Showing posts with label Tosca Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tosca Lee. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

10 Authors You Need to Read

Here are 10 brilliant writers, who are equally amazing people, and whose books completely captivate me! 

The links will take you to their pages on the also amazing FamilyFiction website (whose magazine I write for) and you can check out their books.  You will soon see I love a whole range of genres from military thrillers to historical romance but I can't recommend these authors enough.  

I'd love you to check them out, read one of their books and come back and let me know what you thought!

TL Higley 

Here are covers of some of my favourite books they have written :)









I had to do this list really quickly as I kept thinking of other authors who I would like to add!!  Maybe next time :)

Saturday, 3 July 2010

B&H Thriller Tour Pop Quiz ~ Tosca Lee

The B&H Fiction Thriller Tour is drawing to a close (details of NYC times here) and I'm giving the last word to the indomitable....


Tosca Lee's writing is nothing short of brilliant, innovative and captivating. With Demon and Havah receiving high praise, Iscariot one of the most highly anticipated books of 2011 and a new collaboration with Ted Dekker, Tosca Lee is a must read author and a fun person to know!

Pop Quiz

What did you do for your 13th birthday?


I was in dress rehearsals for my role as Clara in the Nutcracker.


Name 3 things you can’t live without:

My faith, massage therapy and a good pillow.


What 3 adjectives would your friends/family use to describe your personality?

Goofy, eccentric, obsessive


Where did your penchant for anxiety inducing thrillers begin?


In my 30s--when I actually started understanding what anxiety was!


If you could bring one character to life from your favorite book, who would it be and why?


Kayin/Cain. My heart aches for that boy.


If Micah Taylor, Clay, Lincoln Vailes and Dr Brock McNeil got together, what would they talk about?


Clay would spend the whole conversation wondering how everyone else seems to have it all together and if any of them have interacted with a demon and just not told anyone... or might be the demon Lucian in disguise.


What do you think is going to be the best thing about touring with your fellow thriller authors?


Laughing together, knowing them better, and making memories. I truly love all three of these authors.


Tosca's Havah: The Story of Eve is one of my all time favourite books and I'm thrilled B&H are republishing it this August - be sure to get your hands on a copy.



She knew this earth when it was perfect—like her, for a time. Made by God in a manner like no other, she lived in utter peace without flaw in paradise until one fateful decision changed everything. Now, all humanity suffers for her mistake. But what did it feel like then to first sin and be exiled, to see all innocence crumble so vividly, and a strange new world take its place?

Experience the epic dawn of mankind through the eyes
and heart of Eve—the woman first known as Havah.






Contact Tosca:


Website
Blog
Twitter
Facebook

All things Lee @ Relz Reviewz

Now you are all set to participate in the Thriller Tour Thrilling Giveaway coming next week!


Friday, 25 June 2010

B& H Fiction Thriller Tour Dates

You will never hear me complaining about living in my amazing country, Australia, but there are times when I wish I was not so far away! The B&H Fiction Thriller Tour is one of them.

Robin, Jim, Brandilyn and Tosca represent all that is fabulous about writing and being unique and giving people.

I've listed the tour dates below and would love to hear from anyone who gets to visit the tour ~ let those of us who can't make it live vicariously through you - LOL

Come bac
k soon as over the week of the tour, you'll be hearing a lot more from these authors, including:~

  • What they did on their 13th birthdays
  • What their characters would get up to should they meet each other
  • Whether their friends think they are goofy, kind, warped or loyal
  • And, you will get the chance to win a set of four books, one from each author!


B&H Fiction Thriller Tour 2010

ToscaLee, Brandilyn Collins, Jim Rubart & Robin Caroll

Team Up for Unprecedented Major City Book Tour

NASHVILLE—Four suspense novelists are joining forces for the B&H Fiction Thriller Tour 2010. Authors Tosca Lee, Jim Rubart, Robin Caroll, and Brandilyn Collins—newest of the B&H Fiction suspense authors—will make their way from St. Louis, site of the International Christian Retailing Show this June, to ThrillerFest in New York City via Philadelphia. Julie Gwinn, Trade Marketing Director at B&H Fiction, said, “This summer, B&H is taking its four suspense authors on a tour from ICRS in St. Louis to ThrillerFest in New York City. James L. Rubart, Robin Caroll, Tosca Lee, and new B&H author Brandilyn Collins will be attending store signings and media events on a tour route that climaxes at the International Thriller Writers’ ThrillerFest, where our authors will join up with suspense and mystery writers from around the world.”

