By Courtney Pierce
I create baby boomer characters who embrace their middle-ageness with gusto,
of which I am one. We have superpowers―we’re invincible, embrace change, and
are immortal―in our own minds. These qualities make for rich layers of emotion
that reflect our polarized history of innocence and disillusionment. The conflict sits under the skin like embedded shrapnel.
Growing up, I wrestled with foiled rabbit-ear antennae to pick up
signals of a black-and-white, perfect world. Color bloomed in my imagination. Assassinations
and racial violence were quickly turned off in favor of spinning vinyl that
snapped, crackled, and popped.
Simplicity. It becomes a superpower in the digital age, a power riddled
with the buckshot
of change that comes too fast. Sixty years of generational
history shaped our baby boomer uniqueness: Civil Rights, space travel, dropping
in and dropping out . . . and Bewitched.
Anything was, and is, still possible with the twitch of the nose.
As I finish the final installment of my trilogy about the Dushane
sisters, Indigo Legacy, a new tale is beginning to take shape. Future Past will be
the story of a middle-age woman, whose gift of future sight is clouded by the
past. When her visions turn from benign to dire, only reconciling her baggage
will thwart the reality of her own impending death. A vision worthy of a good fight. Of course, this new book
won’t be as dark as it sounds. A spunky Jack Russell terrier named Rudy serves
as the lightning rod for supercharged predictions. This little hero’s insight
surpasses that of humans. As is my style, the humor in the story carries a
poignant message: “Make the most of every minute because none of us knows what
will happen to change our lives in the future.” Could be good. Could be bad.
And sometimes, a baton is grabbed with only trust and determination as a guide.
Then we run as fast as we can.
It's an author's right to project fact into fiction. My books reflect layers of personal experience in real time. Characters get to discover a new beginning at the same time I do. At the ripe age
of fifty-seven, I will marry a man who'll restart my life. And with the utterance
of a vow in June, I’ll become a mother, for the first time, to an eleven-year-old stepdaughter and four grown stepchildren . . . with kids of their own. Me? A
mother and a grandmother without paying all those dues? It’s as if I twitched
my nose and the love of my new life appeared in front of me, complete with the
richness of a family. How do I even begin to write on the page of what I'm experiencing inside? None of this was even a glimmer on the horizon just six months ago.
Even an attempt at capturing on the page makes me feel like a superhero.
No matter what extraordinary gifts I give my characters, I
believe the ability to risk everything to step into the unknown, purely on
faith, is the true superpower that shines through the prose.
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living
in Milwaukie, Oregon, with her bossy cat. She writes for baby boomers. By day,
Courtney is an executive in the entertainment industry and uses her time in a
theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor and mystery.
She has studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed
the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing
community, she is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers
Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource
Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers
Association, She Writes, and Sisters in Crime. The Executrix received
the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal.
Check out all of Courtney's books at:
courtney-pierce.com and windtreepress.com. Both print and E-books are available through most major
online retailers, including Amazon.com
The Dushane Sisters are back in Indigo
Lake. More laughs, more tears...and more trouble.
Protecting Mom's reputation might get the sisters killed―or give one of them
the story she's been dying to live.
New
York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says,
"Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love,
unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo
Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure
Delight."
Colorful characters come alive in
Courtney's trilogy about the Dushane sisters. Beginning with The
Executrix, three middle-age sisters find a manuscript for a
murder mystery in their mother's safe after her death. Mom’s book gives
them a whole new view of their mother and their future. Is it fiction . . . or
truth?
Get
out the popcorn as the Dushane Sisters Trilogy comes to a scrumptious
conclusion with Indigo Legacy. Due out in 2017.
4 comments:
You've captured so much of the Boomer experience in this post, Courtney! "The conflict sits under the skin like embedded shrapnel." That sent chills across my skin. It is true of the experience of so many Boomers.
I agree that our superpower is fearless optimism. I'm so excited for you! Finishing a trilogy, launching a new project, and embracing a new family. Being a step mom will draw on your strength and sense of humor. Being a Grandma is less stressful than mothering an eleventeen-going-on-twenty-one daughter. When in doubt, touch base with those of us who've been through raising girls. We'll keep you grounded.
Congrats on your soon to be ready-made family! Truly a new and wonderful adventure. I'm a boomer to. Loved Bewitched. I think that's why I write witch stories, although mine aren't so light. Good luck on sales with the new series.
Congrats on your upcoming wedding! I agree, age and experience help us to add depth and realism to our stories that sometimes imagination isn't enough to give us.
Thank you all so much for your kind words and well wishes. It's such an amazing experience that I sometimes can't wrap my head around it. For the first time, I dropped my soon-to-be stepdaughter at school this morning, met her teacher, talked with her friends, and then she gave me the tightest hug I've ever received. The tears fell like rain all the way to work. I feel quite blessed. And when she calls me "Mom", I look over my shoulder to see who she's talking to. LOL!!!
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