| | | | | |

COTT: Interview with Clash Winner Susan Page Davis

This week, we’re pleased to feature the winner of the July Clash
of the Titles competition. Susan Page Davis is the author of more than
sixty published novels. She’s a two-time winner of the Inspirational
Readers’ Choice Award, and also a winner of the Carol Award, the
Will Rogers Medallion, and was a finalist in the WILLA Awards and the
More Than Magic Contest.

A Maine native, she now lives in Kentucky. Her historical romance The
Outlaw Takes a Bride is a finalist in the 2015 Will Rogers Medallion
Awards.

Her latest accomplishment is having her brand new June release, River
Rest, be chosen as the July Clash of the Titles victor.

We asked Susan to tell us a little about writing River Rest. Here’s what
she had to say.

CBA: What made you choose the setting for your story?

SPD: My great-aunt left a journal she wrote in the 1920s
and ’30s. It gave such a vivid picture of life in rural Maine that I
wanted to write a story in that setting. I decided to push it back to
1918, near the end of World War I, because of the added tension and also
because my grandfather (Aunt Belle’s brother-in-law) served in WWI. He
was drafted close to the end of the war, and I adapted some details of
his story to fit in for my heroine, Judith’s brother. River Rest is
purely fiction, but many of the events in it were inspired by things
that really happened in my family.

CBA: Do your characters have anything in common with real
people?

SPD: In real life, my grandmother (Aunt Belle’s sister) was
a schoolteacher before she married my grandfather. Judith has a lot in
common with both my Nana and Aunt Belle. She loves her bird feeder, she
learns to make quilts, and she cooks many of the same things my Nana
served. Her life on the farm is a lot like theirs was. I love Judith
because she keeps on, even when she is tempted to fall into depression
as her father did. She knows people are depending on her, so she
perseveres.

CBA: You mention your story was inspired by your great-aunt’s
journal. What’s the best thing you learned from reading what she
wrote?

SPD: My Great-aunt Belle, who wrote the journal, died in
1939, long before I was born. She was 55, and she died from
complications of appendicitis. I never got the chance to know her, and I
would love to be able to sit down with her for a cup of tea. As a side
note, I had acute appendicitis myself in 1985, and it was no fun then,
with modern medicine to help me out. Aunt Belle noted so many cultural
things in her diary—who she voted for, the famous boxers of the day, the
way the neighboring farm boys were building tractors out of truck
chassis, and all the community events and gossip. She never had children
of her own, but she doted on her nieces and nephews. I think I would
have loved her.

Thanks to Susan for her insights. You
may visit her at her website at: www.susanpagedavis.com .

River Rest by Susan Page Davis

River Rest sounds like an interesting read. Here’s more about the
book:

 
Unable to depend on her father to heal the crumbling family,
Judith is afraid to trust the mysterious neighbor, Ben, who lives with
his own grief.



Maine, 1918


Judith Chadbourne gave up her teaching job after her mother’s death
to help her father with her five siblings. But when her father sinks
into deep depression and her brother Joel is drafted, the household
chores and farm work may overwhelm her. Neighbor Ben Thayer offers to
buy their farm, shocking Judith and angering her father. An outsider
from New York, Ben seems rich and mysterious, but his heart aches from
his own loss. Judith accidentally breaks the antique crystal Christmas
ornament her mother loved. The splintering star echoes her family’s
shattering. Ben’s efforts to help make Judith suspicious, but when Joel
falls critically ill at the army camp, Ben’s aid brings the beginnings
of trust. After the armistice, and the community and family start to
recover from the strain of the war, but Judith learns independence is
lonely. When Ben is injured, she is the only one who can help him. Can
love take her beyond the frozen Maine winter?

If you’re into period romances, be sure to check this one out! A
plethora of people voted this into their TBR pile. You might want to
join them!

 

Purchase
Please Follow & Like
Pin Share

Similar Posts