Timed to coincide with the great summer reading season, the four authors will launch the tour with a kick-off event at ICRS in St. Louis, travel to Philadelphia, and then on to New York City where their journey will culminate at ITW’s ThrillerFest. Each stop on the tour will be filled with events, from book signings to library appearances to media interviews, all targeted to the authors’ current fans and those new admirers they are sure to gather along the way. “I think I can speak for us all when I say we love our readers. So while I could say this tour is going to be a unique opportunity for readers to interact with four authors, it's really a great opportunity for us to spend time with our readers,” said best-selling author, Tosca Lee.

Bringing the authors directly to the readers is B&H’s goal with this tour, and having the opportunity to participate in ThrillerFest makes it even more exciting. In addition to different activities in three exciting cities, the quartet will capitalize on various media opportunities, from traditional print and broadcast to emerging online and social media, to engage fans en route to New York City. Additionally, the authors will be traveling together, which will foster momentum and spark energy throughout the tour. Marketing expert and author Jim Rubart said, "Getting to talk to readers, great cities to visit, hanging out with three of my fave authors…this is going to be cool!"

Never before has there been a book tour that focuses on suspense like the B&H Thriller Tour 2010, and the newest B&H Fiction suspense author, Brandilyn Collins, is eager to be a part. “This tour kicks off my new partnership with B&H Publishing. I look forward to seeing my readers during the tour, and, beyond that, I’m excited about the future suspense novels I will be publishing with B&H.”

The B&H Thriller Tour 2010 will begin at ICRS in St. Louis on June 25, route through Philadelphia June 25 and concludes at ThrillerFest in New York City on July 10. For more information on the tour, please contact Jeane Wynn, Wynn-Wynn Media, at 918- 283-1834 or jeane@wynnwynnmedia.com.


Friday, June 25th, 2:00-4:00 PM

Anchor Bookstore - Signing 2:00 - 4:00 PM

Parable Store

1716 Missouri State Road

Arnold, MO 63010

(636) 287-1231


Mid Rivers West - Event 6:00-8:00 PM

Family Christian Store #483

167 Mid Rivers Mall Dr

St Peters, MO 63376-4309

(636) 278-2895


Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Mainstreet Books - Event 12:00 - 2:00 PM

307 South Main Street

St. Charles, MO 63301

(636) 949-0105


Lifeway Christian Store, Bridgeton, Missouri 4:00 - 6:00 PM

11977 Saint Charles Rock Road

Bridgeton, MO 63044

(314) 344-0014


Sunday, June 27, 2010

Barnes & Noble 2:00 - 4:00 PM

721 Grovis Road

Fenton, MO 63026

636-326-2148


Thursday, July 1, 2010

Lifeway Christian Store – York, PA 11:00 - 1:00 PM

2320 Industrial Highway

York, PA 17402

717-757-5311


Lifeway Christian Store- Baltimore, Maryland 4:00 - 6:00 PM

White Marsh Plaza Shopping Center

7900 Honeygo Blvd

Baltimore, MD 21236

410-931-8038


Friday, July 9, 2010

Friday, July 9th, 2010 7:00 - 9:00 PM

Borders-Bridgewater, NJ

290 Commons Way

Bridgewater, NJ 088807

Phone: 908-231-0111


Saturday, July 10, 2010

Barnes & Noble-The Bronx- New York City, NY 1:00 - 3:00 PM

290 Baychester Ave.

Bronx, NY 10475

Phone: 718-862-3945

Sunday, 25 April 2010

Tosca Lee shares her take on what happened to Clay...

Tosca Lee's Demon re-releases from B&H Fiction in June, 2010. For those who have read it in its first life and want to know what happened to Clay, check out Tosca's view below.

Enjoy:~


What happened to Clay at the end of Demon? (SPOILER ALERT) from dfacto media on Vimeo.

Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Tosca Lee shares about Iscariot

Tosca Lee astounded me with her brilliant story of Eve, soon to be rereleased by B&H Fiction. Do not miss your chance to read Havah: The Story of Eve, coming in August, 2010.

In the meantime, listen to Tosca share about her newest project and the daunting task of bringing the story of Judas Iscariot to her readers.

