When I first started writing, a friend recommended that I
read Anne Lamott’s wonderful book Bird by Bird. Direct and to the point,
Lamott gives the first-time writer encouragement and suggestions. One
suggestion that impressed me was this:
There are an enormous number of people
out there with invaluable information to share with you, and all you have to do
is pick up the phone. They love it when you do, just as you love it when people
ask if they can pick your brain about something you happen to know a great deal
about — or, as in my case, have a number of impassioned opinions on.
Beginning with my second book, Eli’s
Heart, I knew I was going to need to pick up the phone Ms. Lamott makes
reference to. My principal character was born with a daunting congenital heart
disorder, and a prodigious musical talent as a pianist. I know a little about
playing piano but certainly not at Eli’s level. And I knew zero about Tetralogy
of Fallot, the heart disorder.
I found Ms. Lamott was absolutely
correct. It has been my good fortune to have crossed paths with many people of
diverse talent during my lifetime. A young man who had performed the leading
role in a musical I directed during his high school years, Dr.
Andrew Rennekamp,
was a medical researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital when I began Eli’s
Heart in 2014, and through him I connected with a cardiologist, Dr.
Aarti Asnani, who was generous with her time and expertise to the point of
doing research of her own as to how T.O.F. was treated sixty years earlier.
And a dear friend who is a remarkable pianist and a great teacher, Scott Besser, talked to me about what it felt like to face the challenges and the emotion of the musical literature Eli performed.
Dr. Andrew Rennekamp |
Dr. Aarti Asnani |
And a dear friend who is a remarkable pianist and a great teacher, Scott Besser, talked to me about what it felt like to face the challenges and the emotion of the musical literature Eli performed.
Scott Besser, Chris Souza |
Her brother Niall was an even greater
challenge. Niall suffers from bipolar disorder and aspires to be a
singer-songwriter. Mental disease—and in particular, bipolar disorder—is
Dr.
Andrew’s specialty. He was an enormous help, suggesting books and articles,
and discussing the disease with me.
A former voice student, Nate Taylor, who is an aspiring singer-songwriter, walked me through his journey and read my attempts at what it felt to perform great music such as “The Sound of Silence” as well as creating one’s own music.
Nate Taylor |
A former voice student, Nate Taylor, who is an aspiring singer-songwriter, walked me through his journey and read my attempts at what it felt to perform great music such as “The Sound of Silence” as well as creating one’s own music.
More recently, writing about two
brothers who survive service in Vietnam, only to be faced with the aftermath of
emotional and mental stress, required a great deal of study about the war and
what our military endured during those years. The two books in “The Cameron
Saga,” Memories of Jake and Man with No Yesterdays, cover the war
from the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution to the fall of Saigon.
After much online
research, reading a number of mostly first-person accounts, and watching videos
and films, through another former voice student I was put in contact with a
remarkable man, Lt. Col. Charles J. Vincent, U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, a veteran of Vietnam and also of the Korean War. Again, I presented
Col. Chuck with a list of questions he patiently addressed, and he agreed to
read sections of both books to give me his suggestions and corrections. He even
gave me the scenario for one brother’s final combat mission. I was fortunate
enough to meet Chuck and consider him a friend.
Col. Charles Vincent |
For my latest venture, a mystery series
set in the city I love, Cincinnati, in the 1960s, I needed assistance with
police procedure
overall and in particular during that era. Through the website
for The Greater Cincinnati Police Historical Society and Museum, I connected
with retired Lt. Detective Stephen Kramer. When I wrote the first book
in 2018, Lt. Kramer was President of the Society; he continues to be active as
its Archivist. A writer himself, he understood what I was looking
for and he has been kindly available for thus far four books in the “Augusta
McKee Mystery Series.” He’s done more than help me with police procedure; he’s
become vital in developing the character of Homicide Detective Malcolm
Mitchell. It’s not at all unusual for Malcolm’s words to actually have come
from an email from Lt. Kramer, with his kind permission.
Lt. Stephen Kramer |
In my personal experience, I haven’t
found writing to be “a lonely profession” at all … not with the contacts,
encouragement and support of remarkable people such as these. They’re part of
my world.
**
All my books are available on Amazon. You can find links to order
on my website: www.susanmoorejordan.com
Or on my Amazon author page https://www.amazon.com/Moore-Jordan-Susan/e/B00IBZ731U
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