Today, I'm hosting Chloe JonPaul as part of the blog tour for her novel, This Business of Children:
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I asked Chloe to share the inspiration for her novel with me.
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Lewiston, Maine was the place where I had done the best and most creative teaching in my entire career.
It wasn't too long after my arrival that I began musing about the possibility of writing a novel. Before I knew it, these four characters emerged almost out of the blue. They weren't any of the teachers I had known - possibly a composite of people I had known in the many places I had taught over the years. I must admit, however, that there is a bit of me in both Deidre Fletcher and Vera Harriss.
I wanted the setting to be in Maine but I didn't want to name any particular town or city so I named the town Blevins. The story is also a reflection in some way of my own union activism as a teacher.
The greatest inspiration for the novel, I feel, is having worked beside so many wonderful teachers who DO make a difference in the lives of the children they teach. I want to acquaint the world with the struggles they face professionally while having to deal with the demons in their own lives.
My teachers and my high school principal inspired me to be the best that I could possibly be and so the dedication in this book reads:
To the special teachers in my life who inspired me with their wisdom, spirituality, and elegance.
Margery Harriss
Marguerite Zouck
Eunice Shay
Mother Colombina, MPF
I actually trashed the novel after I had written it but my friend retrieved it saying,
“You are NOT throwing this away!” I stashed it away and really didn't think about it much until last year when I began seeing so much in the news about the problems in education. What topped it for me was reading about the teacher who committed suicide in Bethlehem, PA after being accused of molesting a student. We also had the 25th anniversary of the Challenger disaster. I thought, “Wow! That's all in my book!” So I pulled the manuscript out once more…and the rest is history.
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You can find Chloe at http://chloejonpaul.com/ and her book in both electronic and physical formats at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Books-A-Million.
2 comments:
Wonderful post Chloe. Love the trailer :).
BK
I must admit that as a native Mainer, the book caught my eye. As I read your post, I became intrigued and I am going to read the book.
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