Iscariot can't come soon enough for me!

Thursday, 28 January 2010

Book Trailer for Tosca Lee's Havah: The Story of Eve

Tosca Lee's Havah is an exceptional book and one I'm thrilled to see being re released by B&H Fiction - it simply is a must read story. Read my thoughts on this amazing novel, here and enjoy Tosca's in depth Character Spotlight.

Check out the trailer and add Havah to your wishlist!
It releases in August, 2010 from B&H Fiction.

Wednesday, 8 July 2009

Exciting news from B&H Fiction Pure Enjoyment & Tosca Lee

I love the books Karen Ball and her team at B&H Fiction select and now they are teaming with an author I admire for her tenacity, boldness and exceptional writing skills, Tosca Lee, author of Havah: The Story of Eve. I can't wait :)

Check out this press release from B&H Fiction:~

Nashville, Tenn., July 8, 2009 - Award-winning author Tosca Lee will release her highly-anticipated third novel in 2011 under the B&H Fiction Pure Enjoyment line. Written from the point of view of the most reviled man in Christendom--Judas--Tosca will again give readers a powerful and enlightening glimpse into the spiritual realm.

"We are thrilled to have Tosca writing for us," said Karen Ball, executive editor for fiction at B&H Publishing Group. "She's a true craftsman. Combine that with her remarkable ability to see inside those we most despise--a demon, Eve, and now Judas--and you get powerful stories of truth and grace that intrigue and challenge readers."



Her two previous books, Demon: A Memoir and Havah: The Story of Eve, created quite a stir in Christian fiction. Demon: A Memoir was a 2008 Christy Award Finalist, 2008 ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Silver Award Winner and 2008 ACFW Book of the Year, Speculative, Second Place. It earned rave reviews across the faith spectrum, including the distinction of, "The most creative, mind-twisting novel of this summer," from Infuzemag.com.

Havah, her sophomore novel, let readers inside the heart and mind of the world's first woman from her creation to Adam's death. Havah is a 2009 ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Bronze Award Winner and ChristianFictionReviews.com Top Pick for 2008. In a starred review, Publishers Weekly called it, "Passionate and riveting... Lee's superior storytelling will have readers weeping for all that Havah forfeited by a single damning choice." Historical Novels Review called it, "...a fascinating novel about human relationships at the dawn of time."

Tosca Lee-- Mrs. Nebraska-America 1996, Mrs. Nebraska-United States 1998 and first runner-up to Mrs. United States--has a deep passion for story. "I was a serious pianist from a young age, and used to practice an hour and a half every day. But when I was in the midst of a great book, I'd sneak it into the piano room and read a page between playing each piece-or as much as I could until my mom said, 'I'm not hearing any music!'"

Lee started writing after obtaining her degree in English and Literature from Smith College in Massachusetts. For more information regarding Tosca Lee, please visit http://www.toscalee.com/. For more on upcoming titles in the B&H Fiction Pure Enjoyment line, log-on to http://www.pureenjoyment.com/. Tosca's current titles are available at booksellers everywhere and on-line.

Friday, 3 July 2009

Friendship Friday ~ What do you value in your close friendships with women?


Tosca Lee


Authenticity. With my dear girlfriends, I can admit my highest ambitions and my secret sins, share my greatest successes and mourn my greatest lows. I can worry over relationships, discuss money, share things God is teaching me, contemplate
the merits of botox, and talk out loud about my consistent battle with Irritable Bowel.

You can’t do all that with just anyone, you know. :D


Demon: A Memoir ~ Havah: The Story of Eve



Elizabeth White

This is a wonderful question. Besides my mom and my three younger sisters, who are perhaps closest to me for obvious reasons, I have one "best" friend.. I met Tammy in a college fiction writing class twenty-two years ago. We pray and read the Bible together regularly and pray for one another consistently. We review and critique one another's writing; we pursue a variety of creative outlets like music and arts and crafts. We go to different churches, but we teach one another, rebuke and encourage one another. She's struggled with singleness, cancer and the loss of both parents; I've struggled with the loss of publishers, finishing grad school, a horrible job, and a wayward child. I literally don't know what I would've done without her spiritual wisdom and feminine compassion. I would not be the writer I am today without her input and prayer support. I also have other women friends who fill in gaps and challenge me to grow as a Christian and as an artist. Other pastor's wives, fellow teachers, fellow musicians and writers...these women have kept me grounded and humble, as well as encouraged and mentored me. God has truly blessed me, and the more I think about it, the more absolutely in awe I stand!

