Pump Up Chats with Therese Fowler

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Therese Fowler is the author of Souvenir and Reunion. She has worked in the U.S. Civil Service, managed a clothing store, lived in the Philippines, had children, sold real estate, earned a B.A. in sociology, sold used cars, returned to school for her M.F.A. in creative writing, and taught college undergrads about literature and fiction writing—roughly in that order. With books published in nine languages and sold worldwide, Fowler writes full-time from her home in Wake Forest, North Carolina, which she shares with her husband, four amiable cats, and four nearly grown-up sons. Her latest book is Exposure: A Novel. You can visit Therese Fowler’s website at www.theresefowler.com.

Thank you for this interview, Therese.  Do you remember writing stories as a child or did the writing bug come later?  Do you remember your first published piece?

I wrote a lot of poems and lyrics and essays, but not a lot of stories. I was more of a reader than a writer when I was a child. That said, I invented stories all the time, but they were for playacting, not for the page. My first published piece (and only published piece until my debut novel, Souvenir, was released) was an essay about What Memorial Day Means to Me, which ran in my hometown newspaper. I think I was in third grade.

What do you consider as the most frustrating side of becoming a published author and what has been the most rewarding?

The democracy of the internets leads to a lot of anonymous author-bashing in the guise of book “reviews,” so that’s one frustration. The other, related, frustration is with the inconsistency of reviewers within the trade review world. Too much weight is given to reviews that oftentimes are written by un- or under-qualified reviewers. The most rewarding side is that my stories are connecting with readers, sometimes profoundly so. It’s humbling and affirming to hear from such readers.

Are you married or single and how do you combine the writing life with home life?  Do you have support?

I’m married, and writing is my full-time occupation, which means I mostly am able to fit my work into “normal” work hours. My husband also works from home and has a lot of flexibility in his day; he does most of the shopping and cooking, which is wonderful. He’s also supportive emotionally. It’s an ideal life, and I feel very, very fortunate for that.

Can you tell us about your latest book and why you wrote it?

Exposure is a cautionary tale about young love, a sexting-related arrest, and the legal madness that follows for both families. It has been called “a Romeo and Juliet story for modern times.”

Can you share an excerpt? Exposure cover

Sure. Here’s the opening scene:

Nine hours before the police arrived, Anthony Winter stood, barefooted and wild, on the narrow front porch of the house he shared with his mother. The painted wooden planks were damp and cool beneath his feet, but he hardly noticed. In his right hand he held a fallen maple leaf up to a sun that was just breaking the horizon. In his left he held his phone. He squinted at the leaf, marveling at its deep blood-orange color, amazed and happy that nature could make such a thing from what had, only a few weeks earlier, been emerald green, and before that, deep lime, and before that, a tight, tiny bundle of a bud on a spindly limb, waving in a North Carolina spring breeze. He’d always been an observant person; he hadn’t always been so romantic. It was Amelia. She brought it out in him. She brought it out in everybody.

Amelia’s voice, when she answered his call, was lazy with sleep. It was a Monday, her day to sleep a little later than she could the rest of the week. Tuesday through Friday, she rose at five to get homework done before her three-mile run, which came before the 8:50 start of their Ravenswood Academy school day. At 3:00 pm was dance—ballet, modern, jazz—then voice lessons twice a week at five; often there was some play’s rehearsal after that, and then, if her eyelids weren’t drooping like the dingy shades in her voice teacher’s living room, she might start on her homework. But more often she would sneak out of her astonishing house to spend a stolen hour with him. With Anthony. The man (she loved to call him that, now that he’d turned eighteen) with whom she intended to spend all of her future life, and then, if God was good to them, eternity to follow.

Seeing Amelia and Anthony together, you would never have guessed they were destined for anything other than a charmed future, and possibly greatness. Perhaps Amelia had, as her father was fond of saying, emerged from the womb coated in stardust. And maybe it was also true what Anthony’s mother claimed: that her son had been first prize in the Cosmic lottery, and she’d won. They were, separately, well-tended and adored. Together, they were a small but powerful force of nature. Love makes that of people, sometimes.

That morning, nine hours and perhaps five minutes before his arrest, Anthony stood on the narrow front porch with a leaf and a phone in his chilly hands. Amelia was saying, “I dreamt of us,” in a suggestive voice that stirred him, inside and out. He heard his mother coming downstairs, so he pulled the front door closed. Unlike the rest of his school’s faculty, she knew about Amelia and him; in her way, she approved. Still, he preferred to keep his conversations private. There were certain things even an approving mother wouldn’t want to hear. Certain things he absolutely did not want her to know.

Where’s your favorite place to write at home?

I have a small office that overlooks a wooded ravine. I either write from the sofa there, or from my screened porch or front porch when the weather is favorable.

What is one thing about your book that makes it different from other books on the market?

It’s a story about young adults that’s written for the adult reader, but should appeal to young adult readers as well.

Tables are turned…what is one thing you’d like to say to your audience who might buy your book one day?

I always say that I simply hope readers will find the book worth the time and/or money they’ve invested.

Thank you for this interview, Therese. Good luck on your virtual book tour!

Thanks so much!


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