I'm so happy to host novelist Leah DeCesare here today to talk about her debut novel, Forks, Knives and Spoons. Thank you so, so much, Leah for encouraging everyone to follow their dreams.
If you think it’s too late to
go for your dream, you’re wrong. I took the circuitous path to write FORKS,
KNIVES, AND SPOONS but I can now proudly say, I am a debut novelist.
I mulled and pondered how to
take the concept of labeling guys as forks, knives, and spoons and turn it into
a story for literally decades before ever writing more than a few notes.
The kernel of the story, the
Utensil Classification System, began in 1988 when my own father gave me a
silverware lesson in guys before I left for college. At school, I shared it
with my new friends and the labels expanded and grew, becoming very detailed.
The way it caught on and multiplied stuck in my imagination and waited.
I had always wanted to be a
writer, from the time I was in the early elementary years, I wrote: poems,
diaries, short stories, essays. In fifth grade, I even typed out five chapters
of my first novel attempt and sent it off to a major New York City publisher
receiving my very first badge of being a writer — my first rejection letter —
at 11 years old.
Fast forward through a college
degree in business, a career in retail buying, event planning and public
relations, leap ahead through three babies, too many volunteer jobs, and a
second career of being a doula, parenting and birth educator, and arrive at me
in my forties. It had been decades of me not pursuing my childhood dream.
In a reflective moment, I asked
myself what I was waiting for to finally become a writer. I knew that if one
day I looked back at my life I would regret not having done this and I jumped
into action. I fulfilled volunteer obligations and chose not to re-up my
appointments, I found a successor to lead a non-profit I’d founded, I stopped
saying “yes” to everything someone asked me to chair/manage/facilitate. The
kids were getting older and I made intentional decisions to find time and to
make writing this book a priority. I put this abstract “become a writer” on the
top of my to-do list and made it concrete. But even then, it took years.
First drafts are crap and mine
was no different, but it was a completed first draft and that, in itself, felt
monumental. From there, the book has changed dramatically through work with
editors, beta readers, and even a casual conversation over cocktails at a
writers’ conference with best selling authors Ann Hood and Jackie Mitchard.
They asked about my book then, without reading a word of it, offered ideas that
made so much sense I reworked the manuscript again after their impromptu
masters class.
Now, I’m working on my second
novel and am approaching it in a whole new, better way than I did with FORKS,
KNIVES, AND SPOONS. I’ve learned so much from writing this book and I feel the
most thrilling sense of personal accomplishment and joy. So if there’s a dream
you’re sitting on, waiting on, thinking on — stop imagining it and do it!
Believe in yourself and make your heart’s desire a reality.
1 comment:
Thank you for having me on your blog, Caroline. You're the best!
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