Fireworks ~ Fair Game ~ Controlling Interest ~ Tour de Force

Wednesday, 6 May 2009

Book Club interview with Tosca Lee on Havah: The Story of Eve

Tosca Lee is the author of the ground breaking novels Demon: A Memoir and Havah: The Story of Eve. We were blessed to have Tosca answer questions posed to her by my Book Club members in time for us to read at our discussion of Havah, last Friday night.

I am now delighted to share our Q&A with Tosca here at Relz Reviewz.

Thanks, Tosca:~



Questions on Havah....

How long did it take to research and write this book and how was it challenging for you?

It took me about six months to research it and about six to write it. The tough part was when I finally realized what I had gotten myself into; halfway through I realized I needed to know not only about the scriptures, but something about ancient textiles, pottery, basket-weaving--even simple fire-making. And that I knew nothing about pregnancy or child birth or wolves or other animals… birds, plants and foods indigenous to the Iraq/Turkey area… By the time I realized all this, I was ready to crawl into a hole.

Did you characterise some of the persons in the book after people you know?

Haha! The parts where Havah is struggling in her relationship with Adam are modelled after some of my experience from my marriage, and Adam bears a resemblance in some parts of the story to my former husband. Especially the snoring part. And her attacking him for it. Snoring just drives me crazy.

How did you come by your description of the serpent?

I knew the serpent had to be something special, and that it had to have legs or wings or both before the fall. So I was thinking something bird-like, but birds are also rather reptilian, too. I liked the idea of it shimmering because I wanted it to be bright, as Lucifer is said to be in the references to him as a star or masquerading as an angel of light. Because I characterized Lucifer as drop-dead gorgeous in Demon, it made sense to me that he would want to inhabit or be personified by something beautiful. More notes on Lucifer in the back of Demon if you're interested.

It was interesting that you described a storm as Adam & Eve left the garden - I had heard that the rains that bought the flood in Noah's day were the first God sent. Is that incorrect?

The vapour canopy theory has lost some popularity with physicists and scientists the last couple decades. The Bible only tells us that before there was man, there was mist because there was no one to work the garden. So the question of rain was up in the air for me. After consulting physicist friends and learning about some of the complications surroundingthe vapour canopy theory (namely having to do with air pressure and temperature), I leaned in favour of having rain and storms.

I read your description of the fallen angels being jealous of God's people and he way we so often take his unconditional love for granted in Rel's spotlight of your book Demon: A Memoir and felt that you also brought this out very well in the dialogue between the serpent and Havah in this book.

This really got me thinking about Satan being jealous of us and was wondering if this was your intention. I also was very intrigued with your take on Havah's strong feelings of betrayal when Adam blamed her for his part in eating the forbidden fruit and how this appears to be the main reason for the decline in their relationship. Am I reading into this correctly?

The jealousy thing didn't occur to me as a reason to write--but it did come up when I was first contemplating what a real demon might truly feel toward humans. Why would they want humans to fail? Comic book demons seem to do it for fun, or just to be pesky. But what's the motivation of real demons? I had a hard time imagining that they were evil by nature because they don't seem to have been evil before they fell. So something had to happen in their hearts. Of course, spirit beings don't function the way humans do, but speculating from a human standpoint, this was my closest approximation. J

I think the main reason for the decline in Havah and Adam's relationship is that they had fallen--they were no longer innocent. They went from a perfect relationship to an imperfect one… and out of that fall came blame. So the blame caused a toxic reaction, but the real reason for their troubles was their own human and fallen state.

Did you use a significant place (from any travels) for the Garden of Eden?

When I was researching the Havah book, I went to St. Lucia (my travel blogs are online if you go to toscamoon.blogspot.com and then click on the link for my Hundred Thousand Miles travelogues, on the right margin). The bugs there at night were positively musical. So that was one inspiration.

Why did you decide to give God and the adam blue eyes?

Adam was the one with blue eyes… I think because I liked the idea of giving him some ambiguous racial identity: darker skin, but blue eyes (which is rare, but not impossible). I just didn't want to end up with these two pink, blonde naked people like you see on the Sunday school flannel graph boards.

Was it difficult to come up with so many names for the children of the adam and Havah?

