick’s got to get his life back in order.
Who better than an emotionally-tanked therapist, leading a reclusive life while hiding in the woods in a hobbit-style house because she can’t come to terms with life, to do it? It sure sounds like a match made in heaven to me!
Learn more about Ruth Logan Herne and Back in the Saddle at ruthloganherne.com, on Facebook (ruthloganherne) or by following her on Twitter (@ruthloganherne) or Pinterest (ruthyloganherne).
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GIVEAWAY
To enter the drawing for Back in the Saddle, please click on this link and share my Facebook post, then leave a comment here about something you enjoyed in Ruth’s interview. [Name and e-mail required. Leave in a safe format - using [at] and [dot], for instance.]
I try to promote on social media, but the best way to keep up with my reviews and occasional giveaways is to subscribe by e-mail in the top right corner (no pressure intended).
Contest ends at midnight PST on Monday, May 30. Winner will be chosen by random.org and contacted by e-mail.
Eligibility: US residents
I like hearing about Ruth's truck farm and her life in an old farm house! jarning67(at)hotmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteI enjoy getting to know the authors behind the books I read, Joan - and you're right, that was a fun part. Best wishes in the giveaway!
DeleteThat is a great looking book cover. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteGotta love that book cover, that's for sure! Thanks for visiting, Aileen - and please leave your e-mail address for the drawing.
DeleteBack in the Saddle sounds like a story I'd really like to read. I can relate to the truck farm since my husband and I love the produce from our patio vegetable garden. Thanks for sharing the interview on this blog!
ReplyDeleteI can relate to that part too, Susie - because although our family garden when I was growing up was nothing like Ruth's, it seemed awfully large at the time! Great veggies, but I'm not a naturally gifted gardener. Please leave your e-mail for the drawing, Susie.
DeleteI shared. I love that we have so much in common. I've been planting my garden and working on my flowerbeds this week. I love to can and I also raise chickens, shhh my kids. I love making sourdough oatmeal bread.
ReplyDeleteleliamae54@aol.com
I love Ruth's awesome books! I enjoyed getting to know more about this amazing woman... wish I could visit her roadside stand some day. :)
ReplyDeleteworthy2bpraised at gmail dot com
Learning about the inspiration behind characters is always a treat. It is good to hear that some good came from the financial crisis of 2008. Thanks for sharing at the #LMMLinkup.
ReplyDeleteI just picked up a book by this author. I'm so glad to know you enjoy her as I always appreciate your recommendations! Thanks for sharing this at Booknificent Thursday on Mommynificent.com!
ReplyDeleteTina