Award-winning women’s
literary fiction novelist Rayne Golay joins us today to discuss the seduction
of Southwest Florida and how it’s played a part in her writing. Life is a Foreign Language is her first
novel. Her second novel, The Wooden
Chair, will be released later this summer. Learn more about Rayne at her
website. -- AP
Southwest Florida Seduces
Quite a few years ago, my
aunt and uncle used to flee the soul numbing cold and snow and darkness of the
winter months in their homeland, Finland. They stayed in a condo in Fort Myers,
Florida, and painted delicious pictures of the pleasures they experienced.
Together with my husband, we ended up by renting a house in Florida, complete
with a pool and a back yard with an orange and a grapefruit tree.
This was the beginning of my
love affair with Southwest Florida; the heat, the sun, the glittering waters of
the Gulf of Mexico, the lush vegetation, I loved it all, still do. I’d go for
walks in my neighborhood and gasp, “Oh, look at that”! I’d grab my husband’s
arm if he was with me, point at a flock of pristine white ibis and say, “Isn’t
this lovely,” as I stared in silent admiration at the sky with ever-changing
clouds and super cells.
When I started writing my
first novel, Life is a Foreign Language,
it was a given I’d set the story in Southwest Florida. During one of my walks,
I stopped to admire a tall jacaranda tree with blue-purple flowers. The
florescence was rich, an azure cloud against the white billowing clouds.
When Nina, my female
protagonist, meets Michael, much about him attracts her, but she “falls” into
his jacaranda blue eyes, compelling, arresting in their intensity. I was able
to pour into this story my passion for gardening, experiencing it vicariously
through Michael’s trial-and-error attempts to grow the perfect rose.
I must have inherited my
fascination for gardening from my father. Despite the harsh weather conditions
in my native Finland, my Dad tended a gardenia in our home. When he first
planted it, it was no more than a twig. Over time, and with tender care from my
Dad, it grew into a bush. Each year in early April it carried a few buds. For
my father’s birthday at the end of April it produced one white flower to honor
his day.
When I bought my house here
in Southwest Florida, before I did anything at all about the yard, I planted a
gardenia outside my bedroom widow. Its spicy and exotic perfume fills the air
when the bush is covered in white flowers—in April. And of course the
intoxicating scent of gardenia wafts through the pages of Life is a Foreign Language.
Life is a Foreign Language
After thirty-seven years of her husband's
infidelities, Nina has had enough! Wounded she files for divorce, leaves family
and native France. She meets Michael with whom she experiences fantastic joy
that tuns to agonizing sorrow when he is brutally torn from her. Alone and
bereft, she must continue the legacy Michael has left; trust, the awareness
that she is strong enough to survive on her own, against all odds.
4 comments:
Morning, Ladies. Your love affair with Florida, Rayne, makes me think of mine with Maine. My theory is we seek out as adults what we missed out on as kids. Your books sounds good. Love when a setting plays a character in a book. Good luck with sales.
OOOO, Rayne, sounds like a wonderful book! And I LOVE Florida. Having lived in Miami for a year, I fell in love with the warm and all the plants.
Again,your book sounds amazing!
Rayne:
Sounds like a great book! Best of luck with your release!
I admire anyone who can garden. I have a brown thumb.
Thanks for your comment. I was out of the country, visiting my children in Geneva while this was going on so am learning about it only today, April 16, a few days after the fact.
Rayne
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