Yes. But at times I knew sort of the sound I wanted. And I did find it interesting looking for more obscure names in my Hebrew baby book that had meaning to the character in the story. All of the character's name have significance.

What aspects of your faith were challenged and strengthened because of the writing of this novel?

This novel was such a challenge. I just felt downtrodden a lot while I was working on it, and so worried I was going to let everyone down. As Demon continued to do well, I just got more fearful. Somewhere in the thick of it, I went to this new (Christian) chiropractor and he said, “Can I pray for you?” Well, I just started bawling. He said, “God is happy with the work you're doing. You're a song in his heart.” I bawled more. The thought that God could be happy at all with me, or could recognize me (I know it's stupid, of course He does) was somehow miraculous.

Were there times when melding fictitious detail with biblical fact was difficult? How did you work through those challenges to come to a solution you were at peace with?

Yes, many. Trying to come up with the mark of Cain, for instance, was difficult. In the end, I just try to look at all the scripture and the few facts available, and try to explain it to myself in a way that makes sense. A lot of what I do in my writing is to try to make sense of things for myself.

What was the most enjoyable scene to write, and the most difficult?

The scenes where Havah proclaims who she is. When she talks about her name after Adam names her. I really dug that. And I loved the end. The hard parts were everything else--and getting the bird sounds or geography or plant things or animal things right. Just looking stuff up continually. And trying to describe her relationship with God pre-fall. That was tough.

Was it intended that this story should add to our understanding of who God is and how He worked out His purposes in the very beginning? If not, what was the purpose in writing this story?

I really wanted to put some flesh around Eve, to make her someone recognizable and human--to highlight the ways that she is like us… and the ways her experience are like nothing we will ever be able to identify with. I also wanted to examine what it might have been like, to have faced the choices and the heartbreak that she did. I don't know about you, but when I used to think about Eve, I always thought of her as a little naïve and sort of ditzy, frankly. But realistically, a historical Eve would have had to be the smartest, most physically perfect woman ever created. What a life, to have walked with God… and to have lost that fellowship as she knew it! I wanted to highlight that I really believe any one of us could have made the same mistakes, even with the best of intentions, as I believe we do every day.

I also wanted to set the stage for the hope of a future--the groundwork of God's plan in providing a Messiah, of making something good and eventually fulfilled come out of even tragedy and error.

Right from the beginning Havah is amazed at the beauty of the serpent and is captivated by his words to her, almost ensuring she is unable to resist his 'fatal attraction.' How did you decide that the concept of the serpent's very nature and beauty would pull Havah consistently towards him so she would become enraptured with him, and his words, and not just the fact that she desired something that she was forbidden to take by God?

Well, I always figured that there had to be something special about the serpent to get such an intelligent woman who knew God first-hand to want to listen to him. She was beguiled, the scriptures say… so what was it about him, exactly? He was so smart, he seemed credible… and he didn't lie, per se--he just didn't tell full truths. If we equate the serpent to Satan, then we know that Satan had at one point done the same with the angels before a third of them fell--that he managed to convince many of them to believe and follow him. So this is a very crafty, very persuasive--and very gorgeous--being. He was the most perfect creature under God at one point, as weird as that sounds.

From the beginning of her creation the Adam regards Havah as his equal in every way. After they have taken the fruit and flee the garden he gradually then appears to lose all respect of her opinions and of Havah as a person, isolating himself from her in many ways. At what point do you feel the impact of sin on man's understanding of a woman deteriorated resulting in the crisis of relationship that appears in this story and which we see so strongly in our society today?

That is a good question. If we look at what God says to Eve, regarding the fact that Adam will rule over her, some regard those words as less a curse than simply matter-of-fact prophesy. The egalitarian nature of the garden has given way to a model that was not the original design. Left to my own conjecture, I would think that this power struggle would have its roots about where it did in the story: soon after realization of what happened… to be played throughout history in the evolving roles of man and woman in a growing population.

What type of research did you do for this book?

See above - The list of research still gives me post-traumatic stress just thinking about it. :D


How did you develop the characterisation of Eve?

I pretty much tried to think through each of the situations Eve would ex
perience for the first time and tried to think of my own response. To me, characterization is a lot of role-playing, a lot of time spent imagining the “what ifs” of a character’s thought life and experience. The fact that I was married for 14 years helped me a lot with some of the relational rubs and issues, if only because I imagine that there are few relationship issues that are truly unique to any one couple.

