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Authors and Readers Blog their thoughts about books and reading at Fresh Fiction journals.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Anna Jeffrey | SWEET RETURN

SWEET RETURN was fun to write. I enjoy creating tough guys who get their comeuppance when they meet a strong woman. I have found that many tough guys might appear to be tough and rough on the outside, but they have gentle hearts. That’s the character I tried to present in the SWEET RETURN hero. Dalton is a man who has made an occupation of witnessing the worst of humanity, but he still had a good heart.

The heroine, Joanna, manages to make a living self-employed in a small, rural community, a challenge all its own. I wanted to create a woman who could equal Dalton in strength of character and independence. I figured he could never be happy with a wimpy woman, just as she had never been able to find a successful relationship with a man weaker than she.

So there you have it. As one reader put it, a hard-headed man and a strong-willed woman.

At the same time I was creating this conflict-driven relationship, I tried to keep a light tone to the story. It struck me as humorous that Joanna would be engaged in 3 businesses as diverse as owning a beauty salon, owning a wholesale janitorial supply business and raising chickens and selling free-range eggs.

The idea of a heroine as an egg farmer was sort of floating around in my head because of the current trend toward organic eating and I had watched some features on TV about free-range chickens. …. Growing up around farmers and ranchers, I know a little about chickens. As a child, every day of my life for many years, I accompanied my grandmother to the chicken house where she would select 2 pullets and wring their necks. Then we would clean them and cook them for dinner. In the late afternoons, we would go to a different chicken house and gather eggs.

Now mind you, I don’t remember a lot about raising chickens. Mostly I recall my grandmother saying, “Don’t play in the chicken house. You’ll get mites.” So I had to do research. Of the many new things I learned about chickens, one thing I discovered is that the principal book on raising chickens for egg production was written in 1902 and is still the foremost compilation of information for that particular endeavor. ….. I also learned that different breeds of chickens have different personalities. Who knew?

Hope you’ll have as much fun reading the book as I had writing it.

Anna Jeffrey

www.annajeffrey.com/
www.dixie-cash.com/

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3 Comments:

At December 20, 2007 3:32 PM , Blogger Caroline Clemmons said...

I loved SWEET RETURN. And I loved the bit about free-range chickens. My neighbor raises them and sells organic eggs. It also brought up memories of helping my grandmother feed the chickens and gather eggs when we visited her farm each summer. One thing I learned is, don't go barefoot in the chicken house!

I loved both Dalton and Joanna.

 
At December 20, 2007 4:50 PM , Blogger Melody Thomas said...

Anna I totally enjoyed Sweet Return. You did a wonderful job at bringing these two lonely hearts together, and I loved the free range egg business on ranching land. I'm one of your greatest fans and have all of your books including your Dixie Cash books. Keep up the great work and I can't wait for your next book.

 
At December 20, 2007 6:32 PM , Blogger Jeanmarie Hamilton said...

That's interesting about chicken breeds having different personalities. Growing up with a mom who raised show cats I learned that different breeds of show cats have different personalities. ;-) So why not chickens? I'll be looking for your book. It sounds like I'll love the story of the tough guy, Dalton, and the young woman, Joanna.

 

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