Welcome to Christian Bookshelf Reviews, Nadine!! Will you tell us a little about yourself?
Thank you for having me, Melanie! I’m an author of faith-based speculative fiction. I’ve been writing with a goal for publication for over 10 years and boy has it been an adventure! I love the Lord, traveling, season, chai lattes, and music. I also work as a freelance editor and I hope to live the rest of my life working around books and story.
My husband and I currently live in Idaho (no children yet) and hope to travel a bit more of the world before settling down and starting a family.
I love dystopian fiction and, I have to say, your book sounds very good. For those who aren't familiar with it, will you share about A Time To Die?
Okay, imagine you have a clock on your bedside or nightstand and it tells you – down to the last second – the day you’ll die. You watch it tick down every day and there’s no mystery behind when you’ll die. That’s what my book, A Time to Die is about. Everyone has a Clock telling them how long they have to live. My main character has only one year left when the story starts and she feels like she’s wasted her life. So, in a last-ditch effort to find purpose, she gets a little…radical. ;-)
What inspired the story?
This story came to me after the death of an acquaintance. He was the same age as me and he died very suddenly while doing relief work in Africa. I remember thinking about the little I knew of him – he was always zipping back to Africa to help out a certain village. He’d skip out on college, the family business, and any other responsibilities to go back to Africa.
Something in him knew he didn’t have time to go to college or invest in his family’s business. I wondered if I was using my time as intentionally as he did. From that question (and the many others that followed) I wrote A Time to Die. Through writing it, my own life and view of life changed drastically.
When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
When I started breathing. [grin] But really, I don’t think there’s ever been a time that I didn’t process something through story. I didn’t consider writing as a profession, it was just a natural need of life – like breathing and eating and sleeping.
When I was a child, I became a chronic liar. I embellished everything. Once I hit my teen years, I finally grew a conscience and started channeling that desire to fib and embellish into stories. Once I entered college for a different degree, I realized that writing books was the only pursuit that felt right with my dreams. Not to mention God continued to lay it on my heart until I couldn’t resist. So I started pursuing it professionally.
What would you say is your most interesting writing quirk?
I never use my first idea in a scene, no matter how good the idea might be. Because, chances are, a reader will think of that idea too and then that makes my book predictable. So, when I’m faced with the question of, “How will they escape?” or “What will happen to cause a fight?” I think hard on an answer…then ditch it and think again.
Where do you like to write?
We have a guest room transformed into a writing room/library. I get to decorate it however I want. :D It’s positively magical and full of windows! But when I need to escape the house, I love working in old coffee shops. When I lived in Missouri, there was the perfect place made out of old bricks with a window corner. *Sigh*
What do you like to do when you're not writing?
Play music (piano), travel, discover new recipes, travel, snowboard, and travel if I can. ;-)
What is your favorite genre to read and why?
Speculative fiction, but that’s kind of an obvious answer. Favorite subgenres in spec-fic would be dystopian, virtual reality, and fantasy. I also love theology books that push me to deepen my faith. Like Follow Me and Radical by David Platt, Love Does by Bob Goff, Circle Maker by Mark Batterson, and The Knowledge of the Holy by A. W. Tozer
What is your least favorite genre to read?
Romance. *Peeks from behind hands* I know, I know, it’s probably the most popular genre out there, but it’s not for me. I read too many non-realistic romance books growing up that created the wrong idea of what romance should be. Then, when I met my husband I was blown away by real romance --- the romance that God intended. Not a single book could compare and I lost my interest in romance novels from then on. For me, there’s very little takeaway from them that I can apply to my life.
However, I still enjoy romance in books. I just don’t like pure, solid, romance novels.
Is there a place you'd like to visit, but haven’t yet?
Antarctica, but mainly because of book research. I’m sure when I start writing a book set in a different environment I’ll want to go there, too.