About the Book
Book: Speak NowAuthor: Chautona Havig
Genre: Fiction / Christian / Romance
Release date: May 30, 2013
Some say you only love once. They’re wrong.
Ask Jonathan Lyman. Still grieving for his wife, he walks into that wedding with no idea his entire life is about to change. It was just supposed to be a simple—oh, who am I kidding? It was supposed to be a typical, lavish, family wedding.
But there’s nothing typical about falling in love with a woman walking down the aisle. So to speak.
Cara Laas is falling hard and fast for a man whose heart doesn’t want to let go of the past and is rushing to meet her in the present. At the same time. That she’s half in love with his children doesn’t help, either.
Their attraction may be their undoing, but is either ready for “till death do us part?”
She’s a master at making others comfortable. He’s never comfortable talking, but if he wants her heart, he’s going to have to speak—now sooner than later, if you don’t mind.
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My Thoughts:
Love at first sight? Instant love? Do these exist? I think this is what Jonathan was thinking when he first sees Cara walk down the aisle as a bridesmaid at a wedding. Jonathan had already been in love and lost his wife to disease after she gave him two adorable children. He didn't ever think he would fall again and not like this.
That is how I understood Jonathan and his rules he also set in place while he dated Cara. No kissing and no touching. I think he really wanted to make sure they could make it work. It was a bit of a long distance relationship and Jonathan was not a talker. And Cara understood that and seemed to understand him better the more they got to know one another.
This was an interesting story. I will admit that I felt confused at times as to whether these two really wanted to be in a relationship or if they were just experimenting with a new way of dating. Well life circumstances kept them going and coming back to one another and they just couldn't seem to stay away. Do they find their happily ever after? Read it and see.
I was provided a copy of this novel from the author. I was not required to post a positive review and all views and opinions are my own.
About the Author
More from Chautona
All New Cover, All New Edits, Same Great Story?
The article condemned the overuse of dialogue. I did a bit of research, and my heart sank. It seemed dialogue was out. Lyrical prose was in. Great. Just what I needed.
I write a decidedly dialogue-driven story. Always have.
Every time I tried to shift character discussions into narrative, my prose took a nose-dive into a tank of boring info-dumping. Blech. Those characters wanted to talk. They didn’t want me to tell readers what they wanted to say. They wanted me to let them tell their story as they lived it.
Characters can be pretty demanding.
Then Jonathan stepped up. He didn’t talk—didn’t want to talk. In fact, he didn’t like it. Refused to do it. And yet… how could he hope to get to know a woman who fascinated him if he didn’t at least ask questions to get her to carry most of the conversation.
Research says that if you gaze into someone’s eyes for four minutes, you’ll develop a strong bond with that person. I suspect that’s what “love at first sight” is. Two people who foolishly keep gazing into a stranger’s eyes long enough to form that bond. Or something.
I also suspect that’s what happened to Jonathan that night.
So here I had a character who did not like to talk. And aside from self-absorbed people, most of us don’t like to carry an entire conversation alone, so the woman he met that night, Cara, wouldn’t enjoy chatting all by herself all night.
Look, I tried to make it less dialogue-driven and not all info-dumpy. I tried to keep it an engaging read without so much discussion. But the dialogue refused to go away. It wanted its place. It needed to be there.
So I caved, certain I was going to be a mediocre writer for the rest of my life.
I hated that book for so long. In fact, I never intended to publish it. Why would I put something out there so very bad? The articles, books, videos—all the things I’d read said I was doing something wrong.
Except one friend. Michele loved the story—begged for new installments. Pleaded with me to finish it. So, I did. For her. I published it, even. Only for her. And you know what? I still hated it.
Despite that book having the best scene I’ve ever written in it.
No joke. There’s a scene in there that I’m always amazed to realize that I wrote. It’s powerful and raw and oh, so poignant. And yes, there are words in it—spoken words by my characters.
A few years passed. I still didn’t like the book. In my mind, it was a failure.
Then someone said something to me one day. “You are so good at dialogue.”
Later, someone else said it again. And later, I heard it again. Here I’d spent all this time and frustration fighting against one of my biggest writing strengths. Because some article made me question the best way to write. When I did searches on writing good dialogue, guess what? I found rebuttal arguments that included references to books I loved. Oops.
To say my eyes opened, and I saw something new in that story might be overkill. If anything, I assumed that meant it was as bad as I thought.
I felt certain that was why I didn’t like that book. It didn’t have “my” dialogue. So I reread it, determined to figure out if I should rewrite the whole thing with more.
Know what I discovered? I like the book.
Okay, Speak Now may never make my top-ten favorites of the books I’ve written. In fact, I guarantee it won’t.
But it won’t make the bottom ten anymore, either. In fact, it’s closer to top than bottom these days. And now it has a new cover, which I’m sure my daughter is pleased about. As the photographer for my original cover, she hated how I blew out the highlights on it. I loved the effect for that book, but with new editing, a few dialogue changes, and of course, that scene I love so much (and one tiny subplot that I never explored well changed for something else), it needed a new cover. And so I have it now. Introducing Speak Now 2.0. I’m so excited to share this book with the world.
Blog Stops
Inklings
and notions, November 5
Debbie’s
Dusty Deliberations, November 6
Simple Harvest
Reads, November 6 (Guest Review from Donna Cline)
deb’s Book
Review, November 7
Elly Gilbert,
November 7
Texas Book-aholic,
November 8
Cultivating Us,
November 8
Because I
said so — and other adventures in Parenting, November 9
Lots of Helpers,
November 10
Musings
of a Sassy Bookish Mama, November 10
Abba’s
Prayer Warrior Princess, November 11
Ashley’s
Clean Book Reviews, November 12
Blogging With
Carol, November 12
She
Lives To Read, November 13
Kayem Reads,
November 14
For Him and My
Family, November 14
The
Meanderings of a Bookworm, November 15
Pause for
Tales, November 15
Locks, Hooks
and Books, November 16
Spoken
from the Heart, November 16
A Modern Day
Fairy Tale, November 17
Truth and Grace
Homeschool Academy, November 18
Giveaway
To celebrate her tour, Chautona is giving away the grand prize package of $25 Amazon gift card and a copy of Speak Now!!
Be sure to comment on the blog stops for nine extra entries into the giveaway! Click the link below to enter.
https://promosimple.com/ps/12f85/speak-now-celebration-tour-giveaway
This sounds like a very good read.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your thoughts on this book, it sounds like an interesting read
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