Why didn't you have the name Abel as the traditional name of Havah's second eldest son?

Good question, and one I forget to explain: I wanted to use the traditional Hebrew, nontransliterated names for Eve, Cain, and Abel, and Seth, etc. It seemed somehow more organic to keep them in the Hebrew and not use the English versions--also to help get away from the standard images that arise when we hear “Adam and Eve” or “Cain and Abel.”

I thoroughly enjoyed having the poems scattered throughout the book. Did you write these poems as the story unfolded or were they from a time that you thought would be perfect for the book?

I did them as the story was unfolding.

I didn't like how you would interchange the use of 'God' & 'The One Who Is' throughout the book (though I recognise you didn't do it much). Could you help me understand why you did this? By the way, I thought 'The One Who Is' as a name for God was really cool, it was helpful in entering that period of history.

There were times when, telling the story as an old woman about to die after 900-some years, it seemed to me only natural that Eve should have some name for God that was more like “God”… evolved from the time when all they knew him as was “The One that Is.” I like The One That Is better, myself, but it was getting cumbersome and I thought, if it was getting cumbersome for me… at some point she must have had another name or word for God, herself. J I did slip Adonai in there, too, once--but there were just times “God” seemed to detract from the flow of the narrative less.

So are you going to write a book continuing on the story with a plot surrounding the tower of Babel? I think you could pull it off.

No plans for that right now, though my friend Kacy Barnett-Gramckow did one about that. Definitely check her books out!

How long was your preparation and research before you actually started writing the book?

Including or not including all my procrastination time? J Overall the research was about six months and six months writing (this is in between working at my consulting job, which has me traveling just about every week--last year was crazy).

Do you have a picture of the characters in your mind as you write about them?

I get a more developed picture as I write about them. For Havah I did try to find some images that reminded me of Eve or Cain or Adam, but it sort of happens as I go.

My favourite part of the book was the way you captured the great "loss" of communication between us and God and woman and man, at the garden after the fruit eating madness. I cried. I got it. I grieved. We are accustomed to the way things are, we don't know any better. I hadn't really imagined much past animals being friendly and God being around in Eden. We have lost so much. Our experience is truly so "base" compared to what God had intended it to be.

My long winded question is.. had you already dwelled on this part of our human experience at this depth, and therefore wrote about it, or did this be
come a reality as you wrote?

I had not dwelled at length on it--I had mused some, and wondered… but the biggest part of thinking through it happened during the process of writing. There's just no short cut for me--in a way, it's like living through it, and things happen completely different than simply thinking through it. If that makes sense. J

What story are you cooking up now?

Stay tuned! I have an idea and some great publisher interest--I'll hope to announce that soon.

Questions on Tosca....

What do you enjoy doing when you are not writing?

Sleeping. Or even better--sleeping in. Or eating! Going to movies. Getting caught up on mail and expenses, e-mail and all those little notes and random scraps of paper that seem to multiply when I'm not looking.

Favourite snack?

Movie theater buttered popcorn!!

Do you have a regular time of day to write?

Unfortunately, no. I'm in and out of town, on planes, with my consulting clients, so it just depends on when I can carve out some time. It often happens at the expense of sleep.

Where is
your favourite holiday destination?

I do think that Bora Bora is the most beautiful place on earth. But then… I haven't been to Australia yet. J

What type of novels/books do you like reading?


Anything from thrillers to memoir, to humour. I love stories of strong women and women in general. I am a fan of the Red Tent, of Anita Diamant, of An
ne Rice, to Philipa Gregory, Margaret George, David Sedaris, Anthony Bourdain. I'm really struggling to have time to read these days, though.

What do you enjoy doing as a hobby?


Staying at home and being a hermit. J Cooking, uh, nit-picking and cleaning out drawers and things around the house. I do like to travel as a hobby, and to buy clothes. And do pilates. And then eat. I do love to eat. (Except not Vegemite! :)

Do you like crosswords or the like?

LOL. No--I'm terrible at them! I'm also miserable at Scrabble.


From the book I sensed you like using words in an expressive way and sometimes unusual words. Do you have any academic qualifications in professional writing qualifications perhaps?

I've been writing professionally since '92 (and publishing a few things here and there before that), and used to teach junior college composition around that time as well. I got my degree in English at Smith College. J

You seem to have a deeper love of language than usual, even fo
r a writer. What do you think?

