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Crazy Little Thing Called Love

Page 32

by Beth K. Vogt


  3. Vanessa struggles greatly with being the new girl all the time. Think about who in your life is relatively new to your community. Discuss ways to serve and encourage them, and consider using the time of your next book club meeting to provide tangible help and encouragement to them.

  A CONVERSATION WITH BETH K. VOGT

  This is a new series for you! Tell us a little about where the idea came from and what you’re most excited about for the Destination Wedding series.

  I discussed the idea of writing a series with my mentor and friend, author Rachel Hauck, as well as my agent, Rachelle Gardner. I was thrilled Howard Books liked the idea of the Destination Wedding series. So often in contemporary romance novels the wedding comes at the end of the novel—often as an epilogue. In this series, the wedding is a main plot point. And travel—well, so many people love to read about new places, right? So combining weddings with new destinations—to me, that was a win-win situation.

  What was your inspiration for writing Crazy Little Thing Called Love? Is there a backstory to the idea?

  I have several friends who met in high school and ended up getting married—and they’ve stayed married, I’m happy to report. When my husband and I were dating, we talked briefly of eloping—very briefly. And I think everyone looks back on their high school years and can think of at least one decision—a romantic one, or just a general life decision—they made and wonder, “What if?”—what if they had done things differently?

  We know you usually have a high-concept question that you weave into your stories. What was the main question for Crazy Little Thing Called Love?

  I believe a Story Question is what fuels a novel. It’s what your characters are wrestling with from chapter 1 to the end. And it’s often a question readers might wrestle with, too. For Crazy Little Thing Called Love, I focused on this Story Question: What if you realized that what you thought was your worst mistake actually was the right choice?

  How did you come up with the storm-chasing profession for Logan? Did you have to do a lot of background research?

  I knew Logan needed to be in a profession that was risky—and I wanted to choose something outside the box. So I mulled for a few days—mulling is a huge part of the writing process. And the idea “storm chaser” came to mind. I would have loved to have time to do more research about storm chasing—there’s just never enough time to do everything I want. I’ve read some about storm chasers and have always been intrigued about why someone would run toward a tornado, instead of running for safety. And I discovered they are not just thrill seekers. They are scientists, motivated by a desire to better understand storms, to help protect people. I read some books and did research online to understand storm chasers better.

  The camaraderie between Vanessa and Mindy, as well as Logan and Caron, is so much fun with the way they banter back and forth. Do you have similar relationships in your life that you model these fictional ones after?

  Friendships are so, so important to me. And yes, when I’m with my friends, it’s all about the conversation, the laughter, the give-and-take between us. If I can make someone laugh, I’m happy. And I’m thankful I have people in my life who know the real me, who are willing to be honest with me, to challenge me—and who are real with me, too. I don’t want to pretend anymore . . . or do a fake life. That’s not what God calls us to do. We’re to reflect his image to others—and having honest, loving relationships with others is one of the most beautiful ways we can do that.

  Vanessa is good at the hello and the goodbye but not the in-between, a great way to explain her issues with trust and relationships. How did you come up with this concept?

  That truth came to me as I wrote the fast draft of Crazy Little Thing Called Love. The “fast draft” is my first draft of a novel—and it’s a wonderful act of discovery. I write my story fast—no editing, no going back and making it all clean and nice. I uncover more about my characters: who they are, why they do the things they do, say the things they say . . . and my plot takes some unexpected twists and turns.

  As I learned more about Vanessa, I realized she’s great at being the new girl, and she also knows how to pack up and move on—all skills learned as a military child. What was missing was how to do the in-between: stay in a relationship for the long haul.

  This is not to say that military families cannot have real, deep relationships with people. Struggling with relationships was the case for Vanessa—for this story.

  Vanessa and Logan’s relationship suffers from a clear communication gap. Was it difficult to develop that in their dialogue, so we can see what each side is really saying but not clearly verbalizing?

  One question driving this story was how did Vanessa go from eloping at eighteen—young and idealistic and in love—to being divorced two years later? What happened? That’s why it was so important to tell the story of Vanessa and Logan’s earlier years—their love story. Readers needed to see their youth, their immaturity, which was so influenced by their lack of communication.

  Every married couple has to learn how to communicate, whether they get married at eighteen or twenty-eight or thirty-eight. But Vanessa’s and Logan’s youth was definitely a disadvantage.

  As far as developing their dialogue—I love writing dialogue! Much of my fast draft is dialogue, so no, that’s not a challenge for me. I just had to remember to think like high-schoolers and college-age kids.

  What can we expect from you next?

  More Destination Wedding stories! I’m working on another novella and another novel for 2016. I’m intrigued by Logan’s little sister’s story: What happens with Caron and Alex? And there are always other stories simmering in my brain, sparked by conversations, news stories, and just random things I run across in my day-to-day life. I just read an online news article about a couple who built their beach house on the wrong lot—someone else’s lot! I thought, How could that happen? And then my writer’s brain turned on and I thought, Hmmm, is there a story here?

  LISAANNE PHOTOGRAPHY

  BETH K. VOGT is a nonfiction author who said she’d never write fiction. After saying she’d never marry a doctor or anyone in the military, she is now happily married to a former Air Force family physician. Beth believes God’s best is often behind the door marked “Never.” An established magazine writer and editor, Beth’s debut novel, Wish You Were Here, was released in May 2012. She writes inspirational contemporary romance because she believes there is more to happily ever after than the fairy tales tell us.

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  ALSO FROM BETH K. VOGT

  Wish You Were Here

  You Made Me Love You: an eShort Sequel to Wish You Were Here

  Catch a Falling Star

  Somebody Like You

  Can’t Buy Me Love: a Destination Wedding eNovella

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2015 by Beth K. Vogt

  Scripture taken from The Holy Bible, New International Version®. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 International Bible Society. Used by
permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved.

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  First Howard Books trade paperback edition June 2015

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  Interior design by Jaime Putorti

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.

  ISBN 978-1-4767-8978-1

  ISBN 978-1-4767-8979-8 (ebook)

 

 

 


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