Gianna
Reviews - Book Reviews
Written by Editor   
Tuesday, 29 April 2008

The Virtual Book Review Network

 

 

is pleased to interview Peggy Somers, author of  Gianna


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Gianna
Seeking the love of her life, Gianna embarks upon an adventurous life that leads her to “the one;” their relationship develops with an explosion of passion and excitement that neither of them expected, fulfilling their wildest dreams and fantasies. How their lives, and the lives of their closest friends, become bound together is brought to life in Gianna, the author’s first book.

Peggy Somers is a passionate romantic who lives in a lovely beach community north of San Diego, California. Her years at two prominent San Francisco Bay Area universities included studying drama, dance, music, economics and math. After graduation, she worked for two years then was able to travel to China, Hong Kong, Europe, Australia and New Zealand. She plans on writing more books based on the lives of some of Gianna’s children and one grandchild as well as other literary genres.

LAUREN SMITH: What inspired you to create a work of fiction?

Peggy Somers: I always wanted to write a book and actually started several. I think I was first inspired by one of my college English professors. He made writing easier for me and I went on to submit several short articles and stories to the local newspaper. Some got published and I even got an award. When I graduated from college I began a career in auditing and finance. I worked for the government where I wrote lots of reports. After that, I couldn’t stay focused or complete my projects until 2004 when I began Gianna.

LAUREN SMITH: What did you do to prepare for writing your book?

Peggy Somers: I like to use timelines instead of outlines. I start entering events based on personal experience and research. My research includes factual items, newspaper articles, and stories that all give me ideas.

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 29 April 2008 )
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Coinage of Commitment
Reviews - Book Reviews
Written by Editor   
Monday, 14 April 2008

 A Virtual Book Review Network Interview with Rob Costelloe

 

 

Lauren Smith: What is Coinage of Commitment about?

 
ImageRob Costelloe: Coinage of Commitment is about two people, Wayne and Nancy, who grow up on opposite sides of the country, who are from very different backgrounds, but who share one thing in common that will attract them to each other. Each has matured wanting to experience romantic fulfillment that is superior to the relationships they see all around them. They not only want it, they actively pursue it and, in Nancy’s case, she turns her yearning into a study of ways a couple can achieve love at a higher level and sustain it for the duration. In 1968, they meet while he is attending blue collar Drexel, and she is at neighboring, Ivy League Penn. Although irresistibly drawn together for the transcendent love they sense they can attain in each other, they must overcome obstacles posed by the class, financial, and religious differences that separate them, as well as opposition from both families, and later, a twist of fate that will be the cruelest test of all. 

Lauren Smith: When you talk about "love at a higher level" what do you mean by that? 

Rob Costelloe: It means keeping the “magic” of a romantic commitment at an elevated level, over a long period of time, as the couple’s highest priority, in the context of leading an otherwise normal life. In the story, Nancy concludes that such a condition, if achieved, can only be sustained by intellectual effort and planning, in addition to the emotional commitment we normally associate with romantic love. 

Lauren Smith: What was your inspiration for writing this book? 

Rob Costelloe: I wrote earlier in life, including an unpublishable first novel, a love story, then I abandoned writing altogether. But I continued to study romantic love, and I enjoyed studying love stories in books and films. In 2005, I read an otherwise well written novel whose denouement was so suddenly despairing that I felt outrage on behalf of all the women readers who were disappointed by this disjointed outcome. Within twenty-four hours, I was writing Coinage of Commitment. 

Lauren Smith: How long did it take you to write it? 

Rob Costelloe: It took seventeen months from deciding to write to landing the first contract offer. The first draft took four months of nearly full-time effort. Since I was also holding a full-time day job, that meant that I got very little sleep. I queried awhile, then sat down and read the manuscript after not having looked at it for two months. I was shocked to discover that it was not the greatest love story ever written, and that it was suddenly important to me that it be that good. I know this sounds delusional, and it did to me even as I was thinking it, but it affected my actions in a major way. I pulled the manuscript off the market and went into what turned out to be seven months of editorial analyses, rewrites, and polishing revisions. I changed my writing style to be more in tune with the story’s artistic needs. After that, it was back to the tedious grind of querying. But this time I did hit gold, garnering three contract offers from royalty publishers.

Lauren Smith: What do you hope the reader "gets" from your book? 

Rob Costelloe: I want my audience to find a variety of good things offered at different levels for their reading pleasure. I hope they enjoy the story proper, and that they thrill to the twist in the final chapter that peaks in a surprise ending. The book has artistic ambitions, and there were times when it felt as though I were sweating blood to make the prose as beautiful as I could so it would sing in the reader’s mind. The book delivers a message about what part romantic love can play in fulfilling people’s lives, and that is intended to be thought provoking. The story examines the theme of “the road not taken” in some of the decisions that Wayne and Nancy make early on that play out in dramatic ways. 

Last Updated ( Monday, 14 April 2008 )
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