I like the sound of language and the rhythm of sentences. Maybe as a former pianist and ballet dancer I like to feel them? I like the malleability of words. Sometimes I know the sound or the feel of the word I want, but have to go look it up to remember what it is. Or that might just be part of turning 40 this year.

How did you get into writing?

I got into writing in third grade doing a pet lover's newsletter on the death of my dog, Oliver. And then doing poems… and short stories… and reading lots, and wanting to be able to write books like I loved. Eventually I wrote my first novel in college. It was very bad. It's in my basement collecting spiders.

As a child what did you dream of becoming?

A ballerina!

What is your favourite scripture?

Zech. 4:6. This is my life lesson--that things are accomplished by God's spirit, not by might or power. Wow, I just today needed to remember this! Why do I always forget this??

What are you most passionate about?

Food. Oh wait. I should say God. God, then food. And stories and writing. And getting out of our little boxes, seeing the world, and daring to examine things. The world is more multi-dimensional and varied and complex than we think. And God is infinitely more complex than we can comprehend. I think that's why I like examining old beliefs with fresh eyes.

Could you share a little of your faith journey, please?

I became a believer at 11. It isn't a very dramatic story--I just learned in Sunday school that I needed to understand I wasn't good enough on my own, and that Jesus paid the cost for me. The journey has gotten interesting over the last few years, as God shows me that He is indeed the author of the unlikely, that grace is much more than I comprehended, and that legalism cannot be substituted for faith.

Relz Reviewz Extras

Review of Havah

Character spotlight on Havah and the adam

Visit Tosca's website and blog

Buy Tosca's books at Amazon or Koorong

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Character Spotlight ~ Tosca Lee's Clay & Lucian

Today the spotlight shines on.......................................................Clay and Lucian


Tosca Lee is a stunning wordsmith, creating vivid pictures and deep felt emotion in her stories that simply should not be missed. I recently spotlighted Havah and now have the pleasure to highlight Tosca's debut novel, Demon: A Memoir.

Over to you, Tosca:~


Brief physical description of your main character/s

Clay represents the Everyman. Probably in his mid 30s, he is never physically describ
ed.

Lucian arrives in a different guise every time: once a beautiful redhead, a handsome Mediterranean, an old woman with sparse hair, a punked out teen, a short Asian man, a wholesome soccer mom. His consistency is his story, the dark light of his eyes… and his obsession with time.

I always thought that Lucian as he appeared in the church might resemble Morgan Freeman.

Strengths and weaknesses


Clay:
A Good Guy. Unfort
unately, it hasn’t gotten him anywhere.

Lucian: Sardonic, brilliant, poignant and devious.

Quirk (if any)


Clay:
Has a drinking problem. Fantasizes about living in Belmont, outsid
e of Boston. Lives on takeout.

Lucian: Cannot stand to eat human food,
but loves to watch humans do it. Smokes in one scene. Fixated on time.

Your inspiration for the character and background to the story


One day, as I drove the stretch of Nebraska road that leads to my acreage, I found myself wondering what it would be like to be angelic and fallen. Would I go around tempting people to lust, covet, envy... just for kicks? It seemed too shallow a motivation for any complex, spiritual creature. There had to be more to it.

Suddenly, I realized that being angelic and fallen was very similar to being human and fallen—except for one major difference: the provision of a messiah.

I immediately wondered what it must feel like to be unquestionably damned—and worse, to watch humans luxuriate in and take for granted the grace made available to them from a doting God. And I thought: why wouldn't an angelic creation resent a human recipient of God's grace? And why wouldn’t a demon want to prove that creature unworthy again and again as a result? Now I knew what it must feel like to be an angelic outsider looking in with jealous eyes and razored heart.

I re-read the story of God’s love affair with humans through this new lens and Demon: A Memoir was born.

Great stuff, Tosca ~ thanks for sharing once again :) Loved Havah and looking forward to reading Demon: A Memoir.


On Monday, I will be spotlighting Amy Wallace's Michael Parker & Hanna Kessler from Enduring Justice. You won't want to miss it or the amazing giveaway!

Relz Reviewz Extras

Review of Havah

Character spotlight on Havah & Adam

Visit Tosca's website and blog

Buy Tosca's books at Amazon or Koorong

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