LUCY BURDETTE: In the late spring, Nancy Herkness and I did a Zoom event for her college class's reunion. I had noticed her name fifteen years earlier in our alumni magazine, when she announced the publication of her first romance. We had such a good time talking about writing and publishing genre fiction, and the writing life, and so much more. I thought you all would enjoy meeting her as well! Welcome Nancy!
NANCY HERKNESS: This summer I’m growing tomatoes for the first time. I blithely ordered three little cocktail tomato plants from Burpee, thinking I would plunk them in the large pot I already owned, water them once a day, and harvest beautiful miniature fruits. Ha! The plants arrived with an instruction sheet as long as my arm.
Here’s a photo of all the equipment required to cultivate those three tiny plants.
The good news is that I’ve harvested about a dozen delicious little red Baby Boomers—yes, that’s what kind of tomato they are. Pretty funny name, isn’t it?
Last month, I downloaded the Duolingo app on my phone and started learning Spanish. I studied French in school but always thought Spanish would be more useful. Also, the book I’m writing is set in a country with a strong Spanish culture.
I’m amused by the vocabulary Duolingo thinks I should learn first. Yes, I agree that “tired” is important but “milkshake”? With my sweet tooth, it’s better if I do not know how to order one in any language. And “basketball player”? Nope, don’t need that one. I have acquired words for every piece of clothing except “shoes”. If you could see my closet, you would know that shoes are very, very important to me, so I have learned that word on my own initiative.
In February I started writing the first book in a brand new series. I set it in a fictional island country (off the coast of Spain, hence my urge to learn the language). My previous stories have always been in locations that were either real or closely modeled on real places. However, I decided that I wanted to do some world-building because I’ve never done it before.
On top of that, I’m 60,000+ words into the manuscript and I just had an epiphany about how to take it up a level. Unfortunately, that means ripping the book apart and putting it back together in a different way. At the moment, I don’t have a deadline so I’m able to indulge in that luxury.
The strange thing is that these were the kinds of things we were supposed to be doing while in lockdown for the pandemic: learning a new language, cultivating our gardens, writing like crazy.
However, I didn’t do any of that. I huddled in my house—and considered myself lucky to have that option—binge-watching television shows, binge-reading science fiction (although I write romance), and not writing a single new word of my own once I handed in the final book in my contract in May 2020.
The constant low hum of anxiety about the pandemic, the apprehension about going to the grocery store or post office, the decisions about who should be included in my personal “bubble,” and the jab of terror every time I coughed or sneezed, all sapped any creative energy I might have mustered.
Yet now that I’m vaccinated, all of a sudden I’m hungry to learn new skills on every front of my life, but most especially I want to push my books to be a more compelling, more intense, more immersive experience for my readers. Even better, I think I’ve figured out what I need to do to make that happen. It’s both thrilling and terrifying.
So why this explosion of productivity and excitement about my work now?
Perhaps my brain needed a rest and the pandemic downtime somehow recharged my batteries. Perhaps after I got protected by the vaccine and that anxiety lifted, the energy I had focused on worrying was freed up for new ventures.
However, I think it goes even deeper. I think the pandemic reminded me that life is both precious and fragile. It pushed me to consider what’s important and to reset my priorities accordingly. Seeing so many lives lost drove home the fact that my time here is a treasure to be used with care and thought.
So I have decided to take on new challenges, to push myself out of my comfort zone…to truly live my life with as much verve and joy as I can.
How about you? Have you come out of the pandemic with any new knowledge about yourself or your world? I’d love to hear it!
Giveaway! Every reader who comments on my blog will be entered for the chance to win an autographed copy of my latest release The Agent. (U.S. only due to shipping costs.)
Nancy Herkness is the award-winning author of the Consultants, Wager of Hearts, and Whisper Horse series, published by Montlake Romance, as well as several other contemporary romance novels. She is a two-time nominee for the Romance Writers of America’s RITA® award.
Nancy has received many honors for her work, including the Book Buyers Best Top Pick, the New England Readers’ Choice award, and the National Excellence in Romance Fiction Award. She graduated from Princeton University with a degree in English literature and creative writing.
A native of West Virginia, Nancy now lives twelve miles west of the Lincoln Tunnel in suburban New Jersey with two tabby cats. For more information about Nancy and her books, visit www.NancyHerkness.com. Sign up for her monthly newsletter at: http://www.nancyherkness.com/newsletter/
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